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Pathetic Disgrace follows Paterson Brace

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Burnley took away a point from Carrow Road after drawing 2-2 with Norwich City on Saturday and under normal circumstances a lot of Clarets fans may well have taken that result before the start of this clash. The truth is though we once again let slip a two goal lead and in the proverbial game of two halves converted an energetic, excellent team performance of the first half into one of pure dross in the second. There can be no excuses for the second half showing and the most disappointed player in the end must surely have been Martin Paterson. Pato had been given his chance in the starting eleven by Brian Laws for the first time since the Preston game in early September. Not only that but this time his talents were not wasted by playing him out wide. He was given the ideal chance to shine up front replacing Chris Iwelumo. He shone like a beacon too scoring two goals in a seven minute spell during the first half to give the Clarets a 2-0 lead at half-time.

There was more to the half than that though. We had Norwich City completely rattled and had by far the greater possession. It was an excellent team performance and so many individuals were on form, not least Martin Paterson. The Canaries fans were incensed with loud boos greeting the home team and manager as they headed for the dressing room. We had them on the ropes; surely we could now go on and win our first league win on the road this season? Hang on though this was Burnley we were talking about and all those horrible thoughts about what happened recently at Bramall Lane came back to haunt us.

You have to give credit to Norwich City who came out a different team in the second half and they now seemed to have a determination about them with substitute, Anthony McNamee giving heart to the side and running rings round a shell-shocked Burnley defence. There was still no excuse though for our woeful performance in the second half. We simply capitulated and spent the whole time it seemed ensconced in our own half unable to break out and mount any meaningful attacks. The pressure for the Clarets fans was unbearable especially when the Canaries deservedly got a goal back after Chris Martin scored for them on 63 minutes.

You just sensed now we were going to chuck away another two points and maybe even three with the Canaries now in the ascendency playing with the belief that the equaliser was just around the corner. The relentless pressure continued but somehow we held on until the second minute of the four minutes of added time before the inevitable happened. Although there was a suspicion of handball, Andrew Crofts popped up to score from close range to break the hearts of the entire weary travelling Clarets contingent who had made the long trek to Norfolk There was just time for Crofts to then be shown a red card after picking up a second yellow and that was it another miserable day for the Clarets. Yes, we didn`t lose and a point against a club in the top six on their home is some sort of achievement. But this felt like a defeat and not for the first time on the road. The last time we could celebrate an away win in the league was against Hull City at the KC Stadium in the Premier League clash back in April. That win was a long time coming too being our only win away that season.

This is now beyond a joke. Are we now so mentally round up about not being capable of winning away, we proceed to continually prove it? Is there a psychological factor at play here in the minds of the players? There is absolutely no excuse for losing a two goal lead and after Sheffield United we now seem to be making a habit of it.

The loss of these points is now beginning to tell, we are fast becoming just one of a number of also-rans hovering in and around the play-offs zone but not being good enough or consistent enough to stand out from the crowd. We are now in 9th spot with 22 points from 15 games, two points behind 6th placed club, Ipswich Town. Yes we are still in with a chance of finishing in the top six but the hope of taking this league by storm after a season in the top flight is evaporating fast. Were we not one of the favourites to go straight back up before the start of the season? So much for punditry then with Middlesbrough currently second from bottom and everybody`s favourite to be Langue champions in the summer.

QPR though beat Reading 3-1 on home soil on Saturday to increase their lead over the Clarets to eleven points and return to the top of the Championship table. Cardiff could overtake them if they beat Swansea at home in the fierce Welsh derby today (Sunday). If they do win we will be a massive 13 points behind them and it increasingly looks like an automatic promotion place is out of our reach barring some miracle that sees Cardiff and/or QPR go on a bad run and the Clarets start a winning one. Shock, horror though that will mean actually winning on the road!

Brian Laws had a few selection headaches ahead of the Canaries clash with virtually the whole squad to choose from except of course for our long-term injured midfielder, Chris McCann.

