Cray Wanderers 1-0 Crystal Palace U18s: Young Eagles crash at Cray

Written by Matt Woosnam

Crystal Palace U18s fell to a narrow defeat against Cray Wanderers in their opening match of pre-season on Tuesday evening, with a Pat O'Connor goal separating the two sides; but there were plenty of positives to take from the 1-0 defeat. 

In a game of men against boys, with Eagles' boss Ken Gillard naming a very young side made up largely of first year scholars, Palace performed well throughout but lacked a cutting edge. 

The home side began well with two decent efforts which were dealt with well, before Palace came into the game through wingers Andre Coker and Aaron Bissaka, as well as midfielder Kiye Martin.

Martin tried to dance his way into the box early on after working himself some space, but was denied by some good defending, before Coker began a good break down the left wing but his poor touch ended the attack prematurely. Nonetheless, it was an encouraging spell for the youngsters as they showed some good touches and their communication saw some promising opportunities arise. 

Both teams tried their luck from range but neither side had their finishing boots on as the efforts either sailed wide or failed to test the goalkeepers, but after 25 minutes the game burst into life as some poor defending from Palace allowed Pat O'Connor to steal into the box and lob Brad Comins from close range to put Cray 1-0 ahead. A header from a free-kick ensued soon after, but it looped harmlessly over the bar. 

A surreal moment followed as Palace winger Coker was once again involved in a promising attack. Having made the step up from the U16s, Coker was looking to impress his boss and certainly did that, but most in attendance were bemused as he somehow contrived to miss from close range from his own header but offside was given anyway. The youngster tricked his way into the box and after a deflection headed the ball over the defender and looped the goalkeeper only to see his effort loop onto the crossbar, before the assistant referee flagged for offside.

Cray brought themselves back into the game again with two excellent efforts and began to dominate, but Palace goalkeeper Brad Comins was in superb form to keep the deficit to a single goal as he tipped the shots past the post and over the bar.

The game started to become stretched and the end to end nature of the first half was summed up as Andre Coker beat the offside trap down the right to find himself clean through but could not find the finish as Palace's best chance went begging. 

The Eagles were looking extremely dangerous on the break with the pace of Kiye Martin, Coker, Andrews and Bissaka causing Cray real problems, but Martin failed to spot Coker in a superb position down the left and instead fed Bissaka who was dispossesed. Then, on the stroke of half time, the youngsters broke once again but Corie Andrews' effort went narrowly over the bar. 

Palace made nine changes at half time, with only Comins and Coker remaining on the pitch, and it showed as an even younger side struggled to find any cutting edge, although performed admirably to keep the home side at bay despite their physical presence. The endurance from Palace was sufficient to create a few attempts on goal in the second half but Ollie Bennett's effort was well saved, before Elliot List's excellent run and shot was frustratingly held by the 'keeper. 

List, who lost his place in the side to Aaron Bissaka following an injury, looked threatening down the right wing but earned a number of kicks for his effort as the Cray players struggled to deal with his pace and skill. Indeed, it almost turned nasty when a very poor challenge from the Cray midfielder resulted in a melee which saw List sent off late on. 

Both sets of players reacted and a punch appeared to be thrown by the Cray player, before List's reaction saw the referee send him off; although Palace may choose to appeal. The youngsters perhaps a little too enthusiastically raced to defend their team-mate but both sets of players continued the unecessary handbags. 

It somewhat marred what was a thoroughly impressive performance from Palace's forwards, despite their failure to trouble the scorers. 

There were impressive performances from centre-back Ollie O'Dwyer, last season's U16 skipper Michael Phillips as well as Coker and Martin, with boss Ken Gillard pleased with what he saw. 

Palace first half line up: Comins, King-Elliot, Akiotu, Wynter, O'Dwyer, Hoare, Coker, Bissaka, Gaggin, Martin, Andrews.

Palace second half line up: Pain, Hogan, Day, Howlett-Mundle, Phillips, Akanbi, Clement, Peter List, Bennett, Coker, Jeremiah.


