| Coca
Cola Championship |
| Saturday
September 19th |
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Cardiff
City 0
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Queens
Park Rangers 2 |
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J.Simpson
19 & 40 mins |
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Team
Line Up
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24.
R.Cerny 7/10
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6.
M. Leigterwood 7/10
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3. D. Stewart 7/10
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13.
K.Gorkss 7/10
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29.
G.Borrowdale 7/10
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7.
W.Routledge 7/10
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14.
M.Rowlands 9/10 (c)
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15. B.Watson 8/0
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10.
A.Buzsaky 7/10
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8.
R.Vine 6/10
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23.
J.Simpson 8/10
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11.
P.Agyemang (82) 6/10
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12.
A.Pellicori (77) 6/10 
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| Subs
Not Used: T. Heaton, P.Ramage, G.Mahon, A.Faurlin, H.Ephraim |
| Substitutes
in yellow |
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Due to being away
on holiday I was unable to make the Cardiff game so here is a match
report from Loft for Words.
QPR
finally click at Cardiff's expense
by Clive Whittingham
The impressive performance QPR have threatening for
so long finally arrived at Cardiff City on Saturday when Jay Simpsons
first half double gave the Rs a very comfortable 2-0 win.
Click. It finally happened. QPRs plethora of talented players
finally moulded into something resembling a team and gave somebody
in the Championship a good going over. Its been coming, I
have said in just about every match report this season that we were
not far away from being a really good team, and on our first visit
to Cardiff Citys soulless new ground on Saturday that finally
happened. QPR looked really good on Saturday, really good indeed.
The concept of perfection is an interesting one.
Jim Magilton ventured the suggestion that QPR were perfect in his
post match press conference. Can anything be truly perfect? Even
the best teams concede goals and lose games, even the best days
out to South Wales end with the village idiot sharpening a shovel
next to you on the train home, I bet even Roxanne McKees farts
stink. Perfection only goes so far, but as far as it goes QPR were
absolutely perfect on Saturday. The team selection, the tactics,
the performance, the pattern of play, the passing all absolutely
bang on. It was the most complete and accomplished QPR performance
I have seen since the De Canio led demolitions of Stoke and Bristol
City with the new look central midfield pairing of Rowlands and
Watson the beating heart of it all. Cardiff were steam rollered
and seriously fortunate to get away with a two goal defeat. There
wasnt a bad player on the pitch in hoops.
Jim Magilton was forced into yet more changes to
his starting eleven following last weekends draw with Peterborough.
Adel Taarabt and Matt Connolly were both ruled out through illness
and Alejandro Faurlin was dropped to the bench to accommodate the
return of Martin Rowlands in the centre of midfield alongside Ben
Watson it was that decision in particular that proved to
be a master stroke. Akos Buzsaky replaced Taarabt on the wing, initially
wide right with Routledge wide left but they soon swapped over.
Jay Simpson led the line with support from Vine. At the back the
Stewart and Gorkss combination was finally reunited at centre half
in front of Cerny with Borrowdale at left back and Leigertwood at
right back ahead of the unfortunate Peter Ramage.
Cardiff were without last seasons top scorer
Ross McCormack and Man City loanee Kelvin Etuhu through injury but
did have the Championships top marksmen so far Michael Chopra
up front along with Jay Bothroyd and in form wingers Peter Whittingham
and Chris Burke supplying them with ammunition. While Rangers rested
during the week following the Palace postponement Cardiff battled
to a 1-0 win at Reading with ten men after Stephen McPhails
red card despite the FA of Wales overturning Cardiff red
cards with such frequency the City programme actually has a special
symbol for rescinded sendings off on its stats page McPhail remained
suspended for this game. Joe Ledley started at the end of a week
when his club and national managers have been spitting venom back
and forth over his current form, but he passed a late fitness test
to do so and did very little to justify his selection.
The game started at what could best be described
as a steady pace. Cardiff tried to build from the back but found
a red and black hooped wall waiting for them whenever they tried
to cross halfway which in turn forced them to look long for Bothroyd
who enjoyed only very occasional success against Gorkss and Stewart.
