Sunday 11 April 2010

Saints 1 Charlton Athletic 0


It was a lovely warm and sunny spring day in Southampton yesterday where over 23,000 fans watched a tense and entertaining display from a rugged Saints against top-class opposition. Charlton are virtually guaranteed a play-off place, we need to win every game and rely on Huddersfield and Colchester slipping up to allow us into the pay-off's.

Charlton were well disciplined and organised. They had a strong physical presence which a Saints team of old would have been crushed by - but not this current squad. At then end, Charlton were playing with three strikers who were extremely physical and bruising. Overall, Saints had 56% of possession and made it tell. One or two players were still in 'let's pass the ball to the opposition' mode and Puncheon was challenged by playing in a new role playing through the middle up front just behind Rickie Lambert. The two centre backs, Fonte and Seaborne were immense and for the first time seemed to gel as a pair. Harding was his usual 100% reliable and Lallana's endless running gave Charlton plenty of headaches.

For me the enjoyability of the games was spoilt by Mr Hegley the referee. He blew his whistle like at tin-pot dictator for a thousand minor offences whilst allowing much bigger crimes to go completely unpunished. The game was never allowed to flow and when 23,000 with one voice tell the ref "you don't know what you're doing" - well they can't all be mistaken can they? The number of clear handballs was well into double figures - but he gave none of them. We were lucky to escape one mad passage of play when the ball pinged abound like a pin-ball and twice struck a Saints arm - neither were given as penalties for Charlton. It is also clear that League One teams have watched each other and learned how to minimise Rickie Lambert's threat in the air from the long ball. They position one player in front and another behind and they jump towards each other squeezing out Rickie. Time after time, game after game this tactic is employed. At best it's obstruction, at worst sometimes it's violent conduct, but if the whistle blows it's always for the defending side.

Saints scored on 34 minutes - ironically as I was berating the ref for not giving a foul on Rickie Lambert. The ball squirted free to Puncheon who passed sideways to Antonio who dribbled around two players and rifled home his shot. A good goal, well taken.

Charlton caused Saints lots of headaches in the second half, but the defence stayed firm and Kelvin Davis made some excellent saves when it was breached. Charlton would have felt they deserved more from the game, but that's the second time we've beaten them this season and our march upwards continues.

Tuesday night sees a very difficult game against high flying Bristol Rovers - another must win game.

COYR

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