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Weary Defeat on Wearside!

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It looks like curtains for the Clarets with a drop back down to the Championship seeming inevitable after yet another poor, lacklustre and clueless performance this time against the Black Cats at the Stadium of Light. The 2-1 defeat sees the Clarets drop to second from bottom after Hull secured a 0-0 draw away to Birmingham to jump above us with a game in hand. With Bolton and Wigan also winning over the weekend, our only hope is to now win our last three games and hope both West Ham and Hull stumble. West Ham, fourth from bottom are still four points clear of the Clarets and play their game in hand tonight away to Liverpool. If the Hammers pick up any unexpected points at Anfield it is effectively the end of the road for the Clarets with most fans already convinced we will be plying our trade in the Championship again next season.

Clarets fans hopes at the Stadium of Light were high too after that stunning away win against Hull City at the KC Stadium last week and we had thought that 4-1 victory would have given the lads the passion and confidence to try and get their second double and second away win of 2009-10.

The score line suggests a hard fought match but nothing could be further from the truth. We were completely outplayed and outclassed by Sunderland in the first half. Already 2-0 down thanks to goals from Campbell and Bent after 25 and 40 mins we looked a beaten side at half-time. In truth it could have been far worse with our defence seemingly having returned to its all too familiar suicide mode and Sunderland looking to extend their lead even more. We were also so ineffective up front I am struggling to remember one decent attempt on goal.

We looked slightly better in the second half and enjoyed a lot more possession but you just sensed Sunderland were taking it easy. Thompson was looking more effective up front after coming on at half time to replace Paterson but we had to wait until the 82nd minute before we could give Sunderland a scare. Robbie Blake had only been on the pitch a minute but a little bit of magic from the wizard found Thompson who thumped the ball home from 25 yards out. The Clarets now had something to fight for in the last eight minutes of this match and you would have thought it would have stirred them into action to try and get the equaliser. We just never seemed to press enough after that though and despite four minutes of added time we never looked like getting a point.

Just too many of our players were not at the races on Saturday, most notably Chris Eagles. He put in a terrible performance and it looked like his mind was more on his next career move rather than trying to save the Clarets from the drop. He needs to be careful if he wants those Premier League clubs to come-a-bidding in the summer. There was no evidence of showboating in this game! He has been linked with moves to West Brom, Everton and Spurs but if any of the managers of these clubs were there yesterday they might now be having second thoughts after this woeful performance. He was lightweight and totally ineffective. He used to score goals for the Clarets too; I can`t remember his last one (It was actually against West Ham at Upton Park way back in November, only his second of the season so far!)

Hull aside, in addition to woeful individual performances, the tactics also just don`t seem to be working no matter what we try. The number of times I saw Jensen boot the ball up for Fletcher to head on to nobody was unreal. If Fletcher was not heading into a black hole he was chasing around on the wing putting the ball in to nobody! Why do we also persist with playing our strikers out wide? Martin Paterson never has been and never will be a winger. He needs to be in the centre playing off a tall striker in 4-4-2 to be at his best. We may have missed Nugent yesterday who was out with a hamstring injury but surely we can do better in attack than this. I would have played both Eagles and Elliott on the wing and put Paterson upfront with Fletcher. Paterson came off at half-time for being ineffective with Thompson moving into the attack up front and we looked slightly better.

To be honest though it`s no use getting the attack sorted if they don`t get enough service and in this game only Cork looked to be doing enough in the engine room.

There was a lot of debate as to whether we should have brought Robbie Blake on earlier too rather than give him just the last ten minutes to try and impress. A little bit of Blake magic set up our goal but even then we couldn`t seem to turn up the heat to try and get that equaliser and it all seemed to just fizzle out in the end. Blake is an impact player these days; he rarely has the legs to put in a full 90 minute shift. Whether bringing him on earlier in the second half would have given us a better chance is debatable and we will never know.

Oh well three games to go now and they don`t make pleasant reading for Clarets fans. Liverpool and Spurs at home with Birmingham away squeezed in the middle and we need to win all three. Barring a miracle it`s Barnsley and Donny Rovers next season for us. Such a shame!

The Clarets Team Sheet

The Clarets had to make one enforced change with news that David Nugent had picked up a hamstring injury and couldn`t feature. Chris Eagles took his place in the starting eleven with Stephen Jordan also making a return to the bench.

