Crystal Palace 0-1 Tottenham Hotspur: Analysis from Selhurst as determined Eagles defeated

Written by Matt Woosnam

Backed by almost a full house, but certainly a vociferous home crowd, and despite giving a good account of themselves, Crystal Palace fell to a narrow 1-0 defeat against Tottenham Hotspur on the opening weekend of the Premier League, courtesy of Roberto Soldado's second-half penalty. 

Palace's lack of quality in the final third, alongside a clear need for more width, prevented them from really troubling Spurs' keeper Hugo Lloris, but the Eagles put in a solid defensive performance only to fall just short. 

Mark Gardiner provides a superb analysis of the match and includes his ratings for each of the Palace players.  

Holmesdale Display

Well, perhaps this season won’t be such a long drudge as many of us feared. I don’t think anyone would deny that Spurs were the better team, but Palace somehow hung in there to be in with a chance, however slim, of dragging back a point. Survival means we have to win the key games at home against lower & mid-table teams, and the display today gave us some indications that this will not be a forlorn hope. What will need to be addressed are the simple avoidable errors that cost us a goal and helped prevent our game gaining any rhythm until Holloway made a triple substitution. 

Palace lined up with a 4-3-2-1 Christmas Tree formation, with most of the team that started at Wembley. Jedinak, KG & Garvan formed the midfield trio, with Gayle & Dobbie slightly further forward in nominal support of Wilbraham. Unfortunately both the formation and the personnel employed therein soon exhibited weaknesses, the primary one being a complete lack of width in attack. Ward & Moxey tried hard to cover 80 yards but that often exposed the rearguard when the ball was lost; in addition they rarely had an outlet down the line. Attacks developed far too ponderously, with opportunities to cross or shoot being passed up in favour of laying the ball off and back; strangely when there crosses were put in they were far too early with no-one in the box to take advantage. Wilbraham was too static and totally isolated up front, while Dobbie and Gayle looked far too lightweight and distant to provide support; Gayle in particular appeared overawed & nervous, playing at this level in an unfamiliar role, and lost the ball far too easily, including in the build-up to the penalty. At the back there appeared a gap down our left between Garvan & Dobbie that Tottenham exploited several times, often outflanking Moxey. To add to this was the number of times simple passing moves were ruined by a poor pass or a misunderstanding between colleagues that saw balls left in favour of someone else. 

As a result it should come as no surprise that Palace’s sole “effort” on goal was a soft header by Wilbraham straight at Lloris. Spurs took their time to find the range on the Palace goal, although it took a smart save from Speroni to turn over Sigurdsson’s effort from distance, while as the first half acme to a close Speroni had to act smartly to deny Soldado and there was a far post header that was missed. In some ways the match reminded me of our first game back in ’89 against a functional Manchester United, when Wright grabbed a late equaliser. Tottenham made the same errors as our guys but not quite as frequently; their defence looked gawky at times, and despite a Palace team that had yet to change up from first gear, they did not look like a side that should be pressing at the upper echelons of the Premiership.Their favourite move was the long diagonal ball from Dawson to left back Rose, suspiciously like the long balls launched from Delaney & Gabbidon towards Wilbraham (although occasionally they found the midget Gayle). 

The second half started much the same as the first, with Palace unable to build any momentum, mostly due to slack passing play, but finally Spurs made us pay. Gayle lost the ball far too easily in our half, Lennon worked some space on our left, and as Moxey slid in to block the cross the ball struck his outstretched arm; it was a clear, definite penalty, that Soldado finished coolly. Palace continued in their mis-firing way for some 10 minutes or so, during which Gayle showed that when acting instinctively he has the raw talent when he escaped and fired a shot not far over. Then Holloway introduced a triple substitution with Williams, Phillips and Chamakh on for Dobbie, Garvan and Wilbraham. Whether this was a predetermined strategy, similar to his plan that finished off Brighton at the Amex in holding on for an hour then going for the win, or an act of desperation, only Olly knows. The formation seemed to be far more fluid, with Chamakh appearing down the right & Williams buzzing on the left and through the middle, while Phillips went through the middle, but this also left Palace more exposed than previously. 

As the game stretched Spurs really should have made the game safe. Twice Palace were brushed aside as first Sigurdsson then sub Defoe managed to slide clear chances wide of Julian’s right-hand post. Palace looked more dangerous as Williams in particular was able to use the ball to more effect, and two half-chances arrived for veteran Phillips, one being blocked by good anticipation by Lloris and the other sent well wide. At the death a corner to the far post saw efforts from Delaney & KG blocked, while Spurs were happy to run down the clock. Despite the number of individual errors made by Palace players, perhaps due to nerves, and being unable to grasp a foothold in the match for over an hour, the result in the end gives us hope for the future – we have the spirit and foundations that we can build upon.

