| FA
Cup Third Round |
| Sunday
January 3rd |
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Sheffield
United 1
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Queens
Park Rangers 1 |
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| R.Cresswell
45 mins |
J.Simpson
39 mins |
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Team
Line Up
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24.
R.Cerny 6/10
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2.
P.Ramage 6/10
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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 6/10
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10.
A.Buzsaky 5/10
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6.
M.Leigterwood (c) 6/10
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18. A. Faurlin 6/10 
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7.
W.Routledge 7/10
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25.
H.Ephraim (71) 6/10
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23.
J.Simpson 6/10
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11. P.Agyemang
5/10
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9.
H.Helguson (85) 6/10
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| Subs
Not Used: Taylor, Hall, Connolly, Balanta, Parker |
| Substitutes
in yellow |
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Match report from
www.clubfanzine.com/QPR
QPR hope to
end years of cup pain in replay after Sheff Utd draw full
match report
by Clive Whittingham
QPR will face Sheffield United again next week in
a cup replay to decide if the Rs can end the worst current
FA Cup run in the Football League and progress to the fourth round
for the first time in eight years.
6 comments have been left on this story
QPR are still without an FA Cup win since 2001, the longest run
of any league team, but they will get another crack at Sheffield
United next week after a dismal draw at Bramall Lane. On a day so
cold it bit into your soul and in front of a crowd almost half what
Sheffield United would expect to attract for this fixture in the
league the famed magic of the FA Cup was in short supply
but QPR deserve credit for at least sticking together a little bit
more than they had done at Ipswich a week earlier and showing more
organisation and determination to get a result.
This was to be a game of such appallingly low quality
it became painful to watch at times. It seems such a waste to see
so many clearly talented footballers forced to play in this way
by managers lacking the balls and brains to allow them to do anything
different but that is often the life of a Championship fan, particularly
when Sheffield United are involved. Id love to spend time
talking to Kevin Blackwell about his footballing philosophy
although I cannot imagine it would be a particularly long conversation.
United seem to be set up solely to bully teams out
of possession and then immediately launch the ball long to try and
turn opposing defences around to win throw ins, free kicks and corners.
That really is it and we will sadly play them four times in roughly
eight weeks now because of this result in stark contrast
to the wonderful to watch Burnley side we ended up playing four
times last season. I wont be going to the replay, the first
game I have missed this season, because I just cannot justify paying
to watch this dirge any more.
Rather than play around them, Rangers simply resorted
to similar tactics matching United for style of football
and pattern of play. To adapt a well worn phrase, dont take
on a long ball outfit at long ball because theyll drag you
down to their level and beat you with experience. QPR just about
managed to match United on Sunday but it was abysmal to watch and
thoroughly depressing for the most part.
With Ben Watson and Tommy Williams returning to their
parent clubs last week Gary Borrowdale and Alejandro Faurlin came
back into the side. The former on the left of a back four with Ramage,
Stewart and Gorkss, the latter in a midfield that also included
Buzsaky and Routledge out wide and Mikele Leigertwood in the middle
against his former club. Up front Patrick Agyemang partnered top
scorer Jay Simpson. While Rangers lost two players at the end of
loan spells in the lead up to this fixture they gained a couple
coming the other way as well with Heider Helguson and Hogan Ephraim
back on the bench after spells with Watford and Leeds respectively.
United were still without top scorer Darius Henderson
who is yet to face QPR in either meeting between these sides this
season. Richard Cresswell started in his place having scored at
Loftus Road in December. Plymouth defender Marcel Seip signed on
loan in time to take his place on the bench for this game.
As the game quickly settled into a pattern of hoof,
chase, hoof it straight back at them it took six minutes for a serious
chance to be created. Faurlin and Buzsaky combined to concede a
very soft free kick from a Sheffield United throw wide on the QPR
left. That gave Jamie Ward a chance to deliver a ball to the back
post where everybodys favourite pantomime villain Chris Morgan
headed over when he may have done better.
