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Sheff Utd v QPR Match Preview
Sheff Utd v QPR Match Preview
Friday, 11th Jan 2008 00:29

QPR’s new look team returns to league action this weekend with a trip to Bramall Lane to face Sheffield United.

It’s a sign of the times at Loftus Road that there were actually a fair few supporters bemoaning our performance at Chelsea last week both on message boards and in the upper Shed End near me at the match. Some said we lacked ambition, some said we showed them too much respect, some said we could have won the game quite comfortably if we’d gone all out for it, some said Luigi De Canio was too negative with his team selection and tactics, some said we didn’t get stuck in enough and so it went on.

It may have been the best time to play Chelsea with so many of their big name players missing, but that doesn’t mean it was a good time to play Chelsea because, really, is there ever a good time to take your Championship side to one of the Premiership’s big four? The players Chelsea used last Saturday totalled just under £80m in transfer fees, compared to our £4m. The Chelsea players that played against us boasted 330 international caps, to Stewart and Buzsaky’s moderate collection of Jamaican and Hungarian appearances. They beat us, on their own patch, by a single goal that could easily have gone wide instead and by the end of the match were keeping the ball in the corner to waste time. It seems a little harsh to criticise our players at all to me, but that’s just my opinion.

If there are those willing to get stuck into our players after a defeat at Chelsea in the FA Cup, it’s not going to be too long before the boo boys are out in force at league games if it takes our new look team a few weeks to gel. What De Canio and the board are trying to achieve at QPR is going to take time, we’re not going to win the next 20 league games and romp past West Brom to take the title on the final day of the season at Loftus Road. We’ve added eight players already this month with another one due shortly – you can’t just sling a whole new team together mid season and hope for it to work straight away. I’d expect it to be March or April before this team is playing to its full potential – and I hope the supporters are more tolerant with them while that happens than they seem to have been after Saturday’s creditable, narrow loss.

The game in Sheffield this weekend is a prime example. Three months ago we’d have taken this fixture as a defeat without thinking too much about it, now there will be many QPR fans not only hoping for, but expecting a victory at Bramall Lane. Me included I’m slightly scared to say. But if I’m wrong I won’t stamp my feet and abuse our new look side, I’ll walk the two miles from the away end back to my house and get ready for Barnsley at home, safe in the knowledge that my football club will still exist by the time next Saturday comes round – I still can’t get used to this financial security malarkey after so many years of sleepless nights. Whether others will be quite so care free I’m not sure. Actually I am sure, expect the first “De Canio’s spent all this money and we still can’t win” post on the message board as soon as we go two games without a victory.

As well as blending a whole new team together while still coming to grips with the language, De Canio and the players are going to have to deal with soaring expectations. Still, it could be worse, our new manager could have been Bryan Robson…

Five minutes on Sheff Utd
Robson arrived in the Steel City during the summer. The Blades had just been relegated amidst the farce of the Carlos Tevez affair and Neil Warnock had been shuffled out of the door after a long reign at the Lane ended in anti climax. The appointment of Robson was greeted with a chorus of groans and moans from the red and white half of the city, and snorts of laughter from the Wednesday side.

Now I don’t like Warnock. I don’t like the fact everybody hails him as some kind of football genius despite the amount of time and money it took for him to get Sheff Utd up, I don’t like the way he remorselessly picked 4-5-1 formations in the Premier League away from home regardless of circumstance even in the penultimate match when a win against an Aston Villa side who’d packed up and gone away for the summer months previous would have seen them safe. I don’t like the way he fills my local paper for eight months saying he’s desperate to land Luke Beckett and then loans him out to Huddersfield within ten minutes of finally getting him, I don’t like the way it’s never his fault when things go tits up and I don’t like the knowing glances we’re all giving each other now Palace have gone 15 unbeaten. I don’t like the guy.

However to remove a manager with a proven record of finishing in the top half of this division and replace him with a manager with a proven track record of relegating teams, a proven track record of spending millions making a team worse than it was before he started, somebody with a reputation of being in the old school of “a pint after the match is fine” in an age of pasta and dieticians makes about as much sense as continuing to play the League Cup semi finals over two legs.