 

 

Crystal Palace 1-0 Aston Villa - Analysis and ratings from Selhurst Park

Written by Matt Woosnam

YES! A third straight victory in the Premier League - something Palace have not achieved since 1994 - was well deserved as the Eagles moved up to 12th place in the Premier League. Here's Mark Gardiner with his ratings and reviews from the match. 

It wasn’t the best of games, with Palace working hard while Aston Villa lacked any real ambition, and the refereeing was of an even lower standard, but today could have seen Palace finally survive a season in the Premiership / Premier League. This, of course, is the Sky Sports age so we’ll forget our previous seven seasons in the top flight that didn’t end in relegation...

Palace, with Moody’s phone possibly impounded and lacking intelligence on the Villains line-up, decided on an unchanged starting XI in the usual positions, and as the game started took up a deep & conservative stance. The possession stats for the first 15 minutes must be horribly lop-sided but Villa managed precisely nothing with all the ball, while on the rare occasions Palace gained possession their attacks had a far sharper threat. Puncheon had already tried an ambitious far post volley by the time KG departed with an injury, necessitating a swap as Chamakh went into the hole and Ledley moved alongside Jedinak in the centre. This move helped Palace’s attacking ambitions but made life a little easier for Villa as Jedinak wasn’t really at the races at this stage, and the visitors nearly seized an opening when, after a series of Villa corners, Clark’s header was kicked clear of the far post by Jerome. After that the chances started to fall Palace’s way, with Bolasie having a couple of decent efforts with boot & head while Chamakh’s far post header was just wide. The best chance came when a very clever free kick routine played Bolasie in by the corner of the six-yard box; he appeared to miss his kick and slip over, but from my angle I couldn’t tell if Holt had anything to do with that by nefarious means.

Having ended the first half on top it was strange to report that Palace barely started in the second half, with possession conceded far too easily, especially down the right with Mariappa, Puncheon and Jedinak guilty. Fortunately Villa lacked any cutting edge and didn’t take advantage of this slow start. Jerome & Bolasie began causing problems, and when the latter fired in a shot Guzman’s careless-looking save saw the ball drop to Jerome, but with the goal at his mercy he struck the underside of the bar and the ball bounced away to safety. Palace gradually took control, with Jedinak improving and the reliable Ledley one of the better performers. The main threat continued to be from Bolasie down the left where he was well supported by Ward, and he created a couple of chances for himself. Puncheon too came back into the game and it looked like he might have engineered an opening when referee Webb looked to have awarded a penalty when a defender might have handled a Puncheon cross, only to change his mind after consulting with the (admittedly better placed) linesman. One can only assume Webb is our World Cup referee on the basis that at least he will be upsetting foreigners for the summer.

Fittingly it was the two wingers who combined for the only goal, Bolasie’s cross from the goal line finding Puncheon around the far post; after taking what seemed like an age to control the ball, Jason’s shot went back across Guzman and in off the far post. Bolasie departed not long after, replaced by Parr in what was a surprising decision given the pressure Yannick had exerted all game on Villa’s right flank; perhaps the little limp was disappointment & diplomatic. Playing on the break Palace really should have made the game safe, the best chance came when Puncheon, with Murray & Parr free in the box, shot from a tight angle and hit the outside of the near post. That could have proven costly as Speroni, keeping commendably alert on another less than busy afternoon, made another fine save from a Weimann close range shot, diving and extending his arm to turn the ball behind. Palace started to defend deep and there was more than a hint of panic about some clearances as Villa finally found some gumption far too late in the game. It has to be said that Villa were particularly poor in both approach & execution most of the game, one cross field pass over hit by some 40 yards, and at the end their large & loud support gave their players some awful stick. But who cares!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R_xj6jIiqUg

Ratings:

Speroni – 7 – Hardly a save to make for an hour, and then those he did make were generally routine, with the exception of another full-length effort to deny Weimann from close range. I think we’ve underrated Julian this season as we are so used to his quality by now, the match- or point-winning save expected.

Mariappa – 5 – Thought Adrian didn’t reach the quality of performances he’s produced of late with some particularly careless passing and some less than solid challenges, especially in the first half, and didn’t really improve until the last 30 minutes.

Ward – 7 – Solid in defence and helped Bolasie a lot on the attack.

