PHIL Parkinson summed up his own predicament after defeat at Portman Road; being desperate to end the winless run does not guarantee it will happen.
There is no question this Wanderers side are pushing themselves to the limit to find an elusive victory, only that they lack the quality to gain enough to eventually hold on to their place in the Championship.
There was plenty to admire from Parkinson’s side at Ipswich – Craig Noone, Jem Karacan and Josh Cullen had their best 90 minutes since joining the club, wing-backs Antonee Robinson and Mark Little put in another lung-bursting shift, and the back three looked a unit once more.
But when your luck is out, it’s out. Cole Skuse’s fortuitous opener arrived like a dagger to the heart just after half time, while David McGoldrick’s second barely registered with a team already licking its wounds.
What hurt more was the fact Wanderers had a chance to help themselves. The lively Noone had a handful of openings in the first half from the edge of the box, and two golden opportunities fell to David Wheater and Gary Madine in the second period which simply had to be taken. Sympathy can only stretch so far when a team is showing such profligacy.
Patience is undoubtedly running thin with some sections of the support, who claim Parkinson’s style of football and selection policy is contributing to the team’s downfall.
It’s just 141 days since the Wanderers boss lifted the promotion trophy in League One to widespread adulation, getting favourable comparisons with the very best there had been in these parts. It seems opinions in football are not so much fickle these days, as farcical.
Notably, faith in the dressing room has not wavered. Jem Karacan has been installed as captain after Darren Pratley dropped out of the team, and the midfielder showed just as much heart, shouldering the blame and asking supporters to stand behind the manager as he had out on the pitch.
There is a very different vibe among this squad compared to the one which surrendered without a trace back in 2015/16. If their fate is to eventually leave the Championship, it appears they will do so as a team. But with 38 games to go, such predictions are premature in the extreme.
The cavalry has appeared on the horizon in the shape of Sammy Ameobi and Josh Vela, back from long-term injury. If Parkinson can get them fit and firing again and get to the bottom of Will Buckley’s hamstring issues, there is a little more reason for optimism.
Wanderers will have to find the clinical edge they lacked in Suffolk, however, because all the rallying calls in the world will not help them avoid the drop if they are not scoring goals with more regularity.
Ipswich started the day seventh but local opinion pre-match was that the league position flattered their performances somewhat – a rather ironic twist on the situation at the Macron.
Mick McCarthy’s side did not impress until the second-half introduction of Bersant Celina, the Kosovo international who was on the verge of signing on loan for Wanderers this summer from Manchester City until a late change of heart.
Parkinson set up 3-4-3, which put a bigger demand on Karacan and Cullen but allowed Noone and Morais the chance to get closer to target man Gary Madine and pick up plenty of possession around the Ipswich penalty box.
Bartosz Bialkowski was on alert as Noone fired a few shots towards goal, and also had to make an awkward punch away from Madine’s powerful angled drive.
Home fans were getting antsy by the break as the Whites dealt fairly comfortably with what they created. Things got tougher after Celina’s introduction but there was still a giant slice of good fortune about the way Ipswich opened the scoring, Skuse’s 20-yard effort deflecting off a Wanderers boot and nesting into the bottom corner past a prostrate Ben Alnwick.
The response was positive but the finishing was wayward. Karacan had a dipping shot pushed aside then Madine and Wheater got in each other’s way with the goal gaping – the latter seeing his shot blocked on the line by Luke Chambers.
Burke’s long ball over the top moments later put Madine clean through but the striker’s ambitious lobbed attempt landed on the roof of the net.
Wanderers’ desperation left holes at the back and McGoldrick rode through two challenges to bring a good save from Alnwick.
The same striker was then denied by a brilliant last-ditch challenge from Beevers with 10 minutes left on the clock.
Parkinson threw on Adam Armstrong – who also fired a decent chance over – then Adam Le Fondre as the Whites finished off playing 4-4-2. But McGoldrick ended any chance of a comeback as he fired home from close range with a minute to go.
Only twice before in the club’s history have Wanderers had to wait until their ninth outing to celebrate a win and while they have a fair way to go to match the team of 1902/03 – who went 23 games – this feels like it has gone on long enough. This weekend’s home meeting with Brentford now takes on added significance as a result.
Parkinson doesn’t want pats on the back after a defeat and will be sick and tired of trying to pick positives when all he craves is three points. He is not alone in that.
But the Bolton boss may do well to channel out the criticism right now and concentrate on what he needs to finally get his side off and running.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules hereLast Updated:
Report this comment Cancel