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Fitz Hall’s hamstrings and Paul Furlong’s last minute winner - history
Fitz Hall’s hamstrings and Paul Furlong’s last minute winner - history
Wednesday, 3rd Apr 2013 19:51 by Clive Whittingham

Ahead of QPR’s meeting with Wigan on Sunday, LFW looks at the career of Fitz Hall who played for both clubs and recalls a classic meeting from 2004.

Recent Meetings

Wigan 2 QPR 2, Saturday December 8, 2012, Premier League

QPR were still searching for their first win of the season when they travelled to fellow strugglers Wigan for the sixteenth match of the campaign back in December, but the appointment of Harry Redknapp as manager had brought about improvements to the team and renewed hope among the supporters. A lacklustre start to a crucial six pointer at the DW Stadium, during which the home side took the lead through James McCarthy, threatened to derail that progress but Ryan Nelsen powered a header home from a corner and then in the second half Djibril Cisse slid home after Shaun Wright-Phillips had won the ball well in the Wigan half and crossed into an understaffed penalty area. Sadly the R’s couldn’t hang onto their lead for more than three minutes and McCarthy capped a decent individual display with an equaliser with a quarter of an hour left to play – a preventable goal, but really it was only the goalkeeping of Robert Green that had kept the hosts at bay that long and Rangers scarcely deserved their point.

Wigan: Al Habsi 6, Boyce 6, Lopez 5, McArthur 6, Bausejour 7, Jones 7 (Maloney 76, 6), McCarthy 8, Stam 7, Kone 6, Gomez 6, Di Santo 6 (Boselli 85, -)

Subs not used: Pollit, Golobart, Fyvie, Redmond, McManaman

Goals: McCarthy 19 (unassisted), 74 (assisted Beausejour)

QPR: Green 8, Bosingwa 5 (Fabio 84,-), Nelsen 7, Hill 6, Traore 5, Diakite 5 (Granero 77, 5), Mbia 6, Derry 6, Taarabt 6 (Cisse 58, 6), Wright-Phillips 5, Mackie 6

Goals: Nelsen 26 (assisted Taarabt), Cisse 71 (assisted Wright-Phillips)

Bookings: Taarabt 45 (foul)

QPR 3 Wigan 1, Saturday January 21, 2012, Premier League

QPR recorded their first win since November, and first maximum point haul under new manager Mark Hughes, with a 3-1 win against Wigan at Loftus Road in January last season. Things were looking pretty straightforward at half time after James McCarthy's inexplicable handball gave Heidar Helguson a chance to score what would turn out to be his last competitive goal for the club from the penalty spot, and then right on the stroke of the break Akos Buzsaky smacked a delicious free kick in off the base of the post. Wigan were indebted to goalkeeper Ali Al Habsi for keeping them in contention at that stage but the second half became a fraught, nervous affair once Hugo Rodallega had halved the deficit with a free kick of his own from similar range to Buzsaky's. A second penalty award from referee Jon Moss – against Gary Caldwell for climbing over Helguson in the box – should have put the game to bed by Al Habsi saved from Helguson at the second attempt which meant Tommy Smith's late 25 yard screamer was a blessed relief to the QPR fans who'd waited three months for a league win.

QPR: Kenny 7, Hill 6, Ferdinand 7, Hall 7, Young 7, Wright-Phillips 6, Barton 6, Buzsaky 8 (Derry 82 6), Mackie 6, Helguson 7, Campbell 5 (Smith 45, 6)

Subs Not Used: Czerny, Orr, Ramage, Bothroyd, Macheda

Booked: Barton (foul), Young (foul)

Goals: Helguson 33 (penalty, McCarthy handball), Buzsaky 45 (freekick), Smith (assisted Wright-Phillips)

Wigan : Al Habsi 8, Gohouri 6, Caldwell 6, Boyce 6 (Stam 69 6), Figueroa 6, McCarthy 5, Watson 7, Moses 7, Gomez 6 (Crusat 61 6), McArthur 6 (Sammon 45 6), Rodallega 7

Subs Not Used: Pollitt, Lopez, Di Santo, McManaman

Booked: Gohouri (foul), McCarthy (handball)

Goals: Rodallega 66 (free kick)

Wigan 2 QPR 0, Saturday August 27, 2011, Premiership

Tony Fernandes’ takeover of QPR had been ratified in the days leading up to the August Bank Holiday fixture at Wigan last season and Joey Barton was perched high in the main stand after completing his move to Loftus Road from Newcastle the day before. The QPR starting 11 wasn’t even as strong as the one they’d won the Championship with the season before with Bruno Perone given a full league debut at centre back and the lumbering Patrick Agyemang selected in attack. Agyemang missed the chance of the match, firing horribly wide after Adel Taarabt had struck the post from distance, and Perone thumped the cross bar with a header in the second half. But Rangers were poor overall and Wigan deserved the win they achieved, albeit through two deflected goals from striker Franco Di Santo.