If there’s one person I hate more than Neil Warnock, it’s Bryan Robson. I grew up detesting the guy because he always had a surly grin on his face in my sticker album, and he played for Man Utd as well of course and regular readers will know that I keep my patio curtains closed at all times in case “The Reds” suddenly fancy a kick about on my lawn.

Then he took up managing.

I can count on the fingers of one hand managers who would actually have been able to relegate Middlesbrough when Robson did. With the Premier League’s top scorer Ravenelli up front and the outstanding talent of the season Juninho in midfield they should have been looking at European places – instead they dropped out of the league altogether. In the end the club’s decision to skip a game at Blackburn because of a sickness bug which resulted in a points deduction cost them their place in the division. If Robson had done what a competent manager would have done, turned up to the game with 11 kids from the youth set up they would have stayed up even if they’d lost 28-0.

Still he was kept on, and allowed to spend £4.5m on Paul Merson in his prime to annihilate Division One by himself. So they were back and, incredibly, he almost pulled off the same trick again. Only the introduction of Terry Venables at Christmas saved Boro – the sight of El Tel standing on the touchline directing the players while Robson lurked in the shadows afraid to say anything to a team that was meant to be his will live long in the memory.

Once finally put out of his misery he surfaced briefly in Division One with Bradford City and relegated them.

And yet, with two relegations and a near miss to his name, West Brom came calling and gave him another crack at the whip. And he relegated them as well. His defence when he got the push (again) was that West Brom’s team was worth a lot more when he left than it was when he arrived. The fact that it was now a Championship team as opposed to a Premiership one escaped him. Tony Mowbray is now showing him how easy it can be to be West Brom manager.

I thought that was it, I thought nobody would be so stupid again, I thought we’d have to suffer him in our television studios forever more. Surely after three unmitigated disasters the world of football would be sensible enough to leave Bryan Robson on the scrapheap neatly positioned between Peter Reid and Nigel Spackman. Apparently not.

I could run through the Shef Utd season to date, I could tell you about the poor performances, the dropped points, the fact that Robson is again taking a team with the division’s outstanding forward in it and leading it on a steady spiral towards the drop zone, the fans running on the pitch and throwing their shirts at him as he stands there looking gormless on the touchline. But I won’t, it’s a waste of me typing because I’ve written it once already – six months ago in fact, before the season even started. I’ll leave you with what David Price and myself wrote about Sheff Utd’s prospects in our preview of the forthcoming Championship season back in August.

What do we think? A squad good enough to make the top six and challenge the top two but a manager not fit for purpose and a frustrating season of under achievement awaits.
Verdict: Miss out on top six, fans unhappy - LFW Championship Preview

Who to watch out for
You know a manager is in trouble when James Beattie is sitting in the stands in his club tracksuit. It’s a medical phenomenon seen time and time again when Beattie was at Southampton – rumbles of unrest against manager, Beattie spends six weeks sitting at the back of the stand, manager gets the sack, Beattie greeted as a returning hero after declaring himself fit for new manager’s first match. Maybe I’m being too cynical, it’s more than likely a coincidence.

With Beattie still injured and more than likely to miss this game the Blades will have to look at a combination of their other strikers against QPR. Luton Shelton (named after the town of conception?) and Jon Stead got the nod for the FA Cup win at Premiership side Bolton last week while Stead was partnered by Rob Hulse in a 0-0 draw at Wolves the week before.

Shelton is seriously quick, you’re unlikely to see a faster player, and he cost the Blades £1.85m this time last year as Warnock searched for a striker capable of firing them to Premiership safety. Neither Warnock nor Robson have found much use for the Jamaican international though. He made just two starts and two sub appearances in the top flight, and only has four starts and eight sub outings this term a division lower. Both his goals for the club have come in the League Cup against Morecambe and he has so far flattered to deceive. He’s had another chance recently with Beattie injured but is yet to score – you know what we’ve always said about strikers and teams out of form against QPR, surely not another Dean Bowditch moment?

Stead has flattered to deceive since bursting onto the scene with Huddersfield Town before bagging six goals in 13 matches after a seven figure move to the Premiership with Blackburn Rovers. When Mark Hughes arrived at Ewood his form dipped to two goals 20 starts and 14 sub appearances and he was subsequently sold to Sunderland where he famously managed just one goal, at Everton, in an entire season of Premiership football. Derby had some success with him on loan when they used him as a wide man rather than a striker and they were keen to get him permanently for their promotion campaign before United stepped in with three quarters of a million this time last year. Five goals in 12 starts for the Blades was creditable but he’s back down to four in 20 appearances this season and is another one struggling in Robson’s team.

Those two were Warnock signings, Billy Sharp was a Robson man. Sharp initially left Bramall Lane for Scunthorpe after being buried under Warnock’s mountain of strikers but was tempted to return to the club he supports in the summer after two fantastic seasons, during which he scored 55 times for the Iron, in a transfer worth more than £2m. But like Shelton he’s bagged only two goals, both in the League Cup, and has started just six league games. He’d really have been better off staying where he was – he’s now right back where he started, in Sheff Utd’s reserves.

Throw in Rob Hulse on his way back from a broken leg and Danny Webber and his record in this division and it’s hard to see why United’s goal scoring record is so shocking. Five times in the last eight games they’ve failed to score at all, the last time they scored more than once in a match was ten matches ago against Charlton. Beattie’s absence is obviously a big blow and being keenly felt, but there’s enough talent backing him up on paper for it not to be the huge hurdle United seem to be making it.

It’s not like they’re short of attacking options from midfield either. Lee Hendrie was a cut above everything else in this league when on loan at Stoke last season and he looked a superb signing for the Blades during the summer – but he has started just five league matches this year and is yet to score. Gary Speed brings a wealth of experience and aerial threat at set pieces, Keith Gillespie is also a quality winger at this level, Michael Tonge was one of the division’s best players under Warnock and they’ve now added Lee Martin on loan from Man Utd, although he is suspended for our visit.

At the back Gary Naysmith and Matthew Kilgallon are both players who cost a decent wedge and have Premiership experience. Chris Morgan has played in the top flight for Barnsley and the Blades, Phil Bardsley likewise for Man Utd, Gary Cahill likewise for Aston Villa. Every player named here is a good or fantastic player at this level – the United squad is teeming with players other Championship clubs would kill to have in their team. In my opinion they have the best team in the league on paper, excluding West Brom who are in a bit of a league of their own this year, and are being held back by the manager. They currently sit 16th, five points away from the relegation zone, and that’s scandalous for a team with those players that has cost that much.

What happened the last time these teams met?
QPR seem to have a decent record against Sheff Utd to me in recent memory and they won their last match at Bramall Lane two seasons ago. The R’s turned in their best performance under young manager Gary Waddock, beating the promotion chasing Blades 3-2 in their on back yard. Marc Nygaard ran from the halfway line and rode his luck past Paddy Kenny to open the scoring after six minutes but normal service seemed to have been resumed when a wonderfully angled header by Ade Akinbiyi and an own goal by Marc Bircham, although he appeared to have been fouled, gave the home side the lead before half time. The game could have been all over just after the break when United were awarded a penalty by the ever home orientated Kevin Friend but Paul Ifill’s kick was saved by Paul Jones and Rangers never looked back. Chris Morgan scored a carbon copy of Bircham’s own goal to bring the R’s level and Paul Furlong finished in vintage style 15 minutes from time to seal the win. Sub Sammy Youssouff twice went close to adding a fourth in the closing stages. Rangers went downhill from there, eventually finishing fourth bottom, United survived their wobble and went on to win promotion to the top flight.

Sheff Utd: Kenny, Morgan, Kozluk, Collins, Armstrong, Ifill, Jagielka, Tonge, Montgomery (Unsworth) Akinbiyi (Shipperley) Horsfield (Webber)
Subs not used: Flitcroft, Kabba

QPR: Paul Jones, Bignot, Evatt, Shittu, Rose, Bircham, Cook, Lomas (Santos) Langley, Furlong, Nygaard (Youssouf)
Subs not used: Bailey, Baidoo, Thomas

Head to Head
Sheff Utd wins – 11
Draws – 14
QPR wins – 15

Past Sheff Utd v QPR Matches
2005/06 Sheff Utd 2 QPR 3 (Nygaard, Morgan og, Furlong)
2005/06 QPR 2 Sheff Utd 1 (Bircham, Moore)
2004/05 Sheff Utd 3 QPR 2 (Rowlands, Gallen)
2004/05 QPR 0 Sheff Utd 1
2003/04 Sheff Utd 0 QPR 2 (Rowlands 2 – League Cup)
2000/01 QPR 1 Sheff Utd 3 (Ngonge)
2000/01 Sheff Utd 1 QPR 1 (Koejoe)
1999/00 QPR 3 Sheff Utd 1 (Steiner, Wardley, Breaker)
1999/00 Sheff Utd 1 QPR 1 (Beck)
1998/99 QPR 1 Sheff Utd 2 (Peacock pen)
1998/99 Sheff Utd 2 QPR 0
1997/98 QPR 2 Sheff Utd 2 (Sheron, Ready)
1997/98 Sheff Utd 2 QPR 2 (Murray, Morrow)
1996/97 QPR 1 Sheff Utd 0 (Barker pen)
1996/97 Sheff Utd 1 QPR 1 (Slade)
1993/94 Sheff Utd 1 QPR 1 (Barker)
1993/94 QPR 2 Sheff Utd 1 (Sinclair, Wilson pen)
1992/93 Sheff Utd 1 QPR 2 (Allen, Holloway)
1992/93 QPR 3 Sheff Utd 2 (Ferdinand, Barker, Bailey)

Team News
Michael Mancienne came through an hour of reserve team football during the week after his latest seven week injury lay off. He reported no discomfort whatsoever but admitted himself that the standard of the match was pretty dire and he may only be fit enough for a place on the bench for this one – Barnsley at home next weekend looks a more realistic aim. Dexter Blackstock and Akos Buzsaky both picked up injuries at Chelsea last week and while both were hopeful of being fit for this one we await any definite news on the attacking duo. Buzsaky has been training this week which is good news. Mikele Leigertwood serves the final game of his four match ban, Rowan Vine is set for his second QPR debut after completing a permanent move and word on the grapevine is there could be a start for Big Dave.

Sheff Utd have added Lee Martin to their squad this week on loan from Man Utd to the end of the season. Martin is fresh from a loan spell with Plymouth and played against QPR on Boxing Day but he is suspended for this one for accumulating five bookings while with the Pilgrims. James Beattie remains injured so Robson will chose between Stead, Shelton, Hulse and Sharp for his attack.
Injury List

Referee
Nigel Miller from Durham is our referee this weekend – he has one dire performance and one superb one to his name in his last two QPR fixtures. Almost a year ago to the day he was absolutely awful in our defeat at Hull but the season before he refereed our defeat at Wolves beautifully – so it remains to be seen which Miller turns up for this one.
Details

What’s happening elsewhere?
For those still looking over their shoulder at the bottom of the Championship you should, famous last words, be in for a relaxing weekend with all three of the sides in the relegation places facing tough games this weekend. Scunthorpe, notoriously bad travellers, go to Southampton while Colchester are at third placed Bristol City. The U’s do have Phil Ifill and Chris Coyne in their squad after some transfer window activity today. Meanwhile Preston welcome Watford to Deepdale – the Hornets are much more dangerous on the road than they are at home of course.
Tony’s Championship Round Up

Form
United have four wins from 13 games at Bramall Lane this season, a further four games have ended in draws. The Blades have scored just four goals in their last nine matches and haven’t scored more than one in a game since they beat Charlton 3-0 at the end of November. They have just one win from their last six league games with Palace, Cardiff and Norwich all taking maximum points from Robson’s team but a 1-0 win at Premiership side Bolton in the cup last week will have boosted their confidence. They have 32 points from 26 games and sit 16th two points ahead of QPR and five outside the relegation zone.

Rangers have lost only one of their last five and two of their last 11 games in this corner of Sheffield. They have lost one of their last seven league matches, a last minute goal at Plymouth resulting in a 2-1 defeat. Away from home they have won two and drawn one of their last four in the league. QPR have three away wins from 13 matches and a further five games have been drawn. Those wins came at Burnley, Watford and Charlton. They sit 18th with 30 points from 26 games.
Championship Table - Form Table

Prediction
Not often I predict a win as you know, but I fancy us. We do seem to usually get a good result up here and as long as Beattie remains on the touchline we should be fine. There’s only so long a squad with the talent available to Sheff Utd can continue to perform like a bunch of morons and knowing our luck it will all click for them on Saturday but having watched them against Palace a week or so ago I fancy us to have enough about us to come up here and turn the home side over.
Sheff Utd 0 QPR 2

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Photo: Action Images



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