Speroni – 7 – Not as overworked as one would expect, with one athletic tip-over and some brave blocks.

Ward – 6 – At times was left outnumbered on the right as Palace could not quite get the hang of the new formation, and Lennon did a fair impression of Zaha late on in turning Joel inside out, but the right back kept going and made a number of good challenges. Also tried hard to offer width down the right in attack. 

Moxey – 6 – The penalty decision was one of those things; it is difficult to keep arms at your side when sliding in, but those are the rules. Several times in the first half Dean was left exposed but he tried hard to cover back, mostly successfully. Worked hard up and down the left in both halves and provided much needed width. 

Delaney – 7 – Until late on the centre of the defence held up quite well, only being caught out by one good passing move and a run by Defoe that saw the defence part. 

Gabbidon – 6 – Solid for much of the match but exposed late on by Defoe’s pace.

Dikgacoi – 6 – His passing at time was poor but he put in a good shift, covering the right side with Ward, but often too deep to be an influence in creative terms. Had a late chance but denied by Lloris.

Jedinak – 8 – Outstanding but not quite perfection, as he too succumbed to the occasional terrible pass straight to an opponent. Otherwise broke up numerous Spurs’ attacks with anticipation and a bit of steel – surprisingly Clattenburg seemed to allow harder tackles than in the Championship. Jedi’s form & fitness will be crucial this season.

Garvan – 6 – Looked good with the ball, and laid off some lovely passes, but again from a deep-lying role which made the through balls easier to defend against. Was outmanoeuvred down the left a little too often for my liking but did put in one lovely strong challenge that made me check it wasn’t the Jedi.

Dobbie – 5 – Looked too slow & lightweight, including breaking up a quick counter by twice stumbling over the ball. Knocked off the ball far too easily.

Gayle – 4 – As mentioned above Dwight looked quite lost and was more of a liability than an asset, conceding possession far too cheaply. It appeared that he wasn’t sure of his role, and some of the errors betrayed his lack of professional football. Yet there is undoubtedly raw talent there, as he showed with his run and shot in the second half, which may be because he found himself playing more in a central striker’s role and he could act naturally. As with Dobbie was muscled off the ball far too easily.

Wilbraham – 5 – Difficult to see Aaron as the striker whose goals will give us a decent chance this season, as he is far too slow, and was another who when he won the ball too often knocked the ball into the space where no team-mate existed. Some of this can be laid at the feet of his supposed support from deep, but again it meant that the ball kept coming back after we cleared it.

Subs:

Williams – 7 – Made an immediate impact when he came on as the only Palace player to run past opponents with the ball, and although Spurs learned quickly and closed him down in numbers.

Phillips – 6 – Shame his pace is also 40 years old as Kevin twice found himself with chances where that extra second cost us. However the attack gained a focus that Wilbraham couldn’t supply when KP came on, making runs that gave the midfield options.

Chamakh – 6 – Looked very handy when he came on, although deployed more down the right than through the middle.


 

Crystal Palace U18s 1-4 Millwall U18s: Lions earn bragging rights

Written by Matt Woosnam

In the first of eight fierce derby matches this season, Palace's U18 side fell to a heavy defeat at the training ground in Copers Cope Road, Beckenham. 

The young Eagles will face Millwall and Brighton home and away in both the development and U18 leagues this season, but it did not go to plan this morning as Millwall opened the season with a thumping 4-1 victory against Palace. England U16 international Mandela Egbo scored a superb free-kick on his 16th birthday to get the goal for Palace.

Academy manager Ben Smith told FYP during pre-season that the club would be in the category 2 league this season, with provisions to look towards achieving category 1 status later in the season. Palace are in the Southern section of the Category 2 U18 league alongside clubs such as Charlton, QPR, Brentford, Swansea & Cardiff.

We were allowed to play in the Category 1 league last season because at the time the fixtures were arranged, we had applied for Cat 1 status but had not yet had our audit / grading performed.


Palace included seven youngsters who had not even reached their 17th birthday in the squad, with a lot of new players in the U18s this season. Some have moved up from our U16s whilst some have been picked up after their release from two of the top academies in the country – Fulham (overall U18 league champions for last 3 seasons) and Chelsea.

Gary Jones describes the match and provides some short analysis:

We have a lot of lads in the U18s who are only just 16 years old, so it may take them a while to adjust to playing at the U18 level.