Burnley in summary therefore lined up as follows:

Jensen, Mears, Duff, Cort, Fox, Alexander, Elliott, Cork, Eagles, Paterson, Fletcher

Subs: Weaver, Carlisle, Caldwell, Jordan, Bikey, Blake, Thompson

The Full Match Report

The impressive Stadium of Light lived up to its name on this bright and sunny day on Wearside as Rotherham referee, Howard Webb got the game underway. Clarets fans buoyed by the win at Hull City last week were hoping for more of the same and it was Burnley as well that made the livelier start. Jack Cork was looking solid and energetic in midfield and he got in a couple of early breaks but they came to nothing.

It didn`t take long though for the pace and power of the Black Cats strike force to begin to take effect with both Darren Bent and Kenwyne Jones starting to expose the weaknesses in our back four. Clarets fans hopes that Sunderland might have been thinking about their holidays with safety and a midtable finish virtually assured were to be dashed with the Black Cats looking strongly up for this match and taking the game to Burnley.

The Clarets back four have found it difficult this season to defend against set-pieces and so it would prove again. In the 19th minute, Jensen had to make a superb save diving low to his right to keep out a header from Mensah quickly recovering to then prevent the follow-up from Michael Turner.

The woodwork then came to our rescue when Kenwyne Jones thumped the ball against the post from a corner.

The onslaught from Sunderland though was beginning to tell and they eventually took the lead on 25 minutes. Alan Hutton, Sunderland`s on loan defender from Spurs decided to go on a charge down the right wing getting in a low cross that found Fraizer Campbell in an ideal position to slide home the ball past Jensen from close range. Again our defence should have done better with questions once more being asked.

The Clarets already looking nervous now seemed to have the stuffing taken out of them as the relentless pressure and possession from the Black Cats continued to wear them down. Darren Bent nearly made it 2-0 after getting in a header from another cross from Hutton but the ball flew just wide. Bent though wouldn`t have long to wait to score his 23rd League goal of the season. With five minutes of the first half remaining Campbell who looked to be marginally offside got on the end of a chipped pass from Henderson and headed the ball down to find Bent six yards from goal. He simply had to side foot home completely unmarked. So it was 2-0 down at half-time and a mountain to climb for the Clarets. In this case they hadn`t even got out of base camp so far with virtually no attempts on goal in the first 45 minutes. Very, very disappointing! Yes OK Sunderland had a vast display of talent on show showboating the club`s £50 million of debt but this was virtually the same team that the Clarets had thumped 3-1 in the earlier encounter at Turf Moor this season! If only we could have played the same way in the return fixture and shown the same quality and determination. Something would need to change in the second half if we were to stand any chance of rescuing something from this game. How we went in just 2-0 down was a miracle in itself we were that poor.

It was perhaps no surprise that Laws made a change at half-time bringing on Thompson to replace the lacklustre and totally ineffectual, Martin Paterson. He had done nothing in the first half but then playing him out on the wing is folly anyway and a waste of his talents.

Thompson upfront gave us the firepower in attack that was sadly lacking in the first-half and the effect was almost instant. He got the better of Anton Ferdinand with a neat turn to put over a cross which Chris Eagles could only head off-target. The early signs though were encouraging.

Just under the hour mark, the Clarets went on a charge opening up the Black Cats defence with some nice passing. It was Tyrone Mears who eventually put over a low cross but it was Hutton who got on the end of it to clear the danger.

The Clarets were by now enjoying quite a bit of the possession and it looked liked Sunderland had switched off confident they could contain anything the Clarets chucked at them without busting a gut.

Thompson looked to be challenged unfairly in the box after being felled by Campbell and there were appeals for a penalty although it was by no means clear cut. Clarets fans briefly thought it had been given until they realised that Howard Webb had decided instead to amazingly give Thompson a yellow card!

A punch from the Black Cats keeper, Gordon following a cross by Mears led to a half-chance with the ball falling nicely to Alexander 25 yards out from goal. Grezza let rip with a left footed daisy cutter but the keeper going to his left managed to grab the ball.

Sunderland who had clearly taken their foot of the accelerator seemed to have few chances in the second half but they always looked dangerous on the break. We seemed to take ages plodding along getting the ball up to our attack whereas Sunderland just seemed to need to string a couple of decent passes together and we were under pressure and having to defend like the clappers.

Bent should have done better but fluffed a chance at the other end to make it curtains for the Clarets but to give them their due, Burnley continued to press.

