Red Devils strength in depth too much for Latics – Manchester United 4 Wigan Athletic 0

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The teams line-up at Old Trafford

Manchester United progressed to the last 16 of the FA Cup with a dominant second half performance against Wigan Athletic.

Latics produced a brave battling first half display but were ultimately undone by United’s greater quality in depth.

The underdogs were edging the first half until Marouane Fellaini’s back post header broke the deadlock just before the interval.

Latics proved to be vulnerable in the air and Chris Smalling added a second header after 57 minutes.

Anthony Martial then set up Henrikh Mkhitaryan to add a third on 74 minutes, before Bastian Schweinsteiger completed the scoring with an overhead kick on 81 minutes after Latics failed to clear a cross.

Latics’ 3,000 strong away following had sung their hearts out throughout and had backed the team magnificently but it was just not to be their day.

Wigan were unchanged from the line-up which defeated Brentford although the returning Yanic Wildschut was named amongst the substitutes.

United’s strength in depth was demonstrated by their ability to make nine changes from their League Cup semi-final victory over Hull City and still field a high calibre and very experienced line-up.

The Championship team acquitted themselves very well in the opening half and probably had the better chances to take the lead.

Callum Connolly forced a good save from Sergio Romero after Dan Burn set him up from Max Power’s free-kick on 11 minutes.

Latics’ best chance came on 54 minutes when Romero spilled Connolly’s right wing cross to David Perkins on the edge of the area and the midfielder’s low drive was well saved by the United keeper.

Just when it looked as though the teams would be heading into the interval level, United struck.

Schweinsteiger’s cross found Marouane Fellaini at the back post and the big Belgium midfielder headed past keeper Jakob Haugaard.

Latics resilience had been broken and United doubled their lead on 57 minutes with another header, Chris Smalling this time on the end of Anthony Martial cross.

The visitors introduced Yanic Wildschut after the goal in place of Perkins but the winger was unable to make much impact on United’s back line.

A swift United counter attack resulted in a third goal. Mkhitaryan produced an enticing cross into the six yard box and Martial bundled home from close range.

It was comfortable for United now and they scored a fourth on 81 minutes when Wayne Rooney’s corner was knocked on by Ander Herrera and Schweinsteiger’s overhead kick beat Haugaard from close range.

The scoreline was a little harsh on Latics who had matched their opponents for long periods but they just couldn’t sustain the level of performance against United’s quality.

Latics must now focus on Championship survival and bounce back to winning ways against play-off chasing Sheffield Wednesday on Friday night.

 

Posted in Bastian Schweinsteiger, Chris Smalling, FA Cup, Henrikh Mkhitaryan, Manchester United, Marouane Fellaini, Wigan Athletic | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

12th Man – Up for the Cup

Will Grigg Wigan Athletic

Can Will Grigg get on the score sheet at Old Trafford?

Latics face the daunting task of trying to eliminate the current FA Cup holders Manchester United at Old Trafford on Sunday.

United are in resurgent form in the Premier League under Jose Mourinho, have qualified for the League Cup final and are expected to progress in the Europa League.

They have a team stacked with superstars and have not lost at Old Trafford since the 2-1 defeat by Manchester City on the 10th September 2016.

Most people will be predicting a comfortable win for United against a team who are near the bottom of the Championship table.

But United are not invincible and this season Stoke City, Burnley, Arsenal, West Ham and Liverpool have held them at Old Trafford.

The Red Devils struggled against Sheffield United last season in the FA Cup and only a last-minute Wayne Rooney penalty saved their blushes.

It will be the first time Latics and United have met in the FA Cup but United’s local rivals Manchester City know all about Latics’ proud recent history in the competition.

Latics, of course, achieved a remarkable double over City winning the trophy in 2013 and defeating them at the Etihad Stadium in the quarter-final in 2014.

Latics do have insider information on United as Warren Joyce was in charge of United’s reserves for eight years between 2008 and 2016 before becoming manager at the DW Stadium.

