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Forty-five of the forty-six regular rounds of the Championship
are now completed, and still our fate is undecided. We could
play another one game, or three, or perhaps four. We can finish
as champions, be promoted automatically from second place, win
the play-offs at Wembley, lose the play-offs at Wembley, or lose
a play-off semi-final at the Circle.
Much, of course is, out of our hands, of which more later. What
was in our hands was the chance (and requirement) to beat the
Championship’s form team,
Crystal Palace,
at an engorged Circle. This we did, in our customary thrilling
fashion, to leave open such a dizzying array of possibilities
over the coming week(s). Never, ever let it be said that being a
City fan is not the most exciting thing you can do with your
clothes on.
Knowing a City victory was imperative with Stoke’s imminent
victory at relegated Colchester,
Phil Brown decided to resolve his months-long dilemma of who he
should play up front by simply playing all of them, as the
Tigers lined up with an adventurous 4-3-3 formation,
accommodating the following: Myhill; Ricketts, TurnerBrown,
Pedersen; Ashbee (c), Marney, Hughes; Windass, Folan, Campbell.
City had Duke, Doyle, Walton, Barmby and Fagan on the bench,
while Colin kept faith with most of the side that had won 2-0 at
ailing Watford
last weekend to extend Palace’s unbeaten run to ten games.
Before the match, a moment’s applause was given for Billy
Fletcher, the young lad taken from us in a road accident en
route to Barnsley. The tribute
was genuine and warm, and we tip our caps to the
Crystal Palace
supporters for their enthusiastic participation.
It was the visitors, buoyed by the most lively away support
we’ve seen this season, who nearly snatched an early lead – a
corner being directed by Mark Hudson on to Boaz Myhill’s post
before being hacked to safety.
A let-off – but on a warm and sunny spring afternoon City were
looking a little nervy, and only a stern intervention from Wayne
Brown prevented a jinking run from Scott Sinclair ending in
disaster. With ten minutes yet to be completed, the opposite
goal-frame was struck – a peach of a free kick from Deano some
25 yards out totally beating Julian Speroni, but hitting wood
and bouncing out just beyond the reach of Michael Turner.
Already at a brisk pace, the game stepped up another gear and
Ben Watson fired a shot narrowly over the bar – but a minute
later we led.
Fraizer Campbell
was the scorer, with another gem of a goal. Collecting
possession with his back to goal twenty yards out, he executed
an improbable piece of control to swivel in an instant, shift
the ball rightwards and flash a right-footed drive past the
bewildered Speroni. An absolute peach from a player who is now
close to exhausting our supply of genuflecting adjectives.
With another capacity crowd exultant, City were firmly on top
and a few minutes later the ball was in the Palace goal again –
sadly disallowed when the East Stand linesman determined that
Deano was offside while neatly volleying home a Hughes cross. A
close decision. We’ll award the flagman the benefit of the
doubt.
Deano was everywhere, but his afternoon, and possibly season,
was soon to be curtailed. A wicked challenge from Shaun Derry
felled our iconic striker, and while referee Booth played the
advantage, he failed to pull it back when this instantly
withered and with Windass in distress on the turf, Palace sprang
forward and nearly fashioned a shooting chance while the City
fans howled in outrage.
When play finally halted, Deano was finally able to leave the
pitch, sporting a wound visible from the stands. And he was not
impressed by events, trying to escape the clutches of
clearer-headed team-mates to visit justice upon Derry, which
would likely have resulted in Derry
eating through a straw for several months. Still raging, Windass
was finally escorted off and a red-booted Fagan hopped on to
replace him. Derry was cautioned, luckily, and spent the
remainder of the afternoon receiving the bitter scorn reserved
for a Leeds player who’s
attempted to cripple a hero.
It was a white-hot atmosphere in the ground now, with both sets
of fans creating an impressive din in support of their sides.
The visitors nearly had something to cheer with half an hour
gone, when Michael Turner deflected a cross heart-stoppingly
close to his own goal, though the ball thankfully flashed inches
wide.