Palace team U18 was:
GK Tom King
RB Madela Egbo
LB Jacob Berkeley-Agyepong
CB Jamal Howlett-Mundle
CB Kieran Kinda-John (Doug Wright)
CM Will Hoare
CM Elijah Gabsi
LM Reise Allassani (Kyle Spence)
RM Javen Palmer
SS Jake Grey
CF Ben Pattie (Elliott List)

Jake Gray

2 mins – nice Gabsi cross field pass inside left back enables Palmer to win a corner which keeper catches

5 – Egbo intercepts ball near half way line and drives into pen area before good last gasp tackle by Wall number 4 thwarts him

6 – overhead kick by Wall support striker drifts harmlessly wide from edge of pen area

11 – Wall RB goes thru back of Allassani and is booked

12 – Grey slips ball wide to Palmer who cuts inside LB but his shot is easily saved

16 – lovely turn half way in Palace side by Wall number 4 leaves 2 for dead and gives him room to fire a thunder bolt over from 25 yards

21 – GOAL – Wall CF Jamie ? lashes ball into top of net from 15 yards out on half turn giving King no chance

29 – Wall’s attacking mid Fred Onyedinma shows off his skills to create space wide left that enables him to float far post cross that just evades onrushing wide right player

33 – Grey picks up ball half way in Wall half. Uses dummy runners to enable him to dribble into area and fire off strong shot that Keeper does well to push around post

39 – good work wide left by Grey, fires low cross which beats keeper for pace and Pattie volleys over empty net from 5 yards at as ball flies at him at pace

Skipper Kinda-John limped off at HT. Egbo moved to CB and Doug Wright on at RB.

47 – Hoare fires over a shot from 22 yards

50 – Grey cuts in from right and curls shot with left foot across goal that Wall keeper does very well to save as looks to be heading into far corner

52 – Brilliant skills by Wall’s Fred Onyedinma down left, gets to byline and pulls ball back to Wall CF Jamie? Who hits bar when looked easier to score

60 – good feet by Gabsi creates shooting chance for Grey who hits it wide

Pattie off, Palmer moves to CF, Elliott List comes on wide right

62 – lovely work wide right by Grey, gets to byline, low cross evades both the keeper and onrushing Palmer

63 – GOAL – good work yet again by Fred Onyedinma enables Wall CF Jamie? To fire home from close range

66 – GOAL – hat trick for Wall CF Jamie? As right winger corner is hit to back post where he volleys home a low shot that creeps under King from 15 yards out

Spence on for Allassani

70 – GOAL – Nice dribble by Spence, beats man, plays ball into List who is fouled on edge. Egbo curls a 20 yard FK into top corner at pace giving keeper no chance

75 – brilliant King save from point blank header from a corner

78 – GOAL – Wall number 4 scores a very similar FK to one Egbo scored

86 – yet more good work by Onyedinma whose cross is half cleared, then returned into box where Wall CF Jamie? Slots wide when should have scored his 4th

90 – Egbo shoots a low FK narrowly wide

91 – Palmer diving header drifts wide

Deserved win for Wall. Margin flattered them a little. Their schoolboy of year from last season Fred Onyedinma was brilliant.

Stand out for Palace by a mile was Egbo. Only 16 this week. Great at RB early on and getting forward well from there. Equally good in 2nd half when played CB, where won stuff in air as well as on ground.

Liked look of List when he came on as sub. Very pacey.

Allassani very ineffective. Not a good day for him.

Gabsi did well in midfield without getting too much support from his colleagues!

Grey did well in spells.

Not too surprising that defence a bit leaky. Two very young full backs (barely 16) and new CB combination.

The U16s drew one all with Millwall.

Cardiff 2 Palace 1 - Early Jedinak goal not enough as Eagles lose in Wales

Written by Jim Daly

 

Palace threw away another lead to go down 2-1 to Cardiff in their big Boxing Day clash on a wet day in Wales.

Mile Jedinak gave the away side the lead in the opening few minutes but goals from Craig Noone and Aron Gunnarrson sealed a win for top-of-the-table Cardiff.

Manager Ian Holloway was forced to give Danny Gabbidon his first start for the Eagles thanks to Damo Delaney's first of three games out suspended. Jonny Parr was switched to right-back for Joel Ward with Dean Moxey slotting in at left-back. Otherwise it was the same lineup that started against Huddersfield, with Owen Garvan in an attacking role behind Glenn Murray.

And Palace got the perfect start when Mile Jedinak converted Garvan's inswinging corner after just two minutes to give the South Londoners the lead.

And the away side continued to dominate the opening exchanges, Yannick Bolasie's great run and cross was just over Murray's head, before Muzza raced clear of the defence but his poor touch allowed David Marshall to collect the ball.

Meanwhile, former Palace defender Mark Hudson was booked for a foul on Murray, but that didn' stop the big centre-back continuing to rough up the Eagles striker.

Another recipient of rough treatment from Cardiff defenders was Wilf Zaha, who was offered no protection from referee Phill Gibbs and was booked for showing his frustration, but he could have doubled Palace's lead when he raced into the area and thundered a shot against the crossbar.

Down the other end Craig Bellamy nipped into the box but good closing down from Peter Ramage allowed Speroni to make a save.