In the end he made just one change from the QPR game with Martin Paterson being given his chance in the starting eleven replacing Chris iwelumo up front. This was perhaps a surprising choice considering Iwelumo is our leading goal scorer but then big Chris has struggled recently on the road and failed to score away all season. Nevertheless this was a brave decision by Laws and one that would bear fruit. Grezza kept his place in the starting eleven in the holding midfield role and it was perhaps surprising that no room could be found for the obvious talents of England Under 21 International, Jack Cork unless he was still suffering slightly from the stomach bug that affected a number of players recently. He once more was sidelined to the bench. Duff and Carlisle remained at the heart of the defence although it was revealed later that Bikey had suffered a recurrence of a rib injury which explained his absence from the eighteen.

In summary we lined up as follows:

Burnley: Grant, Mears, Duff, Carlisle, Fox, Alexander, Marney, Elliott, Eagles, Paterson (Iwelumo 81), Rodriguez

Substitutes: Jensen, Edgar, Cort, Cork, Wallace, Iwelumo, Thompson

Both teams came out wearing black armbands in memory of John Benson who sadly passed away recently. John had connections with both clubs. He was a former Canaries player and of course a managerial side-kick to John Bond at both Carrow Road and Turf Moor before becoming our manager in August 1984 after Bond departed. His tenure was not the happiest one in our history but he did his best. He left the club in May 1985, after being sacked following Burnley`s relegation.

Referee, Trevor Kettle got this pot-boiler of a game underway with Burnley brewing up a strategy to get their first away win on the road this season (Sorry Kettle jokes are inevitable!)

Burnley started brightly with Chris Eagles leading the charge. He could only shoot straight at Canaries keeper John Ruddy though after a run through the heart of the home defence. In the 7th minute Eagles looked threatening again, this time darting in from the right to unleash a shot that hit the side-netting.

Paterson then linked well with Mears getting to the by-line before unleashing a cross straight into the path of Rodriguez. A last gasp challenge though robbed Jay Rod of the chance to shoot with the goal wide open. It was all Burnley at this stage and next Dean Marney tried his luck from distance but the shot was deflected for a corner.

The Canaries first meaningful attack woke up the home contingent fans after 20 minutes play. Martin went on an overlapping run down the right before crossing for Lappin to head downwards towards goal. Lee Grant though parried well to save and deny Norwich taking an undeserved lead.

Six minutes later though and the Clarets finally broke the deadlock. With Mears overlapping on the flank, Elliott instead chose to cut inside and pass to Rodriguez. Rodriguez now spotted and found Mears who took the ball to the by-line before pulling back to feed Paterson. Paterson said ‘thank you very much` and coolly slotted home from eight yards out to put the Clarets 1-0 up.

A few minutes later just past the half-hour mark we were 2-0 up and again it was that man Pato who took the honours. Paterson this time latched onto a pass from Dean Marney after a well-timed run. Ruddy though first saved his shot but the ball bounced awkwardly for the keeper off his arm and slowly went over the line to double the Clarets lead.

The Clarets were now in complete control with a woeful Norwich only able to put over a few crosses that were easy fodder for Grant to mop up. 2-0 then at half-time to the Clarets but little did we know what was about to happen in the second-half.

Canaries` gaffer, Paul Lambert made what proved to be an inspirational change at half-time bringing on Anthony McNamee to replace the lacklustre Lappin.

Norwich came out with all guns blazing and Burnley just could not seem to contain them. Leon Barnett got in a downwards header from a McNamee`s cross in the 50th minute only for Grant to save well. It was the lively McNamee again just past the hour mark who threatened the Burnley defence. His dangerous cross was headed clear by Mears in spectacular fashion but now we were under relentless pressure with the home side having all the possession and the home crowd sensing all was not lost just yet.

