Thursday, December 31, 2009

Scunthorpe United 1-3 WBA

live text replay





this was a little better stuff from the baggies - and especially from luke moore, who is looking increasingly a threat to come out of the slump that has plagued him most of the season. chris brunt, while still not looking the dangerous scorer he has for most of the season, put in an intelligent performance; and gianni zuiverloon showed again that he can be a real threat going forward.

however, the old habit of winning was greatly aided by the iron going on a self-destructive run of bookings that saw the team ultimately reduced to 9-men and conceding two penalties after having drawn level only 50 seconds into what looked might become a competitive second-half.

this was also the match where i realized that earlier decisions by roberto di matteo as to the starting team were much more measured, and his intentions as a tactician were more firmly established than i had first thought. while i think i probably should have realized it against cardiff or QPR, that in continually starting luke moore in a forward pairing with simon cox the gaffer was making plain display of what kind of attack he is trying to establish. he has deliberately taken a more direct approach, and must be planning a kind of utility role for roman bednar when a change of tactics is needed.

indeed, di matteo has favoured young chris wood as his primary substitute and is looking for the kind of midfield attack that will narrow the width at the front and try to play balls in behind the opposing back four. this is a style that suits both moore and cox and doesn't allow for a player like bednar to really get involved in the match. however, being capable of everything from the ridiculous to the sublime, bednar would be a good gamble late in the day and desperately needing something out of the ordinary.

the albion spark-plug in this match was undoubtedly graham dorrans, who seems to find his scoring touch away from the hawthorns. the young scottish international took advantage of a clear scoring opportunity in the 19th minute to put the baggies ahead.

after equalizing through a deflected then flicked on ball in the first minute of the second-half united's discipline disintegrated totally on a pair of penalties. dorrans was brought down by scunnie defender, rob jones, making a direct run into the box down the right flack. joe murphy the goalkeeper was booked for mockingly applauding the penalty decision, and dorrans - now the albion penalty taker since chris brunt's injury of last month - skillfully put the ball out of reach to the keeper's left for his second of the game.



already down to ten men through the acquisition of a second yellow-card by andrew wright in the 61st minute, scunthorpe gave up a second penalty, as well as having midfielder grant mccann sent off for his immediate, angry and animated dissent. while it wasn't a bad effort this time by dorrans, murphy rose to the occasion and anticipated the shot correctly.

finally, gianni zuiverloon scored through the intelligent play of chris brunt down the right-wing, with the northern ireland international spotting the dutchman's run and open space to set up the shot for zuiverloon's second goal of the season.

the baggies look set to follow a pattern on the season and their performance has been consistent and at times ruthless. while this is true, i don't think that we've really seen this team play at its absolute best; and that may not have been necessary until now with the next two league games coming up representing the most important challenges yet this season. if the baggies can rise to the occasion and take maximum points from forest and newcastle they will be ideally poised to challenge for the championship title. indeed, if they manage this, i have no doubt that they will actually win the title. the collective results of these next two league matches will determine just about everything else as far as the final table positions go. i hope they've been saving their best stuff for this pair of games.

also, as a fan of the FA Cup i'm hoping that we can get a strong enough team on the pitch to beat huddersfield and can get something going this year. i would dearly love to see a good cup run. ironically, i think it's probably good for confidence in a situation like this, and not worth ignoring to make the league your sole concern, obsession and irritation. it can keep a team - and certain players - playing and winning games in a prestigious competition without the pressure of the league to contend with. the 07-08 team that won the division and made the semi-final was a model albion team and it's just been too long since a club from england's penultimate division - whatever it happens to be called at the time - has won the competition. although, i know that's a bigger ask these days than it once was. but still, there should always be the dream.


Tuesday, December 29, 2009

WBA 2-0 Peterborough United

live text replay



luke moore has started scoring again. while the red-hot simon cox seems to have cooled in the last couple of matches, moore has finally broken his scoring drought with a coolly placed strike taking a deflection into the net against peterborough united. he has also seen more than a few of his finishes in the last three games called back for offside. this would tend to indicate that the striker has started to have some success at getting into the kind of position he needs to score.

one of my main assertions this season has been: as goes chris brunt so go the albion. while i believe this to still be true, the baggies have started to learn how to deal a little better with their main problem - and this is merely reflected in brunt's play.

the albion have lacked a mental toughness which makes it hard for them to win when not playing well. when the play is flowing and the ideas coalescing with the actual skills and high imagination becomes manifest, you get the idea that the baggies could take on brazil. this is evidenced by the number of extremely one-sided, high-scoring defeats that they have inflicted on the likes of middlesbrough (0-5), watford (5-0) and sheffield wednesday (0-4).



conversely, when nothing is really going right and the team are finding their touch heavy and passing inaccurate, the football awkward and unnattractive, the baggies just seem at a real loss for what to do?!? when chris brunt is lacking in imagination and play just not working for him they run into real problems going forward. what's worse, is that brunty is in a bit of a slump at the moment.

fortunately, i think this baggies team knows what it's got to do, and even if we end up with another nail-biting season as to whether the outcome is automatic promotion or facing the perils of the playoffs, i have faith that this lot has come to understand what is needed and will scrap for points when they have to from here on out.

the baggies played well against a struggling QPR side and came away on the short end of an undeserved draw for which they had to work to achieve. this one was won on two of the scruffiest goals scored back to back by an albion side in a long time. in a case like this, however, i'll take the scruffy little win over beautiful, flowing, expansive football.



