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Burnley Babes Dream, Slumber and Blunder!

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If anybody would like any evidence that we might struggle this season, then the performance against Middlesbrough at Turf Moor on Saturday should be enough to spell it out in abundance. A 2-0 defeat did not even begin to tell the story of how bad we were. We were simply shocking and let`s remember this was exactly the same starting eleven that did so well against Derby County at Pride Park before the International break. You could not have seen a more vivid difference in our performance between those two games. Burnley fans were left hoping that the Derby win away was not a fluke after now going three home games without a win and still looking for our first league victory at Turf Moor this season. It was the manner of the defeat though that hurt the most rather than the defeat itself!

We should have been rested after the break, we should have been buoyed up by the Derby win and raring to go again. Instead we put in one of the worst performances I can remember in recent times, probably even worse than anything we ever saw under Brian Laws. Where was the passion? Where was the skill? Where was the determination and more importantly where was the captain and most of the players?

This performance clearly showed why we need experience in the side and why we need more depth in the squad both in terms of quality and quantity. This was a game pitching boys against men and the men of Boro gave the kids a lesson on how to play football. They came with an aggressive game plan; a strategy that tore us to pieces. We simply had no answer to it! Tony Mowbray certainly won this battle over the relatively inexperienced Eddie Howe!

Goalkeeping blunders, a shocking defence, a non-existent midfield, invisible wingers and attack? Exactly what attack? I am not sure I can remember more than two attempts on goal in the whole match?

Boro took about two seconds each time to turn a chance on the break into a promising attack. Time and time again, they looked threatening! We on the other hand spent most of our time clueless passing the ball sideways, backwards and skyward with the Boro defence able to amble back without even breaking sweat.

Let`s be clear on the evidence of this performance, Brian Easton is not the new Danny Fox, Kieran Trippier is hardly a Tyrone Mears, none of the wingers could hold a candle to Chris Eagles and Wade Elliott must be as happy as Larry to have left the sinking ship! As for Marney and McCann, words fail me!

This by the way is not me being grumpy, it is not me being negative, it is me being realistic and being very, very concerned after seeing what I saw on Saturday. This cannot continue or we will quite simply be keeping a closer eye on the three relegation places rather than a top six spot.

I think probably we are still performing as badly as Owen Coyle did in our opening salvoes of our promotion season so perhaps there is still hope but there is one statistic I found recently that sums up the problems Eddie Howe now faces in my opinion! The average age of players signed by Owen Coyle in summer 2008? Well, 25.5. Average age of players signed by Howe in 2011? 21. Busby Babes we were not! I just hope all the directors looking on maybe felt just a little bit of concern and guilt for the lottery and gamble they have now put this club under.

The defeat by the way sees us drop to 19th spot in the table, and although we have a game in hand over most other clubs we are now just one point off the drop zone. In ‘Eddie Howe We Trust`? Yes, of course that is still true but put it this way we have to trust he can sort this mess out with the limited squad he now has and quickly starting with some convincing loan signings to bolster the woefully inadequate defence.

Full Match Report

Burnley fans expectations were high before the game after getting the first league win under our belt against high-flying Derby at Pride Park two weeks ago before the International break. Now was the time to plough on and follow that up with our first home win of the season against similar high-flying opposition! Boro before this game were in 4th spot on 11 points from 5 games.

The last game Middlesbrough lost away from home was against the Clarets back in April last season and since that time they had won all four of their Championship games on the road. Now we know the result, it is hard to believe Boro had improved so much whilst Burnley had regressed so badly in under six months.

Eddie Howe as widely predicted decided to stick with the same starting eleven as the Derby game for this clash. Why change a winning team after so comprehensively beating the Rams in their last Championship game? The only changes came on the bench with of course Wade Elliott having left for Birmingham on transfer deadline day effectively being replaced by new signing, Junior Stanislas. The bench had a ‘black` look about it with all five being of African or Afro-Caribbean origin. Alex MacDonald was the one to lose out compared to the Rams bench, allowing Marvin Bartley to return following his red card and three-match automatic ban. In summary then the line-up was a s follows:

Jensen, Trippier, Edgar, Mee, Easton, Treacy, McCann, Marney, Wallace, Austin, Rodriguez

Subs: Grant, Amougou, Bartley, Stanislas, Hines

West Yorkshire referee, Mark Haywood got the game underway on a warm, close but showery day in Burnley. Boro fans hearts sank when they were forced to make an early change in defence following the loss of injured defender, Stephen McManus. Former Clarets loan, Rhys Williams dropped back into defence to take up his old role after being used in midfield more-and-more by Boro in recent times. The Boro fans need not have worried though with Burnley failing to test the Boro defence for most of the game.