QPR for their part set a stall out nice and early possession
was the key, lots of it. With Watson and Rowlands leading the way
a succession of attractive moves were quickly put together with
the play moved out to Buzsaky and Routledge at every possible opportunity.
The first threat on goal came after seven minutes when Whittingham
aimed a free kick in towards Bothryod but Gorkss headed away, then
at the other end Buzsaky thrashed one over the bar from the edge
of the box.
Jay Simpson looked for a moment to have been given
a clear run on goal by Vine around the quarter hour mark but he
just overran the ball and it went out for a goal kick.
The match officials incurred the wrath of the Cardiff
fans after 19 minutes as QPR took the lead. Working the ball through
midfield after a Mikele Leigertwood throw in wide on the right the
Rs put together another classy move that ended with Borrowdale
laying the ball into Vines feet on the edge of the box and
he in turn feeding a perfect through ball into Jay Simpson in the
area. He looked offside at the time, and on the video afterwards,
but the flag stayed down and the loan Arsenal front man was able
to calmly slide home his first ever QPR goal past the helpless David
Marshall.
The home crowd gave the referee and his assistant
plenty of abuse for the next ten minutes or so and that, in my opinion,
led to a booking for Damion Stewart who received a yellow for a
fine tackle on Chopra a that cleared the ball out for a throw in
text book style a couple of minutes after the goal. The crowd bayed
for blood and Probert obliged very harsh card for Stewart
that one. The resulting free kick was smashed into the wall from
distance by Whittingham but the feeling that the referee was keen
to even things up only increased when Ben Watson was crudely chopped
down during a promising looking counter attack and did not even
receive a free kick when moments earlier Stewart had been penalised
and yellow carded for a far more meagre offence.
Twice around the half hour mark QPR had chances to
double their lead. First Simpson went close to his second when he
held the ball up in the penalty area, turned Hudson, led him a merry
dance to the corner of the six yard box and then drifted a low shot
just wide of the far post with Marshall well beaten. Then two minutes
later Watson fired over from the edge of the box. In between those
two chances Chris Burke caught a volley perfectly (there's that
word again) on the edge of the box but the ball fizzed straight
at Cerny about three feet off the ground and the Czech keeper dealt
with it a lot more comfortably than he would have been able to had
it been either side of him.
QPR were the better side by some considerable distance
though, and they were playing some really excellent football at
times. Watson and Rowlands were imperious in the centre of midfield
and the Rs were stringing moves of ten, 15 even 20 passes
together with regularity and ease. The QPR fans were even cheering
the passes at several stages during the game and we really did not
have a bad player on the park. Cardiff for their part gave the ball
away cheaply and looked nervous under pressure from their own fans
who turned on them with a speed rarely seen outside Molineux and
hindered their teams chances of doing anything here.
The richly deserved second goal arrived five minutes
before half time. Again Cardiff gave the ball away sloppily with
Joe Ledley turning possession over to Wayne Routledge just inside
the QPR half. Routledge, predictably booed throughout by the Cardiff
fans when they werent too busy abusing their own players,
carried the ball forward 50 yards to the edge of the City penalty
area before laying a perfect ball across to Jay Simpson who confidently
drilled it home first time for his second goal of the game.
QPRs players, fans and management probably
expected to face some sort of Cardiff backlash at the start of the
second half but with the home crowd remaining silent except to boo
and heckle their own players it never materialised and in fact it
was the visitors who came out all guns blazing at the start of the
second period. The game should have been tied up within five minutes
of the restart. More nervous play in Cardiff midfield, this time
by Taiwo, enabled Ben Watson to steal possession back and feed Rowan
Vine into space down the left channel of the penalty box. The angle
was ideal for Vines favoured right foot but his shot just
did not have the required bend on it and ended up hitting the base
of the far post and rebounding away to safety. Bouyed by this Vine
set off on a trademark run at the Cardiff defence on the very next
attack but his low shot was dealt with by Marshall on this occasion.
The Rs had another chance to score moments
later when Ben Watsons mishit corner flew through the six
yard box and was just about scrambled away by Quinn at the back
post as Kaspars Gorkss threatened to turn it over the line.