Bouyed by this the home side went frighteningly close
to taking the lead in the ninth minute. Henri Camara skipped into
the penalty area and, to his credit, stayed on his feet as Kaspars
Gorkss thrust out a leg in desperation. Camara cut the ball back
from the byline to Stephen Quinn who was hugely impressive in the
Loftus Road meeting of these sides last month but on this occasion
contrived to smack the ball against the cross bar from eight yards
out with Cerny all but beaten. It was a sitter, make no mistake.
Having stayed on his feet on that occasion Camara,
easily spotted in black gloves and bright yellow boots and somewhat
smaller than I remember him previously, hit the deck in less convincing
circumstances under a shoulder challenge from Gorkss a few moments
later and was lucky not to be booked. The Senegalese striker also
missed two decent chances early on dragging his first shot
wide and then being denied by a superb ball and all tackle from
Gary Borrowdale covering in behind Gorkss to sweep up a back post
cross.
It took until the 23rd minute for QPR to produce
a threat of any kind on Mark Bunns goal but once Akos Buzsaky
had fired a long range free kick wide after a foul on Agyemang by
Kilgallon the Rs did seem to grow into the game a little more.
Within two minutes Jay Simpson had made the most of a broken passage
of play on halfway to race to the edge of the United penalty box
and unload a low shot on goal that was easily saved. Then on the
half hour Mikele Leigertwood cut inside and curled a left footed
shot high and wide onto the Kop.
The QPR pressure continued when Wayne Routledge broke
into the penalty area ten minutes before half time his low
shot was blocked but the ball rebounded to Faurlin who cracked a
shot towards goal that Bunn beat away with two hands. That was the
first serious save either keeper had had to make but Bunn would
be picking the ball out of the back of his net within three minutes.
In the meantime United picked up two quick fire yellow
cards from our old foe Andy Hall, who did actually have a good game
on Sunday to be fair to him. The first went to Richard Cresswell
for deliberately handling an attempted interception as QPR passed
the ball along their back four for me it was barely worthy
of a quiet word in his ear and it is that robotic, by the book approach
that lets Hall down so often. There could be no complaints about
the second, handed to Andy Taylor who played one game on loan with
QPR back in the dim and distant past, for a crude tackle on Wayne
Routledge close to the touchline.
QPR took the lead six minutes before the break after
achieving two firsts in the match. Firstly, Patrick Agyemang actually
managed to not only get off the ground but do it without ducking
his head at the same time and was therefore able to finally beat
Kilgallon and Morgan to a long ball and flick it on. Buzsaky then
worked very hard to keep the ball in tight to the touchline and
start the games first serious passing move which culminated
with Routledge sending in a low cross that was crisply converted
by Jay Simpson for his tenth goal of the season.
Having enjoyed the better of the first half and taken
the lead five minutes before half time it was important for QPR
to hang on until half time but then that really would not
be our style would it? In fairness to the players the equaliser,
three minutes into first half stoppage time, did come from a corner
that was clearly and obviously a goal kick but the defending from
that point on was very poor indeed. A cross from Warfd after a foul
by Stewart on Evans was over hit and went beyond the touchline before
Morgan retrieved it but the linesman signalled for a corner anyway.
QPR had ample opportunity to clear the ball thereafter but did not
manage it and when Quinn crossed again Cresswell easily got above
Leigertwood to head a soft equaliser past Cerny who may feel he
could have done better. The half time whistle sounded almost as
soon as the ball hit the net.
Having enjoyed marginally the better of the first
half QPR probably felt a little aggrieved to be behind at half time
but they were lucky to still be level at the end of a second period
that belonged much more to Sheffield United. Camara forced Cerny
into a similar double handed save that Bunn had denied Faurlin with
in the first half and Ward curled a cross shot wide of the post
with Cerny well beaten.
