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3:30pm Monday 15th March 2010 in
GUS Poyet has improved Albion in several respects.
They are defending so much better now and his signings have brought more quality to the team.
But he has not been able to do anything yet about the appalling home form.
That will have to change if the Seagulls are going to mount any sort of challenge in League One next season.
This is assuming survival, of course, which is dangerous, although the comfort cushion has only been trimmed by one point to five by the latest Withdean setback.
The giveaway stats are that Albion have now lost more home matches (11) than anyone else in the division and scored the fewest goals (14 in 17).
The second of those wretched tallies is the most significant. If you are averaging less than a goal per game then there is not much chance of winning too many or, for that matter, avoiding defeat.
The startling difference between the Seagulls’ home and away form is encapsulated by the extraordinary diversity of Glenn Murray’s scoring record.
Wycombe or Walsall, Southampton or Leeds, no problem. Murray has hit the target 12 times in his last 12 away league appearances.
Compare that with Withdean and that old chestnut linking the rear end of a farm animal to George Formby’s instrument springs to mind.
It is an unlucky 13 outings in all competitions since the net bulged for Murray at Albion’s adopted home.
Unlucky because he has suffered injury problems during the course of a barren spell which, amazingly, now stretches back a calendar year to a goal against Yeovil.
The sequence nearly ended in the first half against Swindon, when wide men Kazenga LuaLua and Elliott Bennett combined to set up Murray for an angled header from beyond the far post.
It beat replacement goalkeeper Phil Smith but did not carry sufficient weight to prevent skipper Gordon Greer making a comfortable goal-line clearance.
Poyet was quick to seize upon the puzzling Murray scoring anomaly when asked about Albion’s lowest home goals record.
“It’s simple,” he said. “My main striker since I have been here is Glenn and he hasn’t scored at home.
“He had a great chance. If it was away from home would he have scored? I don’t know, you tell me.
“It is a problem so we need to make sure we are better. I have got no explanation.
“Coincidence or confidence? I don’t know. If he didn’t have chances I would accept it is the team performance. He had enough to score at least one but we’ll see. We’ll keep working on it.”
Albion had enough opportunities in general to grab the opening goal in the kind of game where one was always likely to be enough but Bennett, Andrew Crofts and Gary Dicker all missed the target when well-placed.
It would be easy to blame the 4-5-1 system, which had previously worked well home and away during the four-match unbeaten run.
But the truth of the matter is they did not look any likelier to score once they had fallen behind and Poyet switched first to 4-4-2 and then 4-3-3, via the introductions of Chris Holroyd and Nicky Forster.
That was in response to the decisive strike from Charlie Austin, his 14th of the season for Swindon. A left wing cross from lively sub Mark Marshall eventually landed at the feet of Jon-Paul McGovern.
He laid the ball back for Austin, plucked from non-League Poole, to plant a low shot beyond Peter Brezovan from 12 yards.
It was a missed-the-boat outcome for Albion, a terrific one for Swindon after successive defeats had raised doubts about their ability to last the promotion course.
They were quite literally hamstrung, that particular injury ruling out top scorer Billy Painter and forcing off both his replacement Vincent Pericard and keeper David Lucas in the first half, together with winger turned striker Daniel Ward (head).
The visitors, more by luck than judgement on Danny Wilson’s part, became more threatening once forced themselves to go 4-5-1.
Albion’s performance simultaneously tailed off, although Inigo Calderon was excellent again and LuaLua’s delivery was better this time following more of those electric bursts.
He almost scored inside the opening minute and nearly rescued a point in the last, skating past two challenges from the halfway line to unleash a low drive which Smith did well to keep out.
Poyet said: “I think he (LuaLua) had a terrific game, probably just a little bit under Calderon, who was outstanding.
“We have been working with him every week, one session for him, and he was definitely better in terms of delivery.”
The Seagulls need to deliver now against Brentford at Withdean tomorrow night, although Poyet admitted: “With respect to the fans, I don’t know if I am glad to have it at home.
“It’s going to be another difficult game. They are very organised and tough, so we need to be better.”
Albion (4-5-1): Brezovan; Calderon, El-Abd, Elphick, Painter (Forster 75); Bennett, Navarro (Holroyd 71), Crofts, Dicker, LuaLua; Murray. Subs not used: Walker, McNulty, Hart, Carole, Hoyte.