Joyce oversaw the development of top players such as Paul Pogba, Marcus Rashford and Jesse Lingard and the insights he can provide about United’s players could be invaluable as they seek to create an upset.

Latics are now in a good vein of form and will be relishing the prospect of competing against some of the top players in the country in front of 70,000 supporters.

If United underestimate Latics and are in any way complacent then there are players who can cause a surprise at Old Trafford.

Yanic Wildschut is a product of the famous Ajax Academy and is very capable of producing some special magic on the day.

Will Grigg grabbed a brace for MK Dons when United were knocked out of the League Cup in 2014 and I’m sure Latics’ leading goal scorer would love to hear a chorus of ‘Will Grigg’s on Fire’ ring out around Old Trafford.

Egyptian international Sam Morsy has been rejuvenated since returning from Barnsley and the combative midfielder will want to make a big impression against some of the highest paid players in the world.

United may be favourites to go through to the 5th Round but Latics have pulled off some miraculous FA Cup results in recent times and they might just do it again.

This article was first published in the 12th Man column for the Wigan Evening Post on Friday 27th January 2017.

Posted in FA Cup, Manchester United, Sam Morsy, Warren Joyce, Wigan Athletic, Will Grigg, Yanic Wildschut | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Battling Wigan move out of the drop zone – Wigan Athletic 2 Brentford 1

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Man of the match Sam Morsy. Photograph courtesy of Wigan Athletic.

Latics moved out of the bottom three after a dominating display against mid-table Brentford at the DW Stadium.

Man of the match Sam Morsy fired Latics ahead after 28 minutes and soon afterwards the Eqyptian international added a second when Harlee Dean diverted his cross shot into his own net.

Brentford managed a consolation goal with four minutes of normal time remaining when substitute Jota pounced after keeper Jakob Haugaard had spilled Philip Hoffman’s shot.

Latics secured a third straight win in a row and they now go into their FA Cup tie at Manchester United in buoyant mood.

Both teams were without key players, for Latics winger Yanic Wilschut and for the Bees prolific striker Scott Hogan who is attracting interest from West Ham, but it was one way traffic as the home team were in control from the kick off.

The return of David Perkins alongside Shaun MacDonald, Sam Morsy and Max Power made it a very combative Latics midfield and the Bees found it difficult to build any momentum.

Morsy has made a huge impact since his return from Barnsley and he burst through the Bees midfield on 27 minutes and struck a great shot which beat keeper Dan Bentley but came back off the post, just out of the reach of the advancing Will Grigg.

But a minute later Morsy produced an even better piece of skill to open the scoring for Latics. The midfielder once again broke through the Bees defence before hitting a superb curling shot from the edge of the box and past the despairing Bentley.

Latics continued to push forward and they were soon two up. Will Grigg’s shot from inside the box was pushed away by Bentley but the ball found Jacobs, who was able to feed Morsy, and his cross shot struck Dean and rolled into the Brentford net.

Grigg might have increased the lead three minutes later, but he couldn’t quite reach Warnock’s cross from the left and Jacobs had another shot saved by Bentley.

Brentford surprisingly offered little going forward but Latics had been excellent in the first half and they could easily have gone into the break more than two goals ahead.

The visitors improved at the beginning of the second half and Tom Field went close when he met Maxime Colin’s pull-back and John Egan fired wide from inside the box.

Latics always looked likely to add to their tally and Dan Burn headed over, Grigg just failed to reach another Warnock cross and Andreas Bjelland headed away Morsy’s dangerous cross.

The Bees best chance of the game came when Bjelland’s header was superbly tipped over the crossbar by Haugaard.

Jacobs should have made it three on 80 minutes when he cut in from the left curled his shot a foot wide of the far post.

Brentford did manage a consolation goal on 86 minutes when substitute Jota pounced on the ball after Haugaard spilled Philipp Hofmann’s shot, but it was too late for the away team and Latics ran out deserved winners.

