Category Archives: September

21st September 2021- League Cup Third Round, Watford 1 Stoke City 3

WFC.Net Jon Mark’s goal commentary: 1

Attendance: 8,421

BBC Sport: Late goals from Sam Clucas and Josh Tymon gave Championship side Stoke City a surprise win over a wasteful Watford in the Carabao Cup third round.

Sky Sports: Watford head coach Xisco Munoz changed his entire starting XI from the weekend win at Norwich but the majority of his fringe players failed to impress, while Stoke – showing eight alterations of their own – recovered from their loss at beleaguered Derby last time out.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021%E2%80%9322_EFL_Cup

18th September 2021- Premier League, Norwich City 1 Watford 3

WFC.Net Jon Mark’s Goal Commentary: 1 2 3

Attendance: 26,649

BBC Sport: Ismaila Sarr scored twice as Watford beat Norwich in the battle of the two promoted sides and Premier League relegation rivals – to leave Norwich bottom on no points.

Sky Sports: Teemu Pukki cancelled out Emmanuel Dennis’ opener in the first half, but Ismaila Sarr sealed Watford’s second Premier League win of the season with a close-range finish shortly after the hour mark and another in the 82nd minute.

BHappy: Our recent performances have been characterised by an ability to hold opponents off whilst ceding possession, undermined by an inability to capitalise when we break.  Today, subtle changes in team selection and attitude facilitate almost a complete inverse.  That “tight and nervy” prediction is blown out of the water immediately as both sides start positively and aggressively.  Off the pitch, in the circumstances we may benefit from being the away side;  a travelling support in general, let alone on a sunny afternoon in late summer, generally boasts less angst and more bloody-mindedness than a home support, all other things being equal.  This is only fuelled by an early assault on the City goal, adjacent to the away block in the first half, which culminates in Kucka hurling himself like a human missile at a right wing cross.  His opponent holds him off on this occasion, which takes some doing, but this is fuel to the boisterous fire kindling in the away end.  The flipside of this is that having looked generally difficult to manoeuvre through up until now we’re ceding chances a little too easily in what little foothold we afford the home side.  This will not be dull.

11th September 2021- Premier League, Watford 0 Wolverhampton Wanderers 2

Attendance: 20,019

BBC Sport: Bruno Lage’s side had lost their opening three games 1-0 and after 69 shots without scoring, it took Francisco Sierralta heading into his own net from Marcal’s cross to give Wolves the advantage.

Sky Sports: With seven minutes to go they turned that into a second goal. Semedo’s low ball across the six-yard box simply needed tapping home at the back post, where Marcal somehow turned it onto the woodwork and away, before Hwang found some greater accuracy to beat William Troost-Ekong’s despairing challenge from close range.

BHappy: The head coach, at least, has built a rapid connection with supporters – a ready smile and a promotion don’t hurt of course – but his request for a barrage of noise to fuel an early assault on the visitors never looks remotely like coming to pass as Wolves dominate possession for the opening ten or fifteen minutes.  Jeremy Ngakia is one of two new faces in the starting eleven…  I’ve never quite decided in my head whether he’s destined for great things or somewhat less great things, and the same conflicting evidence is on show here.  In the opening minutes Traoré, ostensibly the greatest threat (Jiménez, a shadow of his former self, is regaining fitness and confidence), twice loses Ngakia on the Wolves left before slipping a simple pass to a team-mate presumably deemed to boast more reliable end product.  It’s all very sensible but rather underwhelming, like hiring a michelin-starred chef to pour you some corn flakes.

26th September 2020- Championship, Watford 1 Luton Town 0

The 14 year gap since our last meeting is the longest since we started playing each other in 1885.

Watford Observer Watford tell fans to stay at home for Luton Town derby

Watford board up Graham Taylor statue ahead of Luton Town game

Ben Foster wants Watford ready for Luton Town derby

Vladimir Ivic wants Watford to beat Luton Town for the fans

Ben Foster claims fans were taken for granted ahead of Watford Luton derby

https://www.skysports.com/football/watford-vs-luton/teams/429739
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Whatever career João Pedro goes on to have, and the signs are it will be a damn good one, he is assured of his place in Watford folklore and a place in the hearts of Watford fans after emerging as the winner in the long-awaited derby.

The Brazilian already looks like he has that sense of occasion all the top players have and he chose his 19th birthday and the first derby in 14 long years to bag his first goal for the club. It wasn’t scored with any great flair and won’t feature in any goal-of-the-season compilation, but what it lacked in star quality, was made up for in significance.

The strike, after 35 minutes from a Ken Sema cross, should provide the launchpad for his goalscoring career in this country; turned a promising start by the team into a good one and gave the thousands frustratingly watching at home plenty of reason to cheer in these challenging times.

