Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
A Sammy Koejoe goal - History
Thursday, 4th Feb 2016 17:25 by Clive Whittingham

Ahead of Ipswich’s visit to Shepherd’s Bush on Saturday, LFW looks back at a pulsating meeting between the sides from the turn of the millennium when promotion chasing Town were soundly beaten by QPR.

Recent Meetings

Ipswich Town 2 QPR 1, Saturday December 26, 2015, Championship

QPR entered into the season of giving with rather too much gusto when these sides met at Portman Road over Christmas. Having taken the lead on the stroke of half time when good approach work from Seb Polter and Matt Phillips set Junior Hoilett up for a headed opener, the R’s missed a glorious chance to put then game to bed when Leroy Fer went round Dean Gerken the home goalkeeper but dallied over his finish. That left the door ajar and Ipswich fought back with a hooked effort from Jonathan Dougles and an injury time header from Luke Chambers.

Ipswich: D Gerken; L Chambers, T Smith, C Berra, J Knudsen; J Douglas, A Maitland-Niles (R Fraser 61), C Skuse, F Sears; D Murphy (L Varney 89), B Pitman (T Oar 68)

Subs not used: P Malarczyk, K Bru, B Bialkowski, L Hyam

Goals: Douglas 77 (assisted Murphy), Chambers 90+2 (assisted Sears)

Yellow Cards: Oar 87 (foul)

QPR: R Green 6; N Onuoha 6, G Hall 7, G Angella 7, Konchesky 7; L Fer 5 (Sandro 71), D Hoilett 7, K Henry 7, M Phillips 5 (T Chery 83), A Faurlin 8; S Polter 7

Subs not used: A Smithies, D Tozser, J Emmanuel-Thomas, C Hill, M Luongo

Goals: Hoilett 45+5 (assisted Phillips)

Yellow Cards: Konchesky, Onuoha

Ipswich Town 1 QPR 3, Saturday January 11, 2014, Championship

QPR completed the double over Ipswich with one of their best performances and results from an otherwise largely forgettable 2013/14 season the last time these sides met at Portman Road. With inconsistent performers like Little Tom Carroll and Big Fat Niko Kranjcar finally hitting form at the same time, Rangers were able to cut loose in the second half against the division’s form team and score three quickfire goals through Kranjcar, Gary O’Neil and Armand Traore. A late consolation from Tommy Smith did little to take the gloss off a fantastic away win, and a violent dispute between the stewards and a group of the home fans to the immediate left of the away end resulting in a mass ejection of Ipswich fans only added to the spectacle.

Ipswich: Gerken 6; Chambers 6 (Mings 86, -), Berra 6, Smith 6, Cresswell 6; Hyam 6 (Hunt 72, 6), Skuse 6, Tunnicliffe 6, Anderson 6 (Nouble 72, 5); Taylor 6, McGoldrick 6

Subs not used: Loach, Edwards, Tabb, Lee

Goals: Smith 90+1 (assisted Hunt)

Bookings: Hyam 22 (foul)

QPR: Green 7; Simpson 7, Dunne 8, Hill 7, Assou-Ekotto 7; Carroll 8, Barton 6 (Henry 40, 7); Benayoun 6 (Traore 68, 7), Kranjcar 7 (Phillips 85,-), O’Neil 7; Austin 7

Subs not used: Johnson, Wright-Phillips, Onuoha, Murphy

Goals: Kranjcar 52 (unassisted), O’Neil 66 (assisted Austin), Traore 74 (assisted Hill)

Bookings: Hill 57 (dissent)

QPR 1 Ipswich Town 0, Saturday August 17, 2013, Championship

Rangers left it very late to win the first meeting between these sides that season at Loftus Road back in August. The visitors seemed more than happy with their 0-0 draw at a newly relegated side and a dire encounter was threatening to drift away into a bland mess of time wasting and scrappy midfield play. But Harry Redknapp introduced youth team product Tom Hitchock with seven minutes remaining, removing ineffective Bobby Zamora into the bargain, and when Town keeper Scott Loach palmed an injury time effort on goal away to his left the youngster was in exactly the right place at the right time to slam in his first goal for the senior team and win the match. Hitchcock barely played a minute for Rangers after that and after loan spells at Fleetwood, Crewe and Rotherham eventually signed permanently with MK Dons.