Brian Laws sensed he had to do something and decided to bring on Wallace for Eagles in the 70th minute but it had precisely no effect with Norwich pulling a goal back just a minute later.

Chris Martin scored with a simple finish from close range after a Crofts cut-back.

The pressure continued with the Clarets unable it seemed to mount any meaningful attack and get out of their own half. It was desperate at times and woeful to watch.

The influential McNamee got the better of Fox with 15 minutes on the clock remaining. Cutting inside past the left back, he let rip with a shot that skidded low towards target The ball though hit the inside of the post before flying across the face of an open goal with the Clarets fans now having palpitations.

Laws had seen enough by now so on came Cork for Marney and then a few minutes later, Iwelumo replaced Paterson who had seen little of the ball during the whole of the second half. The changes once more had little effect as Norwich continued to batter the Clarets defence. They were now desperate to get the equaliser being spurred on by the noisy, expectant home crowd.

Four minutes of stoppage time were announced and you could hear the groans and sense the nervousness and worry on all the Clarets fans faces. The inevitable happened with two minutes of added time played. It was Crofts who pounced to score from six yards out to snatch a point. It should have been disallowed though with replays clearly showing he had controlled the ball with his upper arm before shooting. To be honest though, Norwich were worth a point and we should have held our heads in disgrace after letting slip a two goal lead in such dramatic woeful fashion.

The only saving grace is once again we now have two home games on the trot with Doncaster Rovers on Tuesday night followed by Watford the following Saturday. There can be no excuses this time, we simply have to win both games but can we? The lads must be really disheartened after chucking this one in at Norwich and the inability to win on the road just like last season is now putting tremendous pressure on us to win at home.

The formula to win at home and draw away used to be a good maxim but we need something extra these days with the Championship such a difficult division to get out of. Will we ever win away this season? The more this goes on the more you doubt it!

Match Stats

Norwich: Ruddy, R Martin, Barnett, Ward, Smith (Fox 53), Crofts, Hoolahan, Smith, Lappin (McNamee 46), Holt, Jackson (C Martin 63),

Subs Not Used: Rudd, Askou, Gill, Johnson

Goals: C Martin 71, Crofts 90+2

Booked: Red Card for Crofts (second bookable offence)

Burnley: Grant, Mears, Duff, Carlisle, Fox, Alexander, Marney (Cork 78), Elliott, Eagles (Wallace 70), Paterson (Iwelumo 81), Rodriguez

Subs Not Used: Jensen, Edgar, Cort, Thompson

Goals: Paterson 26,33

Booked: Elliott

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

Ref: Trevor Kettle (Berkshire)

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14 comments

  • turfmanphil says:

    Still fuming about this result. What can we do? Do we need to get some new players in the Jan window. Something is clearly not working and we cant afford to keep dropping these silly points from a position of strength

  • Fedupclaret says:

    Not good enough, like you say tmp under normal circumstances you would say that was a good point but these are not normal circumstances yet again two goals up. If we had got half the points we should have had away from home we would be putting the pressure on the top two. Come January how much do you give BL who to me seems to struggle with tactics, like we all say Jack Cork must be signed so that could cost at least 2 mil so another 2mil for more players. Yet again we must win our next two home games which are not easy.

  • Grimsby Claret says:

    We are 9th now mid table, thats not good enough. at least Cardiff llost today, but we are going to have to work wonders to get in the top 2 now, anything less than a top 6 finish would be a disaster.

  • BowthorpeCanary says:

    I think you have to blame Laws for what happened. You completely played us off the park first half. Second half you seemed to come out with the game-plan of time-wasting for the entirety of the half, trying to defend a 2-goal lead. Had you come out and played football, I reckon you’d have won. You didn’t and you got what you deserved really.

    Our equalising goal should have been disallowed for handball definitely but I we should have had a free-kick in the build up to your opening goal so swings and roundabouts, I suppose.