Posted in Brentford, Championship, Jota, Sam Morsy, Wigan Athletic | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

12th Man – Building blocks for survival

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Dream debut for Callum Connolly. Photograph courtesy of Wigan Athletic

What an incredible debut for Callum Connolly at Burton last Saturday, the 19-year-old Everton loanee had only signed for Latics just prior to kick off and he made a dream start scoring two headed goals to clinch a vital win.

It’s hard to remember a better Latics debut and in such an important game. If they had lost to Burton the gap between the two clubs would have been nine points.

But the victory keeps Latics within touching distance of the clubs above them and a home win against Brentford tomorrow could move them out of the bottom three.

The mood around the club this week has been much more upbeat because of the win but also because Warren Joyce has made some very good new signings.

The building blocks are now being put in place to help Latics pull away from the bottom of the table.

The addition of the England U20 international Connolly has hopefully resolved the problematic right-back position and should give the team a more balanced look.

The club has also brought in Danish keeper Jakob Haugaard on loan for the remainder of the season from Stoke City.

Like Connolly, Haugaard made an impact in his first game at the club by saving a penalty in the FA Cup win over Nottingham Forest and he followed this up with an assured performance against Burton.

The 6ft 6½in stopper is an imposing figure and he has added a new weapon to the Latics armoury, the very long kick. Haugaard was launching some massive kicks deep into the Burton half and with a little more luck Latics might have taken advantage.

It is looking likely that Latics will sign Turkish midfielder Jem Karacan from Galatasaray. The 27 year-old former Reading player, who has also had loan spells at Bournemouth and Millwall, should provide more competition in the centre of midfield.

Karacan was on the bench for the Turkish national team in 2014 but his career has been blighted by a series of serious injuries and Joyce is taking a chance that Karacan can get his career back on track with Latics.

But perhaps the biggest bonus this week was the permanent return of Sam Morsy to the club. Morsy’s career looked to be heading away from Wigan after Barnsley triggered a transfer fee but Joyce’s determination to keep the player at Latics has given everyone a boost.

The fans’ favourite has made a positive impact in the last two games and it is now up to the player to justify the manager’s faith in him.

I suspect Latics’ transfer business is not yet over and the manager will have other targets in mind before the window closes at the end of January.

Joyce has brought new blood into a squad, which has always been competitive, but just hadn’t been getting the results. The signs are now looking more promising, but Latics must continue to improve if they are to escape the drop.

This article was first published in the 12th Man column for the Wigan Evening Post on Friday 20th January 2017.

Posted in Brentford, Callum Connolly, Championship, Jakob Haugaard, Jem Karacan, Sam Morsy, Warren Joyce, Wigan Athletic | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Book review: Tangerines and Pies – The story of the 2015/16 football season for Blackpool and Wigan

tangerines-pies

This quietly published book chronicles Wigan Athletic’s successful League One title winning campaign and contrasts it with the travails of local rivals Blackpool during the 2015/16 season.

Both clubs have enjoyed the limelight of the Premier League but during 2015 they were both relegated from the Championship to League One after some disastrous performances both on and off the pitch.

The chairmen of both clubs received FA bans for their racist remarks and defamatory texts, whilst managers came and went at a rapid rate.

The book’s general premise in following the differing fortunes of the two Lancashire clubs is a good one. There are many similarities between the two clubs but also some striking differences.

Both of the clubs are owned by wealthy local businessmen with Dave Whelan at Wigan and Owen Oyston at Blackpool. Whelan is generally well regarded by the Latics supporters, despite his misjudgments when Malky Mackay was the manager.

The Oyston family, however, are loathed by many Tangerines supporters, who accuse them of putting their business interests before those of the club and allowing it to fall into a decline.

In March 2015, Dave Whelan handed over the chairmanship of the club to his 23-year-old grandson David Sharpe. Owen Oyston’s son Karl became chairman in 1999 but his 82-year-old father remains on the board.

It is accurate to say that both Dave Whelan and Owen Oyston are still very influential at their respective clubs.