Delaney – 8 – Another quiet contender for Player of the Year with a couple of vital tackles. Looked to be beaten once by Holt to set up Weimann’s chance but otherwise kept a lid on Villa’s admittedly toothless attack. Lovely through ball to Jerome in the first half.

Dann – 8 – Quietly impressive, forming a very solid pairing with Delaney, with again a few important tackles and clearances.

Dikgacoi – 6 – Short time on pitch marked by a couple apiece of tough challenges and awful passes.

Jedinak – 6 – I thought it took Mile some time to get into the flow of both halves, marked by some less than shuddering challenges and a greater number of poor passes than usual, and sitting deeper than I’d like. When he did hit his stride Palace dominated the middle and looked a far better team, marked by some lovely passes. At the end added weight to the defence in repelling Villa’s late charge.

Ledley – 7 – Another good professional performance from Joe, the only downside a little lack of pace. Held it together when KG departed & Jedinak wasn’t on top of his game.

Puncheon – 7 – Good showing bar a strange 10-15 minutes after half time when his lax approach was a real danger in defence. First half was the main outlet for the first 20 minutes, creating chances. Second half less obvious but still scored a vital goal and hit the post.

Bolasie- 8 – Excellent performance from Yannick who terrorised Villa’s right back position either side of half time, although I’m sure he could have done better with that free kick move when he appeared to mis-kick (look forward to the replay). Created openings for Jerome, which was spurned, and Puncheon, which was accepted gratefully. Didn’t understand the substitution unless he really was injured.

Jerome – 6 – Ran his heart out and didn’t allow Villa’s defence a moment’s peace, but missed a really great chance after Guzman’s less than impressive save left him virtually a free shot on goal from reasonably close-range.

Subs:

Chamakh – 7 – Improved Palace’s attacking play with his ability to hold up the ball and nearly scored with a fine far post header. Also proved useful once again in defending set pieces.

Murray – 6 – Came on just before Palace went 1-0 up and had a couple of nice moments but still looks a little short of pace.

Parr – 6 – Looked like a defensive substitution by Pulis but it worked out fine.

Sunderland 0-0 Crystal Palace: Analysis & ratings from the Stadium of Light

Written by Mark Gardiner

Here's Mark Gardiner with ratings and reviews from the North-East after the 0-0 draw with Sunderland.

 

It was, according to Tony Pulis, a “must not lose” match yesterday; certainly it was a game neither side appeared equipped to win. While the swirling wind and a poor pitch hampered some of the play it cannot excuse the overall poverty of it. Palace departed the happier of the two teams, maintain their lead over Sunderland, but questions about the ability to score and the central midfield are starting to pile up: it has been over four & a half matches since we managed a goal that wasn’t a penalty, and don’t be fooled by the match stats as Mannone in the home goal didn’t have anything other than comfortable saves to make.

The Palace line-up was interesting given that neither specialist left back made it into the XVI. Mariappa, who has barely been glimpsed under the new regime, came in at right back, with Ward switching to the left side. Ledley played on the left side of midfield but not in an advanced role; perhaps he was stationed there to help cut down the threat from Adam Johnson. Bolasie was in a more familiar advanced role on the right, while Ince switched to the hole behind Murray, the position where he had such an impact on his debut.

Palace hardly put a decent move together in the first 20 minutes with Sunderland seeing a lot of the ball in our half. Worryingly we gave away far too many cheap free kicks in areas where crosses could rain down into the box, especially with both full backs seeing yellow cards early on. The referee, while consistent in his cautioning of players, was less so in his decisions on what constituted a foul challenge, with both Bolasie & Murray seemingly cut down from behind on several occasions but not winning the free kick. Palace’s midfield wasn’t helping matters either, both KG & Jedinak frittering possession away cheaply with some awful short-range passing. Sunderland’s best early chance came when Jedinak & Mariappa somehow conspired to set up a Mackem chance that went across the goal; Sunderland were finding a lot of space behind Mariappa (a tactic United used at Old Trafford so long ago) and Bolasie was having to do an awful lot of diligently tracking back. Fortunately Sunderland’s crossing was mostly below par, and on the odd occasion when they did find a forward the header was off-target, Julian having one early shot straight down his throat as the only save in the first half. Actually the best cross into Palace’s box came from a wildly mis-hit volleyed clearance from Ince that ballooned to Borini at the far post only for an athletic volley to go well wide. Palace were also slow to pick up on the Black Cats’ short corner routine.

