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You didn't really think he'd join City, did you?
In what was undoubtedly a tough decision, Michael Owen has opted to join fledgling Premier League upstarts Manchester United rather than experience the footballing utopia that is Hull City.
Okay, so it was a pipe dream. But the Tigers are still in the hunt for strikers Fraizer Campbell and Marc-Antoine Fortuné. Campbell is thinking through the move over a family holiday, while Fortuné is trying to decide whether joining Celtic would be more preferable.
Meanwhile, it appears that veteran German midfielder Dietmar Hamaan has been offered a one-year deal by Phil Brown after his release by Manchester City.
Football
fans like omens. There’s solace in superstition. And so we scour the past for
comfort, even if its crumb sized. It helps during difficult times. Well, this
is a difficult time.
Not in the
great scheme of things, obviously – we’ve known worse, the kind that would have
Newcastle and
their media friends reaching for the whiskey and a revolver. But we must now
stew for seven days awaiting the final act of this heart-stopping Premier
League debut, and it’s going to drag horribly.
So I offer
a positive portent. It is this: two years ago a then unheard man named Phil
Brown took his relegation-haunted City side to StokeCity.
The previous week, a poor result at home had left us in desperate relegation
trouble. We fell behind at Stoke, and slid into the relegation zone as a
consequence.
Back we
came. A goal elsewhere – for Southampton against Leeds
– flashed onto our mobile phones, and spurred us onto a stirring recovery and
equaliser. That priceless leveller made sure that our fate was back in our own
hands, and we eventually clambered, exhausted but exhilarated, to safety.
Spot any
similarities? And dare we attach similar importance to Craig Fagan’s goal at Bolton? No, we dare not. Not yet, anyway. Newcastle’s startling
capitulation to Fulham means that we enter the last day with things in our own
hands. Could we repeat the escape act of 2006/7?
So many
questions, so few answers. So let us depart from whimsy and move onto the cold,
hard facts. On a fresh spring day, Phil Brown assembled his XI thus: Myhill;
Ricketts, Turner, Kilbane, Dawson; Garcia, Boateng (c), Barmby, Fagan;
Geovanni, Manucho. Zayatte’s injured meant that the versatile Kilbane was
introduced at centre-half, while Cousin’s continuing injury concerns restricted
him to a place on the bench as Brown elected to keep faith with Manucho.
Bolton
needed a point from the game to mathematically guarantee a survival that had
been certain for several weeks. They were without Andy O’Brien, who was absent
with illness. He was replaced by our old friend Danny Shittu, of former Watford fame.
There was
a minute’s silence before the game for former Bolton
chairman George Warbuton, impeccably observed by the travelling hordes. We were
some five thousand strong, completely filling both tiers of the Bolton’s away end, and it was towards us that the Tigers
attacked in the first half. Not that we did too much attacking at the outset,
with the first shot of the match taking place at the far end when Matt Taylor
fizzed a thirty yard shot just a couple of foot above Myhill’s crossbar.
Play was
then suspended while treatment was administered to Shittu after a heavy
collision with Manucho – he returned to the fray sporting a large comedy
bandage. Taylor sent another shot towards the
City goal which flew wide as Bolton had the
better of the early skirmishes. Muamba and Taylor had shots charged down by
City players, and it wasn’t until about twenty minutes of a fraught affair that
our chance arrived, Manucho thumping a powerful header after good work by
Richard Garcia that our perpetual nemesis Jussi Jaaskelainen pouched with
remarkable ease. He was now also sporting a chortleworthy bandage after
suffering a heavy blow of his own.
Andy
Dawson was cautioned by referee Peter Walton for a foul on Muamba, and City
fell behind in a distressingly slovenly fashion. A City attack was broken up
and Bolton raided down the right through Elmander – he dragged the ball back to
Muamba, who transferred it to Taylor.
His shot was smothered but the ball fell to Steinsson, who steadied himself and
lashed a fine 20 yard shot past Myhill. A cracking finish, but some sloppy work
in not closing him down. Despair washed over the Tiger Nation.
Not
necessarily the players, however. We should have been level almost immediately
when Ricketts fed the unmarked Manucho, who blazed miles over from twelve
yards, to the vocal dismay of the City fans. Perhaps feeling sorry for him, Mr
Walton bafflingly awarded a corner, from which Barmby directed a free header
wide of the post.
Back came Bolton, although it was a more even affair now. An
Elmander shot required a neat save from Myhill as City wobbled briefly, and as
the half came to a close only a goal-line clearance stood between Gary Cahill
and what would likely have been a decisive second goal. As it was, the break
arrived via some a huge lift in spirits in the stands: Fulham had scored at Newcastle!
