Saints V Reading The Preview Friday, 5th Apr 2013 08:52
A few weeks ago this looked to be a real six pointer, but the last two games have made a big difference to Saints.
Three weeks and two games ago Saints trip the Madejski looked to be a daunting prospect, back then only five points seperated the clubs and with both facing two tough games no one was putting much money on the gap changing between then and now.
Three weeks is an age in football though, Reading went to form and lost at both Man Utd and Arsenal, but we defied the odds and took maximum points from the visits of Chelsea and Liverpool, meaning that the two teams kick off with a massive 11 point gap and needing the points for two different reasons, Saints of course to move that much nearer to safety and Reading to keep a slim chance of survival.
The big surprise of the last week or so though was the appointment of Nigel Adkins as Royals boss and he ironically makes his home debut for the club so to speak against his old employers, so will the Adkins factor have any influence on the end result ?
There are those that say it will and they could be right, however it could affect it either way, from a Reading point of view it could be positive, he will obviosly be keen to put one over on Nicola Cortese and will want to win that much more, however from a Saints perspective what he can do is limited, Adkins may want to win much more than normal, but how about his players, to them it is just another game, yes of course they will want to win it, but from this aspect, Adkins influence on his own team will be no greater than it was last week at Arsenal, his problem is that he only has what he has to work with.
That being the case Reading's promotion last season was based on a particular style of play, it involved keeping things tight at the back and going quickly on the break, this season though they dont have the quality to do either, only Wigan have let in more home goals and they have played one more at home, and away from home only Villa, Newcastle and ourselves, so that is a warning to us perhaps.
Last season their record home and away was virtually identical, this season its far more home based with 18 of their 23 points coming at the Mad Stad, 4 wins, 6 draws and 5 defeats, thats equal to or better than the bottom five, so we shouldnt put this down as an easy home win just because of the fact they are bottom, make no mistake its their away form that has left them adrift, not the home form, indeed without those two wins against Chelsea and Liverpool we could have gone into this game with a worse home record.
So Adkins goes into this game knowing that defeat would almost certainly leave them with a mountain to climb that will be a bit too high for them, a draw wont do them any favours either, he will know that given their away record, if they are to stand any chance of survival they have to win their four remaining home games and given that two of them are against Liverpool and Man City that wont be easy, this being the case the question is, will Adkins stick with Reading usual style and concentrate on not conceding early, going on the break with the get out of jail card of throwing caution to the wind in the closing stages if neccessary, or will he try to change Reading to more his style.
Personally I think it would be folly to change things too much, but as i often say you do the same things you get the same results, so he is truly in a dilemma here, either way it all comes down to quality of players and sadly for Nigel Adkins I dont think he has got too much to work with in Premier league terms, so can he influence this game as much as some may think ? I would say no.
From a Saints line up point of view, hopefully Artur Boruc will return in goal after his dizzy spell last week, then its only a question of whether Pochettino chooses to return Ramirez to the starting line up or stick with a winning side, Adam Lallana is still feeling his groin so i would expect a place on the bench at best for him.
So Saints should go to the Madejski without fear, we are capable of beating Reading and we owe them one for last season, we have a style that works well for us and although isnt perfect and still lacks a few players, is a good base to work on, we have to concentrate on what we do best and push them back, but a word of caution, Reading are best when on the back foot and our downfall is often getting caught on the break, if we keep it tight then we should be capable of outscoring Reading.