Up front Palace hardly registered, not surprising given the dearth of creativity in the middle & the propensity for Jedi & KG to give the ball away. Ince was once again lightweight, easily knocked off the ball and lacking a bit of bite in the challenge; he spoiled one good break with a poor pass. Murray, isolated and not getting anything from the ref, was hardly in the game. When Palace did have a chance of imposing a little pressure from a set piece Bolasie took a quick free kick straight to the opposition. Towards the end of the half Palace did manage one decent passing move down the left only for Ledley to stub his tow when shooting from the edge of the box. The game was summed up when Palace’s best chance came when Mannone slipped clearing under pressure only to find Ince’s 30-yard effort comfortably returned to him.

Sunderland upped the tempo immediately after half-time with sub Altidore bringing a sharp save from Julian although an offside decision made it a moot point. He did better later on for real when turning aside another Altidore effort. In return Ince & Murray worked an opening for Bolasie down the right but the shot lacked power and was easily gathered by Mannone; Yannick soon returned the favour for Murray with a good cross but Glenn was unable to get a decent connection with his head. Sunderland lacked invention, with Johnson well shackled by Ward, and their best openings tended to come when Palace gave the ball away while moving forward: Jedinak, KG and (surprisingly) Dann all committed the grievous sin of gifting the opposition the ball, and Delaney gained a yellow card in breaking up one such break. As against Southampton we nearly conceded from our corner against a swift break.

Growing desperate right-back Bardsley broke into our box onto to throw himself into a ridiculous dive after brushing against a defender. Sunderland nearly grabbed the points when yet another loose ball in midfield was seized upon and Borini escaped the defence in acres on the right, only for his shot to canon off the bar, then fire narrowly over seconds later. Their last real chance game through yet another Jedinak error, bailed out by Speroni’s rapid advance from his line and solid header clear. By this time Palace had made changes: Jerome came on for a lacklustre Murray; Guédioura for the disappointing Ince; and Puncheon for Bolasie. This did pep up the attack and some late chances came, with Ledley putting a decent chance wide and Puncheon’s shot on target but not making Mannone work. However the best chance fell to KG after good work from Guédioura and Jerome saw the ball drop to KG 10 yards out, only for his shot to sail past the far post. It would have been totally undeserved, but then neither side had the quality to break the stalemate.

 

Ratings:

Speroni – 7 – Comfortable first half, only one shot on target and dealt well with a couple of crosses, although one moment’s miscommunication with the defence nearly let Fletcher in at the cost of a corner. Second half two sharp saves from Altidore (even if one would not have counted) but best when dealing with a late break by coming swiftly off his line to head clear.

Mariappa – 6 – Started poorly, being booked early on for two poor challenges, and was often caught by the ball over his head to land in his quarter, but then settled down and very little came down that flank for the rest of the game.

Ward – 7 – Like his fellow full back picked up an early caution which didn’t bode well for 90 minutes against Adam Johnson, but managed to keep him quiet for much of the match, although slow to pick up on short corners from that side.

Delaney – 6 – Found Fletcher a handful in the air, but probably drew that particular duel. When faced with Borini in the second half lost him for the effort that came off the bar. Picked up a yellow card in frustration at giving the ball away.

Dann – 5 – Coped well with Borini in the first half but found Altidore a far more difficult opponent in the second, twice being beaten to crosses only to be saved by Julian. Also tried to run the ball out of our half only to be caught in possession.

Jedinak – 4 – The quality of his passing, even the short ball, continues to deteriorate, too often giving the ball to a colleague under pressure or, worse, cutting out the middle man and giving it straight to a red & white shirt. Bailed out by Delaney, Speroni and Sunderland’s lack of a cutting edge.

Dikgacoi – 4 – Not quite as profligate with the ball as Mile but not far off it, setting up more than one Sunderland break by conceding possession. Also missed a great chance to steal the three points late on by not hitting the target from 10 yards out – admittedly at an angle but poor nonetheless.

