Tag Archives: Blackburn Rovers

11th February 2023- Championship, Watford 1 Blackburn Rovers 1

WFC Net Goal Commentary: 1

Attendance: 19,294

BBC Sport: Bradley Dack scored his 50th league goal for Blackburn as they earned a point against play-off rivals Watford at Vicarage Road.

Sky Sports: Head coach Slaven Bilic bought on Tom Cleverley, who made his first appearance since Burnley in August 2022. The change gave Watford a boost and they equalised in the 73rd minute. Blackburn failed to clear a free-kick, and Hoedt marked his debut with a fine first-time effort on the edge of the area which Pears could not deal with.

BHappy: There’s no avoiding the game’s star turn. João Pedro doesn’t so much run as skate around the pitch;   he’s the first to draw blood, breaking on the right after a one-two with Martins and sliding an evil low ball in towards Araújo that absolutely needs to be cut out  at the near post and is, on the slide, by a Rovers centre back.   Later, both Daughters will reply “João Pedro” with an unspoken “obviously” subtext when their Grandad asks them who their current favourite player is at the top of Occupation Road.  Daughter 1 will be sullen at her ongoing unwanted record of (thanks to two relegation seasons and unfortunate match selection) not having seen a win since New Years Day 2020 – she’d been excitedly incredulous (“really???”) when I recklessly suggested at kick off that today could be the day.

Fran’s Watford Blog: At half time, there was a lovely tribute to Oli Phillips.  His family were guests of the club and his daughter said a few words.  Then Andrew French spoke very warmly about Oli who had been both a mentor and a friend.  The dedication of the media suite to his memory was a lovely gesture and the decorations both at the entrance and inside showing Oli wearing his trademark fedora were just gorgeous.

Taken by Alan Cozzi
https://www.watfordobserver.co.uk/sport/23316909.watford-pays-tribute-legendary-reporter-blackburn-rovers-draw/

Watford Observer: Watford pays tribute to legendary reporter in Blackburn Rovers draw

13th September 2022- Championship, Blackburn Rovers 2 Watford 0

Attendance: 11,803

BBC Sport: Ryan Hedges and Dominic Hyam scored their first goals for Blackburn as they beat Watford in the Championship at Ewood Park.

Sky Sports: The scoreline scarcely did justice to Jon Dahl Tomasson’s men who hassled and harried their opponents who couldn’t match their hunger, workrate and quality.

BHappy: It’s bloody awful.  Or at least, we’re bloody awful… Blackburn do a reasonable job of looking like a competent football team.  So we’re bloody awful.  Or rather…   we’re not completely awful, but the bits that are awful are so awful that they render the less problematic bits sort of obsolete.  For instance, I don’t really think there’s much wrong with our defence as far as actual defending goes.  Nothing that something more cohesive going forward to release the pressure wouldn’t relegate to merely something to work on in the goodness of time, for all Christian Kabasele’s generosity with possession.  Kortney Hause’s number has come up on the “who’s missing today?” spinning dial – a worryingly non-specific sprained ankle depriving us of the option of his surges out of defence and swinging crossfield balls.

Fran’s Watford Blog:  It had been a dreadful performance.  The home side had completely dominated the first half and really should have been further ahead at the break.  I had hoped for better after a bright start to the second half, but it didn’t last long and the hosts were happy to sit back and catch us on the break.  It was a deserved win for them and a troubling loss for the Hornets.  The only player who came out of it with any pride was Bachmann. 

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/62803562

24th February 2021- Championship, Blackburn Rovers 2 Watford 3

BBC Sport: The game came to life in 10 first-half minutes as Joao Pedro lifted the ball over Thomas Kaminski to give the Hornets the lead before Ismaila Sarr scored from close range five minutes later.

Sky Sports: Harvey Elliott spectacularly gave Blackburn hope before the break, but the Hornets regained control just after the hour through Ken Sema’s pinpoint finish. Ben Brereton made it a nervy finish but Watford should have had the game sewn up by that point, with Sarr thwarted by Thomas Kaminski, and one cleared off the line at 3-1.

BHappy: The evening was pretty brutal all round.  It was hammering down with rain on a heavy, tatty-looking pitch.  Blackburn were on the back of a four-match losing streak and missing players.  We, of course, are also missing players… Foster, Kabasele, Chalobah, Deeney is at the very least a respectable spine for a Championship side.  This is the point in the season where the depth of our squad ought to tell.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/56093198

21st October 2020- Championship, Watford 3 Blackburn Rovers 1

https://www.skysports.com/football/watford-vs-blackburn/teams/429776
1-0
2-0
3-1

Who said games involving Watford this season were boring?