Both clubs had new managers for the 2015/16 season, with Gary Caldwell at Wigan and Neil McDonald at Blackpool and both clubs had retained relatively few of the previous season’s playing staff.

The prospects for both teams were predicted to be at the opposite ends of the League One table, with the Tangerines struggling near the bottom and Latics amongst those challenging at the top of the table.

The book includes coverage of the two clubs’ 46 league matches (plus Cup games) and it seeks to explore the relationship between the history of each club; their current circumstances and aspirations; and the relationship between the towns themselves and the clubs, which are so important a part of their cultural heritage.

The author provides useful portraits of the two towns with reference to what diverse authors such as George Orwell, J.B.Priestley, Bill Bryson and Stuart Maconie have said about them.

There are short histories of each club and interviews with those closely involved with each club. For Blackpool Christine Seddon from the Blackpool Supporters Trust and William Watt from the Blackpool Gazette give their views and from Wigan chief executive Jonathan Jackson and Martin Tarbuck from The Mudhutter fanzine were interviewed.

The author provides a fairly accurate commentary on the events both on and off the pitch although he does sometimes stray into ‘Better in my day’ and ‘Grumpy old man’ territory at times, with his aversion to choreographed goal celebrations; the Johnstone’s Paint Trophy; being put off going to matches when it’s raining and getting lost in the metropolis that is Wigan!

This true story reaches a dramatic finale on the 30th April 2016 at Bloomfield Road when the contrasting fortunes of the two clubs are put into sharp relief as Wigan clinch the League One title and Blackpool are all but mathematically relegated to League Two.

Overall the book is a worthwhile reminder of Wigan’s enjoyable title winning season for their fans, but perhaps less so for Blackpool fans that might not want to be reminded of their relegation and their continuing boardroom problems.

Tangerines and Pies – The story of the 2015/16 football season for Blackpool and Wigan by Steve Leach, Published by Bennion Kearny, Price £9.99.

This review was published in the March/April 2017 edition of Late Tackle magazine.

Posted in Blackpool, Book Reviews, Championship, Dave Whelan, David Sharpe, Karl Oyston, League One, Owen Oyston, Wigan Athletic | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dream debut helps Latics close the gap – Burton Albion 0 Wigan Athletic 2

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Burton defend a Wigan corner

Defender Callum Connolly scored two headed goals on his debut to give Wigan Athletic an important victory in their quest for Championship survival.

The 19-year-old Everton loanee had only signed for Latics prior to kick off and had a dream start at his new club when he headed home just on the stroke of half time. He then repeated the act on 64 minutes to ensure Latics came away with a vital three points.

Latics now only trail Burton by three points although they remain in 23rd place in the table. Burton remain in 21st place with Blackburn Rovers in 22nd spot.

Connolly made his debut in place of the injured Nick Powell and was the only change from the team which defeated Nottingham Forest in the FA Cup.

In a closely fought encounter both teams created good goalscoring opportunities in the opening half.

Luke Murphy, Chris O’Grady and Jamie Ward all threatened for the Brewers in the opening exchanges before Michael Jacobs forced a save from Burton keeper Jon Mclaughlin on 18 minutes.

Soon afterwards Max Power nearly made a breakthrough when he latched onto a long ball from Latics’ keeper Jakob Haugaard.

Warren Joyce’s team were adopting a route one approach and the midfielder pulled the ball down in the box before volleying narrowly wide of the post with Mclaughlin beaten.

The Brewers responded and Chris O’Grady’s goalbound shot from inside the box beat Haugaard but was cleared off the line by Stephen Warnock.

Yanic Wildschut set up Will Grigg on the edge of the area on 38 minutes but the striker’s effort curled narrowly wide of the post.

Just when it looked as though the teams would go in level at the interval Latics went ahead through an unlikely source.

Warnock looped a deep cross from the left to the far post and Connolly rose above his marker to head firmly into the Brewers net much to the delight of Latics’ travelling support.

Stephen Bywater replaced McLaughlin at half time after the keeper was injured in collision with former Burton player Jake Buxton.