QPR: R Green 7, D Simpson 6, R Dunne 6, N Onuoha 7, C Hill 6, S Wright-Phillips 6, K Henry 6 (J Jenas, 77, 6), J Barton 8, D Hoilett 6 (G O'Neil, 56, 8), B Zamora 5 (T Hitchcock, 83, -), C Austin 6

Subs not used: B Murphy, M Ehmer, Yun Suk-Young, M Sharif

Goals: Hitchock 90 (assisted Austin/Wright Phillips)

Ipswich S Loach 7, E Hewitt 6, L Chambers 6, T Smith 6, A Cresswell 7, J Tabb 6, C Skuse 6 (R Tunnicliffe, 45, 6), C Edwards 5, L Hyam 6, D Murphy 6 (P Taylor, 63, 5 (F Nouble, 86, -)), D McGoldrick 6

Subs not used: M Crowe, F Veseli, C Berra, P Anderson

Bookings: Tabb 60 (foul)

QPR 2 Ipswich Town 0, Tuesday February 23, 2011, Championship

QPR had been in free-scoring, free-wheeling form when they won easily at Portman Road in the first meeting between these sides in the R’s 2010/11 promotion season. By the time the Tractor Boys, by now under the new management of Paul Jewell, came to Loftus Road there was a nervousness about the QPR team and a grinding nature to the wins they were somehow continuing to clock up. A 2-0 midweek win against Portsmouth owed much to goalkeeping errors and a subsequent success at Reading had been achieved while playing for an hour with ten men. Draws against ten man Nottingham Forest and soon to be relegated Preston followed and when Ipswich veteran Jimmy Bullard dictated the pattern of the first half here there was an air of apprehension about the place. Step forward Clint Hill, fast winning hearts and minds after a summer move from Crystal Palace, who followed up his thumping header against Pompey with another here in similar circumstances. Suddenly Bullard’s influence had been nullified and having taken the lead 13 minutes from time Rangers then doubled that advantage when Helguson forced in from close range after Hill had attacked another corner well. A 3-0 weekend win at Middlesbrough followed as the march towards the league title picked up pace.

QPR: Kenny 7, Orr 6, Hall 8, Shittu 8 (Connolly 90, -), Hill 8, Derry 7, Faurlin 7, Routledge 6, Taarabt 6, Miller 6 (Buzsaky 75, 7), Helguson 6

Subs Not Used: Cerny, Gorkss, Hulse, Moen, Chimbonda

Goals: Hill 77 (assisted Taarabt), Helguson 83 (assisted Hill)

Ipswich: Fulop 5, Edwards 6, Delaney 7, McAuley 7, Kennedy 6, Bullard 7, Leadbitter 6, Healy 6 (Drury 40, 6), Martin 6 (Civelli 84, -), Wickham 7, Scotland 5 (Priskin 71, 5)

Subs Not Used: Lee-Barrett, Peters, Smith, O'Dea

Booked: Kennedy (foul)

