Friday, March 15, 2013

L2 D0-0 (A) Plymouth A. Tuesday March 12, 2013. K.O. 7:45PM. #bcafc


Read this article online
http://texasbantam.blogspot.com/
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CFML Daily News
http://paper.li/f-1315926867

Current table
http://www.sportinglife.com/football/live/tables/cc_league2.html

Fixtures
http://www.bradfordcityfc.co.uk/page/Fixtures/0,,10266,00.html
http://m.espn.go.com/soccer/clubhouse?teamId=387&lang=EN

The "Social media Corner"
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Official Mobile app
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Signings, Loans and Injuries

James Meredith is back in the City squad for Saturday's trip to Exeter.

Injuries
Luke Oliver, Achillies, out for the 2012/13 season

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Match Media & Stats

Head to Head
http://www.11v11.com/teams/bradford-city/tab/opposingTeams
http://www.statto.com/football/teams/bradford-city/

Pictures
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/sport_bantams_pics2012/
(The T&A picture link will dfault to the last match for which pictures are available)

"Last Match" Highlights on Bantams Player
http://www.bradfordcityfc.co.uk/page/player/LastMatch/0,,10266~1612005~36,00.html

BBC highlights (uk only)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/21665745

Match stats
http://www.soccerbase.com/teams/team.sd?team_id=234#teamTabs=results
http://espnfc.com/uk/en/gamecast/345427/gamecast.html?soccernet=true&cc=5739
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/21665745


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When the dust settled - match report


Plenty of pressure but goals proving elusive for Bradford City

6:20am Wednesday 13th March 2013

By Simon Parker

Plymouth 0, City 0

A third stalemate on the bounce – is City's outside play-off push drawing to an early conclusion?

Once again, the Bantams could not convert pressure into goals and were unable to find their way through when they stepped it up second half.

While the unbeaten run stretched to five games since the Capital One Cup final, it was an unsatisfactory outcome for a side with aspirations of catching the top seven. Plymouth, who climbed off the foot of the table with a point, looked nervous and were there to be beaten. Phil Parkinson had a major reshuffle with the City line-up, making six changes from the team that had started on Saturday. But there was no place for Alan Connell, whose last-gasp penalty had rescued a point.

Instead, it was Andy Gray who got the nod to partner Garry Thompson up front. Gray, still looking for the first goal in his second spell with the club, had not been involved at all in the previous three games.

Matt Duke was also back in goal for the first time since his Wembley red card. And there was a rest for skipper Gary Jones, so Ricky Ravenhill took over the armband.

Home Park was not a traditionally happy hunting ground for City. They had won only one of the last 12 visits, when Paul Jewell scored a hat-trick in a 5-1 romp in 1994.

But Argyle boss John Sheridan was in no doubt about the challenge facing his relegation battlers, describing City before the game as "one of the best teams in the division". He gave an immediate debut to Bristol City midfielder Joe Bryan, who had only signed on loan earlier in the day.

Plymouth had the first chance as Andres Gurrieri flicked over the bar but City should have been ahead in the ninth minute.

The home defence were caught waiting for an offside flag that never came as they pressed up and Thompson suddenly found himself totally in the clear.

He could have gone round Jake Cole but instead opted to try to slide a low shot past him and the keeper stuck out a left leg to divert the ball behind. It was good work from the stopper but a gilt-edged opportunity gone begging for the visitors.

Kyel Reid, another of the City changes from the weekend, had a chance to test Cole with a free-kick just outside the box but his shot was poor.

There was an air of edginess about the home side and the crowd – not surprising given their precarious position. But both began to settle as Plymouth saw more of the ball.

A hopeful shot from captain Conor Hourihane sailed high into the hardy band of away fans. But on-loan Jason Banton, who had scored four in seven games, was starting to pull the strings.

The Crystal Palace midfielder latched on to a misdirected pass from Thompson to force a parried save from Duke and then cut back to Gurrieri, whose shot was blocked in front of the line by Carl McHugh.

Gray got his head to a Zavon Hines cross but it was too loopy to threaten. City had not troubled the Argyle stopper since Thompson's early chance.

Reid had been quiet but a good pass suddenly found Thompson in the box. He shaped to shoot but Lee Cox slid across with a vital block. Then the winger took a pot from a 30-yard free-kick but there was no power to test the keeper.

Guy Branston went right through the back of Thompson and rightly picked up the first booking of the night as the game went into first-half added time.

There was still time for City to win one last corner and McHugh came charging in to meet Reid's kick. Sadly the teenager's radar was completely awry as he leapt above the pack and the header flew well wide.

Nathan Doyle opened the second period with another wayward shot before Plymouth went a lot closer. The elusive Banton wiggled his way into space to the left of the goal before firing against Duke's near post.

Banton continued to pose a one-man threat to the City back four and he took another shot through Stephen Darby's legs, which Duke saved low down.

City responded with a corner and again McHugh got his head to Doyle's delivery but the ball flashed past the post. It was the closest the visitors had come for a while.

Ravenhill joined Branston in the book for one foul too many before City thought they had a penalty when Reid was sent tumbling by Maxime Blanchard. It looked to be in the box but referee Andy Davies called it a yard outside.

The Plymouth right back hurt himself in the challenge and needed treatment. The delay allowed Parkinson to make his first change, with the ineffective Gray replaced by James Hanson.

Paul Wotton, making his 468th Plymouth appearance, hammered a shot wide from 30 yards. The home side, like City, realised that a point was not enough.