It also means the Hornets are now ten unbeaten in this lively Herts-Beds derby – Luton’s last win was in September 1994 – and have also kept clean sheets in their opening three league matches of the season for the first time since 1988. Two wins, a draw and three shutouts is a very solid base for Head Coach Vladimir Ivić to build on indeed.

The Hornets and Luton are less than 19 miles apart and it took someone born 5,000 miles away to settle this one. In doing so, Pedro became the Hornets’ youngest scorer since an 18-year-old Nathaniel Chalobah scored against Wolves – and just how old does it make you feel to know that Pedro was just four and growing up in Riberirão Preto when Watford last won a derby. Graham Taylor would even have forgiven him for going down with cramp late on.

His goal was coming, even though it arrived less than 30 seconds after Luton hit the underside of the bar through James Collins. The Hornets learnt the harshest of lessons last season when it came to the price you pay for missed chances, so it was handy their luck changed in the game that means so much to supporters.

Most of the action had originated down the right wing and yet with what felt like the first raid down the left, the Hornets made the breakthrough. Perhaps the Hatters were so concerned about the threat from Ismaïla Sarr and Jeremy Ngakia down the right that they left the Swedish international Sema with a bit of room down the other side. He made the most of his freedom, darting from inside to out before crossing the ball low for Pedro to side-foot home.

It would have been difficult for even the most partisan Luton fan to argue the home side didn’t deserve it. They made most of the running, certainly in the first 30 minutes, enjoying five shots on target, two more than mustered in the entire 90 minutes at Newport.

They were at it from the moment Nathaniel Chalobah thundered into Harry Cornick early on and that was confirmed when you had Craig Cathcart spray a lovely cross-field pass to Sema that Étienne Capoue would have been proud of. There was a lovely turn and spin from Sarr and then Cathcart again got in on the act with a backheel to James Garner.

It was so much more cohesive from an attacking point of view, which you’d expect from a newly-formed side very much in transition. Ngakia and Sarr looked like a well-established pairing down the right and it was from their side that the main threat was posed. Sarr was involved in the move that led to Tom Cleverley cutting one back for Pedro, which he probably should have scored from, and then Pedro returned the favour for his captain seven minutes later.

Pedro eventually took his chance on 35 minutes and the game could and probably should have been dead and buried five minutes after the break. Chalobah will have been disappointed not to score with a header from a Garner corner; the on-loan midfielder from Manchester United had one saved by the legs from Simon Sluga and then Pedro saw the follow-up deflected wide.

Tom Dele-Bahsiru, on as a sub for the injured Chalobah, almost got that match-clinching second on 80 minutes, but in the end it wasn’t needed. Troy Deeney rumbled on for his 399th club appearance and managed to cause a bit of argy bargey in the right-hand corner in front of the Rookery that would have gone down a storm had the fans been here. As it was they celebrated wildy from home and will enjoy this one for a while. They cannot, as the Depeche Mode song ringing out at full-time says, get enough of wins like this.

Watford victorious against Luton Town in the Championship

The Brazilian, who turned 19 today, capitalised after good work on the left flank from Ken Sema, his finish deflected past Luton keeper Simon Sluga, who was called upon to make some more good saves on a day when the hosts should have scored more.

Vladimir Ivic thinks Watford’s performance in their derby day win over Luton Town was their best yet since he joined the club, but hopes there is more improvement to come.

Watford players rated after Luton Town victory

The fixture between keen rivals had not been played since April 2006 but although the match was played behind closed doors, police still insisted on a 12.30pm kick-off. As a result, there was little resembling a derby atmosphere in a cold and biting wind and Luton, in particular, struggled to raise their game against a Watford side whose recent Premier League pedigree gave them a decided edge.

The Hatters really ought to have led when Collins could not keep his shot down from six yards from Harry Cornick’s cross, and Pedro punished them – albeit with the help of a deflection off defender Sonny Bradley on its way in.

Whilst we were on top it would be wrong to paint this as a completely one-sided contest. The visitors were the strongest side we’ve faced thus far, defended well for the most part, desperately on occasions but doggedly enough to stay in it and always looked dangerous on the break where their attacks were neat and tidy.  Harry Cornick was the biggest threat in the first half, too often finding space down the right.  His ball across was smacked off the underside of the bar by Collins with Foster doing well to come out and force the Luton striker to lift the ball.  That goes in it’s a different game;  as it was we broke and scored, and never really looked back.

19th September 2020- Championship, Sheffield Wednesday 0 Watford 0

It may be a few weeks before we see this new-look Hornets side at its fluent best, but they have picked up the very useful habit of racking up points while being in transition.

Points come in all shapes and sizes but they all count the same. The one they got here at Hillsborough, following a goalless draw, is unlikely to feature too heavily on the highlights reel at the end of what is likely to be a frantic season, but it will do very nicely thanks very much as this looks like being one of the more awkward Championship assignments this season.