Monday, December 14, 2009

WBA 2-2 QPR


live text replay




while the albion have hit another little patch of poor results (2 points from a possible 9), simon cox rolls on with 6 goals in 7 games now - including the equalizer deep into injury time to help the baggies avoid a second home defeat in the space of a week.


the thing that was different about this was that it was the first time this year where the team played generally well - they kept up the pressure on rangers for most of the game - and didn't get full points. i've seen the baggies play badly and win. i've seen them play badly and lose. i've even seen them play badly and earn a draw. but i haven't seen them play this well and not get the result that they absolutely deserved. of course, it was common in the premier league but heretofore unseen in the championship this year.

to be fair, it was really just a bit of good luck that fell for QPR after what has been a horrendous month for them - and after starting the season as one of the form teams in the division, as well. truthfully, the play that saw jonas olsson head in an own goal from an incoming corner-kick could just as easily have been called back for a foul, as the big swede was obviously pushed in the back during the scramble for position in front of goal.



as for the albion - and as good as some of the football has been - i still don't think we've seen this team firing on all cylinders yet. while simon cox has found a really hot hand and may be a better striker than we may have at first suspected, none of the other forwards have found consistent form and made for the kind of season that the baggies had in winning the championship title two years ago.

it was obvious that we've been missing jerome thomas who scored his 6th goal of the season and has been - along with chris brunt - the best player on the team this year. we should have probably won this one 3 or 4-2, but that isn't going to happen until another one of the strikers also finds some form.

of course, luke moore is playing ok, but not doing so well. he's a bit dozy and slow to react to unexpected opportunity, but if he gets the right ball in behind the back four he's a good striker... just nothing falling for him at the moment. i still think they should give chris wood a start paired with simon cox. especially since they can now bring bednar on as substitute.

i've heard it said that when things are going well, that's the time to buy. this being true, the baggies are going to have to look at acquiring a top left-back, a good central defender and another striker during the transfer activities in january if they want to challenge for the division title this year.


Wednesday, December 9, 2009

WBA 0-2 Cardiff City

this was absolutely pathetic; and save for the improved midfield play in the second-half which pretty much saw the albion camped out in the blue-birds half of the pitch for the duration - there was nothing positive to be taken from this match.


live text replay




the baggies, while occasionally falling prey to the defensive tactics of lower to mid-table teams, always seem to be able to raise their game against the better clubs in the division. not so in this one, and as a result the albion's stranglehold grip on second-place has been slightly loosened. while cardiff are now in third place behind west brom, it is still a five-point difference between the two and the baggies now need to pick up the pace or face going into the christmas break and FA CUP on a poor run of form; exactly what they want to avoid.

this now makes next monday's match against QPR a must win situation. luckily, this game is going to be broadcast live on TV around the world which is a circumstance that usually sees the albion rise to the occasion. after that they are away to blackpool which could also be a difficult game, with the seasiders surprisingly being one of the form teams of the division at the moment. they may also have to play temporarily without youssouf mulumbu, who was injured early on in the match yesterday.



the big news, however, is that captain scott carson will be out for three matches on a red-card which he earned through head-butting cardiff city striker, michael chopra with just minutes left in the game. the resulting penalty, though initially saved by veteran goalkeeping coach, dean keily was turned in on the rebound to kill the game off and give it its final result of 0-2.

the outcome of all this is that west brom are now 2-points short of averaging the 2-points a game that they'll need in order to make automatic promotion a comfortable proposition.

it is also a very difficult situation to assess. although the baggies are definitely feeling the loss of jerome thomas at key moments, this was a good albion team and should be putting in better performances than this. with luke moore out, it was pretty clear that roman bednar needs some more game time. for one thing, he needs to find his match form which he really hasn't had all year; and he needs to find his place in the team again. one of the big problems with the baggies attack yesterday was that they didn't create the type of passing or ball movement that would get the czech striker involved in the game at all. the other - and i think main problem, was that the whole team felt tentative going forward. even with a huge share of the possession and relentless opportunity to go at the cardiff goal, this only saw one or two really good chances created. to be fair, it was also a really good performance by the city goalie and back four.

after the QPR match next week it's kind of a mixed bag of fixtures going into the new year. with carson out for three matches, dean keily will have to face blackpool (away) and peterborough (home) before the captain returns to duty away to scunthorpe. after this comes an FA CUP tie away to huddersfield, and then two very tough and important league matches: home to nottingham forest and away to newcastle. these two fixtures are indeed huge. there is a real chance to get back in the driver's seat as far as automatic promotion is concerned and to gain ground on challenging for top-spot. the baggies will have to be at their absolute best in the early new year in order to take full advantage of the opportunity.



the defense has been good lately, and should probably be forgiven for yesterday's temporary lapse that more or less allowed whittingham to walk into the albion half from the centre-circle in the 18th minute and get a good enough look at goal that carson had no chance on the shot. it sounded as if cech was probably the one that didn't get in and shut him down, and to be fair, he's been playing a lot more in the midfield this year than at left back.

the baggies have to figure out how to play against this type of tough defensive setup. it has tripped them up against crystal palace, swansea, and now cardiff (barnsley was just bad all around). what the team has to learn, is that when their midfield link-up play with the forwards is being disrupted to the degree it was against any of these teams, they'll have to sit back in a tough defensive setup themselves and try to pull the other team forward, open the game up and get the opposition to engage in playing football.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Derby County 2-2 WBA

if nothing else, this was a testament to all the weaknesses that i have seen in the baggies at their worst this year, and was like a microcosmic reflection of how roughly 20% of the season is going to go - in so far as, it's going to be tough against teams capable of disrupting the setup play of the albion central midfielders, especially graham dorrans. this is where west brom are going to get beaten for points this year; not against the good footballing sides, but against defensive midfielders that can put off the albion passing game.

live text replay





the baggies came within two minutes of winning a game that they really didn't deserve, and their tendency of not knowing what to do with a one-goal lead was on display in the most dramatic of fashions. although a draw was probably the fairest result, the albion - having surprisingly scored the apparent winner in injury time - switched off and allowed the rams to equalize two minutes later and with only about 15 seconds left till the final whistle.

fortunately, west brom will usually play a lot better than they did in this match, and the accompanying good fortune that winning teams make for themselves will more regularly see things swing in their favour than not. still, this is going to happen and the club just have to pick themselves up and see to it that they don't fall into a run of poor results. an average of 2-points a game, at this point, would probably see the baggies attain their goal of automatic promotion and maybe even win the division.



luke moore's game has picked up in the last couple of weeks, and the struggling striker has started playing well again. in spite of this, things just won't fall for him at the moment, and it seems he's picked up another small inury which will see him miss the cardiff match tomorrow. it might be just as well, as roman bednar probably needs a start and this will also, no doubt, put young chris wood on the bench. luckily simon cox is continuing to be the player that everyone hoped he would be. the ex-swindon town striker scored a late equalizer in this one to bring his current record to 5 goals in 5 games; a run of form which he hopefully can continue. he looks top value for the money at this point though.

tomorrow's match against cardiff is arguably the most important fixture of the year so far, so the baggies will have to be ready for this one.


