Tuesday, 12 April 2016

Season Ticket Sabatical


I hate being negative, especially about ITFC, but after the last few weeks I have become increasingly disillusioned about football at Portman road. The truth of the matter is that I haven't seen a good game there all season, it's been pretty awful to be honest, not once have I walked out of the ground with a smile on my face, wishing that the game hadn't ended.
It's that bad that I predicted a 3-1 win to Brentford on Saturday and got it right, being a smart-arse was the only consolation on what was another drab Saturday afternoon.
I don't blame Mick McCarthy for it and if he left us to take the vacant Aston Villa job, I'd fully understand. He has done a great job at Ipswich, but in my opinion he has gone as far as he can with the 'tools' available to him. If Marcus Evan's seriously wants us to get promotion to the Premier League then he needs to show a bit of faith in the man who rescued us from the jaws of League One and back him.
We've decided not to re-new our season tickets, which is a bit sad really - but going to the match has got to be fun and exciting sometimes and never a chore.
The game itself got off to a terrible start for the visitors, following a horrendous leg break for Alan Judge following a tackle in the middle of the pitch from Luke Hyam. The game was held up for ten minutes whilst he received treatment on the pitch before being stretchered off. Hyam received a yellow card for his challenge and following the restart he was continually being wound up by the Brentford mid-field and booed every time he touched the ball by their fans. He eventually 'bit' and got his marching orders in first half injury time - silly boy!
That was fifteen minutes after we had conceded a controversial goal, Cole Skuse felt he was fouled on the halfway line, but the ref waved play on and Brentford broke forward and took the lead.
We actually looked better in the second half with ten men and did create a few half chances, but it was Brentford, who made the most of their extra man, putting the game beyond our reach with two more goals in the sixty-fourth and sixty-eighth minutes.
With time running out substitute Liam Feeney scored Town's first goal for more than six hours, to at least send me home smug!







Not a good afternoon for Alan Judge

Monday, 11 April 2016

Oh Dear!


Another Tuesday night of frustration at Portman road for Max and I, against relegation threatened Charlton Athletic, in what was surely a 'must win game' for both sides. The visitors looked hungrier than us but in the end it finished in a very disappointing 0-0 draw, which in effect means that they'll go down and we'll be staying in the Championship for the fifteenth season running. Two points and no goals scored in the last three games have in effect finished us off.

Max is not the only one with a dislocation, Town's season is also now disjointed !




Seven points off the play-off's

The last time that I felt so disillusioned about renewing my season ticket was in 2006, it was when I had season tickets in the North stand upper with Sam, Max, Paul and Tom. If I remember rightly it was a boring game and at half-time with the score 0-0 I said to Paul that if we lost I wouldn't renew, look what happened... 


Note the attendance 23,592 
If Saturday's home match against Brentford is anything like that, then I'll know what to do!

Monday, 4 April 2016

No Silver Lining



We left Ipswich for the trip to the Black Country nice and early at 9.30am and were in Wolverhampton three hours later, not bad considering that we had to use the M6 toll road, to avoid long queues around Birmingham. We walked into the city centre once we had parked the car and found a Yates's, where we had a couple of drinks before heading to the ground.
Molineux is one of my favourite football grounds to visit, it's been redeveloped over the years, but still has the feel of a 'Ground' rather than a stadium. At the back of the Sir Jack Hayward Stand there are several fast food stalls and I was looking forward to getting some food from one of them in particular - Sano Spices Masala Express. I had chicken tikka in a nan bread and afterwards just to be greedy I got some Masala chips, bloody lovely!





Inside the ground there was a strange and subdued atmosphere, it was almost like an end of season game with nothing to play for, in Wolves case it was true, but from our point of view we surely needed to win?
As for the match itself, it was quite a tame and lack lustre affair, Wanderers never looked like scoring and we didn't show enough ambition to go and win it. The home fans started chanting 'Boring, boring', during the second half, showing their disapproval of what they were watching. It was quite ironic, with their former manager, Mick McCarthy, standing in the visitors dugout, himself the target of being too negative in Town's shocking one-nil defeat at home to Rotherham, before the international break - a game that I was fortunate enough to miss!
It's only the beginning of April, but unless I have a change of heart and go to Sheffield Wednesday in two weeks time, or we make the play-offs, (which is becoming increasingly difficult to imagine, considering that we're now five points off the top six), then the trip to Wolverhampton will be my last away game this season.














Thursday, 31 March 2016

Happy Murphday



Ipswich won their game in hand, beating Blackburn in a rearranged match, (due to Rover's recent FA Cup run), under the Portman Road floodlights, on a very cold Tuesday evening, getting to within one point of the play-off places, with just nine matches left to play.
There is still a feeling of doom and gloom around, it seems that the majority of the Town fans had given up on the season going into the game and some of them were even calling for manager Mick McCarthy's head, especially after our one-nil defeat at fellow play-off rivals in Cardiff on Saturday.
Max and I moved down towards the front of the North Stand, relocating the season tickets to try some different seats, in readiness for next season, yes we are going to renew!