The game here in South Yorkshire was pretty much a repeat of the arm-wrestle against Middlesbrough, minus the set-piece winner from Craig Cathcart, although the Hornets did look more fluent going forward in the second period. It was nowhere near as cohesive a performance as the one the team produced here last time in October 2014 in a comprehensive 3-0 win, but these are very different times and Rome wasn’t built in a day. The upshot is, after two games, the Golden Boys have one more point on the board than they did at the same stage of the promotion-winning campaign in 2014/15 and there is plenty more to come from this group.

Crucially, they look like they have a solid base to build from – this was a second successive league clean sheet – and any team who has aspirations of mounting a challenge must be a tough nut to crack first and foremost. The team already looks to be moulded in the spirit of their demanding Head Coach Vladimir Ivić.

It would be fair to say the Hornets made something of a tentative start. With the Wednesday bench bellowing their team to press the Hornets as high as possible, the visitors’ were not allowed to play out from the back and all three centre-halves made uncharacteristic sloppy passes in the space of 90 seconds. It was a clear sign that the Hornets were not going to get the time on the ball they desired in an attempt to build from the back.

There were a couple of nice touches from the wing backs – Jeremy Ngakia flipped one over the head of his winger while Ken Sema popped one through the legs of Izzy Brown – but it was largely all Wednesday, who enjoyed two thirds of the ball at one point.

With that much of the ball the Owls were always going to manufacture the odd chance, but nothing really to seriously trouble Ben Foster. Kadeem Harris curled one over the angle of post and bar from the right; Dominic Iorfa should have converted a header from a Brown free-kick and then there were shouts for a penalty when Christian Kabasele put Josh Windass under the most intense pressure after the forward charged into the box. The best chance of the lot, though, came just before the half-time whistle when Tom Lees, up from the back, hit the outside of the post with a header from another Brown free-kick.

The Hornets’ one and only attempt on goal in the first 45 minutes came when Glenn Murray, anticipating that a pass from Craig Cathcart bound for João Pedro was going to drop his way, dropped off, took one touch and let fly with a rising drive that Cameron Dawson was forced to beat away.

All in all the away team would have been grateful to get into the dressing room at the break all square with a chance to regroup and recalibrate. Ivić was still talking to the midfield three of Nathaniel Chalobah, Tom Cleverley and Domingos Quina as the players emerged for the second half, suggesting the former Serbia & Montenegro international schemer had seen one or two things to tweak in the middle of the park.

The Head Coach opted for a personnel change on 58 minutes, replacing Murray with Stipe Perica, and the Croation almost made an immediate impact. He started a move down the left with an arcing run that Ben Wilmot picked out with a lovely clip into the channel, and came so close to finishing in with a header into the bottom corner after some nice interplay between Chalobah and Cleverley. But Dawson denied the angular striker with a save low to his left. Perica thought it was in and was already starting to wheel away in celebration at his first goal for his new club.

Perica added a different dimension to the attack. He was involved in a move that led to an attempted overhead kick from Cleverley and then teed up Quina for a shooting chance only for the Portuguese schemer to be fouled on the edge of the box. Sema blasted over the free-kick but this was more like it. The fact Wednesday picked up two yellow cards in quick succession in a bid to stop promising attacking raids by the Hornets showed how the tide had turned.

James Garner, on loan for the season from Manchester United, came on for his debut midway through the second half and he looked neat and tidy and showed the confidence to assume the role of set-piece taker. Him and particularly Perica made a real difference when they came on.

Ivić made use of his bench by bringing on Ignacio Pussetto for the last ten minutes and that showed how he’s prepared to use the depth of his squad and how it’s going to be all hands to the pump as there will be plenty more games like this this season. Next one in the league? The small matter of the first derby in 14 years. They come thick and fast, don’t they.

Watford play out goalless draw at Sheffield Wednesday

Ivic made one change to the team that beat Middlesbrough on the opening day of the season, with Glenn Murray replacing the unwell Kiko Femenia and Ken Sema dropping into the left-back position.

Vladimir Ivic happy with Watford’s clean sheet at Sheffield Wednesday

Watford players rated after draw against Sheffield Wednesday

The Owls got on top in the first half against their sloppy opponents but were unable to make their dominance count, with Tom Lees coming closest to breaking the deadlock when his unmarked header grazed the post.

Watford came on strong in the final half hour but Owls keeper Cameron Dawson made a pair of fine low saves to thwart Stipe Perica and Tom Cleverley.

