Bradford City are doing it the hard way again

Barnsley 2
O’Connell 50, Farrell 90+6
Bradford City 2
Powell 73, Roberts 82 (OG)

By Jason McKeown

They’re certainly making this more dramatic than it needs to be. Facing a troublesome defeat, Bradford City suddenly roared to life, scored twice late on to set up a huge win, then threw two points away by conceding deep into stoppage time. It’s a blow to their play-off hopes, but it needn’t prove pivotal. With games running out and the margins for error wafer-thin for those chasing them, one more Bantams’ win all but seals it.

The problem is that we’ve been saying “one more Bantams win” for a couple of weeks now. This was another opportunity to virtually book their play-off place, and again it wasn’t taken.

And, wow, was this an opportunity.

Barnsley were beleaguered – announcing two hours before kick off that their manager, Conor Hourihane, will leave at the end of the season. Barnsley were bruised – top scorer and perennial thorn in the City side, David McGoldrick, was injured. And above all else Barnsley were backed into a corner. The game kicked off at 12,30pm, but by 12.38pm they were down to 10 men.

That’s because Vimal Yoganathan walked early doors for a reckless challenge on Ibou Touray after the City wing-back latched onto a loose ball. The youthful Welsh midfielder needlessly dived in and illegally halted the attack. The referee, Charles Breakspear, didn’t hesitate in brandishing the red card. With 82 minutes to play against 10 men, City could hardly have wished for a more favourable set-up.

Yet they couldn’t make the most of it.

If anything, the red card caused more problems for the visitors than the hosts. It weirdly aided Barnsley. The news of Hourihane serving his notice might have created an uncomfortable atmosphere at Oakwell, but the early dismissal fuelled a siege mentality among the home support.

The anxiety, in turn, seemed to transfer onto City. They fell into the classic traps when playing against 10 men – trying too hard to force the issue, moving the ball forward with unnecessary urgency and sacrificing quality. What was needed was patience and control. Instead, they rushed, heaped pressure on themselves, and soon began to wilt under it.

That suited Barnsley just fine. They revelled in wearing the cloak of underdogs. They sat in a low block 4-4-1 formation and countered with real menace when turnovers came. The endless long balls sent towards City’s front three were all too easy to defend. And though – just like Stevenage – Barnsley left space in wide areas that encouraged wing backs Toray and Josh Neufville to charge forward. Just like Stevenage, Barnsley had the physical excellence at the back to deal with the flurry of crosses.

It meant City were pretty predictable and easy to contain – especially without their two chief sources of inspiration. Bobby Pointon was of course missing here, with Graham Alexander disclosing post-match that the lad from Low Moor will miss the next fortnight, possibly even the rest of the season. Antoni Sarcevic was on the bench, probably rested in view of two huge home games coming up. Without the pair, City lacked the intelligence between the lines. Their attack became static.

Here’s the problem: a front three of Stephen Humphrys, Kayden Jackson and Will Swan has pace and threat, but offered too little in build-up play. All three were too high up the pitch. The gaps between midfield and attack were too big, forcing City into low-percentage long balls and speculative moments.

It led to a first half where City were toothless despite their man advantage. Jenson Metcalfe went close with a long-range effort, but they didn’t register a shot on target until the 47th minute. This, of course, against 10-men.

And then Barnsley scored.

Marc Roberts’ long throw caused chaos, and Eoghan O’Connell’s glancing header drifted into the net. There could be no real complaints. The warning signs had been there throughout. City were too careless to heed them.

They’d made uncharacteristic mistakes at the back all afternoon. Like when Curtis Tilt inexplicably passed the ball straight to lone striker Tom Bradshaw, to set up an attack where Barnsley forced a corner. Or when a high ball into the City box was surely Sam Walker’s to claim, but Tilt booted it behind for a corner. Or when Touray produced a foul throw, which gave Roberts another long throw opportunity. Matt Pennington and Aden Baldwin were also guilty of poor distribution. Max Power and Metcalfe competed well in the middle but were occasionally caught out.  

It was a City team playing below their usual standards, not really handling the occasion. And when O’Connell put Barnsley ahead, they were in something of a sticky situation. Walker made one excellent save to prevent the Tykes going further ahead. At the other end Swan missed a sitter and a Touray cross shot that was begging to be tapped home. The brightest spark was Neufville, who had a storming second half where he had the measure of half time substitute Mael de Gevingey. But it was crumbs of comfort.

