Friday, January 22, 2010

Newcastle United - League and Cup

WBA 4-2 Newcastle Utd.



live text replay


one fact was clear about this match straight off the bat: the albion were making a run for the cup and newcastle (for whatever reason?!?!) were not. as far as the albion is concerned, this is always a good move and a cup run enhances the club's success in league play as well.

the baggies have always been a cup team, and in any category you look they are still one of the top-ten clubs in this particular competition: 20 FA CUP semi-finals, 10 finals appearances, and five cups won. this is still a better record overall than chelsea, for example. with this being the 90th anniversary of our only ever league championship, it's also worth remembering that the albion's fame has always been based on cup success and respectable league standings.

the FA CUP win of 1954 was followed by three straight top-five finishes in the 1st division. this is the spirit of west bromwich albion.



while the world's oldest football competition has lost much of its glamour and popularity due to the season-ticket culture that dominates match attendance amongst the country's bigger clubs, and fully televised premiership and UEFA schedules have taken interest and precedence from the cup, it is still the competition for which west bromwich albion is most famous and i think that ignoring the cup is a serious mistake for any baggies team.

i have to admire roberto di matteo for starting a full-strength line-up. it is an absolute credit to the gaffer's understanding of english football, and - more importantly - the spirit and history of west bromwich albion. he knows that for the baggies, a cup run is fine and fair accompaniment to a successful showing in the league.

despite not scoring as he had in the last two matches this was actually roman bednar's best performance on the year, and he knew it. ishmael miller continued his return to football with another late inclusion as a substitute. i imagine that this will go on for the next month or so until the big striker is fit enough to start and possibly play through an entire 90 minutes.

as to the team selection - and the seemingly unusual 4-5-1 attacking formation - it is very similar to how tony mowbray was setting up during what i always refer to as the "ishmael miller project" of last year. while it looked like a 4-5-1, the ex-gaffer was really playing jonathan greening in an advanced attacking position alongside miller. di matteo's setup is a little more conventional as he has both graham dorrans and robert koren in position to go forward as attacking midfielders. my thought on this is that it might see more success with koren pushed forward into an orthodox striker's position, playing in support of either bednar or miller as the target-man.

with the next round an away draw to reading, the albion are already looking a good bet for the quarter-finals and with so many of the big clubs gone from the competition, we might be able to start dreaming just a little about the possibility of becoming the first championship side to win a wembley cup final.


Newcastle Utd. 2-2 WBA



live text replay


well, this was roman bednar's - and perhaps the team's - best game of the season so far. there is no doubt that with 2 goals in as many games, the big czech striker is looking like he's finally rediscovering his past form.

after having been part of an all-round terrible performance against nottingham forest, gabriel tamas showed that he is a tough, resolute and sometimes dirty defender who has a definite contribution to make in a side that is generally short on tough, and sometimes dirty players. as well, ishmael miller's return looks more of an immediate threat than one might have expected, with the big striker hitting the post and unlucky not to score what would have been the winning goal in the last few minutes against newcastle.



as good a game as this was - and a draw being the fairest of all outcomes - it didn't do much for the baggies in terms of the table. the 2-points that they took from newcastle seem far more important than the single-point registered, and the albion are going to need a five or six game run of wins at some point if they really want to secure automatic promotion. however, this is the championship and judging by historical precedent, nottingham forest may just have peaked too early in the season and will, in all likelihood, end this term in playoff position.

i still have confidence - and even if it's just on goal difference - that the baggies will just edge it as far as automatic promotion places go.

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