Goals: None.
Yellow cards: None.
Swindon (4-4-2): Lucas (Smith 12); Darby, Cuthbert, Greer, Sheehan; McGovern, Douglas, Ferry, Ward (Easton 46); Pericard (Marshall 33), Austin. Subs not used: Timlin, Ritchie, Amankwaah, Jean-Francois.
Goal: Austin (69).
Yellow cards: None.
Comments(16)
bruce beckett
says...
4:27pm Mon 15 Mar 10
russellsnr
says...
5:33pm Mon 15 Mar 10
Dave K
says...
5:48pm Mon 15 Mar 10
tinker000
says...
5:55pm Mon 15 Mar 10
mark by the sea
says...
6:07pm Mon 15 Mar 10
Dallas Martin
says...
10:36pm Mon 15 Mar 10
Cap'n Pugwash
says...
11:29pm Mon 15 Mar 10
Saulgone Petetong
says...
8:12am Tue 16 Mar 10
kumquat
says...
8:24am Tue 16 Mar 10
lancingseagull
says...
9:50am Tue 16 Mar 10
Dave K wrote:Errr....Doh...Doh...
Bruce Beckett, you sound very much like somebody that just looks at stats and doesn't actually attend games. A blind man could see that Glenn is a class act. I'm looking at our 4-5-1 system and questioning it. We keep having a lot of possesion in games, yet when we move into the final third, we have nowhere near enough support. Murray is having to drop back to get the ball as he's very isolated as a loan striker, but when he does get the ball and plays it to one of our wingers, nobody is in the box. We didn't give 4-4-2 a chance on Saturday, I think it lasted 5-10 minutes before we went to 4-3-3. It was from one extreme to another, too many in midfield and not enough up front, to not enough midfielders and 3 isolated strikers. There is a reason why 4-4-2 is the most popular formation in the country....
lancingseagull
says...
9:55am Tue 16 Mar 10
lancingseagull wrote:Sorry Dave K. Attached your quote by mistake. Please accept my apologies.
Dave K wrote: Bruce Beckett, you sound very much like somebody that just looks at stats and doesn't actually attend games. A blind man could see that Glenn is a class act. I'm looking at our 4-5-1 system and questioning it. We keep having a lot of possesion in games, yet when we move into the final third, we have nowhere near enough support. Murray is having to drop back to get the ball as he's very isolated as a loan striker, but when he does get the ball and plays it to one of our wingers, nobody is in the box. We didn't give 4-4-2 a chance on Saturday, I think it lasted 5-10 minutes before we went to 4-3-3. It was from one extreme to another, too many in midfield and not enough up front, to not enough midfielders and 3 isolated strikers. There is a reason why 4-4-2 is the most popular formation in the country....Errr....Doh...Doh... .Doh..Do you not think he might be a born and bred Albion fan living abroad.?....What a waste of skin you are.
lancingseagull
says...
9:57am Tue 16 Mar 10
tinker000 wrote:Errr....Doh...Doh...
Why is it that yank's open there mouth's before the brain is engaged(if they have one) come and watch plenty of games before you mouth off. Having just missed last two home games due to being under the weather ( first missed home games for seasons) i had to listen to commentry on Sussex Radio and it came home to me that a big part of the problem is Withdean the commentators sounded like they were in a closed room(gents) no crowd etc to get the team going have had more atmosphere at a morgue ,the player are doing there best in a place that it was ment for Well it could be housing when we get out of there(thank god).Watched the away game at Colchester and the away support was great YOU COULD HEAR THEM ABOVE ALL i rest my case. My advice to you B B is go back to watching pansy rounders and soft ball all the Yanks have got ,before you remind me USA beat ENGLAND years back think it might have been youth side . Have a nice day.
the taffster
says...
10:37am Tue 16 Mar 10
Gee Jay
says...
4:28pm Tue 16 Mar 10
lancingseagull
says...
10:28am Wed 17 Mar 10
Gee Jay wrote:Sorry Gee Jay, there's also an invisible "h" after the silent "p" in psychological. (lol)
Taffster.....there is a silent 'P' at the beginning of Phsycological, like in swimming pool, as my dad used to say! Yep, I know, its so old!
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Frankie Moonshine says...
4:20pm Mon 15 Mar 10