The scene was set for the remainder of the game after Boro took the lead in virtually their first attack of the match with just 10 minutes gone. Boro hot shot Marvin Emnes started the move catching Burnley out on the break. Barry Robson took up the challenge crossing deep for Hoyte to test the defence with a bobbling high volley in the box. Easton attempted to head clear but the ball fell to Bailey who managed to shoot through a crowd of players to beat a diving Jensen.

The match then seemed to deteriorate into a stop-start scrappy sort of game for a time held up by a sequence of injuries to Boro players which disturbed the natural flow of the game whilst frustrating the Clarets players and fans alike. It was also Boro though and danger man Emnes came close to doubling the lead for the visitors after letting rip with a shot that needed Ben Mee to block the ball after getting his body in the way.

Our first real attempt came on 27 minutes following a corner from a deflected Rodriguez shot. Mee got up to the Wallace delivery heading the ball down for Edgar to collect and attempt a left-footed hooked volley. The top of the crossbar though got in the way and Boro fans could breathe a sigh of relief! That`s all we really had to show for a very disappointing first 45 minutes and if we thought at half-time, things could only get better, we were sadly mistaken!

Eddie Howe did not make any changes for the start of the second-half, perhaps surprisingly after the dire first 45 minutes. He did though try a change in tactics moving to a 3-5-2 formation in an effort to try and boss the midfield and keep Boro`s at bay. Did it work? Did it *****!!

Four minutes into the second half, Boro got the second goal they so richly deserved! Bennett pounced with a sharp finish in the box after a Marvin Emnes shot was blocked by Jensen. The goal though once more exposed the weakness of our defence and our inability to control Boro on the break. Now we had a mountain to climb with most Clarets fans wondering if indeed we were ever going to get out of base camp!

Howe by now at long last had seen enough. On came Stanislas to replace a lacklustre Treacy and make his Clarets debut in the 51st minute. At first he seemed a lively prospect but even he faded in the latter stages.

He did though almost have an immediate impact when he came on looking good as he fed Trippier out on the flank. Trippier linked well with McCann before the captain at long last tested the keeper for our first time in the match! Loan keeper, Carl Ikeme at full stretch had to deal with the vicious drive from McCann just managing to turn the ball round the post. Another chance went begging for the Clarets when Austin picked up the ball after being put clear by Rodriguez. He pulled the trigger too early though and that would be virtually the last action from the striker who suddenly in this match seemed to be the shadow of his former self compared to recent games.

With 20 minutes to play, time for a double-substitution with Hines and Bartley coming on to replace an off-form Austin and Marney. We did look a little sharper to be honest but realistically we never looked like reducing the arrears and most Clarets fans wanted the referee to call time so we could all go home and sulk!

If anybody was going to score, it looked more likely to be Boro who continued to play impressively right up to the end. Boro in typical fashion were once again on the break after one of our corners broke down. Within seconds, we were under pressure again when Hoyte put Emnes clear with just Jensen to beat. Thankfully his touch was poor allowing the Beast to rush out and save the danger and prevent yet more embarrassment for the Clarets on one hell of a poor day at the office.

All Clarets fans could do after four long minutes of added time that nobody wanted, was quickly get off the ground hoping that somehow we could recover our dignity when we play another Boro next Saturday at London Road. Bring on Posh! Perhaps though this time, it was not said with that much enthusiasm!

Match Stats

Burnley: Jensen, Trippier, Mee, Edgar, Easton, McCann, Marney (Bartley 70), Wallace, Treacy (Stanislas 51), Rodriguez, Austin (Hines 70)

Subs Not Used: Grant, Amougou

Booked: Wallace, Treacy, Rodriguez

Middlesbrough: Ikeme, Hoyte, Bennett, Bates, McManus (Haroun 4), Williams, McMahon, Bailey, Robson (Arca 80), McDonald, Emnes (Zemmama 85)

Subs Not Used: Martin, Kink

Goals: Bailey 10, Bennett 49

Booked: Bennett, Robson

Possession 46% Burnley, 54% Middlesbrough (Source: BBC Sport)

Ref: Mark Haywood (West Yorks)