Ledley – 7 – Helped Ward police the left side defensively. Not as attacking as Yannick but popped up in one good move in the first half only to fail to get his shot away, then missing from a decent position in the second half. Would prefer to see him in the middle three with Bannan & one of KG or Jedinak.

Bolasie – 6 – Worked hard, particularly defensively, which are words I don’t think I could have recorded a year ago, as he had to cover the space behind Mariappa. Didn’t show as much up front as in recent matches, although set up a chance for Murray in the first half and had one shot on target in the second.

Ince – 4 – Continued a run of performances which could not even be described as peripheral. One or two nice touches, setting up Ledley’s first half sight of goal, gut once again found wanting in the challenge, either knocked too easily off the ball or lacking aggression in the tackle.

Murray – 5 – Saw little of the ball in the first half, and when he did usually coughed up possession, sometimes under “unfair” challenges not so ruled by the ref. Not much better in the second half but did have a header wide under pressure and set up a chance for Bolasie. Looked tired by the time he was substituted.

Subs:

Jerome – 6 – Provided a more direct threat when he came on and that little extra pace did force a couple of half chances.

Guédioura – 6 – Started poorly with his first two interventions being to give the ball away then giving away a cheap free kick in a dangerous area. Then settled down and provided a good link to Jerome, helping set up KG’s chance. Had a free kick that curled just wide but lacked the pace to embarrass Mannone. 

Puncheon – 6 – Not much time to do anything but a couple of good moves down the right and a shot that was easily saved by Mannone.

See what a Sunderland fan thought of the game here.


 

Charlton U21s 1-1 Crystal Palace U21s: Jake Gray impresses for development squad

Written by Matt Woosnam

Jake gray

A goal each in the first half saw Palace’s development side earn a 1-1 draw with Charlton at the Addicks’ Sparrows Lane training ground.

The first half ebbed and flowed but was sparked into life when a Sullay KaiKai free-kick looked set to nestle in the top corner of the Charlton goal, but Dillon Phillips managed to palm it away with a superb save.  The home side looked dangerous on the break but numerous crosses were wasted without an end product, and Palace punished their lack of cutting edge when Ibra Sekajja did well down the left and sent a low cross into the area for Jake Gray to fire a stunning volley into the corner of the net and put Palace ahead. 

Gary Issott named a youthful side, with Darcy Blake the only senior player in the squad, on his return from a nightmare few months on the treatment table. Their inexperience showed as Charlton worked some good openings but once again failed to convert their chances, with Tobi Sho-Silva particularly wasteful. 

An even first half came to a close with some crunching tackles from both teams, with Blake and Dymond both making excellent interventions. Just as Palace thought they had adapted well to Charlton’s passing game they conceded an equaliser on the stroke of half time.

Despite an outstanding fingertip save from a header earlier in the match, David Gregory was unable to keep Jack Munns from finding the net after he saved well from Harry Gerard, Munns tucking home the rebound to make it 1-1 at half time.

The second half began with Charlton dominating possession but the Addicks were unable to break down Palace’s solid defensive lines.  Palace then made three substitutions with Darcy Blake, Sullay KaiKai and Derek Tieku being replaced by Matt Parsons, Hiram Boateng and Nabil Guediora.

It was Guediora who nearly put Palace ahead but he failed to reach a delightful cross from Jake Gray. After Gregory made an excellent double save, Gray found himself with a golden opportunity from ten yards, but his shot cannoned back off the post.

A strong appeal from the Palace players for a penalty was waved away by referee Thomas Ramsey before Jack Munns received his marching orders for kicking out at Matt Parsons.

The Eagles pressed for a winner but were constantly denied by a combination of good defending, goalkeeping and the woodwork. Skipper Connor Dymond saw a header saved well in the dying seconds before Luke Croll hit the post with the rebound.

MOTM - Jake Gray.

Palace: Gregory, Gordon, Croll, Dymond (C), Taylor, Blake (Parsons), Gray, Sow, Tieku (Guediora), Sekajja, KaiKai (Boateng).

Charlton: Phillips, Holmes-Dennis, Lennon, Azeez, Sho-Silva, Gerard, Osborne, Poyet, Fox, Jordan (C), Munns.