|
| MATCH
STATS |
| NORWICH
CITY:
Marshall; Otsemobor, Shackell, Taylor,
Lappin;
Chadwick, Brellier, Russell, Smith; Cureton,
Hartson.
Subs: Croft (for Smith, 54), Martin
(for Hartson, 54), Brown (for Chadwick,
70), Gilks, Spillane. |
| WATFORD:
Lee, Doyley, Shittu, Mariappa, Stewart,
Smith, Mahon,
Williamson, Johnson, King, Darius Henderson.
Subs: O'Toole (for Johnson,
90), Priskin (for King, 89), Poom, Jackson,
Ellington.
|
 |
| SCORERS:
Norwich: Croft (64)
Watford: Henderson (36), Marshall (og, 42),
King (88).
|
 |
TOP
CANARY:
EDP: Martin Taylor
EN: Martin Taylor
|
 |
| ATTENDANCE:
24,192
|
 |
REFEREE:
Clive Penton (Sussex). Not a night of great
controversy for Mr Penton but he and his
assistants did manage
to get the crowd on their backs with one
or two odd and over-fussy decisions.
|
 |
| ADDED
TIME:
First half: 1 min
Second half: 4 mins
|
 |
| YELLOW
CARDS:
Norwich: Chadwick (foul on Doyley, 27),
Brellier foul on Smith, 84), Lappin (dissent,
90)
Watford: Mahon (foul on Russell, 11)
|
 |
| RED
CARDS:
None
|
 |
| SHOTS
ON TARGET:
Norwich 1, Watford 4
|
 |
| SHOTS
OFF TARGET:
Norwich 1, Watford 3
|
 |
CORNERS:
Norwich 2, Watford 8 |
 |
FOULS:
Norwich 15, Watford 12
|
 |
| OFFSIDES:
Norwich 9, Watford 3 |
 |
|
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
CHRIS LAKEY
Match
Gallery
Battle-weary Norwich will question the wisdom of playing
their second big match in the space of just three days
after failing to win for the 10th Championship game
in a row.
With Sunday’s battling draw against Ipswich still
fresh in the memory, the odds were stacked against City
as they faced the Championship leaders, still smarting
from a surprise home defeat by West Brom on Saturday.
And there’s one of the salient points - Watford,
as if they needed an advantage, had an extra day to
prepare.
Add the fresher legs to their superior quality and Glenn
Roeder’s chances of a second home match full of
hope and promise were slim. And so it proved
Two goals down at half-time was reminiscent of Sunday’s
exploits, and when Lee Croft pulled one back there was
certainly more than an air of optimism around Carrow
Road.
But Watford are a different kettle of fish to City’s
cross-border rivals, and when Marlon King added a third
near the end the match the prospect of another home
draw was already well on the wane.
The tale of the tape shows just what Roeder is up against:
one shot on target, one off.
Roeder was without the suspended Darren Huckerby, starting
a three-game ban after his straight red in the closing
stages on Sunday, and Dion Dublin, who suffered a hamstring
injury in that game.
Jimmy Smith was promoted from the bench into the right
midfield role, with Luke Chadwick heading left, and
on-loan John Hartson, as expected, deputising for Dublin
up front, alongside goal hero Jamie Cureton.
Adrian Boothroyd called Adrian Mariappa in for injured
central defender Jay DeMerit, with former Canaries skipper
Matt Jackson recalled from a loan spell at Blackpool
to take a place on the bench.
Watford headed towards David Marshall’s goal from
the start, the keeper not helped by team-mate Julien
Brellier taking Tommy Smith down a few yards outside
of his penalty area: luckily, Adam Johnson’s attempt
was a yard too high.
Hartson took the “honours” in his first
confrontation with giant defender Danny Shittu, leaving
the Watford man grounded – but it was Shittu who
clearly came out on top.
 |
| City boss Glenn Roeder
(left) looks on as his players fail to reproduce
the sparkle of Sunday's derby clash against Aidy
Boothroyd's (right) Watford. |
Watford’s attacking prowess was there for all
to see – including the linesman - in the fifth
minute, when Marlon King’s cross went over Shackell’s
head and was met by Darius Henderson, whose first time
effort hit the back of the net, but was ruled out for
offside.
City were a little slower out of the blocks, although
Cureton should have done better when he hooked a cross
over the bar on nine minutes when Hartson was available
at the near post.
Hartson almost showed him how it was done, bringing
down the ball beautifully and allowing Cureton a run,
only for another offside flag to halt his progress –
a problem that would frustrate City’s on several
more occasions.
Smith almost caught out Marshall with a miscued cross
that the keeper did well to tip over and King got the
first effort on target soon after as Watford responded.
Chadwick was unlucky to see yellow for a foul on Lloyd
Doyley on 27 minutes, with City – and the home
crowd - growing increasingly frustrated with the match
officials as a host of decision went against them.
City got their first effort on goal after half an hour,
Chadwick and Darel Russell breaking well from a Watford
before Cureton fired a shot from the edge of the area
over the bar.
But attacks were few and far between, with Watford’s
attacking instincts stifling Otsemobor’s forays
forward and the visiting defenders quick to close down.
It was Watford’s superior strength and
pace which did for City on 36 minutes, Smith playing
a ball inside the flat-footed Lappin, Doyley skinning
the left back for speed and putting a low cross in which
the sliding Henderson knocked over the line from close
range.
Once again, City’s resolve in arrears was put
to the test – the question was would they be able
to recover as they did on Sunday?
Unfortunately the challenge was becoming far
too familiar, with Watford adding a second just three
minutes before half-time, just as Ipswich had done on
Sunday. This time it was of City’s own making,
the unmarked Adrian Mariappa heading Johnson’s
corner against the upright from close range, only for
the ball to hit Marshall on the back of the legs and
go back over the line.
Johnson’s left-footer which whistled past an upright
emphasised the gap that was growing between the teams
– and the challenge ahead.
The response at the half-time whistle from City followers
was polite, no more – they knew the odds of City
recovering from two down so soon weren’t good.
Half-time: Norwich City 0, Watford
2
Watford didn’t help their cause by not allowing
City to get any momentum going, leaving Roeder with
no choice but to change – so off went Hartson
for Chris Martin, with Lee Croft replacing Smith.
And 10 minutes later it paid off. Both subs
were involved, Martin taking a quick throw down the
left to Cureton, who made his way to the byline and
crossed low and accurately for Lee Croft to knock it
over the line from close range for his first of the
season – and first since Barnsley last March.
 |
| Lee Croft raises hopes
that City might fight back from 2-0 down for the
second time in three days. But it was not to be. |
The phrase déjà vu was being uttered
everywhere, with City fans in full voice and the impetus
once again with the Canaries. But Watford are a very
different proposition to the Ipswich side which buckled
at the weekend.
Roeder threw striker Chris Brown on for Chadwick with
20 minutes left as City chased an unlikely equaliser,
with a hectic finale on the cards.
Watford weren’t making it easy, and Lappin wasted
a good free-kick opportunity when he went for goals
– despite the rare presence of City big guns Martin
Taylor and Jason Shackell in the area.
Henderson could have made sure of the points for Watford
with their first real effort of the second half on 81
minutes, but he hooked Smith’s cross across an
empty goalmouth.
Frustration was mounting again, with referee
Penton the focal point of more Norwich complaints, but
clear heads were needed for a rescue act: an act King
ensured wasn’t necessary with two minutes left.
Julien Brellier played a poor pass to Croft in the left
back area, Lee Williamson took possession and played
in the striker who slid it home from an angle –
signalling an exodus of home fans.
Result: Norwich City 1, Watford
3
|