I’m just back from a freezing afternoon at the stadium, and honestly, I’m still trying to process how that slipped away.
The First Half: High Intensity, Zero Edge
We started exactly how we wanted to, on the front foot and playing with genuine intensity. Our press was working; we forced several turnovers in dangerous areas, but poor quality haunted us in the final third.
Whether it was a moment of hesitancy, an unnecessary extra touch, or just poor decision-making, we failed to capitalise on the chaos we created. This is where it falls on both the quality of the squad and the coaching. The patterns of play are not there to get us into the box, the "final ball" feels like it's lacking the clinical drilling required at this level.
The Half-Time Shift
I don’t know what was said in that locker room at half-time, but the second half felt like a recurring nightmare. It looked eerily similar to the dying days of the Jose, Conte, and Ange eras—a passive, nervy energy that invited Sunderland back into the game.
Accountability: Players & Frank
I’m tired of blaming just the dugout. The players have to be held accountable for letting the opposition dictate the tempo in the second half. Whatever the game plan was, the execution was non-existent.
That said, Frank isn't off the hook. I’m holding him just as responsible for the tactical shift (or lack thereof) at the break and the timing of the substitutions. We looked unbalanced and lost the midfield battle entirely.
Key Takeaways from the Cold:
• The Gray Factor: We were nowhere near as fluid or composed without Archie Gray. He’s becoming the glue that keeps the transition play together.
• The Tel substitution: Contrary to what some might think, we were definitely not a better side without Mathys Tel today. We lacked that spark of unpredictability upfront. He brought some urgency and attacking to the left side that we had been missing.
A disappointing day out. We have the intensity, but until we find the clinical edge and the mental fortitude to kill games off, we’re just repeating the same mistakes.
Overall it’s an improvement on the recent drab performances. It’s a long way from good enough.