Ipswich Town 0 QPR 3, Tuesday September 14, 2010, Championship

This was a battle between first and third when the teams met at Portman Road in September 2010 — a battle QPR came out firmly on top in. Neil Warnock’s Rangers had started the season in scintillating form with four wins and a draw from their first five league games and four clean sheets into the bargain. That progress was threatened by long term injuries to two right backs picked up in a 3-0 home win against Middlesbrough just three days before the difficult looking trip to Portman Road but with both Bradley Orr and Peter Ramage unavailable Warnock pulled a rabbit out of the hat in the form of Kyle Walker on loan from Spurs. The speedy youngster was a tremendous addition to the side and looked right at home immediately in the teaming Suffolk rain. Rangers went in at half time two to the good thanks to a brace from the in form Jamie Mackie. First he showed great persistence in the penalty area to score at the second attempt after being set up by Heidar Helguson, then ten minutes later he accelerated past the Ipswich defence in a swift counter attack and buried a low shot into the far corner from the edge of the box. Ipswich had been set up to contain QPR rather than hurt them and, having seen that plan destroyed, manager Roy Keane was unable to kick start a plan B for the second half. QPR extended their lead from the penalty spot through Heidar Helguson although had the referee Keith Stroud waited a split second before blowing his whistle Akos Buzsaky had already ripped a 30 yarder into the top corner anyway. That strike rather summed up the emphatic nature of the victory and the R’s followed it up with a 2-0 win at Leicester that Saturday.

Ipswich: Fulop 6, Peters 6, McAuley 4, Smith 5, Kennedy 5, Edwards 5 (Brown 72, 5), Norris 5, Hyam 4 (Priskin 46, 4), Leadbitter 5, Townsend 5 (Wickham 46, 7), Scotland 5

Subs Not Used: Murphy, Eastman, Healy, Hourihane

Booked: Scotland (foul), Smith (foul), Leadbitter (foul)

QPR: Kenny 7, Walker 8, Gorkss 8, Connolly 8, Hill 7, Derry 8, Faurlin 6 (Buzsaky 36, 7), Ephraim 7, Taarabt 7 (Leigertwood 60, 7), Mackie 9 (Smith 80, 6), Helguson 8

Subs Not Used: Cerny, Agyemang, German, Parker

Goals: Mackie 31 (assisted Helguson), 42 (assisted Taarabt), Helguson 68 (penalty, won by Mackie)

Previous Results

Head to Head >>> QPR wins 25 >>> Draws 18 >>> Ipswich wins 29

2015/16 Ipswich 2 QPR 1 (Hoilett)

2013/14 Ipswich 1 QPR 3 (Kranjcar, O’Neil, Traore)

2013/14 QPR 1 Ipswich 0 (Hitchcock)

2010/11 QPR 2 Ipswich 0 (Hill, Helguson)

2010/11 Ipswich 0 QPR 3 (Mackie 2, Helguson pen)

2009/10 QPR 1 Ipswich 2 (Simpson)

2009/10 Ipswich 3 QPR 0

2008/09 QPR 1 Ipswich 3 (Di Carmine)

2008/09 Ipswich 2 QPR 0

2007/08 Ipswich 0 QPR 0

2007/08 QPR 1 Ipswich 1 (Nygaard)

2006/07 Ipswich 2 QPR 1 (Furlong)

2006/07 QPR 1 Ipswich 3 (Gallen)

2005/06 Ipswich 2 QPR 2 (Moore, Furlong)

2005/06 QPR 2 Ipswich 1 (Rowlands, Gallen)

2004/05 Ipswich 0 QPR 2 (Furlong, Shittu)

2004/05 QPR 2 Ipswich 4 (Furlong 2)

1999/00 QPR 3 Ipswich 1 (Peacock, Koejoe, Kiwomya)

1999/00 Ipswich 1 QPR 4 (Steiner 2, Peacock, Wardley)

1998/99 Ipswich 3 QPR 1 (Kiwomya)

1998/99 QPR 1 Ipswich 1 (Gallen)

1997/98 QPR 0 Ipswich 0

1997/98 Ipswich 0 QPR 0

1996/97 Ipswich 2 QPR 0

1996/97 QPR 0 Ipswich 1

1994/95 Ipswich 0 QPR 1 (Ferdinand)

1994/95 QPR 1 Ipswich 2 (Ferdinand)

1993/94 Ipswich 1 QPR 3 (Impey 2, Ferdinand)

1993/94 QPR 3 Ipswich 0 (White 2, Barker)

1992/93 Ipswich 1 QPR 1 (White)

