x

Saints V Wolverhampton Wanderers The Verdict

The stats suggested a comfortable Saints victory should have taken place, sadly we defended poorly in the second half to gift Wolves three points that we really should have had in the bag.

Once again VAR played a big part in the game, although Saints inability to defend was what cost us all three points, not the controversial video system.

Even though Saints dominated the first half and took a two goal lead through excellent goals from Jan Bednarek and Shane Long, the writing was on the wall with Wolves missing a couple of chances where they had one man in the box and 3 or 4 defenders nowhere near him, luckily for us they missed.

Likewise a flap from McCarthy should have seen the visitors score but the luck held for that on that one as well.

The second half started brightly and for the first 8 minutes there didn't look like there would be anything other than a convincing Saints win , but suddenly Wolves broke and we failed to get in a couple of tackles we really should have made, Neto was in the box with 3 Saints defenders marking fresh air, he had time to bring the ball down and pick his spot without a challenge made, sadly a return to the shambolic defending of a few months ago.

That changed the game, suddenly Wolves heads were up, then came the controversy, firstly Jonny should not have been unmarked and have been able to get through on goal as he did, secondly we were clumsy in the challenge and that gave the opportunity for VAR to do it's job.

Having watched the replays several times over I can see why VAR gave the penalty, however I think that they got it wrong, Jonny was diving before he even reached Stephens outstretched leg, he knew the ball was away from him and threw himself forward, he went down not because of any Saints contact with him and that in my book is no penalty.

Now it was game on and although Saints had their chances notably a glorious shot from Redmond that hit the bar, but we would again be caught on the break, Traore was played on side and surged forward, we had five players in the box and aside from Traore there was only Jiminez, yet we watched the ball and no one took a blind bit of notice of Jiminez who received the ball completely unmarked and again at least 3 Saints players marking fresh air, it was the easiest chance that he would get not only in this game but most of the others and he didn't miss.

We huffed and puffed in the final minutes and Boufal really should have done better blazing over from close range and the game ended on a bizarre note when a young child invaded the pitch for some reason, Sofiane Boufal stopped him, the only thing he caught cleanly all afternoon (OK harsh but i'm not above the odd cheap joke)

So this was yet another game thrown away by poor organisation and poor defending, we lack leadership and when we get a two goal lead we have no one on the pitch keeping us focused and therefore we defended like schoolboys, chasing the ball and not marking up players.

It is not the end of the World, in fact it is a warning sign to us that although we have had some great victories we still need to improve the team in key positions, the defence has been good in recent weeks, but it was appalling today at key moments and that has to be rectified and that means getting someone in in the transfer window, the issue isn't the full backs, we need a leader in the centre of defence.

We have to learn from this defeat, perhaps we got a little overconfident, but mainly because of what I have been saying all season, sometimes we will get away with our lapses and sometimes we won't, this was one of those days when we didn't.

This doesn't make us a poor team, it makes us a good one with issues.

We have a good foundation to avoid relegation, we need to stick to the task ahead and get ourselves over the finish line.

What to read next:

New Year’s Frey delight for resurgent Rangers – Report
QPR continued their recent Championship recovery and rediscovered the finishing touch which eluded them at Vicarage Road, beating Watford 3-1 at the second time of asking on New Year’s Day at Loftus Road.
Queens Park Rangers 3 - 1 Watford - Player Ratings and Reports
If you saw the match, please give us your player ratings and a mini match report.
Happy New Year My R's - Preview
QPR end a dramatic, chaotic, emotional 2024 exhausted; they start 2025 at home to a Watford side they really should have beaten when these two met just a couple of weeks back.
Diakite's trail of comedic terror - History
Ahead of the New Year’s Day visit from Watford we look back across 120 different meetings between the two sides, and the madcap antics of Samba Diakite who played (sort of) for both clubs.
Martin in charge of Watford visit - Referee
QPR's second appointment of the season with referee Steve Martin, following the 2-0 win at Cardiff, comes on New Year's Day at home to Watford.
Late heartbreak for improved QPR at Carrow Road - Report
QPR bounced back from their standard Boxing Day collapse at Swansea, with a much better performance and result at Norwich – the hosts equalising in the last minute of normal time to deny Marti Cifuentes’ side a win.
Norwich City 1 - 1 Queens Park Rangers - Player Ratings and Reports
If you saw the match, please give us your player ratings and a mini match report.
Norwich out for revenge, QPR looking for a response - Preview
The first return fixture of the season sees Norwich, beaten 3-0 at Loftus Road just a couple of weeks ago, face a QPR side reeling after their latest Boxing Day collapse.
A Christmas Carrow Road treat, served up by Super Ray – History
Ahead of the trip to Norwich this Sunday we’re looking back to a top tier meeting from Christmas 1991 when two silky bits of play from Roy Wegerle and Ray Wilkins set Dennis Bailey up for a brilliantly taken last minute Carrow Road winner.
Premier League’s Barrott takes Norwich trip – Referee
Sam Barrott, fast tracked onto the Premier League list last season, takes charge of our Sunday trip to Norwich.