Saturday, November 21, 2009

WBA 4-1 Bristol City


live text replay




this last week's home match against bristol city has seen simon cox pretty much nail down a starting spot in the team - for the next few weeks, anyway. he was the maker of an own goal on the part of the robins when his shot in the 46th minute came off city defender louis carey after beating goalkeeper dean gerken. this built on first-half goals by jerome thomas just on 3 minutes; and chris brunt's 5th of the season in the 12th minute, to then make the score 3-0. as if that wasn't good enough, the 22-year-old striker then scored in his own right a minute later to put the baggies 4-0 up and bring his own season total to 3 goals in 7 starts.

if this is how he plays at this level of football, and he can keep this kind of form consistently, then he is definitely a player the baggies have been looking for the better part of the last two years. i think we can all be hopeful that he has the potential to make a significant long-term contribution to the albion organization. i'm already thinking about next year and how he'll pair up with ishmael miller!



following saturday's victory, chris brunt stated that he felt that things had started to fall into place, and everyone at the club is tuned in. as we become distanced from the poor results of early october, they thankfully begin to appear as nothing more than a blip in what looks to be shaping up into an otherwise successful season, and confirming brunt's current assessment. perhaps the albion are coming closer to living up to the potential that the present team is capable of?

while luke moore has not found his form, bednar has been out both injured and ill and a couple of the senior international players are grumbling about transfers if they don't get regular starts in the first team, everything else seems to be running smoothly and starting to gel.

of course, the baggies are still awaiting the return of their three long-term injuries: ishmael miller, james morrison and neil clement; but even with miller having begun training again, it is unlikely that any of these players will have any impact on or see much playing time this season. so, barring any activity in the january transfer window, the current team is the one that will see out the season.

with that in mind, and striker simon cox looking to have secured a starters spot for the time being, i think it's time that the gaffer thought about giving young chris wood a start. while there is no argument that age and inexperience weigh heavily against the teenage new zealand international, i think he is probably a more suitable choice in regards to style of play than is luke moore in an attack pairing alongside simon cox. indeed, this is one of the few things that i've had to question in di matteo's tactics these last two or three weeks.

there is no doubt that roman bednar would be the first choice to start, but two weeks out to injury and then illness last week saw luke moore start again - and in the last two matches in which cox has also started. while i can imagine the tentative nature of starting both a 17 and 22-year-old in leading the line, moore looks like he needs a few weeks to take the pressure off, put in a few goals for the reserve side and the opportunity to get his head straight.



i was at the hawthorns for young wood's only goal of the season, and as a passage of football, i think was a good indicator (and never mind the goal itself - it was a cracker!) as to what his game is about. he's a big target and has a natural ability to hold the ball up, is good with his back to goal and turning on defenders using his size and speed to make space. as well, he has fairly good pace when running directly at a defender, and he's got a good long range shot. he has consistently been showing good form in the reserves, and considering the current situation with the strikers at the club, it couldn't hurt to start the two youngsters this week.

other than that, the albion just have to remember not to let up, and that this is the championship where anybody can beat anybody else on any given day. the baggies have played well against top-ten competition but have faltered the odd-time and had poor games against teams in the mid-to-bottom half of the table. with the match away to sheffield wednesday this weekend, there is good opportunity to keep things rolling and address this issue.


Monday, November 9, 2009

Leicester City 1-2 WBA

live text replay




i started writing this blog as a therapy for having become obsessed with the albion and as a way to deal with the misery of last season in the premier league. it was a terrible disappointment after the expectation that this team had created through their brilliant footballing performance in winning the championship and reaching the FA cup semi-final the year before.

ron atkinson even said earlier this year that he had thought that the baggies would go up and achieve what would become a long-term consolidation as a premier-league club. their utter failure to do so has had a special frustration from the point of view of the club's overseas supporters, among whom, i have the privilege to count myself.

you see, up until this year it was pointless and impossible for me to subscribe to the ALBION WORLD audio commentary service offered on the club's website. it wasn't so much a technical or regional problem that prevented me the ability to do so, but rather, an ethical consideration. the problem was that the service would only work for WINOWS operating systems. i do not use microsoft products; nor am i a MAC user. i use a regular PC, but several years ago (and after years of using "pirated" WINDOWS operating sytems) i started playing around with several FREE and OPEN-SOURCE operating systems, commonly known as LINUX.

it is possible - and a great many people do this for practical reasons - to have a PC run multiple operating systems. you can have multiple versions of WINDOWS and LINUX variants on a single machine; and for the first few months i ran both WINDOWS 2000 and SLACKWARE LINUX on the same PC. as soon as i had figured out how to do everything in the LINUX environment that i could in WINDOWS, i abandoned microsoft completely. i came to adopt this idea as a philosophical concept. there are many reasons other than the practical consideration of having a faster computer not to use WINDOWS, most of which are, in fact, ethical in nature. but i won't get in to that here and now...

while i am able to pay expensive cable television subscription fees and get a full complement of premier-league games, championship matches were few and far between. in 2007-08, i saw the baggies 4 times: 2 league matches, and the FA Cup quarter and semi-finals. the rest of the season was followed on the BBC live text commentaries. but with the baggies back in the premiership and on weekly TV, i had the greatest hopes for the next season.



after the home fixture with portsmouth last year, and ishmael miller was gone for the season, i knew the albion were in trouble so i started to blog. a great deal of my early blogging had to do with the fact that i was going to "lose" the baggies as they would be back in the championship and limited to 2 or 3 televised matches a year; and as a committed free software user i couldn't justify installing WINDOWS on my computer for any reason!

two things changed drastically this last year though. first, the service that most clubs in the premier and football leagues use for live audio commentary on the internet changed so that it was now compatible with MAC and LINUX operating systems. as well, the football league had made a deal to broadcast 60 championship and league 1 matches on TV this year, and they're all being carried on SETANTA SPORTS CANADA. this means that all west brom matches would now be available to me, either on TV or through the internet as live audio commentary. besides that, i was lucky enough to have been in england this last september and had the most fortunate opportunity to see the baggies play twice at home in the space of four days.

anyway, the point of this rumination is to wonder what i'm doing here anymore? does anybody read me? does it matter? is what i've got to say - besides expressing the woes of trying to follow a team like the albion from overseas - worth the time i put in? can one accurately assess a situation from thousands of miles away and with radio commentary as their main receiving medium?

