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QPR smacked for four by promotion-chasing Albion — Report
Wednesday, 20th Apr 2016 19:53 by Clive Whittingham

A promising first half display gave way to a second half collapse by QPR at high-flying Brighton on Tuesday evening.

The similarities between Chris Hughton's Brighton and Hove Albion, twentieth in the Championship last season, and the QPR team Neil Warnock promoted from this division in 2010/11 are stark. On the evidence of this 4-0 win, following hot on the heals of a similar demolition of Fulham on Friday night, the same happy ending awaits.

Brighton, like Warnock's Rangers, began the season with an unbeaten run stretching to 20-odd games before a blip in form over Christmas. Both sides recovered their poise in the New Year, buoyed by intelligent January additions, and pressed home their advantage in the second half of the season bar a random, unexpected 4-1 defeat on the road — Albion's was at Cardiff, QPR's at Scunthorpe.

The Loftus Road regulars, travelling in large numbers as they had to Cardiff at the weekend despite the lack of anything to play for, would have arrived on the sunny South Coast on Tuesday hoping to see the same stubborn resistance their class of 2011 faced from Hull and Derby who both won points in Shepherd's Bush back in the day as the pressure finally started to tell on the league leaders.

The early signs were promising. Matt Phillips, playing in an advanced role to try and make sure Conor Washington wasn't as isolated as he has been on his latest run out as a lone striker, won a free kick after ten minutes which was cleared as far as Ale Faurlin who shot over the bar. Eight minutes later Washington wasn't far away with a shot on the turn inside the area — home keeper David Stockdale well beaten as the ball flashed wide of the top corner. Karl Henry, again selected on the wing, headed at Stockdale from a corner after Phillips had freed Massimo Luongo behind the home defence.

Then the keeper fell to his right to comfortably save a drive from Phillips after he'd driven to the edge of the area with real purpose. Later the muscular winger won the ball back himself and piled forward once again before lashing over. Phillips looked unusually lively and interested — made a cynic wonder who might have been there watching him? Alan Pards Pardew looked on from the main stand, coincidentally.

There were chances at the other end as well of course — three good ones in fact. Anthony Knockaert's diving header from James Wilson's pull back after 17 minutes bounced over; Tomer Hemed hooked over his shoulder, and the bar, from close range after a deep cross was turned back towards him in the six yard box; and Alex Smithies, restored in goal despite Matt Ingram's man of the match debut at Cardiff on Saturday, produced his standard wonder save five minutes before the break when Lewis Dunk met a well-flighted corner with a trademark header that had goal written all over it.

But this was an arm wrestle - an even contest that QPR were well involved in. A far cry away from the football version of a three day insurance seminar we suffered in South Wales. Referee Keith Hill was generous to Jiri Skalak midway through the first half when his wild lunge at Grant Hall was deemed worthy of just a yellow card, but it typified the closeness of the contest and the competitiveness of the game.

Then the roof fell in. This was to turn out to be the equivalent of Warnock's QPR beating a meek Sheffield United side 3-0 at Loftus Road — another convincing win on an unrelenting march to the Premier League.

The game was finished with two moments either side of half time. The foul adjudged to have been committed by Nedum Onuoha on Skalak in a minute of first half injury time looked soft. Knockaert's whipped free kick into the top corner was anything but.

Before a foothold had really been re-established at the start of the second half, Skalak doubled the lead with a ferocious 30 yarder into the top corner after Grant Hall had broken every defensive rule in the book by weakly heading a routine punt down the field down and back into the traffic populating the danger area, rather than up, away, wide or out of play. Hall's form is declining alarmingly.

That was that. Brighton, freed from the pressures of the stalemate, set about racking up the goals as they had done against our West London neighbours on Friday evening. QPR's bright first half performance melted away into resistance so tepid it was hardly resistance at all.

The visitors could argue the free kick for the first goal was a generous decision from the referee, and the fourth goal added late on by Knockaert from range should have been disallowed with substitute Jamie Murphy obviously offside and playing at the ball in front of Smithies as it travelled past the pair of them.

But you cannot defend as Hall did for the second, nor as Nedum Onuoha did for the third — a flying header from a corner by Conor Goldson who was airborne and mobile against an opponent who's been caught out at corners a bit recently and was welded to the floor here — and go around complaining about anything other than your own failings.

Junior Hoilett, whose brief flurry of form through the spring appears to be over on this rather limp evidence — must have that deal nice and sorted for next season now — was replaced by Seb Polter in the second half. Tjaronn Chery for Clint Hill was an attacking substitution and later Nasser El Khayati came on for Conor Washington who'd worked hard but again ploughed mostly a lone furrow and rarely had a sight of goal.

None of it made any difference. QPR struggled to register a shot in the second half and slipped quietly to a defeat confirmed long before the final whistle.

It's been a long, arduous season at Loftus Road and it's really starting to show now. A dramatic hack at the budget; an influx of players from levels, clubs and countries that meant they were always going to be a mixed bag and need time to settle; an exodus of the so-called bigger-named, better players; three different managers… It was billed as a potentially painful 12 months we'd need to go through to get the club in a position to move forward on a sounder footing. It's been that and more and it can't really end soon enough.

For all those reasons, it would be a bit daft to get too distraught and het up about a shellacking away from home, right at the end of the season, against one of the division's best teams, after a half decent first half performance, when we have nothing to play for.

But there is obviously huge work ahead this summer to get this QPR team into the sort of shape that means this season is indeed one of transition, rather than the new normal. There are weaknesses everywhere except the goalkeeping position. Karl Henry, Massimo Luongo and Ale Faurlin, the three main central midfielders this season, have no goals between them. Goals feel too easy to concede, and far too difficult to score at times.