1992/93 QPR 0 Ipswich 0

1985/86 Ipswich 1 QPR 0

1985/86 QPR 1 Ipswich 0 (Byrne)

1984/85 QPR 3 Ipswich 0 (Fereday 2, Bannister)

1984/85 QPR 1 Ipswich 2* (Bannister)

1984/85 Ipswich 0 QPR 0*

1984/85 Ipswich 1 QPR 1 (Gregory)

1983/84 QPR 1 Ipswich 0 (C Allen)

1983/84 Ipswich 3 QPR 2* (Gregory, Stewart)

1983/84 Ipswich 0 QPR 2 (Gregory, Stainrod)

1978/79 QPR 0 Ipswich 4

1978/79 Ipswich 2 QPR 1 (Francis)

1977/78 QPR 3 Ipswich 3 (McGee 2, James)

1977/78 Ipswich 3 QPR 2 (McGee, Bowles (pen))

1976/77 QPR 1 Ipswich 0 (Givens)

1976/77 Ipswich 2 QPR 2 (Givens, Masson)

1975/76 QPR 3 Ipswich 1 (Thomas, Webb, Wark og)

1975/76 Ipswich 1 QPR 1 (Givens)

1974/75 Ipswich 2 QPR 1 (Gillard)

1974/75 QPR 1 Ipswich 0 (Francis)

1973/74 QPR 0 Ipswich 1

1973/74 Ipswich 1 QPR 0

1968/69 QPR 2 Ipswich 1 (Bridges, R Morgan)

1968/69 Ipswich 3 QPR 0

1967/68 Ipswich 2 QPR 2 (Marsh (pen), Leach)

1967/68 QPR 1 Ipswich 0 (Marsh)

1956/57 QPR 0 Ipswich 2

1956/57 Ipswich 4 QPR 0

1955/56 Ipswich 4 QPR 1 (Clark)

1955/56 QPR 1 Ipswich 1 (Clark)

1953/54 Ipswich 2 QPR 1 (Cameron)

1953/54 QPR 3 Ipswich 1 (Petchley, Woods, Shepherd)

1952/53 Ipswich 0 QPR 1 (Hatton)

1952/53 QPR 2 Ipswich 2 (Addinall 2)

1947/48 QPR 2 Ipswich 0 (Hatton, Boxshall)

1947/48 Ipswich 1 QPR 0

1946/47 Ipswich 1 QPR 1 (Hatton)

1946/47 QPR 1 Ipswich 3 (Hatton)

1945/46 Ipswich 0 QPR 2

1945/46 QPR 4 Ipswich 0

1938/39 Ipswich 1 QPR 0

1938/39 QPR 0 Ipswich 0

Memorable Match

QPR 3 Ipswich Town 1, Saturday April 22, 2000, First Division

Nobody had expected much of QPR in the 1999/00 season with finances tight and relegation only avoided on the final day of the previous campaign with the famous 6-0 home win against Crystal Palace. But the goal scoring form of non-league find Stuart Wardley and an effective striker partnership between Chris Kiwomya and Rob Steiner had helped the R’s surprise a few of the First Division’s bigger names — Rangers had won at West Brom, Ipswich, Man City and Blackburn.

Christmas brought a succession of injuries and manager Gerry Francis had to play the loan market well — making a success of centre half Darren Ward, Arsenal youngster Brian McGovern and the effeminate Middlesbrough striker Mikkel Beck. An unlikely tilt at the play offs looked on when the R’s followed a run of six successive draws through January and February with three straight wins including a memorable 3-1 win at Maine Road against Man City.

That run culminated with a 3-2 win at Walsall sealed by a late strike from an impossible angle by Chris Kiwomya. Spirits were high and optimism abounded as Crystal Palace came to Loftus Road and were comprehensively played off the park but profligacy in front of goal that would eventually see the Super Hoops held to 18 draws across the entire campaign came back to haunt the home side when Clinton Morrison bundled in a late winner against the run of play. That goal, and subsequent defeat, deflated the place and killed the momentum stone dead. Rangers won only one of the next five, and even that success against the division’s whipping boys Swindon was a narrow 2-1 affair.