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garysfc added 09:35 - Apr 5
spot on, esp last para. i cant see us losing, think a win is very possible but maybe a draw will prevail. i think a lot will depend upon our players mindset rather than theirs & what "the adkins effect" will have on them. if we're focused & get the bounce, we'll be on 37 pts by 2pm. | | |
CliveF added 10:02 - Apr 5
Given current form it is difficult to see Saints losing, but as they say, "There are no easy games", and the Reading players will be out to impress their new gaffer, so I would be happy if Saints secured an away point. It is next weeks match that I feel is important. Three points next week would almost guarantee staying up. Given the past comments about Southampton by a certain telly tubby shaped manager, looking at the remaining games it would probably ensure that we would be the top promoted club. | | |
ExiledSupporter added 11:21 - Apr 5
There seems to have been little exchange of views about the relative strengths of our notoriously fragile central defenders recently - although we still concede some poor goals, we are letting fewer in (aside from a nightmare vs Newcastle). Any views about why this has happened...is it down to having three central midfielders who make a fantastic barrier in front of the defence or have some of the defenders improved considerably. Clearly the order of selection has changed over recent weeks: During the Adkins era Post Adkins 1. Fonte 1. Yoshida 2. Yoshida 2. Hooiveld 3. Hooiveld 3. Fonte 4. Forren This is rather remarkable given the observed failings of Jos, never his commitment in question, but often his judgement, concentration, positioning and pace. It is also a comment on the consistency of Yoshida who gets relatively little recognition. If a good player doesn't become a bad player overnight, can an average player become a good one? What will Jos serve up against Reading given their previous proclivity to counter attack quickly? | | |
REEDYREEDOREEDZ added 15:09 - Apr 5
I think all of our defenders have improved this season. Hooiveld has done surprisingly well in the last few months. He looked out of his depth at the start of the season but apart from the odd mistake he's done really well recently. Yoshida has kept improving with games. He's now a decent centre back and probably the best we have. The team as a whole has improved incredibly since the 8 losses in our first 10 league games. We've only lost 5 league games in our previous 21 now!! That is top 8 form. Jack Cork and Luke Shaw made a huge difference when they came into the team. They really helped sure things up and the team grew in confidence with their added quality. Schniederlin has been excellent and is now the most effective defensive midfielder in the league. Credit has to go to Adkins and Poche for building a team of players who know thier job and work for each other. We're such an effective unit under Poche, its a pleasure to watch. Keep the defensive mistakes down to a minimum and we should continue this form for the rest of the season. Saints to beat Reading 3-1. Top half of the table here we come!! | | |
Scummer added 15:42 - Apr 5
It is heartening to see faith shown in players who have made mistakes and then see them respond to that faith and training and become better. It goes to show that we have (and have had) a good set of scouts, managers and coaches that have improved the squad itself, but have also improved the players in that squad. Interesting article here: http://www.eplindex.com/29962/epls-underrated-midfields-tactical-stats-compariso | | |
BlackRod added 20:55 - Apr 5
I seem to remember that everyone was pretty confident we would beat QPR at St Marys. I hope I'm wrong but I have a sense of deja vue. | | |
St_Beano added 23:00 - Apr 5
No one knows our players better than Nigel, surely that gives him an edge in this one. Just hope he cant counteract all our attacks | | |
slynch added 00:38 - Apr 6
ADKINS IN THE TELEGRAPH - Having predicted that Southampton were on course for a top- 10 Premier League finish regardless of whether there was a managerial change, Adkins was also dismissive of the idea that his former players were/are now doing anything differently. “The lads are good football players and when you’ve got the ball, keep it, and when you haven’t got the ball get the ball back,†he said. “It hasn’t changed has it?†YEA! THEY GOT A BETTER MANAGER! | | |
St_Beano added 09:49 - Apr 6
No one knows our players better than Nigel, surely that gives him an edge in this one. Just hope he cant counteract all our attacks | | |
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Blogs 31 bloggersKnees-up Mother Brown #19 by wessex_exile February, and the U’s enter the most pivotal month of the season. Six games in just four weeks, with four of them against sides also in the bottom six. By March we should be either well clear of danger, or even deeper in the sh*t. With Danny Cowley’s U’s still unbeaten, and looking stronger game on game, I’m sure it’ll be the former, but first we have to do our bit to consign Steve ‘Sour Grapes’ Cotterill’s FGR back to non-league. After our shambolic 5-0 defeat at New Lawn, nothing would give me greater pleasure, even if it meant losing one of my closest awaydays in the process. What’s the excuse going to be today Steve – shocking pitch, faking head injuries, Mexican banditry or some other bit of sour-grapery bullsh*t? Middlesbrough Polls |