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16 comments

  • turfmanphil says:

    Sorry chaps, my new found positivity just about evaporated after this shocker! Very,very worried now

  • Fedupclaret says:

    I was going to start with gutless and no passion but Boro came with a game plan and if we were still playing now we would not have scored. Why Bikey is not in the team to give it some steel is beyond me, and i don’t like singling players out from an all-round bad team performance but what Marney and Wallace bring to the team i just don’t know. Bikey should have replaced Mee in the defence or Marney in midfield, the most worrying thing was nothing on the bench to change things. Most teams that get promoted are big strong and well organized not small light weight teams doing fancy flicks. Hope EH phone is red-hot trying to get some load players in before the next game.

  • turfmanphil says:

    Correction we are now 20th and not in bottom three on goal difference. Brum just beat Millwall 3-0 at home! Wade gets 15 mins off bench

  • Grimsby Claret says:

    We were Boys against men, But thats what Eddie wanted no experience these kids are no where near where we need them to be. I

  • YorkshireClaret says:

    I wasn’t at the game but by judging the reports if these players are the the ones who want to play for us it might have been a better idea to keep the ones who apparently “didn’t” want to play for us. I don’t know how we could go from great to shocking in the space of 2 games. Hope Eddie can work his magic and get players in, the squad needs competition for places or players will get complacent.

  • turfmanphil says:

    Bottom line? We can’t afford it! Competition for places, I mean!

  • turfmanphil says:

    Actually we probably could afford it,if the tight gits on the Board gotta grip and stopped playing silly buggers over the salary cap

  • VinRogue says:

    Can’t disagree with that tmp other than mom, first goal Edgar was at right back when it would have helped if he had been in the middle, also leant back and blasted over from 6 yards, if he was mom then it can only be by default as I did not have a BFC mom.

  • turfmanphil says:

    Totally agree VR, I was at a loss to name anyone MoM, but went with the flow simply because despite his hectic week, he was the only one who refused to go asleep quite so easily as the rest!

  • turfmanphil says:

    GC, how much did Eddie actually want to reduce the age of the squad? He says he did, but is it just co-incidence then that the ones we have got shut of in the 30 plus age bracket also happen to have been probably earning our more expensive salaries? A useful peg to hang his hat on then and kill two birds with one stone whilst maintaining the Board’s strategy of reducing the salary cap burden? Call me cynical if you want but it does look suspicious to me

  • CrosspoolClarets says:

    I’m concerned about the lack of father figures / mentors / leaders when things don’t go well. I think off the pitch offers a clue to on it. The players were shocking at the player of year awards in May, and when I gave some grief to Bentley and Eddie, the manager didn’t say a word in defence. Twitter this week has been a lesson in bad language and tantrums (mainly Austin), and after Boro a pal was inadvisably chastising (politely) the players when they left the ground and gots dogs abuse in reply (Wallace mainly) with the captain doing nothing to defuse. A crisis is brewing I suspect, Eddie needs to grow some cahonas as Mr Bush may say.

  • turfmanphil says:

    You do wonder what is going on behind the scenes. I continually hear rumours about power struggles at the club and management reorganisations. Folk only have to hear this stuff at the club and it negatively cascades all the way down. Maybe all this uncertainity coupled with seeing so many changes on the playing side is adversely affecting manager and players alike.

  • sheclaret says:

    I think I have just about recovered from Saturdays performance, after having had to drown my sorrows on Saturday night. What a diabolical performance, it looked like the lads had just turned up from a night on the beer down Lava nad Ignite. Got to agree with vin there was no man of the match. I do think McCann needs stripping of his captaincy, or grow a pair, as he is not giving orders or talking to anyone. We need someone who is prepared to have a go when they are not performing.

  • AndyHo says:

    Find us a well tested centre half with staying power EH. Should be easy?

  • VinRogue says:

    Amougou is our best Centre Half imo, however due to circumstances beyond the supporters control he seems to be Managements least favourite team member and so will not be selected as he has to spend time in the naughty corner and is allowed one phone call a week to Remco……..(waste of wages or what)

  • CrosspoolClarets says:

    I would say that Eddie’s worst decision of the summer is to make McCann captain. Anybody who has chatted to him would know he isn’t captain material, but is a very good player. He is playing far worse than at the tail end of last season so we can’t say it’s due to his injury. We need a Caldwell type signing and make that person captain and let Chris McCann go back to what he does best.

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