The season seemed to be petering out to a meek conclusion when Ipswich Town arrived in W12 in late April. The Tractor Boys, by comparison, were chasing top two Charlton and Man City down hard in the battle for automatic promotion to the Premier League. Earlier in the season at Portman Road Gavin Peacock, Rob Steiner and Stuart Wardley had all scored in a magnificent 4-1 Rangers win but George Burley’s side were heavy favourites going into the return fixture.

Nevertheless, QPR took the lead straight after half time when Richard Langley’s fierce drive was parried into the ground by Richard Wright and Gavin Peacock swooped in on the rebound to score with his head.

In the midst of their Christmas injury crisis Rangers had paid Salzburg £250,000 for Surinam forward Sammy Koejoe after a scouting operation that didn’t stretch much further than a DVD of career highlights that wound up on Gerry Francis’ desk one afternoon. Koejoe gave the impression that he’d rarely played football to any kind of level before moving to London but every now and again — well, on three occasions during a two year stay to be precise — he produced a flash of brilliance. The first of those came against Ipswich when he collected a Kiwomya knock down on the edge of the area, dropped his substantial shoulder to create space and then powered home an unstoppable second.

The visitors pulled one back when Richard Langley felled Jim Magilton in the box and the Northern Ireland midfielder, and future QPR manager, converted the spot kick himself — some redemption for a red card he’d collected in the corresponding fixture in Suffolk.

But Rangers were firmly in party pooping mood and rather than keep the ball in the corner and waste time substitute Kevin Gallen crossed in the last minute for Kiwomya to score again against his former club, controlling the ball with his chest and volleying a shot that caused some confusion by bursting through the net at the Loft End but did count as a third goal of the afternoon.

Ipswich eventually had to rely on the play offs for their promotion and despite becoming perennial chokers in the end of season knock out did this time succeed in winning the last ever final at the old Wembley Stadium 4-2 against Barnsley. Rangers meanwhile finished tenth.

QPR: L Harper, M Perry, K Ready, C Plummer, I Baraclough, P Bruce (K Gallen, 74), S Wardley, R Langley, G Peacock, S Koejoe (G Kulcsar, 74), C Kiwomya

Subs not used: K Rowland, P Murray, A Scully

Goals: Peacock 46, Koejoe 58, Kiwomya 90

Ipswich: R Wright, G Croft (M Reuser, 45), F Wilnis, A Mowbray, W Brown, J Clapham, J Wright (R Naylor, 69), M Holland, J Magilton, D Johnson, J Scowcroft

Subs not used: M Venus, M Stockwell, K Branagan

Goals: Magilton (pen, 79)

Attendance: 14920

Connections

Chris Kiwomya >>> Ipswich 1987-1995 >>> QPR 1998-2001

Born in Huddersfield of Ugandan descent Kiwomya initially made his professional breakthrough down in Suffolk at Portman Road. He was reasonably hot property too - top scoring in the old Second Division in the 1991/92 promotion campaign that crucially won Ipswich a place in the inaugural Premier League. Rangers drew 0-0 with the Tractor Boys at Loftus Road that season despite dominating, and then 1-1 in the away game when Devon White’s first goal for the club only served to cancel out an earlier strike from Neil Thompson which frankly Tony Roberts should have been able to save with his limbs chained together.

Kiwomya built his reputation with Ipswich, scoring 64 goals in 259 appearances for a team that was often battling relegation from the top flight. When they finally succumbed to the drop in 1994/95 Arsenal moved in and paid £1.25m for his services. This was an odd period in the Gunners’ history. The reign of manager George Graham had turned sour after league title wins in 1989 and 1991, FA and League Cup success in 1993, and a Cup Winners Cup win in 1994. Graham had been caught taking £425,000 in bungs from Norwegian agent Rune Hauge to aid the purchase of two of Hauge’s clients John Jensen and PÃ¥l Lydersen. Jensen, bought as a goalscoring midfielder after an impressive Euro 92, infamously only scored one goal in more than 150 appearances for the Gunners — against QPR. Rangers did win the game 3-1 though.