Will Atkinson came on for Hines against the side where he spent the first half of last season. Sensing the urgency, Thompson ran menacingly across the Argyle box but his well-struck shot was blocked by Onismor Bhasera.

City were pushing for a breakthrough and almost had it when Cox miskicked into the path of Hanson. He set up Thompson for a strike which hit the top of the bar.

That proved Thompson's final touch as Connell took his place but the chances continued to build. Reid's shot was pushed out by Cole and Hanson's follow-up was deflected a yard wide.

Connell advanced menacingly towards goal but his low shot was held by Cole and Reid ran into traffic in the penalty area.

There were six added minutes to end the stalemate but City could find no repeat of Saturday's late, late show.

They won a corner and Duke wanted to go up for it. Instead it was pulled up for a foul by Rory McArdle and the danger had passed.

The game finished in farcical circumstances after McArdle miscued towards his own goal. Duke was bundled over by two Plymouth players before Darby blocked their attempts to force the loose ball over the line.

It was a blatant shove on the keeper and City were unimpressed that nothing was given. Now they head for Exeter in part two of the Devon double header urgently in need of a winning tonic.

Attendance: 5,609
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Bradford City just need a spark up front

8:10am Wednesday 13th March 2013

By Simon Parker

Phil Parkinson admits City need a spark to get them back to winning ways after another night of frustration.

The Bantams were held to a goalless draw at struggling Plymouth – their third stalemate in a row as they failed to make any inroads into the League Two leading pack.

Once again, Parkinson's troops were cursing missed opportunities from a game which they should have won. Garry Thompson failed to finish when clean through and also hit the bar, while defender Carl McHugh put two headers just wide from corners.

Parkinson said: "Thommo knows he's got to score early on but I feel for the lads because they really are giving us absolutely everything.

"We're a team which needs a lift in front of goal. We need somebody to produce something and we're waiting for that to happen.

"We just need that moment and if one had gone in, then I'm sure we would have won the game comfortably.

"I've played in many teams away on a Tuesday night and your goal-scorer gets one early which gives you something to hang on to. But we're not getting that.

"It's across the team. We've had some great headers from set-plays and really good chances to score – it was the same on Saturday.

"But we're five games unbeaten and we've got to take the positives. I can't fault the lads and the way they are working.

"We're still asking for the players to keep scrapping and they did that."

Thompson was also nursing a swollen knee after a lunge from behind from former Bantams defender Guy Branston. Parkinson felt referee Andy Davies was wrong to only book the centre half.

The City chief argued: "It was a terrible tackle. Thommo's got a big scar right down the side of his knee – it's a definite red card.

"But what can I say, Reidy (Kyel Reid) also got pulled down in the box in the second half which everyone could see. But we didn't get a penalty and he gave it outside.

"Maybe it's me but I've been a manager for ten years now and I really do feel something's going to fall for us. We've hit the bar, had a one v one and had so many moments.

"Sometimes away from home you get one chance and score. We're getting six or seven every game.

"We know we've got to start taking them but we've got to keep believing and keep doing the right things in those areas of the pitch."

Parkinson also played down the speculation linking him with the managerial vacancy at his old club Reading. He insisted the rumours will not be a distraction.

He said: "Obviously I played there a lot of years and I've been linked with that job when it's come up previous times. It happens and you take no notice of it and carry on with the job here.

"I'm determined to finish this season in style and myself, the staff and the players are working tirelessly to do that.

"We've still got a chance of making it a fantastic season. We've already had a very good season and we want to keep it going."

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Bradford City boss Parkinson rounds on his critics

6:50am Thursday 14th March 2013

By Simon Parker

Phil Parkinson says he is forced to chop and change the City side to prevent the players running themselves into the ground.

And he reckons that anyone who questions why he has to keep shuffling the pack "doesn't understand football".

The Bantams boss has come in for some flak for constantly changing the starting line-up.

He switched six names again at Plymouth in Tuesday's 0-0 draw – their fourth stalemate in five games since Wembley.

With City struggling to make any headway on the play-off race, the lack of a consistent team has been flagged up as a contributory factor.

But Parkinson admits the sheer volume of games in this "extraordinary" campaign has given him no other choice.

He said: "People always jump on the negatives. If you change the team it's wrong, if you don't it's wrong. But it's not an option, it's a necessity. I'm not thinking 'should I change' but that I have to.

"Anyone who doesn't understand that doesn't understand football.

"These players have played an extraordinary amount of games this season. I've got to back my judgement call. That's what you have to do as a manager.

"The staff and myself always look at the situation and who we think is struggling to go into a game and where we need a bit of freshness. These players are human beings and you've got to understand that."

City's three leading scorers – Nahki Wells, James Hanson and Alan Connell – were all on the bench at Home Park. Instead, Parkinson spearheaded the side with Garry Thompson, who hit the bar, and Andy Gray.

He also left out midfield general Gary Jones – the first league game City's skipper has missed since his back injury in October.

Parkinson added: "If we're going to get to where we want to be – and I still think we've got a good chance of that – then we're going to have to utilise the squad.

"We've had an extraordinary season and we need to use the full 20-man squad. The ones not in the team, like Michael Nelson and Gary Jones the other night, must do their bit on the touchline and in the dressing room to get the lads going who are playing.

"We're all in it together. We're all working for each other as a group.

"We've been five games unbeaten since the cup final, three of them on our travels against York, Port Vale and Plymouth. I know we've drawn four of them but it's still a good return.

"Every game is big at this stage. Exeter away on Saturday is another one we look forward to and it's important that everyone sticks together."

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