Dave Jones had seen enough and started to make changes
to his team each one more mystifying than the last. Whittingham,
Citys outstanding ball player and chief threat from set pieces,
was taken off for youngster Josh Magennis while Solomon Taiwo, who
had at least shown one or two tidy touches, went off for defensive
central midfielder Gavin Rae while Ledley who had been terrible
on the day remained on the field. Magennis could have introduced
himself to the game with a spectacular goal as he attempted a first
time volley on a dropping ball in the penalty box but he took a
fresh air shot to the delight of the travelling QPR fans.
Jones then took off Jay Bothryod who, while obviously
not very good on the day, was at least a physical focal point to
the attack against Stewart and Gorkss and replaced him, bizarrely,
with centre-half-cum-defensive-central-midfielder Riccy Scimeca.
What on earth he had in mind there I dont know but it killed
Cardiffs hopes once and for all. Scimeca wasnt very
good ten years ago and is certainly not the player you want on the
field when two nil down at home with 25 minutes left to play. Dave
Jones is a manger I rate quite highly but he, along with his team,
had a bloody nightmare on Saturday.
For his part Jim Magilton sent on first Pellicori
and then Agyemang for Simpson, who was given a standing ovation
by the travelling fans, and Vine. Pellicoris first action
was to win a free kick on the edge of the box when Quinn crudely
chopped him down and received a fully justified yellow card. Buzsaky
stepped up to take the free kick, curling the ball over the wall
and a fraction wide of the post with Marshall stationary covering
the other side of the goal. The Italian striker later picked up
a booking of his own for deliberately handling a Cardiff pass as
it went past him.
There is no such thing as a perfect performance,
but this was just about as close to it as you will ever see. QPR
were brilliant from one to eleven, back to front and left to right
- far superior to Cardiff in every single department for every single
minute of the game. The key to it all was the impressive central
midfield partnership of Watson and Rowlands. The passing game of
the former guided Rangers round the pitch while the energy and leadership
of the captain was the driving force behind the whole performance.
Rowlands was everywhere and made such a difference to us
a clear man of the match.
Akos Buzsaky was back to something like his best,
Wayne Routledge played very well, Gorkss and Stewart looked unbeatable
back together again and both Borrowdale and Leigertwood coped well
with Cardiffs main threat that, contrary to popular belief,
comes from Whittingham and Burke in my opinion rather than Michael
Chopra. Jay Simpson will get a lot of the headlines for a fine double
and he certainly deserves recognition as well I have been
a bit mystified by the relying on a kid, not capable
of playing up front by himself, why cant we just
get a proven striker in here criticism that has gone Simpsons
way so far because for me he has done very well in all three games
played so far and thankfully on Saturday he converted the chances
to complete the good approach play he puts in. Vine alongside him
started slowly but seemed to be getting back to form in the second
half and was unlucky not to score.
Cardiff for their part started slowly and conceded
possession in bad areas. This very quickly drew abuse, booing and
heckling from their own supporters and that in turn induced a nervousness
in their game. If we are as bad as that at Loftus Road then its
little wonder our team is currently doing better on the road because
for me the home faithful, bearing in mind Cardiff were fourth at
the start of play, were very harsh on their own team and really
hindered their performance.
Magilton, possibly through a combination of injury
and total accident, appears to have stumbled across a couple of
combinations and a system that works really well for us. Watson
and Rowlands should be the first name on the team sheet from now
on as the central midfield pairing. I know Leigertwood can play
a holding role, and Mahon as well, and I know Faurlin has cost us
a fair bit and passes the ball nicely, but those two had an all
round game between them on Saturday that was both solid defensively
and inventive when going forward. That is the central midfield pairing
from now on no question at all. Likewise at centre half where Gorkss
and Stewart were back to their formidable best of last season. Akos
Buzsaky and Wayne Routledge should also keep possession of the wingers
jerseys regardless of any return to form or fitness of Ephraim,
Taarabt, Cook, Faurlin and others.
As well as the three valuable points and the relief
at seeing a talented but so far lacklustre QPR side finally click
together this game and result should bring an end to Magiltons
chopping and changing. This starting eleven, selected consistently
and playing like this, and this time next year Rodders
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