It made
for a happier half time interval than could otherwise have been expected. Foul
beverages were consumed – one doesn’t expect CAMRA-approved ales at football
grounds, but this was utter filth. It also allowed for reflections on the
Reebok. Bolton is a traditional club from a
traditional northern place, not entirely unlike us (though obviously with a far
richer history), and it appears their battle to marry old with new is not
faring too well. Some halfwit had evidently decided that equipping the fans
with the type of paraphernalia best left to ludicrous American sports would be
a good idea. Shame on them. Shame on the Bolton
fans who eschew song and chant with mindless beating of these idiotic objects.
That
fairly major quibble aside, it’s not a bad place to watch the Tigers. The view
from the upper tier was fine, the police and stewards were content to allow
football fans to behave as such…and within a minute of the restart, the special
type of insane glee and fulsome bellowing reserved for crucial goals on the
road was splitting the Lancashire sky.
A long
ball from Garcia gave Fagan something to chase, and one of his particular
strengths is hassling and harrying defenders. In this instance, it was the
troubled figure of Shittu, who completely arsed up his attempts to collect
possession, allowed Fagan to pinch the ball and he slipped a delightful
left-footed finish past the exposed Jaaskelainen.
Joy was
unconfined, and it visibly galvanised a City side that had previously looked
committed but a trifle short of confidence. Not now. Kevin Davies escaped
sanction for a crunching foul on Dawson, and
after ten energetic but scrappy minutes, even more good news reached us: Aston
Villa had equalised at Middlesbrough, while Newcastle’s only competent defender Sebastien
Bassong had been sent off.
The City
fans roared the team on as we established control of the game, forcing three
corners in quick succession. All were dealt with, and Bolton
almost snatched another goal against the run of play when a corner of their own
was deflected off Manucho and towards goal, but happily the ubiquitous Fagan
was on hand to hack the ball to safety.
Back came
City, who came desperately close to taking the lead when a mis-hit volley by
Nick Barmby wrong-footed Jaaskelainen and bobbled towards goal, only to smack
into the post. Many teeth were gnashed 130 yards away.
Barmby,
who’d been a characteristically frisky and thoughtful influence on the game,
was withdrawn soon after in favour of Dean Marney. He was involved immediately
when a well-struck shot by Geovanni was parried by the Bolton
keeper. It fell to Marney, who neatly rounded the grounded goalie but from a
horribly acute angle his shot flew across goal – sadly, no-one was on hand to
prod the ball home.
Geovanni’s
quiet afternoon ended after 77 minutes when Cousin was brought on as the Tigers
swarmed forward in search of a winner. With fewer than ten minutes remaining we
were yet again cursing the name Jaaskelainen as he pulled off a brilliant save
to divert a crashing Cousin header onto the crossbar, then remarkably he was up
first to palm the ball away. It fell to Fagan who took a touch and flashed the
ball back across goal. Again, a ball whizzing through the six-yard box found
no-one in black and amber.
Knowing
his side had little to play for and were toiling a little, Gary Megson made two
changes, bringing off Taylor and Muamba for Riga and Chris Basham – the latter
had a promising chance to score within seconds of coming on after being
released on the Bolton left, but he carelessly trod on the ball and the chance
was cleared. Halmosi replaced Manucho, whose departure with heralded with just
a hint of sourness, and he too was immediately in the thick of the action,
darting into space on the left and sending in a fine cross that wasn’t
capitalised upon.
Four
minutes of injury time, and although City looked the only side likely to score,
sadly it wasn’t enough. News of Newcastle’s
latest defeat had filtered through during injury time, and it meant that the
scenes at the end were decidedly upbeat, though tempered just a little with the
knowledge that we ought to have won.
But the
point nudges us onto 35, and most importantly, back into 17th place.
During this construction on this missive, West Brom’s
relegation has been confirmed. Middlesbrough trail by three points and four
goals, Newcastle
by just a point and with substantial goal difference superiority.
They
travel to an Aston Villa side in poor form and with nothing to play for. We, of
course, are hosting the new champions, crowned yesterday. A win makes us safe.
A point means…ah, you know all the permutations already. Let’s save them for
now
Instead,
one more omen to tide us through the coming week. As we’ve known for a while,
Manchester United will face Barcelona
in the European Cup final three days after their game at the Circle. Now that
they’ve secured their eighteenth title, speculation about the strength of the
side they’ll field is rife. Well, Barcelona
also won their domestic league yesterday. They celebrated this fact by sending
a reserve team to Mallorca this evening, with Rome in mind.
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Sidebar
Last Result City 0 Man Utd 1
Next fixture: at Nth Ferriby (Jul 18)