Gibbs then allowed himself to be swayed by the home fans and booked Bolasie before seemingly missing an elbow on Murray from Marshall.

And just before half-time Cardiff's pressure paid as Craig Noone equalised for the home side.

Murray had a chance to restore the lead right on half-time but blazed over from 12 yards to complete a poor 45 minutes for the big man, and the teams went in level at the break.

The start of the second half saw head injuries to both Garvan and Bolasie, with the former being missed by Gibbs who was having a poor game. Meanwhile Gabbidon flicked on a header from a corner but it was missed by everyone.

The rain continued to lash down but that didn't stop both sides creating chances; Garvan was sent through by Murray but fired wide before Bellamy had a shot well saved by Speroni.

And Palace were claiming a penalty with half an hour left after when Zaha went down in the box under pressure from Ben Turner but Gibbs instead gave a foul against the Eagles forward.

And Cardiff took the lead with 15 minutes left when Gunnarsson headed in Bellamy's corner to make it 2-1.

Palace's frustration started to pay as they conceded soft free-kicks, Peter Whittingham skimming the bar with one effort.

As the game entered the final five minutes Holloway went for broke, chucking on Jermaine Easter for Parr, with KG slotting in at right-back.

But it wasn't to be and the full-time whistle went and Holloway suffered his second defeat as Palace manager to leave the Eagles six points off top spot, but just two from Hull in second.

Palace lineup: Speroni; Parr (Easter), Gabbidon, Ramage, Moxey; KG, Jedinak; Zaha, Garvan, Bolasie (Moritz); Murray.


 

Scunny Match Report: Palace Didn't Fold Under Pressure From Iron

Written by Jim Daly

FYP has never witnessed a robbery before, and probably wouldn't know what to do, aside from shout "don't do that!" or "seriously, I'm going to call the police", but yesterday FYP watched a burglary so blatant we're surprised warrants haven't been issued for the arrests of 11 men in red and blue shirts from the south London area yet.

Palace grabbed a 2-1 win with a late, late goal from FYP favourite Neil Danns, but it was much more than the Eagles deserved having been under pressure for large periods of the game. Still, who cares?

We'll take everything we can get at the moment and the win lifts Palace to within just nine points of the play-offs. Damn Agilo and their 10-point deduction enforcing administration.

But the final-whistle jubilation seemed a long way off 10 minutes into the game as Scunny's forward three of Hooper, Thompson and McDermott terrorised the Palace defence in the opening exchanges. Clint Hill had a terrible time down the left as Thompson repeatedly made him look like a Sunday league player, summed up by one fresh air clearance which Thompson capitalised on and it was only the intervention of the excellent Matt Lawrence who prevented a goal.

In fact, Lawrence was the only defender with his head screwed on yesterday and without his MOM performance, we could have surely lost. Hooper and Byrne both missed guilt-edged chances before the half-time whistle came and the Eagles fans breathed a huge, collective sigh of relief.

After half-time Palace looked a bit more confident, but still spent most of the match chasing claret and light blue shadows. It took until about 60 minutes for the Eagles to realise that lumping long balls into the box was never going to materialise into anything with the 12ft Jones easily heading away anything delivered.

However, against the run of play Darren Ambrose put Palace 1-0 up with a smartly taken shot from the left of the box. For some reason FYP knew he was going to score when he lined up the shot. That sparked Palace into life and suddenly Nick Carle and Neil Danns seemed to find their 'on' switches and began buzzing around midfield. Keiran Djilali came on for Danny Butterfield almost unnoticed while Palace celebrated Ambrose's goal and the young winger had much more of an impact than our number 20.

Djilali drew a foul by Scunny's Williams which led to a red card for the defender and also had two brilliant chances to put the game to bed but snatched at his far post volley, before firing right at Murphy from 10 yards out. Experience and confidence will teach him how to bury those, but he looked bright and was always in the right position. He has bulked up too since his introduction last season and FYP is making a mental note to follow his progress. Scunny, more than deservedly, equalised with five minutes to go. A corner was flicked on at the near post by Mirfin and it eluded everyone and went in. Most Palace fans made the face that said "hmm, fair enough".

But the games wasn't over and Palace still pressed for a winner. Lee Hills came on to give Palace a bit more of a cutting edge down the left and Nate Clyne also began pushing on. It was Clyne's run that led to the winner, he shaped to shoot but fed Danns who spun on the right of the box, got a lucky bounce, but then cooly fired home with his left-foot from 18-yards, the ball curling deliciously into the far corner. Cue delirium in the away stand and on the pitch.

A massive bundle of Palace players mirrored events in the away end. This means so much to all of us. The final whistle was seconds later and Palace fans and players clapped each other for what seemed like hours. What next in this bizarre epsiode of the club's history? FYP doesn't know but can't wait.