    You’re a good side, you just need to keep going for the full 90 minutes – time-wasting when there’s 45 minutes to play rarely works. Good luck for the rest of the season (‘cept the reverse fixture of course!)

  • skutter169 says:

    I’m with Phil, I’m fuming. I can’t understand what it is, were playing well, we score goals, we get in good positions and then throw it all away! In my opinion weve dropped 8 points, 8! Bristol (missed a pen and just couldn’t score), Palace (Couldn’t score), Sheff Utd (Threw it away) and now Norwich (threw it away). 8 points, that would be thirty, we’d be third pushing Cardiff at the min. I don’t know what we need, I think were good enough, Im just at a loss to understand it. Plus were now below Leeds and I’m getting it in neck at work!!! Doncaster and Watford are now must wins. 6 points at home is a must!

  • Bernie Lee says:

    You forgot Middlesboro and Ipswich !

  • cornwallclaret says:

    I reckon BowthorpeCanary has got it right. BL must accept the responsibility. Get Jack Cork signed up and play positive football, we have the players to do this, the present system is clearly not working, at least let us lose out with spirit and not just whimper out.

  • Couch Potato says:

    Not disagreeing with anyone on here, but I would add that, as well as playing the positive football we can play, we also need to be able to play a more controlled game, because there will be times when we need to be able to do that, especially if (somewhat bigger ‘if’ now, it feels like) we get back into the PL. And the only way to learn how to play in a more controlled way is to practice it in real matches. So I’m not as negative on the gaffer as some on here seem to be for trying to help the team add another string to its bow. Having said that, I was struggling to understand a couple of his subs at Carrow.

  • Billy Hamiltons Boot says:

    How to say this? My thoughts about Laws are starting to crystallise and they’re not good. He just doesn’t seem to have the tactical nouse required. We seem to be where we are in the league in spite of him. If we had a halfway decent manager (like a Coyle) we’d be top 3 with the squad we have. Dare I say it Laws out?

  • RickersTwickers says:

    We’re all entitled to our views but it is sometimes easy to criticise the manager. Sure, he has to take his share of the blame but when they cross the white line the players have to take reponsibility for their performance too. I’m not so sure things are so bad that we need to be throwing ourselves off the tower just yet. Personally, I blame the coach driver !!!

  • WelshClaret says:

    The best form of defence is attack, and I also agree with BowthorpeCanary. It sounds as though we came out in the second half to protect the lead rather than continue with attacking a side we had on the run. A third goal would have changed everything. I’m not knocking Laws and I still hope he puts it together, but I’m just begining to wonder about his ‘tactical nouse’ as well. He’s still learning himself, having never worked with such a good squad as this. But I hope he learns quickly, because we definitely need to be, and should be competing for the top 2 spots. Without Bothroyd, Cardiff were surprisingly average and there was nothing there that made me think they were well ahead of us, the other way around in fact. We’ve got the players and we’ve all seen them play superbly together, but they’ve got to do it for 90 minutes and in game after game. Come on Brian, we can still do this. UTC.

  • Fedupclaret says:

    WelshClaret agree with some of the things you have said but the line he’s still learning, his he not one of the most experienced managers in the football leagues. The tactical nouse is a big part of a good manager one who can change things during a game which i don’t see with BL.

  • canadaclaret says:

    Looking at what Stevie Cotterill has done at Pompey, do you think we should have gone back for him!!!!! It does seem we are throwing matches away at the moment. Let’s hope it comes good tomorrow and Saturday

  • turfmanphil says:

    Interesting somment re Cotterill. I always thought there was more to him than met the eye. His forte seems to be taking a struggling side with few squad players,building a decent squad and getting them to survive/consolidate. Whether he can take them further though seems to be his challenge one he couldn’t quite do for us before the boo boys got on his back! Good luck to him,I hope he proves a lot of his Burnley critics wrong. Cotterill is defence minded,but was accused of dull football! Sometimes we need dull football to win matches!

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