The Brewers pressed forward in an attempt to draw level but the Latics defence held firm with Warnock, Burn and Buxton all outstanding.

On 64 minutes Latics increased their lead when Jacobs’ right wing corner found Connolly in the box and the young defender angled his header past Bywater for a dream double.

Burton tried to get back into the game but Latics were resolute. The home team resorted to shots from distance, although Burn did have to make a goal-line clearance and Haugaard saved well from O’Grady.

Jordan Flores replaced Wildschut and Craig Morgan replaced Power in the closing stages and Latics were able to see out the game with relative ease.

It was a memorable debut for Callum Connolly and a much needed Championship victory for Latics. Warren Joyce should be praised for his decision to bring Connolly to the club and to play him in such an important game. It is imperative that the team now build on the victory and put together a winning sequence to move them away from the bottom three.

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12th Man – It is getting serious now

pirelli-burton

Burton Albion’s Pirelli Stadium

Latics reaped the reward of a first home victory in seven games against Nottingham Forest with a high profile fourth round draw at FA Cup holders Manchester United.

Former United reserve team manager Warren Joyce will be relishing the prospect of pitting his wits against Jose Mourinho and Latics’ players will be looking forward to competing against some of the top players in the country in front of 70,000 supporters at Old Trafford.

The club will certainly benefit financially from the trip, but Latics have a proud recent history in the FA Cup, winners in 2013 and semi-finalists in 2014, so don’t rule out the possibility of another shock result.

Before that game however, Latics have some huge games in the Championship and tomorrow they come up against Burton Albion in what could be a season defining relegation six-pointer.

Going into the game both teams have selection dilemmas with injuries and transfer speculation affecting them.

Burton have been hit by a sickness bug this week and they are definitely without their new signing Luke Varney who was unluckily injured in last week’s cup defeat to Watford. The striker will be out for some time after suffering a punctured lung and broken rib.

Top scorer Jackson Irvine, striker Chris O’Grady, defender Ben Miller and midfielder Will Miller are all doubtful for the game.

Latics are still without several key players and the injury list lengthened when Nick Powell hobbled off against Nottingham Forest with a reoccurrence of the hamstring strain that has plagued his career so far.

It seems that the 22-year-old could be out for the rest of the season, which would be a huge blow to the club that gambled on him making such a big impact.

Speculation continues about Saturday’s Man of the Match Sam Morsy’s possible transfer to Barnsley.

The two clubs have an agreement about the transfer fee but the player has yet to agree personal terms. I expect Morsy to play at Burton, if no agreement is reached with the Tykes.

Warren Joyce will want the FA Cup win to be the catalyst for Latics to put a winning run together in the Championship. With Latics six points from safety, there cannot be a repeat of the disastrous result at Rotherham on Boxing Day.

The manager will be aware that the players didn’t turn up in the first half at the New York Stadium and a similar performance against Burton would be catastrophic for the club’s survival chances.

This article was first published in the 12th Man column for the Wigan Evening Post on Friday 13th January 2017.

Posted in Burton Albion, Championship, FA Cup, Manchester United, Warren Joyce, Wigan Athletic | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Will FA Cup victory ignite Latics’ season? Wigan Athletic 2 Nottingham Forest 0

Sam Morsy

Man of the Match Sam Morsy may be on his way to Barnsley

Wigan Athletic progressed to the fourth round of the FA Cup with a comfortable victory over Nottingham Forest at the DW Stadium.

Forest are three places above Latics in the Championship table but it was the lower placed team who dominated throughout.

Latics went ahead through Will Grigg just before half time and consolidated their lead through Yanic Wildschut on 57 minutes.

Forest were given a way back into the game on 81 minutes when Latics conceded a sloppy penalty but debutant keeper Jakob Haugaard saved Eric Lichaj’s spot kick and any hopes of a comeback were thwarted.

The home team made two changes to the starting line up from the recent defeat to Huddersfield with new loan signing Haugaard making his debut in goal and Sam Morsy returning from his Barnsley loan in midfield.