The crowd of 16,488 (214 from Lancashire), was the lowest attendance of the season at Portman Road this season so far and they were very quiet, mind you, there was very little to cheer about coming from the pitch, in what I have to say what was another unentertaining game. After an hour had been played, I felt that the game had nil-nil written all over it. Fortunately Daryl Murphy,(celebrating his thirty-third birthday), had other ideas and gave Town the lead from the penalty spot after sixty-seven minutes, following a shove on Luke Chambers in the box.
Murphy was on the scoresheet again twenty minutes later, substitute Luke Varney, (facing his former club), broke from, inside the Town half and played the ball to the birthday boy, who took a touch before unleashing a fantastic shot from twenty yards out, past Jason Steele and into the Rovers net.

Town now need to beat rejuvenated Rotherham, who have found a new lease of life under Neil Warnock, at home on Saturday. It will be the first home game that I have missed all season, due to a trip to France.




Wednesday, 9 March 2016

Once You Pop, You Can't Stop


Note the name Dozzell amongst the subs - Jason's sixteen year old son Andre
That's on-loan Ben Pringle, who scored the only goal in a 1-0 victory, for the second game running, adding to his winner at Huddersfield last Saturday.
Nottingham Forest were the visitors to Portman Road on 'Supporters Day', (Town fans from all over the world meeting up for various functions over the weekend). Luckily we were all treated to an entertaining game of football - much better than what we have watched recently!
Bartoz Bialkowski was on top form in the Ipswich goal, making several sharp saves to help build a platform for us to take the three points. Also having an outstanding game was Kevin Foley, another recent addition to the Town squad. He ran the re-jigged midfield and it was he who set up Pringle for the games only goal in the sixty-third minute.






After the recent doom and gloom/over expectancy/reality check, we are all of a sudden sniffing around the top six again. In reality though I think the top four are sorted (Burnley, Hull, Middlesbrough and Brighton) and it's between Derby, Sheffield Wednesday, Cardiff, Birmingham and us to sort out the final two play-off places with twelve games left to play.


Holiday Blues



I came home from a really good holiday in South East Asia not very enthusiastic for football, which is very unlike me.
Since Christmas Ipswich haven't been playing that well or picking up many points, we didn't add to the squad during the January transfer window and lost to Portsmouth in the FA cup after a replay at Fratton Park, so not too much to get excited about.
It was three weeks to the day that I attended my last Town match, the 2-1 home win against Reading, since then we have lost away at both QPR and Bristol City.



High flying Hull City were our visitors, for yet another Tuesday night game. We were more than a match for them in the first half and were unlucky not to go in at halftime with the lead, after Daryl Murphy’s shot had hit the post.
It was City who took the lead though, three minutes after the restart, with a cool finish from Mohamed Diamé, past Bartoz Bialkowski and from that point on they completely controlled the game, in a similar style to what Middlesbrough had done earlier in the season.
As much as we tried the visitors held strong and took all three points back ‘up north’, and remained at the top of the table, bringing our sixteen game winning run on a Tuesday night, to an end in the process.





The defeat, (our fourth in five matches, including the FA Cup loss), dropped us down to tenth place, six points off the play-off places.

When the fixtures were released back in June I picked out next Saturday's away game at Huddersfield, as one to go to, but such is my lack of enthusiasm at the moment, I'm not going to bother! I figure out I'll have another chance to go there next season!

Not Pretty In Pink



Our home match v Reading was put back from Saturday afternoon to Tuesday night, due to the Royal's involvement in the FA Cup fourth round - we didn't have a cup game, having lost a replay against League One Portsmouth at Fratton Park, but enough of that already.
It was the eve of mine and Sharon's holiday to Singapore, Burma, Koh Lanta and Thailand, so we thought that we'd celebrate the occasion and have a rare, (nowadays), pre-match beer. We met Max at his flat and walked down the road to his new local The Brewers Arms, a pub that I had never been in before.
We made our way to Portman Road after a couple of San Miguels and were in our seats in time to see the two teams enter the pitch, Reading wearing a truly awful strip, of what I would describe as, insipid pink - it looked like a white kit having been washed alongside something red by mistake! They describe it as African Violet.
The seasons lowest attendance of 16,616 witnessed a first half which was as bad as anything that I've seen all season, it reminded me of the 0-0 match versus Wigan just over a year ago. It was that bad that Sharon was reevaluating her renewing her season ticket!
The second half did start a little bit brighter, but it still had a feeling of a goalless bore. Ryan Fraser gave Town a surprising lead, (from my point of view, given my negativity!), in the fifty-seventh minute, when his shot, from a Freddie sears cross, deflected off Jake Cooper and past Reading's stranded keeper Ali Al-Habsi.
Cole Skuse, gave away a needless penalty ten minutes later, after needlessly bringing down Hal Robson-Kanu in the box. Garath McCleary converted the resultant penalty to level the scores.
With just a minute remaining on the clock, substitute Brett Pitman popped up with the winning goal smashing in Fraser's low cross from close range, extending Town's record of wins on a Tuesday night to sixteen and moving us back up to sixth place in the table, in the process.