Fox attempted to score from a direct free kick but the ball dipped onto the roof of the net.

With nine minutes to go, Laws decided to bring on some fresh legs in a move that would prove inspirational. On came Robbie Blake to replace the industrious but tiring Jack Cork and within a minute the magician was setting up a goal to make it 2-1 and give the complacent Sunderland some jitters in the last few minutes of the match.

After some nice approach work, Blake laid off a typical neat pass to find Thompson just outside the box. He calmly slotted his low shot home into the bottom corner of the net to give Clarets fans some hopes of a late recovery.

Sadly though we never really pressed for the equaliser after that and indeed it was nearly Sunderland who extended their lead when Jensen had to save well to deny Kenwyne Jones.

Yes, a disappointing game lost in the first half in a fashion that is fast becoming the Burnley trademark weakness with just too many players underperforming and making crucial schoolboy errors in defence.

Match Detail

Sunderland: Gordon, Turner, Hutton, Mensah (Ferdinand 46), Malbranque, Richardson, Henderson, Meyler (Zenden 88), Campbell, Bent (Mwaruwari 90+4), Jones

Subs Not Used: Carson, Bardsley, Da Silva, Kilgallon

Goals: Campbell (25), Bent (40)

Booked: Yellow Cards for Mensah, Malbranque & Meyler

Burnley: Jensen, Mears, Duff, Cort, Fox, Alexander, Elliott, Cork (Blake 81), Eagles, Paterson (Thompson 46), Fletcher

Subs Not Used: Weaver, Carlisle, Caldwell, Jordan, Bikey

Goal: Thompson (82)

Booked: Yellow Cards for Duff & Thompson

Possession: 57% Sunderland, 43% Burnley, (Source: BBC Sport)

Referee: Howard Webb (Rotherham)

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41 comments

  • WelshClaret says:

    Agree dale, Laws was hamstrung at Wednesday in exactly the same way Cotterill was at Burnley , in having to constantly loose their best players. I don’t think anyone can call Laws a championship failiure for this reason and although he isn’t proven in any way in the premiership I don’t think he can be blamed for our current predicament. I agree with tmp that the rat leaving the ship and taking the whole support staff with him is the glaring reason, and if he had stayed I’m fairly sure we would have got the home results against Portsmouth, Stoke, and Wolves if nothing else, leaving us in a fairly good position by now. Coyle has stated clearly that the reason he left was because Bolton are far ahead of us with regard to facilities and development, and it was purely a career move. What I can?t forgive him for is his timing, why couldn?t he wait until the end of the season ? The team and Laws seem to be working well together in the dressing room at least, and I agree that they gave everything in the second half but to no avail. Sunderland nearly blew us away in the first half at the Turf, but the second half performance coupled with the timely introduction of Eagles and Nugent totally reversed the outcome and we looked like the premiership side. But that was when confidence was high and fortress Turf Moor was impregnable at that time. Coyle wrecked all that in one fell swoop. Assuming that what the players are now saying is correct, Laws should be given a chance at least until December , unless of course Kilby and the board know something that we don?t.

  • turfmanphil says:

    The thing that worries me Dale is that working with a low budget seems to be precisely the level of ambition this board is going to have in the Championship despite all the financial benefits of a year in the top flight plus parachute payments. Why else would you use Dolittle & Spend Nowts accountants report to justify his appointment based on the work he did in the Championship on low budgets? A decent job like Cotts and Laws have done previously only meant one thing, midtable mediocrity and that worries me

  • Claretdale says:

    I dont particularly disagree with that Phil. I dont think Laws was the man for the job and I dont think that mentioning that study as a justification for the appointment was the brightest thing to do either. Next season ( should we go down), we will have one of the better budgets in the division and certainly more than we have ever had before. I just think it is harsh to criticise Laws on past achievements because, to a certain degree, he has spent the majority of his managerial career fire fighting.

  • Bernie Lee says:

    What financial benefits from a season in the top flight ??

  • turfmanphil says:

    Increased revenue from gates of 21,000, the reported £40million worth of financial benefits from playing in the top flight (TV money etc), the £7 million that could have been put towards players instead of paying off Directors loans, the financial benefit of increased merchandising from the interest generated by new fans and new businesses taking note.

  • Claretdale says:

    Phil – As has been mentioned before. The directors money was a LOAN and was always to be paid back at some point.