Latics started on the front foot and pressed their opponents from the kick-off. Their first opportunity came on seven minutes when they won a free kick on the edge of the Forest area.

Nick Powell blasted the resultant free-kick narrowly wide of Stephen Henderson’s right hand post.

Minutes later Powell had to be withdrawn after suffering a reoccurrence of his hamstring injury and was replaced by Jordi Gomez.

Morsy was in the thick of the action and involved in most of Latics best moves.

It had been something of a surprise to see Morsy in the starting line up given that Latics had agreed a transfer fee with Barnsley and the player was in the process of agreeing personal terms with the Tykes.

The Eqyptian midfielder might have found the net on 10 minutes when in space just inside the box, but he somehow failed to make contact with Wildschut’s low cross, the ball then fell to Michael Jacobs whose subsequent shot was wide of the target.

Forest had an opportunity on 13 minutes from Hildeberto Pereira’s free-kick, but Jacobs managed to deflect the shot for a corner.

Morsy then had two great chances to open the scoring, firstly firing wide from Wildschut’s pull-back and secondly, when he chested the ball down and his shot was deflected wide for a corner.

Latics were in almost complete control with some neat passing football.

Grigg started a great move when he controlled the ball and turned on the halfway line before feeding Jacobs down the right. The midfielder beat his marker and crossed to the near post and although the ball was initially cleared it fell straight to Gomez, but his shot spun over the crossbar.

Just when it was looking like Forest would hold out until the interval Latics went ahead.

Stephen Warnock broke free down the left hand side and crossed for Grigg at the near post and the striker made no mistake for his seventh goal of the season.

Latics continued to be in control at the beginning of the second half as Forest offered only limited resistance.

Grigg might have doubled the lead almost from the kick-off as he got on the end of Dan Burn’s pass but his effort was just wide.

Jacobs fired wide of Henderson’s goal on 51 minutes and was then denied by a superb last ditch tackle from Michael Mancienne soon afterwards.

But on 57 minutes Latics went two up through Wildschut. The powerful Dutchman played a neat one-two with Warnock down the left and cut into the box before firing a low drive past Henderson. It was no more than Latics good play had deserved.

Forest were gifted an opportunity to get back into the game on 81 minutes when an unnecessary foul by Gomez on Lica gave Forest a penalty.

However, they failed to take their opportunity as keeper Haugaard saved Eric Lichaj’s driven penalty with his legs.

Local boy Jordan Flores replaced Grigg late on and nearly made a name for himself when his curling shot went narrowly wide of Henderson’s post.

It was a much improved performance by Latics as they recorded their first win in seven home games. But they will also be aware that Forest put in a poor display and have now gone seven games without a win in all competitions.

Latics will be hoping that manager Warren Joyce’s first home victory can kickstart their progress towards Championship survival starting with the crunch game at Burton Albion next Saturday.

Posted in FA Cup, Nottingham Forest, Warren Joyce, Wigan Athletic, Will Grigg, Yanic Wildschut | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

12th Man – Time for action

Dave Whelan

Latics owner Dave Whelan has some big decisions ahead

It’s a dispiriting time to be a Wigan Athletic fan, with the situation both on and off the pitch looking bleak.

Last season the club appeared to be on a stable path with a young forward thinking manager with clear ideas about the type of football he wanted to play.

A young chairman who backed his manager and talked about a long-term strategy for success. A group of players who believed in the manager and comfortably won the League One title.

How thing’s have changed this season. The optimism and togetherness of last season has been shattered and the club appears to be heading back to League One at an alarming speed.

The club’s current predicament is ultimately the responsibility of the owner Dave Whelan, chairman David Sharpe and chief executive Jonathan Jackson and it is fair to say that their recent decision-making has been found wanting.

Latics have sacked four managers since the start of the 2012/13 season with only seven other clubs in the Premier League and Football League having a higher turnover of managers.

Dave Whelan has achieved so much for Latics during his time in charge but the club currently lacks coherent leadership.