Phil Brown’s options for later in the game reduced yet further
when Henrik Pedersen had to be withdrawn. He hadn’t looked fully
fit, and on came Nathan Doyle for just his third appearance of
this season. Though we weren’t to know it, this was to be a
telling moment.
Seven minutes before the break,
Crystal
Palace equalised. Wayne
Brown halted a tidy move by Colin’s charges, but showed dopey
indecision on the scale of his Prime Ministerial namesake in
possession, which allowed Morrison to rob him of the ball – it
fell to Sinclair, who poked it past Myhill for the game’s second
goal.
A kick in the knackers, but on balance, a deserved leveller for
Palace. The mood, once exuberant, darkened further with news of
a Stoke goal at Colchester,
with odds of 1/infinity being offered on it coming from a long
throw proving to be generous.
Owing to the extensive delay for Deano’s injury and subsequent
rage, our game was several minutes behind
Layer Road, and the second didn’t get
underway until 16.08 – the tension of the afternoon was evident
immediately, as the City support quietened, aware that as things
stood Tony Pulis’ anti-football was just forty-minutes away from
success.
Would we fall apart as harmfully as at
Bramall Lane? Or was there to be yet
another heroic effort from the Tigers to take it to the final
week? Nails were chewed, sighs were expelled, many stood
throughout, all fretted - and proceeded to watch, spellbound, as
City tore into
Crystal
Palace for 45 exhilarating
minutes.
The first real chance came from an outswinging corner by Dean
Marney, which was meatily met by Michael Turner, but unusually
his set-piece direction was lacking and the ball flew harmlessly
wide. At the other end, Hudson also flashed a header wide, but
increasingly the play was all coming at the packed South Stand
towards which City were kicking.
Much of this was by rapidly transferring the ball forward. Not
the unwatchable long-ball rubbish preferred by such sides as
Stoke and Watford, but with City playing a tight 4-3-3 with
little width in midfield, it primarily involved the two
full-backs chipping the ball through the midfield for the
frighteningly quick trio of Campbell, Fagan and Folan to chase.
Although the shortage of manpower in the midfield had led to us
struggling to exert much control on the shape of the game in the
first half, Ashbee was now doing the work of several men, all of
them excellent, while Marney and Hughes were scampering around
in nimble supporting roles.
Palace were struggling to contend with this, and fell further
and further back as City’s urgent need for victory carried us
deeper into enemy territory, and for longer.
A word, now, for some of the men making the second half such a
compelling spectacle. Nathan Doyle. Ah, where has he been all
season? This is meant as no criticism of Sam Ricketts, a
legitimate player of the year candidate, or Andy Dawson, who has
stepped up this level in a quite unexpected manner. However,
that this was his first League outing of the season suddenly
seemed quite peculiar, as he put in a rather wonderful shift at
left back. Quick, skilful, disciplined in position and with an
eye for a speedy pass forward, he was terrific. Indeed, he
nearly scored a wonder goal of his own with a piercing run from
deep that carried him past seemingly half of the Palace side,
before sadly blazing his shot wide from about fifteen yards.
Ian Ashbee we have already mentioned, but his fist-shaking
intensity coupled with the diligent midfield play so imperative
to his worth were all present. His place as a City legend is,
thankfully, no longer in doubt.
Mr Booth, thy miscreant whistleblower. An errant, performance,
and arguably the worst we’ve seen all season. There was a wholly
astonishing period in the second half where virtually every
single decision that was not 100/0 in our favour went the way of
the visitors, and his cowardice in awarding decisions to whoever
was the defending side could only serve to punish City. Very
poor.
With 22 minutes left and Stoke only quarter of an hour from a
win no-one doubted they would complete, Phil Brown made the only
attacking change open to him, bringing on Nick Barmby, although
Bryan Hughes can count himself a little unfortunate to have been
withdrawn.
City continued driving forward, just a hint of desperation
creeping in. However, it was slipping agonisingly beyond us. The
City crowd, orchestrated for once by those inhabiting the
south-east corner, was showing commendable defiance and the
noise continued to build as our hopes began to slide, but Palace
have not surged into the top six without showing plenty of
resilience themselves, and they grimly hung on.