The Hornets doubled their goal tally for the season inside 50 minutes on the back of their most fluid attacking display and yet were so fast and loose going forward they inadvertently treated connoisseurs in the art of goalkeeping to an absolute masterclass from Ben Foster, including a stunning second-half penalty save. It was a bonkers game, really, and could have ended 5-5.

The helter-skelter nature of it will take a bumper Hive Live show to explain and will no doubt have infuriated Vladimir Ivić, who loves a 1-0, and former defender Tony Mowbray, the Blackburn boss, but the games come so thick and face in this chaotic league that you just move on, gratefully accept another three points, the fourth maximum haul of the season, and move swiftly onto the next one.

The main takeaways were that, in the magnificent Foster, the Hornets have the best ‘keeper in the league, that this represented the first time the Golden Boys had won three in a row at home since Christmas, the first time they had scored three at home since that memorable win over Liverpool in February and, perhaps most importantly, they are up to third in the league and motoring nicely.

Étienne Capoue is also back, making his first appearance since July 11 and reminding everyone of his class with a double nutmeg late on; James Garner looks a player of real promise while João Pedro is developing really nice and now has three goals this season.

It really was a curious first half. Foster was by far the busier of the two keepers, making three saves that would otherwise have resulted in goals. Christian Kabasele was lucky to not receive a straight red card for denying a goalscoring opportunity and the home side had to feed off a third of the possession and yet they found themselves 2-1 up at the break.

The fact they were, was down to the fact they were ruthless in front of goal, plundering two in the space of four minutes. It also helps when you have a player of Garner’s gifts, a player so keen to pass forward and probe defenders. He sent Kiko Femenía haring down the right on the overlap for João Pedro to neatly tuck in the first after 13 minutes. Garner was at it again less than 360 seconds later, selecting the pitching wedge from his bag this time to send Ismaïla Sarr sprinting down the same right-hand flank. He saw his shot, cleverly fired across the face of goal, saved by Thomas Kaminski and there was Cleverley in support and on hand to nod the ball into an empty net. It was Cleverley’s first goal since the thrilling 2-2 draw with Arsenal here last season.

The Hornets had only mustered three goals in their previous five games and here they had two in 17 minutes. You wondered, at that stage, if they might cut loose and go for the jugular.

But Blackburn showed why they are the league’s leading scorers by coming at the home side real hard before and after the double strike. Foster saved one from Adam Armstrong that dipped and swerved all over the place from right to left. The ‘keeper then saved headers from Darragh Lenihan and Corry Evans in quick succession. So much for the Hornets having faced the second fewest shots on target in the league this season. With the fourth on target in a breathless first half-hour, Blackburn pulled one back with a fine snapshot strike from Ben Brereton. It was now very much game on after just 28 minutes.

The game had now very much loosened its top button and it was end-to-end stuff at times. The emphasis was very much on attack rather than defence.

João Pedro was a whisker away from restoring the two-goal lead before the break following a blistering burst of pace and then cross from Sarr. Everyone had just about caught their breath at half-time and the vast majority at home were just settling down with a cuppa when the Hornets made it three four minutes after the break.

Ken Sema engineered half a yard for himself down the left and whipped off a teasing cross, an absolute nightmare for defenders that Lenihan, under pressure from Sarr, inadvertently turned into his own net. It was the bit of breathing space the team needed as Blackburn came to have a real go and needed to be kept at arm’s-length throughout.

They refused to go away though, refused to be intimidated by the sight of Capoue striding off the bench on the hour. They forced another fine save from the overworked Foster, this time a finger-tip one to deny Armstrong while Nathaniel Chalobah had to bravely chuck himself in front of one from Bradley Johnson. Rovers were causing the Hornets more problems than any side this season and this game was by no means dead.

It threatened to take another twist when Craig Cathcart got the wrong side of Lewis Holtby and referee Andy Woolmer quite rightly pointed to the spot. But Foster got Cathcart off the hook by flying to his left to firmly push away Armstrong’s spot-kick. It was the 12th of his career and he can’t have made many better.

Sarr had a great chance to put the game to bed late on after more approach play from Garner and then the young midfielder tried an acrobatic attempt of his own. It was just the sort of full-blooded game United had in mind for Garner when they sent him on loan. You expect there will be more of this to come in this wonderfully unique division.