actually, i'm surprised at how much i'm able to understand about what's going on with the club. i heard two points made by the commentary team on ALBION RADIO prior to the leicester city match that were almost verbatim observations as i had made them in my blog of the previous week reviewing the watford match. it seems that what had been obvious to me had also been obvious to the commentary staff - and worthy enough to mention on the broadcast.



of course, i'm not sure that it would be the same had i not been to the hawthorns in september, or seen the first few matches of the season on TV. there are details that can only be fully received through direct visual information. for example, when i saw the baggies play at the hawthorns it was pretty clear that the left-back, joe mattock, consistently came up very high in attack and was often in danger of being caught out of position. in fact, on the tuesday night match that i attended v doncaster rovers, the albion gave up an early goal precisely as a result of the young full-back's poor positional play. this was a weakness in the team that persisted, was consistent and definitely cost a couple of goals along the way. in the last few games, however, it seems like he's learned his lesson and is keeping his position much better. you need at least an initial visual experience to make a fully informed assessment of a simple situation such as this one.

while life is not perfect, in that i still don't believe in DRM, which is the various intrusive forms of controlling information online so that it can't be downloaded or copied - as is the case with all premier and football league video and audio content - the situation is at least now a reasonable compromise. i have a paid membership account - made through the albion website - which allows me to access any of the live audio streams of premier and football league clubs that have opted in to the PLAYER setup.

still, the question goes unanswered. should i be writing about football if i'm not saying anything different from any other football writers?

i'm not sure. but i will, at least, chronicle this season - and at the end, make an accompanying video as well - as it has become possible for me to keep up with and gather the information needed to do so; and ultimately, i guess, because i can't get the albion out of my head!


Sunday, November 1, 2009

WBA 5-0 Watford F.C.

i was really worried about this one after seeing watford absolutely demolish sheffield wednesday by a score of 4-1 on TV last friday. it was really good football. but if you want to come to the hawthorns and try to play football at this level against the albion you're going to get beat 9 times out of 10.

live text replay



as crystal palace and - to a lesser extent - swansea city showed, the only way to really beat this baggies team in the championship is by employing the most negative tactics... 10 men behind the ball and a single striker looking for counter-attack opportunities. but playing football? you probably aren't going to win.

so it was as the baggies pasted watford 5-0 at the hawthorns last saturday.


i don't think too many albion fans would have much to criticize from this performance. it was another clean-sheet for scott carson, five goals all coming by different sources, and a victory achieved largely without chris brunt, who came on for only the last 25 minutes and was relatively inconsequential to the outcome of the match.




there were several factors about this match which will make it seem a like a crucial turning point in the season if the baggies do well in the next few games, and ultimately, gain promotion on the year. first off, this was a tight and well executed performance throughout. i had to listen to the match on the ALBION RADIO, and the infrequency with which the fullbacks were mentioned in the commentary is one indication of very solid work at the back. i only remember meite's name coming up twice in the whole broadcast, for example, and that's always a good sign for a defender.

while not improving his overall performance - and still looking kind of out of it - luke moore returned to doing a strikers' job, scoring in the 48th minute to end a drought for the team's forwards that has lasted since september 19th. gianni zuiverloon netted his first goal for the club, and simon cox scored perhaps the best of the goal of the game to open his league goals account for the albion and looks to have earned a place in the starting team.



i hope the baggies have learned their lessons over the first third of the season, as the upcoming away match at leicester city is possibly the toughest prospect that the club have had to face all season. i saw city play QPR on TV last week and on their day they are probably the most all-around solid side in the division. leicester are excellent at the back - having the second best defensive record in the league - and although they play with less possession than other teams might, they know how to take advantage of their opportunities when they come.

the last time that west brom had a big win, they followed up with a string of poor performances which started at home in a 0-1 loss to crystal palace. they can't afford another run of poor results at this point of the season. if the albion can continue with last week's form, then they can beat leicester city at home. it's as simple as that. but, this is a definite case where the defensive game is going to have to be solid, as i can't see this leicester side allowing the baggies' forwards as much space, time or opportunity as they had last saturday.


Saturday, October 24, 2009

Coventry City 0-0 WBA

at the beginning of this year's season i found myself waiting eagerly for saturday to roll around. three out of the first four or five albion matches were televised; and by the time i went to england in early september they were on a five-game unbeaten streak. i attended both of the next two games at the hawthorns, which saw them extend the run further, by virtue of two 3-1 victories over plymouth and doncaster respectively; and the day before i came home the baggies thrashed middlesbrough at the riverside 0-5. i listened to that match live on the internet through ALBION RADIO, and returning home i was able to see it as a repeat broadcast on SETANTA SPORTS CANADA. there was every reason to feel positive and continue to look forward to saturdays with the gleeful anticipation that a winning side breeds in its supporters.

live text replay



since my return to canada, however, west brom have been knocked out of the league cup 2-0 by a young arsenal side, dropped two home matches 0-1 to both crystal palace and swansea city, lost away to barnsley by a score of 3-1, and produced two 0-0 results away to preston north end and coventry city - their only win in the last six league matches being a 3-1 home victory against a decidedly poor reading side.

i now wait for match-day with a desperate hope that the albion can find their early season form again, and dread the prospect of more losses and goalless draws. what is going on here?!?!

the truth is, even during their unbeaten run, the team has not yet lived up to its potential. but instead of the break-out that i was expecting that would see at least one of the strikers finding a hot hand, and the baggies taking a clear-cut control of the division, i now find myself waiting desperately for another win, anticipating a struggle for a play-off spot, and listening to everyone talk about bloody kevin phillips again!

when tony mowbray left the club to go and manage celtic, west brom did well in finding roberto di matteo. while i had my doubts about him at first, he was able to instantly revitalize many of the players who had either struggled or gone unused under mowbray, and i don't think there is a single albion supporter who didn't eventually welcome what seemed at the time a real breath of fresh air.



i have found that there are generally two schools of thought as to what the baggies need at the moment. one group is concerned about the albion's ability to keep clean-sheets and improve defensively, while the other believes that they must find goals up front, with only 2 of the last 15 coming by way of the strikers. i am of the latter opinion.

the fact is that an albion striker has not scored a goal since september 19th, and all the clean-sheets in the world will do nothing but produce goalless draws without a decent offensive output; and you can't expect the midfield and fullbacks to produce the goals with the frequency needed at the moment - especially with chris brunt, the club's leading scorer, out of the side due to injury.

