Showing posts with label Jaosn Tindall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jaosn Tindall. Show all posts

Friday, 6 November 2020

Was Steve Cook unlucky to be sent off at Sheffield Wednesday?

I keep watching back the challenge that Steve Cook made on Josh Windass of Sheffield Wednesday to see whether it should really have been a penalty or not. The decision could easily have gone either way, but referees are primed to give attackers the advantage when they have a clear sight of goal and I can see why the penalty was given, even if I think it was unlucky for Steve Cook to be sent off.

Steve Cook is punished but rightly feels unlucky to be sent off

The way that Cook used his shoulder to try and put pressure on the attacker was not clumsy it was calculated to nudge Windass sufficiently enough that he would gain control of the ball. A shoulder charge anywhere else on the pitch I would argue would be unlikely to see a foul called. But when an attacker goes down when he had looked favourite to score, it is going to give the referee a decision to make and if he judges there was excessive contact and the attacker has not dived he will point to the spot. Personally, I thought the decision was harsh as Cook used his shoulder. But that is football.

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The Disrupted Season (2019-20) completes the story of Eddie Howe's reign at AFC Bournemouth 
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Steve Cook will be annoyed with himself even if he looked disbelieving when he was sent off. Had the decision been the other way around I am sure our fans would have been baying for the penalty. I am not sure we would have been demanding that the defender be sent off though. The referee seemed a bit card happy in the number of cards he produced on the night, but I was expecting a red card for two yellow card offences, not a straight red for what was considered a professional foul. The irony of the issue is that VAR might have saved Cook in the Premier League, but there's none of that in the Championship.

So, I would say Cook was unlucky to be sent off. The attacker made the most of it but it was an annoying way to give one side the advantage in the game. The real worry for Tindall though should be how come Windass could make that run and our defenders look so flat-footed and behind the play, which gave Windass a couple of yards on the defenders enabling him to beat Begovic and potentially score? Bournemouth need to solve that problem in upcoming games rather than dwell too long on the actual foul as it was called. Steve Cook wouldn't have had to make such a challenge in the box if he had been more aware of Windass' run.

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Previous post on Cherry Chimes - The defeat was coming 

The winner of Cherry Chimes' competition to win a free copy of the Disrupted Season (2019-20) is @martindgodfrey

Thursday, 5 November 2020

The defeat was coming

Jason Tindall was rightly annoyed by the performance of his team against Sheffield Wednesday but he used very strong words that didn't hide his annoyance.  By saying that "One team was fighting for their lives here tonight, and I think there was another team that turned up here tonight that tough their ability would be enough to win the game and I think that is the lesson we have got to learn from today," Tindall was making no doubt that the players need to step up their game.

Bournemouth look to have misplaced confidence going into games.

Bournemouth have been starting slowly in far too many games and it happened again against Sheffield Wednesday. The team is being too casual and not showing the hunger that has driven the team before. Bournemouth need that terrier hunger that we used to see from players like Harry Arter, and while the players at the club are arguably of a higher standard now, they haven't been showing the full package which needs a desire and work ethic to win games.

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The Disrupted Season (2019-20) completes the story of Eddie Howe's reign at AFC Bournemouth 
- it's available now for £11.49 as a paperback - visit Amazon to order

Jason Tindall was consistent in making late changes to the team in the second half but there wasn't enough intensity about Bournemouth's play to get them a goal. While Sheffield Wednesday found it easy to play the ball in behind Bournemouth's defenders there was little attempt to remedy the problem and that is ultimately what led to the goal. Winning second balls should be some of the basics of the game, but Bournemouth's players are far too relaxed about it.

The defeat was coming and it has been on the cards for the last three or four games. But the players couldn't react this time. That is what is ranking fans I think. We could all see it despite the unbeaten run. Bournemouth have been found out. They are not fully at it. Playing with calmness is more a case of overconfidence.

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Jason Tindall can say it is not his strongest side, but the fans know it was just about the strongest side he could put out. There are no major injuries. The players are just short of being mac sharp for whatever reason. The question is will Tindall's words have any impact on the players and will we see a better performance at Birmingham? Now Tindall has the option of starting Rodrigo Riquelme and even Cameron Carter-Vickers. The defeat could be a blessing in disguise - Bournemouth don't need passengers.

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Monday, 21 September 2020

Bournemouth still lack game management

The performance against Middlesbrough was workmanlike from Bournemouth without being near the spectacular heights of their pre-season form against West Ham when Lewis Cook, Jack Simpson, Junior Stanislas and Diego Rico were involved from the start. Against Middlesbrough, there was a slowness to get going and even when they had the lead it was difficult for Bournemouth to make the most of the couple of clear cut chances they created. The real failing of the game though was to be unable to hold out and to manage the game to the finish with a clean sheet.


Scoring first is ow happening but holding on to leads is now proving a challenge. 

Four points from two games is still great form for a team in transition. It is easy to be picky and Jason Tndal is perhaps learning that this side doesn't find it easy to hold on to a one-nil lead yet. I think we have to look at who was on the pitch at the time of Middlesbrough's goal and the players that had been brought on to close out the game as a first point. Billing and Rico had both come on after 70 minutes so Danjum and Stacey could be rested. The goal came from a throw-in and players were not picked up quickly on the left side, which looks like it was Billing's job, but even then the cross was delivered with ease and Bournemouth were outnumbered at the far post when the ball swung in.

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Holding shape and watching player movements is something that Tindall just has to drill into his team. We saw it done so well with Roy Hodgson's Crystal Palace and at times Bournemouth needs to be as miserly as Palace are at the back. I am not sure if it is Bournemouth's way of coaching or the players that they have, but defensively they still switch off and it is usually at crucial moments of the game like the last 10 minutes.

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So Bournemouth now need to try and grow from this and learn the lesson. We know they can be an all guns blazing, attacking side under Tindall. They now need to develop a stingy side if they are going to be a force in the Championship. There are enough experienced players at the club to see out games. JT has to get his subs right though and see who is less likely to make mistakes in tight matches like the Middlesbrough game. Some times attack is the best form of defence and without King and Stanislas, JT wasn't positive enough to pick Lewis Cook take the game to Middlesbrough.

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The Disrupted Season (2019-20) completes the story of Eddie Howe's reign at AFC Bournemouth 
- it's available now for £11.49 as an ebook or a paperback - visit Amazon to order

Previous post on Cherry Chimes - Middlesbrough hold Cherries to a draw at the Riverside



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