The sense of frustration was palpable. City were backed by a magnificent 5,000 turnout, but early enthusiasm faded to silence before groans and even boos. News was coming through that Huddersfield were 3-1 up at Bolton. Everyone else would be playing at 3pm. The job wasn’t done yet, and losing in these circumstances would seriously hurt morale.

Then it changed.

The catalyst was a quadruple sub. Off when Jackson (who looked rusty) Swan (who flattered to deceive), Metcalfe (still short of his best form) and Pennington. On came Nick Powell, Sarcevic, George Lapslie and Harrison Ashby. Alexander went 4-1-4-1, with Power operating behind the dual number 10s of Sarcevic and Lapslie, Neufville pushed up to right wing, and Humphrys (who started left forward and swapped with Jackson to be central at half time) on the left.  

The impact was immediate. It gave City greater attacking balance, and the closeness on the pitch of the forward players allowed fluid moves to develop. From one such attack, Humphrys delivered a delightful cross and Powell powered home his first goal for the Bantams. It’s an unexpected bonus that Powell has returned from injury so strongly, and he is having an increasing influence over the run-in.

The best thing about going level was City’s determination to push on. They didn’t use the equaliser as a chance to backslap each other. Powell celebrated briefly, but the ball was quickly retrieved from the net and the team were back in position for the restart almost immediately.

They kept attacking with purpose, and eight minutes after equalising they went 2-1 ahead. Touray whipped in a low cross that tempted Roberts into a clearance, only for the defender to divert it into his own net.

The limbs were epic. The collective jumping and embracing felt like the moment City had finally taken a decisive step towards the play-offs. And as we serenaded the team with songs about going to Wembley and the minutes ticked by, perhaps we didn’t fully register that City’s standards were beginning to slip again. Or that a Barnsley team surely beaten had, in fact, one final sting in the tail.

Because deep, deep, deep into stoppage time – 90+6 of all minutes – Barnsley equalised. Patrick Kelly sent a ball behind a napping Ashby to Rhys Cleary, and the guy who scored that wondergoal at Valley Parade in October crossed for Leo Farrell to beat Tilt and fire home. Farell had only been on the pitch for seven minutes.

Fair play to them, Barnsley absolutely deserved the point for their spirited performance. They might even argue they could have won it. At 1-1 they broke with real intent and Cleary appeared to be hauled down by Ashby in the box. But rather than point to the spot, Breakspear booked the Barnsley winger for diving. Hmmm.

As for City, they can have few complaints. They didn’t take advantage of the early gift of the Barnsley red card and were sloppy for large spells, not least in those final few minutes where their characteristic game-management went missing.

It is a concern that they have not completed a full 90-minute performance since the Port Vale win in early March. It is a concern how exposed they look on the left side without the injured Tyreik Wright and Bobby Pointon, and a concern that neither may return before the end of the season. It is also a concern that there is no obvious replacement for that wide-left role. Humphrys is the closest option, but his uneven display here underlined why Alexander does not fully trust him there. He has moments of quality, but does not link play with the same intelligence as Pointon.

But for all the concern, they are still just about there.

As we absorbed the pain of 90+6, Huddersfield were hit at 90+11 – when 10-man Bolton snatched a draw that damages their top-six hopes. And in the 3pms, Stockport had their own 90+6, with a goalkeeper equalising against them. Stevenage endured a 90+1, denying them a famous win over champions-elect Lincoln. Luton only drew.

The biggest worry is Plymouth’s 3-1 win over AFC Wimbledon. It narrows City’s cushion from eight points to six, with Argyle coming to Valley Parade on Tuesday. An away win would cut the gap to three and crank up the pressure ahead of the final home game against third-placed Bolton. Plymouth and Luton can still overtake City.

So there is still work to do. Still a bit more brilliance needed. With the music close to stopping, it would take a remarkable set of results for City to miss out from here. But when they’re making afternoons like this more dramatic than necessary, we should not underestimate the Bantams’ tradition of doing things the hard way.



Categories: Match Reviews

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10 replies

  1. Awful performance against 10 men ! Yes 10 men for nearly 90 minutes .Strikers don’t know where the goal is . Andy Cook scored again . Nobody can convince me it wasn’t a mistake to let him go . Rubbish

    • calm down…calm down. We’ll be there don’t worry…over reacting I think. The boys will come good. It’s been a great season and we never do it the easy way. Look at the final kick of the season last year! Let’s get behind them in their last two home games of the season and we can look forward to the play offs?! Keep calm and play on! Up the bantams!