Watford beat Blackburn Rovers at Vicarage Road

Watford beat Blackburn Rovers to climb into third place

Watford head coach Vladimir Ivic calls for improvements

Watford players rated after win over Blackburn Rovers

Vladimir Ivic tells Ismaila Sarr and Joao Pedro to put Watford first

Ben Foster wants Watford to kill teams off quicker

The Hornets took control with two goals in quick succession early in the first half from Joao Pedro and Tom Cleverley.

Watford goalkeeper Ben Foster had already made a number of fine saves by the time Ben Brereton pulled one back with a brilliant chest and volley from 25 yards out. The hosts were also fortunate not to have Christian Kabasele sent off after he hauled Adam Armstrong down when the Rovers striker had gone clean through.

Any concerns that the second half would calm down a bit were allayed within five minutes of the restart.  An underhit Chalobah pass towards Sema was cut out, and Wilmot was caught slightly flat footed as Brereton escaped only to be pulled back by a welcome offside flag.  That could have been a different second half. As it was, and with so much of our threat in the first half having come via the burning pace of Sarr and Femenía on the right, Blackburn telegraphed what was to come by giving Ken Sema all sorts of space to put a cross in on the left.  He’s already demonstrated that he needs no space at all to cause damage from wide positions, so it was little surprise that a minute later his vicious cross was turned in by Lenihan.

https://www.11v11.com/league-tables/league-championship/21-october-2020/

7th February 2015- Championship, Watford 1 Blackburn Rovers 0

WFC.Net goal commentary: 1

BBC: Watford striker Odion Ighalo scored his 12th goal of the season to give the Hornets victory over Blackburn.

Sky: The Hornets had been marginally the better side in the first half, but they struggled against the visitors’ more direct approach after the break and needed goalkeeper Heurelho Gomes to stop them from going behind on at least two occasions.

Bhappy: Blackburn dictated terms for long, long periods here, including the whole of a second half in which we barely created as much as a half-chance and, I suspect, mustered no more than one vital, decisive shot on goal. They set the agenda, they shaped the game, they’ll feel with complete justification that they should’ve won it. They were well-organised, robust and physical, and a bit charmless in a way that I find oddly charming; these kind of Championship gurners are gradually dying out, and more’s the pity. In Chris Brown, they had a proper old-fashioned villain of a centre forward, all bad-temper and elbows, whose only failure in the service of his side was to miss the couple of chances that came his way. In Jay Spearing, whose resemblance to one of the boulder-trolls from Frozen is uncanny, they had a proper midfield hatchet man, treading the kind of disciplinary tightrope that any midfielder worth his salt ought to spend his career walking. The rest aren’t exactly shrinking violets. There’s something Victorian and industrial about them, and I’ll regret the day when our legion of continental fancy-dans doesn’t have to overcome this kind of challenge. They’re a good side. Not a nice one, but a good one.

Fran’s Watford Blog: In a rare Watford attack, Vydra exchanged passes with Deeney and tried a shot that was blocked, it fell to Paredes who played it out to Deeney whose shot was put out for a corner.  Watford then took an unexpected lead as Layun’s set piece was played on by Angella to Ighalo whose shot found the net by way of Steele’s hand and the post.  The celebration of this miracle included a very long prayer from the goalscorer.  Blackburn tried to hit back and there was a moment of drama as Gomes punched a cross then chased the ball out of the box to welly it over the SEJ stand to loud cheers from the Watford faithful.  Watford appeared to have increased their lead in the final moments as Vydra and Ighalo broke forward and the Czech won a corner from which a cross was headed home by a defender as Ighalo challenged, but the goal was ruled out for offside presumably as Ighalo was deemed to be interfering with play.  There were huge cheers at the final whistle.  It had been a difficult game and the win was hardly deserved, but Blackburn had been such unpleasant opponents that I felt no guilt.  It was no surprise that Gomes won the man of the match award and he was given a tremendous ovation as he did his lap of the pitch applauding the crowd at the end.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/31070467

27th September 2014- Championship, Blackburn Rovers 2 Watford 2

https://watford.fcdb.info/index.php?page=matches

WFC.Net goal commentary: 1  2

Sky: Blackburn fought back from two goals down to grab a point with a 2-2 draw against Watford at Ewood Park in the Championship on Saturday.

Fran’s Watford Blog: With Garcia now out of hospital but in the director’s box, it was Ruben Martinez in the dugout again.

https://www.soccerbase.com/matches/results.sd?date=2014-09-27
Observer, 28 Sep 2014