what is confusing me most is the gaffer's reluctance to play simon cox, who in league 1 and playing for swindon town, was joint top-scorer in the country last year. while his start against rotherham in the league cup was not a particularly distinguished performance, he did score the winning goal. as well, he redeemed himself further by playing well in the subsequent cup fixture with arsenal, but has not been able to break in as a starter in the league matches; and his appearances as a substitute have not given him enough time to settle in.

with both the january transfer window and the return of ishmael miller still a couple of months away, i cannot understand why he has been given only one start (v plymouth) in the league this year, with di matteo preferring to play luke moore, roman bednar and even young chris wood over the ex-swindon town sharp-shooter?



i would suggest that it's time to make a change and take some chances. i was surprised today, for example, that di matteo did not start cox. bednar was out of today's match - having been injured in the first few minutes against reading - and with luke moore having lost his early season form, i didn't think the gaffer had much of a choice. instead, he once again started moore, and had midfielder robert koren playing in an advanced position, similarly to how mowbray would use jonathan greening in the "ishmael miller project" formation of last year.

personally, i would have started wood and cox in a regular 4-4-2 formation today and see how they got on. despite only one goal on the season, wood has shown some skill and proved useful at using his size and strength to hold the ball up, but we still don't know anything as to how simon cox plays at this level in the league.

i think the gaffer was after victory through keeping a clean sheet today, and assuming that one of the midfielders could score at least one goal, this might have been the case. but i just don't think that a defensive approach is the way an albion team should be playing. especially if none of the strikers are scoring. while the albion have had a couple of excellent defensive teams over the years (the 92-93 team, for example, had 27 clean-sheets whilst recording 17 1-0 victories), they still needed the likes of cyrille regis, laurie cunningham, bob taylor and andy hunt to knock in goals up front.

there are no mid-week matches this week, and it is very likely that bednar will be back in the side next saturday against watford. still, i will be disappointed and perplexed if simon cox does not start next week.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

WBA 0-1 Swansea City F.C.

this was a bad day all around. my internet was not working for much of the match, and i had to keep tabs on the game through the BBC live text commentary when i was able to.

i caught the first fifteen minutes and the last five of the first half on ALBION RADIO; then i could only connect for the last fifteen minutes of the game.

live text replay



with city coming to the hawthorns, this was the toughest match and the most in-form performance of any team that the baggies have had to deal with thus far this year - including the opener against newcastle. the albion were lucky enough on the day to hang on to first place, by virtue of the toon's loss to scunthorpe - so thank god for life in the championship! however, this can't go on without seeing an eventual downward movement in the standings.



the baggies have now dropped 11 out of the last 15 points available.

while no one played particularly well at all yesterday, i was still expecting one of the strikers to break out and start scoring. in light of this, yesterday's loss was doubly ironic.

the arrival of roberto di matteo saw countless individuals on the team re-vitalized and the new gaffer seems to know how to use his players better than tony mowbray did. both luke moore and craig beattie started out the season looking completely different players to last year. moore scored a couple of goals just for fun, and beattie really found his touch in the cup games, putting in 2 real quality goals against rotherham.



since then, moore has not been able to find his form following a short recurring injury, and beattie was sold to swansea city the day after the cup game against rotherham. roman bednar has not scored since the match away to middlesbrough. simon cox has still to open his league goals account, and he needs more opportunity as a starter. while chris wood has been doing a good job at holding up the ball and setting up goals, he still has only scored once on the season.

the double irony of yesterday's loss is that craig beattie, who scored the winning goal for swansea, is still one of albion's top scoring strikers on the year. the problem could not have been illustrated more clearly nor the reality of the moment more stark.

i found it disappointing when they sold beattie, as he was playing well and would've been useful outside his role as a starter for cup games; but i did not think it would have an impact on the club's form. today it appears to reflect a minor disaster.




WBA 3-1 Reading F.C.

no TV for this one again, so i had to listen online.

live text replay



other than putting the baggies back on track, it didn't seem there was much to this match; although an albion victory is always a reason to cheer and would've been a fun match to watch, especially live at the hawthorns.

marek cech is emerging as my latest hero to wear the navy-and-white stripes. i can't understand why he was so under-used with tony mowbray in charge? it was our first game of the season without chris brunt where he wasn't sorely missed with both cech and jerome thomas filling in admirably as starters.

despite being signed to play left-back - which kept him out of the team with paul robinson being the gaffer's preferred starter - cech is a much more versatile player than that, and seems to be finding a more natural role as an attacking wide-midfielder. in fact, he was unlucky not to have scored a least a goal in this one as he had enough chances that he could've scored a hat-trick!

unfortunately, the baggies are still having problems with none of their strikers being able to find form since luke moore's recent injuries and the selling of craig beattie to swansea city. roman bednar was injured in the first five minutes, but luckily it was nothing more than a pinched nerve, which will see the czech international out of the side for only a game or two.



chris wood continued in doing a good job as substitute, and had a hand in the making of two of the albion goals.

this was a very typical performance by the albion; being slow to start and conceding first before finding 3 goals of their own. this was the third game of the season where the baggies have followed almost an identical script when faced with not particularly strong opposition at home. they gave away early goals to both plymouth argyle and doncaster rovers before scoring 3 themselves. however, they've been having to rely on the fullbacks and midfielders to produce their goals, with jerome thomas emerging as the 2 goal hero in this one and mulumbu adding the third to seal all three points. indeed, in all three of these wins - which in total produced 9 goals, only one was scored by a striker with chris wood's first goal for the club in the match with doncaster.

despite the victory - which is always a happy circumstance however it was made - nothing much has changed since last week. the strikers have to find their form before this team really starts living up to its potential. this was not a particularly good reading side and the score could've been 5 or 6-1. despite having moved back into first place, let's hope this happens sooner rather than later or west brom might find themselves struggling and playing in fits and starts.