The two remaining home games offer a chance to finish on some sort of high, and Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink has shown enough so far to suggest he is capable of staging a play-off push next season — Rangers are sixth in the division's form table for the second half of the season after all.

But if Rangers needed a reminder of the standards they themselves once set at this level, and the mark they'll have to get to again if this season isn't to have been a wasted effort, then here it was in spades.

Links >>> Photo Gallery >>> Ratings and Reports >>> Message Board Match Thread

Brighton: Stockdale 7; Bruno 7, Goldson 7, Dunk 7, Rosenior 6; Knockaert 8, Stephens 7, Kayal 7, Skalak 8 (Murphy 70, 6); Hemed 7 (Sidwell 77, 6), Wilson 6 (Baldock 46, 6)

Subs not used: Mäenpää, Greer, Bong, Lua Lua

Goals: Knockaert 45+1 (free kick won Skalak), Skalak 51 (unassisted), Goldson 73 (assisted Knockaert), Knockaert 84 (assisted Sidwell)

Bookings: Skalak 22 (foul)

QPR: Smithies 6; Onuoha 5, Hall 5, Hill 6 (Chery 60, 6), Perch 6; Henry 6, Faurlin 5, Luongo 5, Hoilett 5 (Polter 54, 5); Phillips 6, Washington 6 (El Khayati 70, 5)

Subs not used: Gladwin, Ingram, Petrasso, Kpekawa

Bookings: Hall 72 (foul) Polter 90+1 (foul)

QPR Star Man — N/A Phillips, Henry and Perch played well in a decent first half, but difficult to make a star man award on a night like that.

Referee — Keith Hill (Herts) 6 Perhaps a little generous with both the Skalak booking — looked a really bad tackle from my low vantage point — and the free kick for the first goal while the fourth was obviously offside.

Attendance — 25,411 (1,500 QPR approx) Disappointed to see a number of features laid on for our first visit to this ground appear to have been quietly done away with — including the direct train back to London from Falmer specifically for the away fans straight after the match.

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HastingsRanger added 20:36 - Apr 20
When your highlight of the game is a decent pint, pie and catch up with Robert Elms at half time, things are not good.

The first half was reasonable but once the goal went in, you could never see us recovering. Very disappointing that there was no drive to get back into the game. Before the match I was thinking that we could have a reasonable season next season but on that showing we are a long way still.
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TacticalR added 21:37 - Apr 20
Thanks for your report.

From the highlights it looks as though Brighton hit us with two good goals, and that was game over. We have been set up as a defensive team, and once the defence is breached we don't know how to rectify the situation. The lack of goals from the midfield trio indicates a lack of mobility and perhaps some confusion about when to go forward and what to do when we get there.

Although Phillips looked quite good in carrying the ball forward, his shots lack the power that he is able to get into his crosses, so did not really trouble the keeper. I doubt if Pardew was too impressed.

The worrying thing is that once again we have looked very ordinary against one of the top sides in the division.
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extratimeR added 09:27 - Apr 21
Thanks Clive

Yes, very disappointing after strong first half sowing. I really didn't see that score line coming, I think the tackle in the first half was a red card every time.
Surprised Ref was so quick to pull out yellow.

Brighton need to have a think about train frequency from town centre before game, it was like a very bad day on the Central line with the over crowding, this wasn't a full house but train was dangerously overloaded and got worse as it stopped to collect more fans o the way to ground, good job fans sense of humour helped out. Should be interesting if they go up.

Very good day out, great stadium.
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1MoreBrightonR added 10:11 - Apr 21
Despite the score, i had a good day out and caught up with some old friends. Also the shocking second half meant we left 10 mins early and missed the long wait for trains. It does annoy me that a brand new stadium has such bad transport links on match day.

First half was very even...not a classic but we fought well. the goal was horribly depressing...we knew they'd score and it was a bad time to concede, and i had a perfect view.
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Myke added 10:59 - Apr 21
Thanks Clive, sounds like your classic 'game of two halves'. You mentioned that Phillips played in an advanced role (with Henry on the wing) to prevent Washington being too isolated. Surely that's Chery's role? Maybe Philips was more involved first have because he was playing centrally (or maybe just because he was being scouted), but either way it makes no sense to have Henry on the wing when his primary function should be to stiffen the midfield area. If JFH is still playing players out of position after nearly 30 games in charge it's worrying for next year. Each player should have a clear role at this stage and know what is required of them, regardless of whether they are here next season or not.
I wouldn't be too concerned about Hall's dip in form, he's young and it's been a long season, with his center-half partner constantly being chopped and changed. Very hard for experienced players to maintain a high level of consistency in a settled team throughout the full season so I'm sure he'll be fine. It's an indication of how far he's come this season when we're shocked if he makes a mistake.
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nightwish added 19:16 - Apr 21
Whoever is responsible for the signing of players at Brighton this season is the person we need at QPR.From being a very poor team last season to the team they have this season.The signings Brighton made in the summer and again in January someone has done their job extremely well.As a QPR supporter I am looking at Brighton with envy
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Marshy added 20:55 - Apr 21
It was a great shame that they got the first goal right at the very end of the first half, as it gave them the important psychological advantage. The writing was on the wall from that point as although I thought we were the better team in the first half, I just couldn't see where a goal for us would come from. All 4 Brighton goals were scored from distance. We just allowed them too much time and space on the ball. Closing down was non existent. First time at the Amex. Good atmosphere and good stadium, but not an evening I'll not care to remember with fondness.
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