Wigan: Al Habsi 8, Boyce 6, Caldwell 6, Lopez 6, Figueroa 6, Diame 8, Watson 7, Moses 7 (McArthur 69, 6), Rodallega 8, Gomez 7 (Stam 85, -), Di Santo 6 (Sammon 69, 6)

Subs Not Used: Kirkland , McCarthy, Thomas, Jones

Booked: Lopez (foul), Caldwell (foul)

Goals: Di Santo 41 (unassisted), 66 (unassisted)

QPR: Kenny 7, Gabbidon 7, Hall 5 (Harriman 61, 7), Perone 6, Connolly 6, Faurlin 6, Derry 6, Taarabt 7, Buzsaky 6 (Bothroyd 72, 7), Smith 6 (Andrade 80, -), Agyemang 4

Subs Not Used: Murphy, Helguson, Ephraim, Hewitt

Previous Results

Head to Head >>> QPR wins 3 >>> Draws 4 >>> Wigan wins 2

2012/13 Wigan 2 QPR 2 (Nelsen, Cisse)

2011/12 QPR 3 Wigan 1 (Helguson, Buzsaky, Smith)

2011/12 Wigan 2 QPR 0

2004/05 Wigan 0 QPR 0

2004/05 QPR 1 Wigan 0 (Furlong)

2002/03 QPR 0 Wigan 1

2002/03 Wigan 1 QPR 1 (Thomson)

2001/02 QPR 1 Wigan 1 (Gallen)

2001/02 Wigan 1 QPR 2 (Thomson, Brennan og)

Memorable Match

QPR 1 Wigan 0, Saturday November 13, 2004, Championship

Wigan and QPR had met a handful of times in the seasons leading up to this as the R’s chased the Latics up the Football League ladder. This was their first ever meeting in the second tier of the English game and came as Paul Jewell’s Wigan side was pressing for it’s a maiden promotion into the top flight, and just a few months after Ian Holloway’s QPR had finished second in the Second Division to move back up a division themselves.

That promotion hadn’t kept Ian Holloway safe from the vultures that circle around Loftus Road all too often however. The introduction to the board of Gianni Paladini had left Holloway looking vulnerable, particularly as his newly promoted team had initially struggled at the higher level and won just one of their first half dozen league games. Following a meek 1-0 home defeat by Sheffield United – hardly a surprising result with a centre half pairing of Richard Edghill and Georges Santos – the story was that the QPR boss would be sacked if he failed to win the next game and replaced by Argentinean Ramon Diaz.

Luckily for Olly, and for Rangers, a pulsating home game against fellow newly promoted side Plymouth was won by three goals to two with Paul Furlong lobbing in a spectacular second and Kevin Gallen scoring late at the School End to seal the win. That victory was the first of seven on the spin that lifted Rangers to fourth in the table and eventually developed into a run of nine wins and a draw from 15 matches played. The run came to an end in spectacular fashion with a 6-1 defeat at Leeds but the week before QPR had been on top of the world after a famous win at Loftus Road against the big spending, high flying, free scoring Latics.

Jewell had paired Jason Roberts and Nathan Ellington together in attack that season and the pairing proved to be prolific with service from Jimmy Bullard – but a combination of awful finishing and fine goalkeeper from Chris Day kept them scoreless on this occasion until the dying embers of the game. Wigan’s profligacy set up a grandstand finish when former Everton winger Kevin McLeod crossed on the run from the left flank for veteran frontman Furlong to superbly guide the winning goal into the far corner of the net with his head.

Jewell fumed at his side on the touchline, angry that they’d carelessly conceded possession in a dangerous area while pressing for a winner. Wigan, nevertheless, did go onto win promotion while QPR’s challenge fell away, but on that occasion it was the R’s well on top.

QPR: C Day, M Bignot, D Shittu, G Santos, M Rose, G Ainsworth (K McLeod, 64), M Bean, K Gallen, L Cook (G Padula, 76), J Cureton, P Furlong

Subs not used: F Simek, S Branco, A Gnohere

Goals: Furlong 89 (assisted McLeod)

Wigan: J Filan, D Wright, M Jackson, I Breckin, L Baines (S McMillan, 46), N Eaden, A Mahon, J Bullard, D Graham (G Teale, 76), N Ellington (M Flynn, 87), J Roberts

Subs Not Used: G Whalley, G Walsh

Connections

Fitz Hall >>> Wigan 2006-2008 >>> QPR 2008-2012

Fitz Hall had played a part in one of the most memorable moments in recent QPR history even before he joined the club from Wigan in 2008.