Friday, October 9, 2009

PNE 0-0 WBA

i woke up at 7.00 AM last saturday morning to watch this one live on SETANTA SPORTS CANADA. it was a little better than the last two albion performances, and considering that this is a fixture that the baggies have not won in 50 years, seems a poor result only by virtue of their recent back to back losses, home to crystal palace and away to barnsley.

graham dorrans was the best of the baggies' players on the day and seems to have gotten over the idea that he is the next paul scholes. this was illustrated most clearly in the fact that the young mid-fielder had the only real clear-cut scoring chances on the day, and a quick reaction by lillywhites' keeper, andy lonergan on a late header by dorrans in front of goal was all that was needed for both sides to maintain a clean-sheet.

live text replay



i haven't really got any complaints; although, i still don't think we've seen the best of this year's baggies yet and can only hope that they get the timing right in terms of form over the course of the year. when the baggies last won promotion from this division they spent most of the season in 2nd place behind watford and later stoke city. both watford (in the long-term) and the potters (in the short-term) were prime example of what happens when you peak too early in this division. watford fell away the last 15-20 games of the season and finished sixth; good enough for a play-off spot, and stoke - who rather looked like running away with the division after taking over 1st place in march - similarly ended on a run of poor results and the baggies won the championship trophy.

the problem right now is solely the lack of offensive output on the part of the forwards. it's all very well to imagine the outcome of what in themselves must be highly speculative talks - with sol campbell and thinking about getting the team playing higher quality stuff at the back; but, more importantly, the strikers have to start scoring goals before the albion start winning consistently again.



maybe it's a good thing that they've had a sudden poor run of form so early in what certainly looked more than a promising season at the outset? there are certainly lessons to be learned and this was another rough reminder of life in the champonship.

i'm sure that one of the strikers will emerge fairly soon, and who knows, with ishmael miller expected back within weeks after christmas break it could be a high-scoring season yet?

in the meantime - and let's hope that luke moore finds his early season form again after a month of injuries, and that bednar, cox and wood find their form soon. at this rate, i think di matteo could even afford to give cox and wood more starts and see how they get on over a full 80-90 minutes of league football.



Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Barnsley 3-1 WBA

live text replay



well, things seem to have have gone from bad to worse... the rough return has finally really arrived.

the only positive from this one was chris brunt's goal near the match's end, showing that he is really the true leader going forward, sometimes having to take matters into his own hands - as i first detected in the match with ipswich town. after the albion scored in that one, the left-footed, northern-ireland international had to single-handedly drag the baggies back into attack, as they seemed at a lack for tactics. he had such a good game against middlesbrough - and scoring one of the really spectacular goals of the season - that it was kind of relentless.



but in this one, save for 4 or 5 occasions of individual initiative, the baggies were pretty poor. dorrans and mulumbu both appear to believe the hype they've created at the outset of the season in thinking that they're the next paul scholes and nani; and while this is a really good club, they haven't quite adjusted to the full range of experience that this division holds for them. the fact that they can go into a big stadium like the riverside, in a match replete with full TV coverage, big media attention, and produce a really good 5-0 win against top competition in high-flying style, and then massively underestimate both a home visit from mediocre crystal palace and a somewhat less than glamourous evening in south yorkshire is surely indicative of this.

today, the team was really missing jonathan greening for the first time; and probably (and though i hate to admit it) paul robinson too, as young joe mattock was consistently caught out coming up too high in attack. all three barnsley goals were the result of working the ball down the right wing and taking full advantage of the young full-back's poor positional play.

the club needs both another outside left and central defender before it has anything like depth throughout the whole squad; and, at least one of the strikers has to go on bit of a run before they can start to think about wins coming a little more easily. since luke moore's minor injury of a couple weeks ago, no striker has stepped forward to really lead the way back to playing all-out albion style football.



with cech out for a few weeks, and the long-term injured trio of miller, morrison, and clement still a long way from coming back, jerome thomas did a lot more damage than he could've imagined when he slapped young wilshere at the emirates stadium last week. moore has another minor injury, so i imagine that it will be another start for bednar paired with wood, and simon cox to come on as sub against preston on saturday. however the gaffer plays it, one of these guys has to start hitting. ironically, the midfield and full-backs are doing their part - putting goals in, anyway - and if the strikers don't start scoring at a rate of 1-2 goals a game - and enhance the present offensive output, this is going to be a long season with a lot of complaining about the defensive play and lack of clean-sheets. funny how that works, but that seems to be life at the albion.



Saturday, September 26, 2009

WBA 0-1 Crystal Palace

abject. miserable. undeserving. poor. a bad day at the office... i really don't know what to say, but this was not a good performance by the albion, and i'm glad i was at the hawthorns for the last two games and not this one.

the easy assessment of this one would be to attest to neil warnock's ability to squeeze points out of negative footballing tactics; but in truth, the albion didn't seem to be in this one except for a late squandered opportunity by luke moore that would have put the albion ahead and probably given them a win they didn't really deserve.



welcome back to the championship!!! one of the reasons that i like this division is that it is much more competitive than the premiership, where the infamous "big four" win just as easily away as they do at home and are rarely beaten under any circumstance except when playing each other, the villa or everton. today was a bleak reminder of the nature of the championship and everything i am usually grateful for about football at this particular level.

after thrashing middlesbrough last week - and on the back of succesive 3-1 victories at the hawthorns versus plymouth argyle and doncaster rovers - the baggies have dumped their first two matches of the season, going out of the league cup against arsenal when reduced to ten men by a jerome thomas' dismissal after about half an hour; and today's home loss to crystal palace. unlike the premiership, on any given day, anybody in this division is capable of beating anyone else. and so it was today...

live text replay



i got the idea from today's game - after having seen the matches at the hawthorns and against middlesbrough on internet audio stream and TV - that the baggies were missing chris brunt more than anything. while graham dorrans and youssouf mulumbu have been doing sterling work in the central mid-field, chris brunt has been the key in leading the team forward. when i saw the baggies at the hawthorns there was a kind of "captain" quality that he seemed to have. he is definitely the out-field general - and despite jerome thomas' exciting runs in possession and koren's moments of truly inspired attacking play - is consistently the most aggressive of the mid-fielders going forward.

i have noted on a couple of occasions when the baggies are playing a lot of clever possession in the midfield through dorrans and mulumbu, brunt is the one who drags them forward and urges the attack into more direct action - and then there was his unbelievable scoring performance last week at middlesbrough...



anyway, i knew this would happen. the baggies are going to lose a few matches that'll seem like a surprise. it's still a long season and part of the secret to winning automatic promotion is not to peak too early, because there's no way that you can sit it out in the championship like chelsea or manchester united fighting out a promotion campaign, sitting in first or second place all season and only expect to lose 3 to 4 matches on the year. it'll never happen! it's just not what the championship is about! i was just surprised that it was today against crystal palace that brought west brom back down to earth with a thump.

jerome thomas pulled things further back than he could have imagined at the time when he drew the red card against the arsenal the other night. but with a long way to go, maybe the cautionary lesson learned will curb the tendency the baggies have had this season for getting booked - especially for stupid things like "dissention", which has been happening far too much. there are going to be injuries and the albion are still at least one central defender short of full and real depth in the side; so they can't afford suspensions as well.

roberto di matteo is exceeding expectations and so far this has been a good year with a real positive feeling about the club. maybe it's time to take long breath, pray that everyone stays healthy as possible, cool it down and think about taking some points back against barnsley on tueday night.



Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Last Night of the Proms

oh well... as we stagger on to our first loss of the season - in the league cup and a match we could have won, funnily enough - it's been 4 games now since i've blogged, or really had the chance to do any writing. as i have been in england this last 2 weeks, i haven't really had the opportunity. the funny thing is, being in england, and actually making my first trips to the hawthorns where i saw two 3-1 victories by the baggies, i was sure i would be blogging the whole time eagerly and excitedly...



since my last blog where i was still unsure about di matteo and had questions about the baggies' tactics when they've got a single goal lead, things have definitely changed. the great thing is that i was actually there to see it when it started. the albion are now playing like a proper albion team.

Arsenal 2-0 WBA



the latest news is that we've gone out of the league cup. as i finally begin this long overdue writing, the baggies shot themselves in the foot playing against an arsenal team made up largely of younger players, when jerome thomas lost his cool with 17 year old jack wilshere - who was doing his level best to win free-kicks by diving and play-acting a la cristiano ronaldo, and thomas gave him a light smack in the face for not accepting a hand-up following a tackle and proceeding to pretend he had been kicked in the head by the albion attacking midfielder. unfortunately - and no matter how soft a slap it was , that is a red-card offense and the baggies were down to 10 men for most of the match.



up until that particular point, the albion had had the better chances and the only real shot on goal in the first half. admirably, the baggies held on for most of the match when a save by dean keily fell for sanchez watts to knock in the first goal on 68 minutes to set the gunners on course for victory and a place in the next round of the league cup. eight minutes later - and with a ten man baggies side chasing the game - leon barnett made the critical mistake of attempting to chest the ball back to dean keily, which was pounced on by an on-rushing carlos alberto vela who merely had to tap the ball home and it was all over. in his defense, leon barnett has been one of the many albion players who have seen a great improvement in his play under roberto di matteo, and while a striker can sit making horrible mistakes all day and needs only score the winning goal at the death to be a hero, there is no room for a centre-back to make a mistake without looking like a dangerous clown; so i have to feel for him, especially in light of his recent form and this being a cup game and all, where players are more likely to second guess themselves in routine situations. i can't really get down on the guy.

live text replay



whatever else came to pass, this match was lost as soon as jerome thomas got the red card, leaving a 10-man west brom to play almost an hour against the best passing team in the country. the drag of it is that the baggies were looking just as likely to win this one as the gunners until this unfortunate incident. given the numerical disadvantage that they had to endure (and leon barnett's late lapse in judgement) the albion did well enough in this one to take heart in a good performance; especially simon cox who had his best start of the year so far - and we still haven't seen the full potential of this team yet with their finest performance to date probably being the win against ipswich.

ok... no league cup this year. that's cool with me.


Middlesbrough 0-5 WBA



i took this match in live through the west brom websites's ALBION RADIO on a microsoft windows computer at my mum's house in chilcompton, radstock. i left england the next day and was then able to see it on TV as a repeat on SETANTA SPORTS CANADA monday morning.

live text replay



this one was kind of unbelievable for me, especially after my trips to the hawthorns for the plymouth argyle and doncaster rovers games. these were classic albion style matches played by a team playing a proper albion style. the team was slow to start, conceding the first goal in each game before anwering with 3 of their own on both occasions, making the wins emphatic. this baggies team has finally realized that to keep attacking is the only way for an albion side to win consistently. unlike the first 4 or 5 league matches of the season where they seemed unsure about what to do with a 1 goal lead and would concede within minutes of scoring a goal. in each of the two matches i witnessed at the hawthorns they finally found the answer: stay solid and keep a good shape at the back, play the ball through the midfield, keep going forward and look for another goal. in each of the last three matches there was the characteristic of spark-plug players to ignite the baggies performances. marek cech was a perfect example of how the presence of di matteo has transformed the attitudes of many players who were under-used and unhappy under tony mowbray. the new gaffer has already made greater use of more players and improved their performances substantially that i kind of wonder how this group would fare in the premiership?



just as marek cech and jonas olsson had been the scoring lynch-pins in the two previous matches; each scoring twice against plymouth argyle and doncaster rovers respectively - so was chris brunt the two goal scorer who set the tone and basis for the absolute rout of boro on saturday. his second goal was one of the highlights of the season so far, and required both quick thinking and skill to spot the opportunity and then have the technique to pull it off. this was classic ineptitude and lack of initiative on the part of middlesbrough and traditional albion attacking football on the part of the baggies.

WBA 3-1 Doncaster Rovers



live text replay



well, i was back at the hawthorns after having been on the saturday previous and i was treated to more of the same, as well as a more intense match. as against the argyle, the baggies went behind early on a straightforward run at the box by the rovers down the right side. getting behind the baggies' defense they delivered a low well placed cross running across goal for waide fairhurst to tap home the ball for a 1-0 doncaster lead.

just as it had been on saturday against plymouth this didn't last long as 12 minutes later jonas olsson got on the end of a graham dorrans corner and headed home the equalizer to begin the baggies' match domination and inexorable march to victory.



mulumbu has certainly been a real spark-plug in the baggies' midfield, and i suspect that it is largely on the quality of his play that the team is not missing jonathan greening at all. the albion number 21 is winning balls in a robust and decisive manner and together with graham dorrans and chris brunt seems to almost always have a hand in the outset of a move that starts the baggies forward in finding the right pass, keeping possession and building useful attack position. as my girlfriend leaned over and said to me early on in the plymouth match:

"that number 21 is always at the start of something good."

she was right.

the match was drawn 1-1 at half-time and there was a real positive air about the hawthorns that seemed to me to be lingering from saturday afternoon - like we all knew there were more goals in this one and another baggies win was in the offing.

the guy to my girlfriend's right screams in a thick black country accent:

"get the ball!!! keep the ball!!! pass the ball!!!"

and in response to the baggies trying to make something of a long ball from scott carson:

"not the long ball... it never works," and in reference to one of the doncaster full-backs, he continues, "and that bloke's a little tall to be trying that!!!"

the guy to my left moans at every poorly placed pass and questionable decision by the referee.