  • Longtimeclaret says:

    Defence has been a problem for Burnley in a lot of games this season but a lot of the time its been a learning experience for both managers and players ,at start no men on the posts for free kicks and corners one example.Bikey was bought for defence with our best performing defender Caldwell he was out with injury at start of season (Duff was also, top player when on best form ),Bikey is an outstanding player when he plays his best he has lost some confidence,but he should be in defence i know he changed to defensive midfield etc when alexander was out,Cort has done better in recent matches though and players need games regularly. Blake has the skill and is a good impact player to change a game if needed

  • turfmanphil says:

    Yes,I know Dale but dont you think they could have held off for a season and put that money instead towards a couple of decent midfielders that could have given us a greater chance of staying up and gaining the £40m/year its worth in the top flight? Take your loans back from that pot sure and if we had still gone down, sell the players we bought hopefully at a profit and take your loans back then?

  • turfmanphil says:

    Welcome to VB, Longtime! Agree with you on Bikey

  • Claretdale says:

    I do see your point Phil – but I just dont think it is fair/correct. If we had spent the £7m on players on the basis that the directors take it back the season after – If we go down we would need the money then to try and get back in the top flight. If we stayed up we would need the money to preserve top flight status. That is before we even think about what impact it has on the lives of the directors who are not able to spend their own money? What have they had to give up to give BFC the money? I just think that Burnley will always be able to use £7m somewhere, and this season ( when we had more money than ever before), was probably the best time to pay off all of our loans. The loan was also probably provided on the agreement that were we to get promoted – it would be paid back. After almost losing a substantial amount of that money – the directors were probably quite keen to get it back.

  • turfmanphil says:

    We don’t know what the small print of their loan deals said but it has been taken out of the promotion money which I still think would have been better used to try and secure our place in the Prem with all the financial benefit that would have brought. Now we just seen to have the worst of both worlds, relegation, fewer player assets and probably reduced revenue from ticket sales. Happy and content directors maybe but I am sure they could have waited another season to be happy!

  • Claretdale says:

    But you arent really answering the question. If we go down and need to rebuild our squad, that £7m could be well utilised at that point. We will always need/want the £7m – but it isnt ours to have!

  • turfmanphil says:

    Lets assume we had spent the £7 million as a contribution to players with Premier League experience this season. Had we stayed up, we would have got the best of both worlds. far more money which the Directors could then have taken their loans back from. Relegation would probably mean those players would want to be off to another Prem club but we could probably have sold them for a profit. The Directors could have pocketed their £7 million and anything else put towards new players along with the £16 m parachute! The £7 million was always going to be taken back at some point and I argue that decision should have been taken in the Summer when it was known if we had survived or not. Some would argue also that it might have been better to use some of that £7 million to buy back the Turf once and for all,but I would have favoured putting it towards players

  • Claretdale says:

    I am not sure things are ever that simple!

  • turfmanphil says:

    Sometimes folk cant see the wood for the trees!! 😉

  • ozjean says:

    It’s so easy isn’t it tmp – spend lots of money we don’t have , get into debt and we will make more money in the long run and have a team that stays in the Prem. Except it doesn’t work. It is also the exact reason we have the global financial crisis. I just thank god Kilby is the Chairman and you aren’t otherwiser we would be out of business in a couple of years.

  • turfmanphil says:

    I doubt it, even in the worst case of going into Administration all these teams are coming back or will come back, witness Leeds, Southampton, Norwich, Charlton etc etc. The fear of going into it is blocking progress and we are missing opportunities to secure the long term financial benefit for this club for years to come! We have just as much chance of falling down the Leagues and going out of business by not investing indeed I have been told had it not been for Flood investing in players last season & our success we would have been in dire financial straits! I am confident that other directors would take a different view to the cosy mentality we have at present and Kilby & Co wont last forever, only then will we see whether these fears are rational or not

  • Claretdale says:

    The problem with the teams you mention ‘coming back’ Phil is that they are all ‘big’ clubs with gates in excess of 20k ( I expect). We are not, I cannot think of a ‘smaller’ club that has struggled financially and is on the way back up?????

  • turfmanphil says:

    Not sure there is any true comparison. The only ‘small’ clubs that have been in the Prem hail from the 90s when things were somewhat different and all those are still in existence fumbling around at lower levels. Barnsley, Bradford City, Oldham & Swindon

  • Claretdale says:

    Agree it is hard to compare – But how many of those would be struggling to the same degree as they have if they hadnt pushed themselves to far? It is probably not a question we can answer.

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