QPRs only really serious shot on the goal came
around the hour mark when Routledge whipped a corner into the near
post where Stewart met it full on the volley but the ball flashed
wide of the goal when almost everybody in the away end expected
the net to bulge. That was about as exciting as it got for the travelling
faithful and talk quickly turned back to whether or not Kaspars
Gorkss had starred in a film called Latvian Fist
that one of our travelling party had seen, and if it would be possible
to start a song even more random than the Annies Song John
Denver anthem that United run out to. A brave and persistent attempt
to get the QPR fans singing the Carpenters Close to
You enjoyed some success to the left of the goal.
That jovial mood could soon have evaporated had Radek
Cernys extreme casualness cost us a second goal midway through
the second half. Having collected a loose ball in his hands Cerny
then put the ball down to clear it but dallied, pushed it too far
out of his area and was challenged first by Ward and then by Evans
and somehow managed to scramble the ball away. A more obvious example
of creating a problem where one need not exist you will struggle
to see.
Hart sent on Hogan Ephraim for Buzsaky who was very
ineffective for the most part again but even Ephraim, obviously
keen to impress, was restricted to working hard when tracking back
rather than actually attacking United. Geary was booked for a nasty
foul on him and Faurlin was similarly punished for then fouling
Geary as a scrappy game descended into niggle nastiness.
Ten minutes from time, and with the game seemingly
destined for a draw, Sheffield United came within a whisker of snatching
a winner. Ched Evans won and took a free kick 25 yards out from
goal, Gorkss harshly penalised on this occasion, and lashed the
ball against the underside of the bar, off Radek Cernys foot
and out to Derek Geary who fired over from close range although
he had possibly been flagged offside. It was a stunning free kick
that almost snapped the crossbar in half and Rangers were very lucky
to survive. At the other end a rank first touch from Agyemang denied
him a clear run on goal after Routledge had played him through.
With five minutes left for play Paul Hart introduced
Heider Helguson for Patrick Agyemang and to be honest Im really
glad to see him back. Helgusons problem is fitness, when he
plays I like him a lot and in five minutes plus stoppage time here
he won more ball in the air than Agyemang had managed all afternoon.
He also got a sight of goal from a Faurlin free kick after a foul
on Routledge but having brought the ball down at the back post it
was taken off his toe by Chris Morgan.
During the week I had jokingly said that it might
cheer everybody up a little if somebody could nail Chris Morgan
at some point. From the corner resulting from the Helguson chance,
Damion Stewart did just that kicking the widely detested
United captain square in the mouth while competing for a loose ball
in the area. This brought almost as big a cheer as Simpsons
goal from the away end and various chants from the away end about
letting him die were taken in better part by Morgan than they were
probably intended.
Overall I thought that, quality wise, this was one
of the worst games I've ever seen. Both teams focussed solely on
lumping it long and trying to turn each other around. We put together
one move in the first half and scored from it and that was about
it. I'm hoping, and I believe it to be the case as Hart and Harford
have never ever been long ball merchants before, that this was us
simply adapting and trying to muscle up against ridiculously physical
opponents. We got more than I expected us to from the game so if
that is the case then we did it well.
I thought we shaded the first half for chances, and
United were better than us in the second, but it was an obvious
draw from a long way out and only Evans late free kick provided
any sort of threat to that. I liked the set up and performance of
the defence a lot more although it was still far from perfect and
the goal was extremely soft. Buzsaky was poor again and while we
can all keep saying with some justification that he needs to play
in the middle he also needs to get fitter and think about his game
a lot more - a few times I've noticed recently he plays a ball around
the corner and then when there's nobody there throws his arms about.
Probably team mates should read these things but he's got to look
before playing them and we have to maintain possession much better
than we do.
Ultimately a replay is something nobody wanted and
all I can say is I once again came away thinking thank God I don't
support Sheff Utd. We were a bit spoilt with four games against
an attractive Burnley side in similar circumstances last season,
360 minutes of football against the Blades is like Chinese water
torture. Still, we deserve credit for getting a draw at a difficult
place to go and we must now look to finish the job at Loftus Road
for a chance of a crack and another wonderfully attractive northern
side in round four. It could be Bolton next, if we can stand it.
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