Campbell had a snapshot well parried by Speroni, Mr Booth turned
down a penalty shout that was only half-hearted because not one
single person in the stadium considered him possible of giving
such a decision, we continued to hurl balls in and curse a
higher power as they were all cleared, just, and that instant of
fortune we needed mockingly eluded us.
Then, with injury time underway at
Layer Road
and 85 minutes on the clock at the Circle, cometh our captain.
Palace had what looked like a clear corner denied to them, to
cries of hallelujah from the City fans, initially gobsmacked
that Mr Booth was capable of pointing in a direction that wasn’t
north, City bounded downfield and won a corner than Dean Marney
hared over to take.
His delivery was immaculate, and it met Ian Ashbee hanging an
immense distance off the ground. His connection was sweet, and
from fifteen yards the ball arced beyond Speroni’s
camera-friendly dive and crashed into the goal.
Utter pandemonium detonated around the stadium. One of the most
intense goal celebrations witnessed in the Circle’s short life
shook the air and suddenly the dream was – just – back on.
The final minutes were played out amid a haze of delirium, so
fervent that even the usually, ahem, more reserved patrons of
the West Stand were flinging out arms and belting out anthems.
The noise rolled around the clean corners of our magnificent
home and assailed the ears as our final stand was rewarded with
an utter cacophony. A quite memorable scene.
Little more of the match is worth reporting, for Palace took
their defeat like men (as manly as southerners for whom “fack”
is a proper word, at least) and trudged off to their horrible
part of their horrible city, while we feted our heroes off the
pitch, and then after serenading our recently triumphant
Juniors, feted them once more in an end(ish)-of-season lap of
honour.
And how we should remember this side. There is Deano, changed,
be-suited and on crutches, beaming with pride at being among his
own. There is Phil Brown, pointing skyward again, still
believing. There is Ian Ashbee, his place in our affectations
secure again (and how your correspondent cringes at his prior
ingratitude). There is Fraizer Campbell, shyly accepting
thunderous acclaim from fans of another club, hopefully knowing
his six amazing months here will make him welcome forever in
East Yorkshire. There is Brian Horton, standing slightly to one
side, the quiet mastermind in the background. There are various
children of the players, slightly agog. And lastly there is the
chairman, sporting the same brown shoes as appear to have become
an unofficial trademark of the club, positively revelling in the
cheers, doing a slightly unbecoming yet hugely endearing jig,
his chest puffing out to hear the first – but surely not last –
cry of “one Paul Duffen”. The East Stand loved him.
And finally they went back to the dressing room, and we too
left, wondering how we’ll get through the final nerve-wracking
days of this arresting season. We all know the permutations –
failure to win at Ipswich, and
we’ll stay third. Victory there will still count for nothing
unless Stoke lose at home to struggling
Leicester, OR West
Brom fail to get a single point against
Southampton on Monday evening and at QPR next
weekend.
It’s hopelessly out of our hands. But then we always knew that,
and while people who think that football and grass should be
kept firmly apart appear seem destined to prosper at our
expense, we cannot overly concern ourselves with the injustice
of that. We can only travel to Ipswich
in our official and unofficial thousands, hope to overturn the
division’s best home record, and hope that someone does us a
massive favour elsewhere.
And if they don’t, the worst that’ll happen is that we’ll finish
third, and take on any of Bristol, Watford, Palace, Wolves or
Ipswich in the play-offs, all but one of whom have already lost
at the Circle and all but two of whom we’ve either beaten on
aggregate – one being a latest score of 3-1, the other being a
shattered and deflated Bristol. Hardly the end of the world.
There’s no pressure on us any longer. We can roll up at
Portman Road, enjoy ourselves, hope
for a miracle, but most of all, feast our eyes once again upon
what is now unquestionably the greatest City side of all-time,
and wonder at how and where the journey will end. And so, to
Ipswich… (AD) |