David Sharpe supported Gary Caldwell during difficult times last season but this season he was very quick to dismiss him and appoint a manager without recent Football League experience.

Warren Joyce was a risky appointment given that he had never managed in the Championship and his last eight years had been spent in charge of the Manchester United reserve team.

It was something of a surprise that Joyce was given a three-and-a-half-year-contract after recent managers had only been on shorter-term rolling contracts.

Joyce has had a torrid time since his appointment and Latics have only won one of his ten games in charge and they suffered a record sixth-consecutive home defeat against Huddersfield last Monday.

Latics come up against Nottingham Forest in the FA Cup tomorrow but next week they will face Burton Albion in what could be a season defining relegation six-pointer. If Latics were to lose that game the prospects for survival would be very slim indeed.

The Whelan family has some very big decisions to make over the next few weeks.

Do they back Warren Joyce to keep Latics up? Or do they bring in a new manager? Do they provide the transfer funds to boost the squad? Or do they sell their most valuable players, for example, Yanic Wildschut, Will Grigg, etc?

Surely now is the time for the Whelan family to show leadership and do everything in their power to maintain Latics’ hard won Championship status.

This article was first published in the 12th Man column for the Wigan Evening Post on Friday 6th January 2017.

Posted in Burton Albion, Championship, Dave Whelan, David Sharpe, FA Cup, Jonathan Jackson, Nottingham Forest, Warren Joyce, Wigan Athletic | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Wells late strike stuns Latics – Wigan Athletic 0 Huddersfield Town 1

 

nahki-wells

Nahki Wells stunned Latics with a late winner

Latics slumped to a record sixth consecutive home defeat against play-off chasing Huddersfield Town.

The teams had seemingly cancelled each other out with ten minutes remaining until Elias Kachunga’s snapshot was only parried by Jussi Jaaskelainen and Nahki Wells followed up to seal the three points for the Terriers.

Latics are now six points from safety and facing the prospect of a disastrously swift return to League One. Huddersfield remain fourth in the Championship table.

Warren Joyce made one change to the team which had drawn at Derby with Nick Powell returning in place of the injured Andy Kellett.

It was a tense encounter as both teams needed the points for very different reasons.

Latics pushed forward from the kick off with Nick Powell prominent in much of their best play. However, both teams struggled to get any shots on target in the opening half.

Wigan’s best chance came around the half-hour mark, when Stephen Warnock’s reverse pass played Yanic Wildschut down the left hand side. The winger put in a dangerous cross but Tareiq Holmes-Dennis did well to provide the interception with Michael Jacobs ready to pounce.

The Terriers were limited to two dangerous crosses and Jaaskelainen was a relative spectator.

The first notable incident of the second half came after 53 minutes when Holmes-Dennis pulled down Wildschut on the halfway line with the Dutchman ready to run free on goal.

Wildschut then probably had Latics’ best chance of the game when Jordi Gomez’s pass set him up but he fired his low shot just wide of the near post.

Latics were pressing in numbers but they lacked the creativity to breakdown a resolute and well drilled Huddersfield defence.

Nick Powell limped off after 75 minutes and was replaced by the returning Ryan Colclough.

Just as the match looked to be heading for a stalemate, Huddersfield stunned Latics with a killer blow.

Kachunga tried a speculative effort from distance and Jaaskelainen appeared to be unsighted and could only parry the ball into the path of the delighted Wells who tapped the ball into the empty net.

Latics threw on extra strikers Adam Le Fondre and Craig Davies but it was too late to make any difference and they tamely slipped to another damaging home defeat.

The club have now reached a new low point in this season’s campaign. Warren Joyce’s record of one win in ten games is a miserable one and Whelan and Sharpe must surely be regretting the sacking of Gary Caldwell.

Joyce now has the difficult task of motivating the players for their FA Cup tie against Nottingham Forest before they face Burton Albion in what could be a season defining relegation six-pointer.

Posted in Championship, Huddersfield Town, Nahki Wells, Warren Joyce, Wigan Athletic | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment