Antti Heinola summons the strength to put together his six talking points from Sunday's heartbreaking late defeat at home to Chelsea.
We've seen similar games at Coventry and at Villa. The Man Utd 1-1 draw wasn't quite the same, but it's not far off. It's a killer blow. When we play poorly, we lose. When we pay well, we lose. On this occasion we were near-faultless for 88 minutes and then one tiny, silly mistake changes everything and the rising hope fades. The number of points we've lost in the last five minutes of games this term is so large I don't want to add it up, because it'll make me cry hot salty tears of unbearable sorrow.
On the face of it, you think: 'Well, we all know Clint isn't a Premier League left back these days...' but who else was there? And we definitely all thought: "Nah, he's not playing Karl Henry left mid, is he?" But what choice did he have? Real, reliable choice I mean? He's been badly let down by all three left midfielders (Hoilett, Kranjcar and Traore) that were available, so what else could he do? And actually, enormous credit goes to Ramsey for his plan that not only worked, but that was carried out phenomenally well by the ten outfield players. Henry isn't a left winger, so he tucked right in and in the first half especially we just ignored the left side. Instead, we pushed Chelsea inside, cramped them up, and completely denied them space all over the pitch. We harassed and harried and never gave them a moment's peace and they never settled. And we did all this playing two up front against the best (if uninspiring) team in the league.
In short, Ramsey had a plan and the players stuck to it brilliantly. Well done the boss, well done the team. Very hard luck on the result that everyone richly deserved. Ramsey's bizarre home record seems particularly harsh on him - we've been in all those games and yet lost every one.
2 - Too often beaten by low shots from distance.
3 - Prone to a rick - this has been throughout his career, at Norwich, West Ham, England and with us. He is just a keeper who does, every now and again, make bizarre mistakes. Does being a keeper come too easy to him? Are they mistakes of complacency?
4 - Kicking.
Today, it was a combination of three and four. I have never, ever understood why, when he kicks the ball from his hands, he puts backspin on it by cutting underneath it. I've said it since he joined. It's totally bizarre and I cannot see how it benefits us. But to do it here, against that vicious swirling wind, was just inexplicable. And if it was just once this season, you could put it down to bad luck, but that's at least the third goal that's resulted from a very poor kick out. Great bloke, great keeper, but after all the work everyone had put in, that was a hammer blow. He knew it, we all knew it. I know the players couldn't even look at him afterwards, but I hope back in the dressing room he had a few arms round his shoulders, because let's face it, this season there are very few players who can say they deserve much above a 'C' for their overall contribution - and he's one of them.
So often this season there's been a disconnect between defence and midfield, midfield and attack. The midfield never supporting the strikers, but somehow not really protecting the defence either. Today was different and it showed. Everyone knew their job and stuck to it. And as a result, weirdly, it must have been one of the easier games this season for Caulker and Onuoha. While they could never switch off, they were never left exposed and we always had numbers back to deal with Chelsea counters. It's that kind of collective effort that's been so often lacking this season. As a result, Chelsea only made one genuine chance all day - the one they scored from. Hazard was nullified, Fabregas played poorly, Drogba never had a kick, Ramires was hounded out the game. And on and on. And we still created a couple of our own chances. Well done all, but big congratulations to the back four for a very confident and solid display. Special mention to Isla too, after struggling v Villa, for doing an excellent job on Hazard.
But then there was the goal. All those who chucked stuff on the pitch - sorry, I hope you're all banned until next season. I hate Chelsea as much as the next fan, but they played the game fairly today, they didn't hound the ref (who was absolutely excellent) and, as much as they didn't deserve that goal, it was a fair goal and a good finish and wasn't celebrated in an over the top way. You make us look like classless, poor losers, no better than their manager. I saw empty plastic bottles which I'm sure are harmless, but that's hardly the point and if coins were thrown that is completely unacceptable. We lose a lot. Let's try and do it with at least a semblance of class, ok?
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