  2. What a great shame we didn’t push the boat out in January. We needed one goalscoring striker not three who have so far mustered 2 between them. That was the time to give the squad a real boost. We were so ragged today and the stakes being so high it’s hard to know why we can’t just play football, pass to feet, which should not be that hard against 10 men. I would have gone to a back four soon after the sending off.

  3. I watched the game on TV and genuinely felt we were lucky to take a point. This was an abject performance against 10 men with nothing to play for…no build up play, aimless hoofing, woeful crossing (Neufville needs to seriously work on his final ball). Even if we trip over the line into 5th or 6th I struggle to see how we beat anyone around us over two legs. As soon as we went 2-1 up panic seemed to take over (not a good characteristic for combatting tight playoff matches). I had flashbacks of Swindon away this time last year throughout this game…

    The main positive of late has been the re-emergence of Powell, he’s clearly a cut above but just a shame he’s not fit enough to start matches.

    Bigger picture, it has been a great ride in league one and huge credit for being in the playoffs since game week 3. Sincerely hope we find some form over the next two weeks but I fear Plymouth on Tuesday could be a chastening defeat.

  4. Is Ethan Wheatley still at the club?

  5. It’s not over till it’s over. She’s clearing her throat ready to sing?! What a season this has been who’d a thought we would be in this position start of the season (look at Port Vale?). Think Powell is the answer up front but not sure he can do 90 mins. Humphries is good on the left. Some of the January window signings have not improved the side? The amount of times we gave the ball away to a ten man team who are not even good with eleven? We need to have more belief. It wasn’t till the subs came on we clicked in to gear. But unforced errors cost us again?! Think the next two games will determine where we are going to finish? Plymouth will be an handful theyve got the momentum and it’s going to take a tremendous effort to overcome them. The twelfth man will be needed! Bolton seem to be having a similar spell to us?! Two draws will be enough in the next two home games. And we can look forward to the final game down in Exeter. Just hope GA can choose the right game plan and squad. Let’s get behind the lads for one last push to the play offs! Up the Bantams!!

  6. Isn’t this all so Bradford City! Before the game, a score draw away from home would probably have been a decent point, especially with our away record. At full time having played 83 mins against 10 men and having led with just 8 mins of normal time to go, this now feels like a defeat. Staggeringly, and much like last season, we seem to keep getting away with these regular cock ups as others also falter – injury time goals seems to have been the theme of the day. The biggest worry for me is what this might’ve done mentally. Despite the Wycombe win, we are still fragile in mindset for away games. Do any of us really have away day confidence at all any more? And bad enough that we couldn’t put 10 men to the sword over almost a full 90 minutes but to concede an equaliser against a 10-man team in injury time at the same time a rival score their own equaliser whilst they themselves only had ten men feels indicative of what we might have ahead in the play offs. Bolton will have walked away from today feeling buoyant whereas even though we got a rare point on the road, it really does feel more like a defeat. Still, at least a reserve goalkeeper didn’t score against us though ….

  7. Just another woeful performance to add to the growing number I’ve witnessed this season. Anyone walking into the ground ten minutes after kick off wouldn’t have guessed we had a one man advantage.

    So predictable, misplaced passes, hoof the ball up front to forwards who rarely win a header, only one decent cross all match (which resulted in Powell’s goal).

    I’ll repeat again “how the hell are we in a play off position?” As Mitchell states above, why didn’t we revert to a back four when their man was sent off?

    What was the point in letting Cook go and getting Mullin in? On who’s advice did we sign him? It’s obvious Alexander wasn’t enamoured with him from day one and he never made the match day squad today. All that hype about Wheatley pre-signing and he’s shown nothing to match that expectation, suffering the same fate as Mullin today.

    Those “skin of the teeth” 1-0 wins mean cementing a play off place should still be a formailty but we’ll really struggle without Wright and Pointon.

  8. A question. If Grimsby miss out on the playoffs and returns to us to see out his contract, would he be eligible to play for us, assuming we reach the playoffs?

    • I don’t believe so. This is the rule:

      Regulation 53.1.4 states: “A player whose standard loan expires (or terminates) at the end of the season of the transferee club but prior to the completion of the league matches of his parent club (where it is a member club) will not be eligible to play in any remaining league matches in that season.”

      Loan registrations are meant to last until the transfer window opens.

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