On a balmy May evening in 2003 the centre half had been playing for Oldham against Rangers at Loftus Road in a delicately poised Second Division play-off semi-final second leg. Tied on aggregate and seemingly destined for extra time, the game exploded into life seven minutes from the end when Clarke Carlisle stepped out of the QPR backline and headed a long clearance from Oldham’s excellent goalkeeper Les Pogliacomi back down the field. Carlisle had probably been concerned with little more than clearing his lines but the header dropped in behind the Oldham defence which hesitated, expecting young Rangers forward Richard Pacquette to be flagged offside. The striker turned his palms to the sky and walked away from the ball, the flag remained down as a result, and that was all the invitation Paul Furlong needed to seize on possession and set off towards the School End goal.

Hall went with Furlong that night, grappling manfully with the former Chelsea man as he somehow kept the ball under control and moving towards the goal despite the pressure of both his opponent and the situation. On the edge of the box Hall finally surrendered, falling to the floor after finally being shrugged off by Furlong who then drew Pogliacomi from his line and finished crisply into the far bottom corner. QPR fans who have been following the club for 40 years said it was the loudest they’d ever heard Loftus Road in their lives. For Furlong it was the completion of quite a turn around: booed for his Chelsea connections and poor performances after a summer arrival from Birmingham his form exploded after Christmas and culminated in that goal which catapulted him to the status of a modern day club legend. The Rangers fans were too busy acclaiming a new hero, celebrating the late sending off of pantomime villain Wayne Andrews and hailing a late save from Chris Day that preserved the lead and is still, to this day, one of the greatest stops ever made at the Loft End of the ground to think too much about the fallen Oldham centre back.

It had actually been Hall with the shot that came so close to forcing extra time – an instinctive effort when a desperate last throw of the dice had fallen at his feet. He’d been brought to Oldham by manager Iain Dowie having been rejected as a youngster by first West Ham and then Barnet. Dowie knew him from non-league Chesham, where he’d turned up after leaving Underhill and played for Iain’s brother Bob when he was manager there. He was a key part of an impressive Oldham team that Dowie built his own managerial reputation on – our current captain Clint Hill partnered Hall at the back in that side with another ex-QPR man Paul Murray doing the leg work for a classy, ageing midfield pair of David Eyres and Darren Sheridan. Former Leeds man Clyde Wijnhard led the attack and Pogliacomi was in the form of his life in goal. Hall was named in the division’s Team of the Year in 2002/03. Dowie, Oldham and Hall were unlucky to remain stuck in the third tier.

With Oldham impressing but failing at League One level it was inevitable that the side would be broken up and Hall went first – joining Premier League side Southampton for £250,000 in 2003. He was never a regular at St Mary’s but when Dowie also got a call from higher up the ladder – at First Division Crystal Palace – he sent for Hall immediately, and paid a hefty £1.5m to get him to Selhurst Park as well. Dowie had just overseen a remarkable promotion – Palace were in relegation trouble when he joined from Oldham in November but they won 16 of their last 24 games and two play-off ties to take their place in the Premier League.

Hall was a regular for the Eagles in the top flight but couldn’t prevent a cruel relegation sealed on the final day of the season in a local derby at Charlton. Dowie made Hall the captain for their first season back in the second tier but the team ran out of steam badly in the second half of the season and was easily beaten by Watford in the play-off semi-final. Dowie subsequently jumped ship to Charlton in acrimonious circumstances while Wigan agreed to meet the £3m release clause in Hall’s contract and take him back to the Premier League in 2006.

Hall never settled with the Latics. Ankle and knee ligament trouble sidelined him for long periods and when he did play he was responsible for some horrendous individual errors. Steve Bruce had no time for him and when QPR came calling for his services in January 2008 he’d made just two appearances in the previous six months – in a League Cup defeat to Hull and 4-0 league thrashing by Man Utd.

Rangers were newly minted, following a takeover by Flavio Briatore, and having struggled in the bottom three for most of the first half of the season were looking to flex their financial muscles for the first time under the supervision of manager Luigi De Canio. Eight players arrived immediately with Arsenal’s Matthew Connolly, Hull’s Damien Delaney and Preston’s Patrick Agyemang signing lucrative deals; Akos Buzsaky, Rowan Vine and Hogan Ephraim making their loan deals permanent; and Man Utd’s Kieran Lee arriving on a temporary contract along with Hall.

And so began a bizarre, and often incredibly frustrating, four year stay in W12 for Hall. Initially the signs were good - Hall was mobile, good in the air, sound on the ground and suited De Canio’s free-wheeling playing style perfectly. When De Canio left at the end of the season Hall’s old mate Iain Dowie replaced him and Rangers started the following season with Hall as captain and main man. He scored twice in an opening day victory at home to Barnsley and missed a penalty that would have given him a hat trick. He scored against the Tykes again on the opening day of the season three years later in a 4-0 win that set Neil Warnock’s Rangers on the way to promotion.

But Hall’s time at Loftus Road is best remembered for a catalogue of injury problems. There never seemed to be anything seriously wrong with him – no broken legs or pulverised knee ligaments – just a series of back, calf and hamstring niggles that would see him limp out of games in the first half and disappear for three weeks before returning. This pattern became monotonous during Jim Magilton’s time as manager. The Ulsterman was determined to start Hall whenever he was fit which meant he would play two games, limp around for a bit in the third holding his back, vanish for three weeks, and then immediately return to the team to start the cycle again. With consistency of selection key in the centre back positions this started to grate – particularly as Hall wasn’t playing well enough to justify the immediate recalls when he was fit – and goals started to be shipped. Magilton’s unwavering faith in Hall had a lot to do with the downfall of a promising managerial reign.

Hall was actually out on loan – and injured again – at Newcastle when Neil Warnock first arrived and he preferred the far superior pairing of Kaspars Gorkss and Matt Connolly during the promotion season. But Warnock also later came under the defender’s spell. Hall and new comer Danny Shittu started making appearances at the end of the promotion season when Connolly and Gorkss lost form and confidence and that summer, as Rangers prepared for the Premier League, Warnock allowed Gorkss to join Reading while making Hall the first choice QPR defender for the top flight. Not surprisingly he was neither fit nor good enough.

There were few tears shed when Hall’s ridiculously long and lucrative four year contract finally came to an end last summer. Quite the opposite in fact – there was a barbecue at LoftforWords Towers to celebrate the moment. Hall was picked up by Watford on a free last summer and is threatening to win another Championship promotion with the Hornets – but, yet again, he’s only been fit enough to start half their fixtures. On Tuesday night at Hull he limped out of the action after 26 minutes.

Potentially a half decent second tier centre half, but almost completely useless to any team at any level while he remains as pathetically fragile as he has been for the last six seasons.

Others >>> Ben Watson, QPR (loan) 2009, Wigan 2009–present >>> Scott Sinclair, QPR (loan) 2007, Wigan (loan) 2009-2010 >>> Gino Padula Wigan 2000-2001, QPR 2002-2005 >>> Jason Jarrett, Wigan 2002-2005, QPR (loan) 2007-2008 >>> Matt Jackson, QPR (loan) 1996, Wigan 2001-2007

Tweet @loftforwords

Pictures – Action Images

Photo: Action Images



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Roller added 20:58 - Apr 3
It is rather sad that Hall's most significant QPR moment was while he was playing for Oldham.

He seemed to have his best matches for us when he was playing alongside and continually organising Damion Stewart, I can only think that having to think for two kept him more focused. How such a big lad is so fragile will never be understood.
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TacticalR added 22:49 - Apr 3
I am really, really glad I don't have to think about Fitz Hall any more.

An absolutely lethal player who created confusion all around him. His positioning and errors were often so bad that other defenders would get caught out by his actions, and by the time the situation he had created was punished he was far from the scene of the crime.

He was one of those players who would always back off a player, trying to remain between the attacker and the goal, and then not get a challenge in.

The only time he looked good was against long ball sides that pumped balls into the box.

Worse than Anton Ferdinand in my opinion.
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R_from_afar added 08:52 - Apr 4
Our 1-0 win in 2004 is still one of my most memorable games. They battered us but Furs (and McLeod) stole the show with a stunning breakaway (not unlike the Traore/Mackie goal in the last game of last season). It should really have been 5-1 to Wigan in that 2004 game, to be honest.

You Rs

RFA
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ballbag added 13:42 - Apr 4
Was the Upper School End open for home fans during that 1-0 win (2004)?

I have a recollection of seeing that goal from that angle...that's IF Furlong scored in the Loft end. Otherwise I was sitting in the Upper Loft.

Bloody hell, the drugs during those years really mashed my brains up!

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LambournR added 12:54 - Apr 5
I remember that play off night very well - one of the best ever occasions at LR. It was certainly loud and the joy around the place after that goal went in after the previous 5-6 years of toil was wonderful.
I don't remember Fitz falling over though - I'd though he tried to rugby tackle Paul Furlong, but Furlong was too strong. He tried the same tactic quite a few times while playing for us, usually conceding a penalty.
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