Kiwomya joined on the same day as young Luton striker John Hartson, but neither signing really looked like they had the wherewithal to help the Gunners challenge for trophies once again, and both arrived just as the club was about to go through an amazing transition. Bruce Rioch, a very similar manager to Graham in background and style, was brought in after a successful stint with Bolton Wanderers but he lasted just over a season (in which Arsenal finished fifth) before a dispute with first Ian Wright, and then the board over transfer funds led to his demise. The signing of Dennis Bergkamp from Inter Milan during Rioch’s reign showed where Arsenal were heading as a club and, after another prolonged caretaker spell under furture QPR boss Stewart Houston, Frenchman Arsene Wenger arrived and transformed the club forever. All this rather left Kiwomya (who only managed six starts, 11 sub appearances and three goals in three years at Highbury) and Hartson in a state of flux. Eventually Kiwomya tried his luck on loan in France with Le Havre and Malaysia with Selangor before his contract expired and Ray Harford picked him up on a free transfer for QPR prior to the start of the 1998/99 season.

Harford would last barely two months into the campaign before resigning and being replaced first by Iain Dowie on a caretaker basis and then returning hero Gerry Francis. It was then, with Rangers cash strapped, that Kiwomya really started to shine. As the R’s battled relegation he scored twice in a crucial 4-0 home win against Swindon Town and then wrote his name into the club’s folklore on the final day of the season.

Locked in a struggle at the bottom of the table with Oxford, Bury, Port Vale and Portsmouth, Rangers knew they needed a victory on the final day of the campaign at home to Crystal Palace to secure safety. Since the Swindon win the R’s had managed just one victory and a draw from eight matches and a 2-0 setback at Port Vale the week before in front of a huge travelling support — a fifth defeat on the spin — looked to have doomed them to the Second Division.

It’s always been my opinion that there was something very fishy about what happened next. Palace — financially stricken and in the midst of a messy divorce from owner Mark Goldberg — rolled over and died on a pitch bathed with sunshine and protest balloons in the most obvious and dramatic manner anybody could ever have imagined. When George Kulscar and Tony Scully are lashing in volleys from outside the penalty box something is seriously amiss, and the Kulscar goal in particular — the first of the game — looked eminently saveable only for keeper Kevin Miller to stand still and watch it go past him. Kiwomya scored possibly the lowest quality hat trick ever registered in the professional game and missed a penalty into the bargain and Rangers survived.

Francis rebuilt the team intelligently, adding Stewart Wardley’s hard running to the midfield along with youth team graduate Richard Langley, Jermaine Darlington’s pace to wide areas and most crucially Rob Steiner as a focal point for the attack. Kiwomya thrived, scoring 14 goals as Rangers finished tenth. A well taken late goal in a 3-2 March win at Walsall had put the R;s within touching distance of the play offs but a subsequent brace was only good enough to secure a draw at home to Norwich and the form fell away slightly — his final goal of the campaign capped a memorable 3-1 home win against his former club Ipswich who were heading for promotion at the time nevertheless. That was also the day of the lesser spotted Sammy Koejoe blockbuster as well.

So, despite being on the brink of financial ruin, hopes were reasonably high going into 2000/01 with impressive England Under 21 hopeful Clarke Carlisle added to the defence and Peter Crouch arriving from Spurs. However, crucially, Rangers lost Steiner to a career ending injury and Kiwomya never functioned as well without him. Kiwomya’s early season form was good — four goals in his first eight appearances - but a September away game at Barnsley saw QPR go in at half time three nil down and with disgruntled travelling fans massing around the tunnel at half time to give the players a piece of their minds Kiwomya didn’t cover himself in glory with an angry reaction. Although the striker then subsequently scored twice in the second half to threaten a comeback, the final score of 4-2 only served to plunge the team into greater difficulty. Kiwomya was in and out of the side thereafter with one niggly injury after another and the perception was he either wasn’t bothered, wasn’t trying, or both. He managed six appearances and no goals in the next four months, returning briefly to score twice in an FA Cup replay with Luton at Loftus Road and win through to a fourth round game with his old club Arsenal which Rangers promptly lost 6-0.

More time on the sidelines was broken briefly by a return and two goal haul as the R’s beat Barnsley 2-0 and Gillingham 1-0 as Francis made way for Ian Holloway but they were to be his last goals for the club. Holloway added Andy Thomson to the attack alongside Peter Crouch and at the end of the season, with the club now in administration, Kiwomya was one of dozens allowed to leave at the end of his contract. A record of 30 goals in 96 appearances for a mostly crap side stands up well on paper.

Spells in Denmark with Aalborg and the lower divisions with Grimsby preceded his retirement and coaching spells with first Arsenal, then Ipswich and finally Notts County. In the wake of Keith Curle’s sacking at Meadow Lane, Kiwomya had a prolonged caretaker spell in charge of Notts County which brought three wins and six draws from 11 games. Ominously they lost three on the bounce following his permanent appointment but rallied with two wins and a draw from the final three games and finished the season twelfth. An abysmal start to the following season saw him sacked and replaced by Shaun Derry. The jury therefore remains out on his ability as a manager, and divided on whether he was any good for QPR or not.

Others >>> Jay Emmanuel-Thomas, QPR 2015-present, Ipswich 2011-2013 >>> Massimo Luongo, QPR 2015-present, Ipswich (loan) 2012 >>> Danny Simpson, QPR 2013-2015, Ipswich (loan) 2008 >>> Andros Townsend, QPR (loan) 2013, Ipswich (loan) 2010 >>> Brian Murphy, QPR 2011-2015, Ipswich 2010-2011 >>> DJ Campbell, QPR 2011-2013, Ipswich (loan) 2012-2013 >>> Kieron Dyer, QPR 2011-2013, Ipswich 1996-1999, (loan) 2011 >>> Bradley Orr, QPR 2010-2012, Ipswich (loan) 2012-2013 >>> Tamas Priskin, Ipswich 2009-2012, QPR (loan) 2010 >>> Marcus Bent, QPR (loan) 2010, Ipswich 2001-2004 >>> Jim Magilton, 1999-2006, (manager) 2006-2009, QPR (manager) 2009 >>> Damien Delaney, QPR 2008-2009, Ipswich 2009-2012 >>> Simon Walton, Ipswich (loan) 2006-2007, QPR 2007-2008 >>> Georges Santos, Ipswich 2003-2004, QPR 2004-2006 >>> Adam Miller, Ipswich 1999-2000, QPR 2004-2006 >>> Steve Palmer, Ipswich 1989-1995, QPR 2001-2004 >>> Kevin Lisbie, QPR (loan) 2000-2001, Ipswich 2008-2011 >>> Wayne Brown, Ipswich 1995-2002, QPR (loan) 2001 >>> Sieb Dykstra, QPR 1994-1996, Ipswich 1999 >>> Mark Stein, QPR 1988-1989, Ipswich (loan) 1997 >>> Paul Goddard, QPR 1977-1980, Ipswich 1991-1994 >>> Phil Parkes, QPR 1970-1979, Ipswich 1990-1991 >>> Alan Brazil, Ipswich 1977-1983, QPR 1986 >>> John O'Rourke, Ipswich 1968-1969, QPR 1971-1974 >>> Frank Clarke, QPR 1968-1970, Ipswich 1970-1973

Tweet @loftforwords

Pictures — Action Images

Photo: Action Images



Please report offensive, libellous or inappropriate posts by using the links provided.


You need to login in order to post your comments

Queens Park Rangers Polls

About Us Contact Us Terms & Conditions Privacy Cookies Advertising
© FansNetwork 2024