So what have we learned?  Hardly news given Ivić’s reported stylistic preferences but we look an awful lot better at stopping the other lot than scoring ourselves.  But for our marking at set pieces we looked pretty impenetrable today, as you’d hope from that extremely proficient back three with Cleverley and Chalobah sitting in front of them.  Chalobah, as an aside, is becoming a candidate for that all-but-forgotten mantle of boo-boy, a role largely unoccupied for a decade or so but was excellent today, strong defending and effective supporting attacks.  Better.  All that’s stopping him dominating football games at this level is a need for a bit more assertiveness.

15th September 2020- League Cup Second Round, Oxford United 1 Watford 1 (Watford won 3-0 on penalties)

The programme was only an online publication
https://www.skysports.com/football/oxford-utd-vs-watford/435931
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Daniel Bachmann was the hero as Watford left it late to knock out Oxford United on penalties in a dramatic Carabao Cup tie at Oxford United.

Last season’s League One play-off finalists looked set for a place in the third round up until the final minute, when substitute Ken Sema cancelled out Rob Hall’s first-half strike to send the game to a shoot-out.

Up stepped Bachmann, who had already excelled in normal time with several vital stops, and the Austrian made a stunning three saves from three to ensure it was the Hornets who progressed to the third round, where a trip to Newport County awaits.

There were first glimpses of new signings Francisco Sierralta and Stipe Perica, while Vladimir Ivić handed full debuts to youngsters Derek Agyakwa, Toby Stevenson and Dan Phillips. The Academy trio will now hope to gain further important game-time in Wales next week.

There was an explosive start which very nearly saw Perica score with his first touch in English football. The striker’s close-range effort in the opening minute was kept out by Oxford keeper Jack Stevens after fine work from Jerome Sinclair out on the right.

The Croatian went even closer with 10 minutes on the clock. Fellow debutant Stevenson whipped over an inviting cross and Perica’s bullet header clipped the top of the crossbar on its way over, with Stevens well beaten.

But it was the hosts who would break the deadlock, midway through the first half. Joel Cooper charged past the challenge of Nathaniel Chalobah and the ball broke for Hall, who took a touch and fired a clean half-volley low into the bottom corner.

The errors began creeping in and Watford were fortunate not to go further behind when Phillips conceded possession too easily to Hall in the middle of the park. Bachmann denied Derick Osei Yaw with a reflex save, and it was the start of an especially busy spell for the keeper.

The ex-Stoke stopper was at his acrobatic best when keeping out a Cameron Brannagan shot from the edge of the box. Elliott Moore poked against the post from the resulting corner, then moments later Bachmann was alert to thwart Sam Long before watching helplessly as Cooper blazed the rebound over with the goal gaping.

Just one goal in it at the break, but it may well have been more.

Momentum started shifting towards the Hornets as they approached the hour-mark. A fine Marc Navarro pass unlocked the Oxford defence, allowing Perica a clear run at goal, but his shot struck the face of Stevens and Sema’s left-footed follow-up flew high into the car park behind the keeper’s goal.

If Watford were to find a way back into the game they were going to have to do it the hard way. Navarro pulled up with what looked like a hamstring injury and with three replacements already made, the Hornets were left to navigate the final 20 minutes with just 10 men.

Just when it seemed that time was up, substitute João Pedro scuffed a shot that fell kindly to Sema, who made no mistake from six yards, converting with his right foot to send the game into penalties.

Enter Bachmann, who saved incredibly from Anthony Forde, Marcus McGuane and Hall, with Sema, Domingos Quina and Perica making no mistake for the visitors.

Line-Up

HORNETS: Bachmann (GK); Agyakwa (Kabasele, HT), Sierralta, Wilmot; Navarro, Chalobah (C) (Sema, HT), Phillips, Stevenson; Quina, Sinclair (João Pedro, 60); Perica.

Subs not used: Parkes (GK), Ngakia, Pussetto, Murray.

Watford beat Oxford United in the Carabao Cup on penalties

The goalkeeper saved all three of United’s spot kicks, while the Hornets scored all of theirs to send the visitors through with a 3-0 scoreline in the shootout after clawing the game back from the brink of defeat.

Daniel Bachmann praised by Watford coach Vladimir Ivic

Watford players rated after penalty win over Oxford United

Watford’s Daniel Bachmann insists penalty heroics at Oxford United were ‘instinct’

Rob Hall’s 20-yard strike after good work from Joel Cooper gave League One Oxford the lead and they were seconds away from seeing out the win. But Ken Sema sent the game to penalties when he scored into an empty net after receiving Joao Pedro’s scuffed shot.

Some might question the wisdom of forking out a tenner for a stream to watch a single-camera view of the early stages of the League Cup.  Those same people would probably leave early at the end of a 6-0 pasting, or opt against long drives across the country to watch irrelevant end of season dead-rubbers in the rain.  This is a fundamental part of the process.  To skip it would be like skipping puberty.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020%E2%80%9321_EFL_Cup