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Match Details
21.10.2000
Burnley team:
Mihopoulos, Thomas, Cox, Davis (2), Cook (off 79), Briscoe, Ball, Branch (off 66), Payton (off 81), Mellon , Weller, Johnrose (on, 79), Mullin (on, 66), Robinson (on, 81), Crichton (sub), Armstrong (sub)
Queen's Park Rangers team: Harper, Warren, Darlington, Carlisle, Perry (Murray, 74 ), Rose,
Langley (Koejoe, 73 ), Wardley, Peacock, Connolly, Crouch. Subs
not used: Miklosko, Dowie, Heinola
Referee: R Olivier (Sutton Coldfield)
Reports
We are a bigger club than Burnley" - Matthew Rose (QPR defender),
The Sun's Soccergoals supplement 21/10/2000Hopefully Stan saw this and left a copy in the dressing room. "... John Mullin's strike earned a 1-0 win at Queen's Park
Rangers in a match which they [Burnley] controlled from start to
finish" - Geoff Brown, Independent on Sunday 22/10/2000 Hard to believe, but it's true. It was hardly a great
performance, but the Clarets did more than enough to handle a
team who consider themselves to be slumming it in the First
Division. How times change. A trip down the M11 and the Tube ride in from Epping left the
Anglia Clarets about 90 minutes early for the game. Loftus Road
is a strange ground, sandwiched in amongst BBC buildings and
council estates, which gave it a very odd atmosphere. CROUCH PENNED On a gloomy day, the Clarets lined up as (4-4-2/4-5-1/3-5-2): Mihopoulos Thomas Davis Cox Briscoe Ball
Weller Mellon Cook Payton Branch Subs: Johnrose (Cook 79), Mullin (Branch 66), Robinson (Payton
81) QPR: Harper, Warren, Darlington, Carlisle, Perry (Murray, 74),
Rose, Langley
(Koejoe, 73), Wardley, Peacock, Connolly, Crouch Subs not used: Miklosko, Dowie, Heinola No Cooke - are the rumours of his reserve-team bust-up on the
mark? Most of the early attention focussed on Peter Crouch, who
appeared to be the world's first Genetically Modified Footballer.
Although dismissed by most of the travelling support as little
more than a human pair of stilts ("f**king freak" was the general
consensus), Crouch was still blessed by no little skill on the
ball, although he was well marshalled by Davis and Cox for most
of the game. The early play was cagey as it seems to be in most
games Burnley play these days, but chances were few and far
between. We didn't seem to miss Glen Little too much, except with
his ability to hold the ball for a more than a split second. Burnley were content to soak up pressure and largely counter on
the break, and the first good chance fell to Mellon, who reaped
the benefit of Briscoe sneaking round the back of the QPR defence
and cutting an (admittedly bobbling) ball back. Micky appeared
to have the ball in the back of the net before Harper flashed
across his goalmouth to parry the ball away. There was another
good chance when the Clarets hit on the break. The ball was fired
forward quickly to a marauding Mellon - in one of the best
performances I've ever seen him put in - feeding the ball to
Cook(!) haring down the right wing. His measured ball through fed
Payton, whose shot was well saved by Harper. QPR did come more into the game in the latter stages of the first
half. Gerry Francis shuffled the pack, putting an extra man into
the midfield, pulling back the right back leaving Briscoe in
no-man's-land, and pushing the left back forward to pressure
Weller back. This gave them more possession, but their only
decent chance was an overhead kick from a partially cleared
corner, which Mihopoulos parried away reacting well. I think he
made it a bit more spectacular than it deserved, but he looked
very impressive. Despite not knowing a word of English he looked
to have a better line of communication with the back 3/4/5 than
Crichton ever has done. Half time. A bizarre competition involving a football, a pole,
dizziness and the QPR mascot as goalkeeper kept everyone warm. (I
can't begin to explain) Stan sorted out the tactical switch by pushing Briscoe more into
midfield and almost switching to a back 3 himself. One of the
beauties of the current Burnley side is their ability to largely
defy any broad formational style. It's not quite Total Football,
but it's not far off. Long gone are the days of "give it to the
winger". Kevin Ball, who has come in for stick for being negative
(hi Jez!) played about 4 different positions, as did Mellon. And
Cook. And Cox. A digression here. Like many others I've been prone to
criticising players in the past, and Mellon and Branch have
probably borne the brunt in the past season or two. In this
division though, they look like naturals. I still don't think
Branch's natural position is as a forward, but his running was
excellent in order to give an outlet to the defence in the early
second half. Mellon's game suits this level of football
perfectly; No longer does he charge forward on the break only to
have no-one to pass to - there's always an outlet somewhere. Some
of the breaks from defence were quite breathtaking. It wasn't perfect - Payton had an off-day, and we didn't kill the
game of particularly well, being guilty of conceding possession
too easily. I think this may be due to lacking Blakey. Back to the game. An odd substitution that appeared defensive
with Mullin on for Branch. Surely that wouldn't work. But with
Burnley very comfortable, we scored. I can't really describe the
buildup, owing to being sat in row D and having my line of sight
obscured by those in front standing up. It was Davis whose early
through ball from deep in the opposing half looped past the QPR
backline, and MULLIN who had ghosted past his marker in the
inside-right position. Although it looked like he had taken it
too far, but he slotted it
coolly under the advancing Harper and didn't even look surprised
as he celebrated in front of dozens of delerious and
crowd-surfing Clarets supporters (look carefully at the TV
replays, you can spot me very near Mullin). Twenty minutes left, one goal up away from home. Time for a
frantic backs-to-the-wall heartstopper? Not a bit of it, as QPR
surrendered their unbeaten home record quite tamely. Paul
Robinson came on but appeared to be singing from a different hymn
sheet from the rest of the team - he looked more interested in
impressing the manager than helping the team. I suspect this
might not work with Stan. PARADISE GAINED So, four away wins before November. The highest league position
I've ever known as a Burnley supporter. I'm beginning to find it
hard to complain about anything. Is this Paradise syndrome? Still, bad times could still be just around the corner. The next
months see a glut of away games and matches against opposition in
the Top Ten, so by Christmas we could be in a crisis situation.
Best make the most of it while it lasts... Up The Clarets Steve
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