"c'mon roman," he yells at the albion striker, roman bednar, "get back onside!!!"

olsson scored again in the 64th minute. this time the link-up with dorrans was from a free-kick and the swedish full-back headed in his second goal of the game to put the albion in the lead.

finally, i had the privilege of witnessing chris wood's first professional goal for the albion. the 17 year old new zealand international scored the most spectacular goal of the match as he drove a scorcher from just outside the box into the top left-hand corner of the rovers' goal, giving keeper neil sullivan no chance and west brom their second emphatic 3-1 victory in the space of 4 days.

WBA 3-1 Plymouth Argyle



live text replay



i arrived at the hawthorns by taxi from new street station. initially my girlfriend and i were intending to take the local from birmingham snow hill to the hawthorns station, but were sent the wrong way by three publics-works employees who had their north/south muddled.

"we're not locals," one of them explained when i initially approached him with my inquiry.

i was really impressed by the whole experience. i had told the driver to drop us at the east stand, as that is where our tickets were. as we drove along and turned onto the birmingham road there must have been ten-thousand baggies supporters almost all wearing the blue and white stripes.

"you're fellow compatriots," my girlfriend noted at the sight of them.

and it was an overwhelming sight. where at home, here in toronto, i am unique - and somewhat of an esoteric - wearing my collection of west bromwich albion jerseys - retros from TOFFS as well the latest gear, and either my navy blue and white or my yellow and green striped scarves in the winter - in a place that one only ever sees manchester united, chelsea, liverpool and toronto f.c. represented in the general day to day fashions. but here - here at the hawthorns i was home. i was with almost 20,000 other baggies supporters all wearing some indication of their devotion: scarves, caps, training gear, and jerseys from every year imaginable... it exceeded my expectations.

while there are many aspects of the modern game that i abhor - chiefly in the form of obscene transfer fees, disgustingly excessive salaries, over-paid athletes trained to play football instead of proper footballers training to be better athletes, the idea that the national team doesn't consider players from the lower divisions, not to mention the deathly dull dominance of the all mighty bloody "big four"; i do appreciate that the oppressive large-scale hooligan element of the 1970s has been eradicated and is something that is actually not inside the stadium anymore. gone is the blind, idiotic existential rage that sat ready and waiting to create general and large-scale social disturbance on the terraces. it is a much improved atmosphere to the stamford bridge, upton park or highbury of the 1970s.

from a most biased viewpoint, the baggies' supporters have got to be the best in the country, and certainly some of the most knowledgeable fans in the english game today.



i was really impressed by the fact that the club has integrated peripheral parts of the old stadium with its post premiership era rebuilding of the hawthorns: the old fashioned turnstiles - paint-chipped and baggies blue; or the old bill-board announcing the next home match that still requires the teams and times to be changed by hand; the astle gates and wrought iron fence that surrounds the parking lot... i love the hawthorns.

the most notable characteristic of the baggies under di matteo's management has been the resurgence in spirit of players who had been under-used, under appreciated, and under achieving with tony mowbray in charge. today it was marek cech's turn to show his best stuff.

the albion went behind early on a pretty soft goal by plymouth's jamie mackie. shelton martis got turned the wrong way as the argyle attack came down the left flank, penetrating the albion area and trickling an acute angled shot past scott carson. my heart sunk just a little as it was the first time i remember the albion ever being behind in a match this season.



"welcome to the hawthorns," i heaved a disappointed sigh and said to my girlfriend.

just past the half-hour mark, however, everything came right again as shelton martis made up for his earlier mistake by scoring the equalizer from a graham dorrans corner kick. i had seen my first goal by the baggies at the hawthorns and was ecstatic jumping to my feet and cheering along with the other 20,000 albion supporters present.

the smethwick corner sang psalm 23.

martis has been a consistent fixture in the baggies back four since he came into the squad, but his play has seen improvement under di matteo as has that of leon barnett, luke moore, marek cech, and even craig beattie (before he left).

while i liked tony mowbray terrifically, as he was a good spokesman for the team and someone who could analyze football with the best of them, i'm not sure how well he did with the baggies last year. he managed the particular team he had well enough in the championship; but in the premier league his biases and idealistic approach to the game were not in tune enough with the players he had. i admired his commitment to what i call "the ishmael miller project", but it came at the expense of not giving enough opportunity to most of the aforementioned players, especially cech and moore; and may have been the main reason that the albion were relegated. he didn't seem to know what to do when miller got injured and was gone for the season (and still hasn't come back) and was adamant and persistent that borja valero was the best technical footballer in the side. so what?!?



under di matteo, it is obvious that everybody feels better. chris brunt didn't leave for rangers - as was feared earlier in the summer, and is playing a key role on the pitch going forward and in set play. roman bednar's back and scoring goals. luke moore is an absolutely transformed player and started the season completely on fire before picking up a small injury in training that kept him out for a couple of weeks... everybody has been brought into the side now, where before there was a divided team of those who were in and those who were out.

about five minutes before the end of the half marek cech scored a brilliant goal from 35 yards out that he absolutely buried in the top right hand corner of the plymouth goal. for me this was also a brilliant moment. i was at the hawthorns and having the best time imaginable.

again, the smethwick led the chorus to psalm 23.

it looked as though cech had his second goal as he sprinted onto a header in the box but was ruled offside.

from where i was sitting in the upper tier of the east stand he hadn't looked offside when he started his run.

"OOOHHHHH REF-ER-EEEEEAAAAA!!!" moans the guy to my left.

i haven't spotted the flag yet and the hawthorns is still buzzing.

"hey, we can all sit down," the guy on our right says to my girlfriend, "'e's been called offside!"



cech eventually found his second goal from a header in the box with about 5 minutes left. once again the smethwick sang two choruses of psalm 23.

afterwards, strolling down the birmingham road trying to get around and in front of the traffic jam emanating from the stadium, a guy sipping beer from a paper bag asks me what the final score was.

"3-1," i reply.

"we was losin' one-nil," he says, seeming a bit surprised.

"yeah, but we scored three after that," i say.

"good on ya'!" he salutes me with his paper bag.

my perfect afternoon at the hawthorns was complete.