Tag Archives: Coventry City

5th November 2022- Championship, Watford 0 Coventry City 1

Attendance: 20,164

BBC Sport: Viktor Gyokeres scored the only goal of the game as Coventry City ended Watford’s three-game winning run with a hard-fought victory against the high-flying Hornets at Vicarage Road.

Sky Sports: A goal from Viktor Gyokeres five minutes into the second half turned out to be just enough on a day when Watford had a goal disallowed as well as seeing Ismaila Sarr miss a golden chance.

BHappy: Whilst the game’s outcome is hugely frustrating, any disappointment should by mitigated by the fact that whilst Coventry’s template is very much The Way To Play Against Watford, none have executed it as effectively as this.  We know that without Imrân Louza we are short of a lock-picker;  here Coventry are disciplined and focused in the face of what, for the first half hour or so, is a purposeful attack.  Come the second half they’ll be stretched, we could easily have come away with this with something so – annoying, but maybe a blessing in disguise.  We’re better, but not better enough to take anything for granted.

Fran’s Watford Blog: At half time, tribute was paid to Cliff Vassiliou who was a very familiar face at Vicarage Road before his passing earlier this year.  He would also often be seen at reserve and youth games with his best friend, Tom Walley.  They also remembered Paul Stallard, a lifelong fan who had given 25 years of service to the club.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/63436136

6th February 2021- Championship, Coventry City 0 Watford 0

The game was played at Birmingham City’s St.Andrews as Coventry were in yet another dispute with the owners of the Ricoh Arena.

BBC Sport: Watford moved up to fourth in the Championship with a battling draw against an impressive Coventry City at St Andrew’s.

https://www.skysports.com/football/news/11710/12209214/coventry-0-0-watford-xisco-munozs-hornets-lose-ground-in-race-for-automatic-promotion

Sky Sports: Mark Robins’ men passed up a series of chances to break the deadlock in the first half but held firm as the Hornets – who saw captain Troy Deeney strike the crossbar – piled on the late pressure.

BHappy: I really really can’t face writing about this tedious bollocks again.  It’s painful enough to bloody watch it.  And yes there’s mitigation and no it’s not all bad, whatever social media warriors would have you believe (and incidentally, baselessly claiming to speak for the masses – “all supporters can see that” – “we all know that” – isn’t a good look.  Either your opinion stands on its own merits or it’s best left in the box).

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/55866859

7th November 2020- Championship, Watford 3 Coventry City 2

https://www.skysports.com/football/watford-vs-coventry/teams/429836
1-0
2-2
3-2

The Hornets served up a five-goal thriller for the second successive home game, producing the perfect response to those fans who regrettably missed the one three days earlier on Hive Live and leaving themselves in a wonderful position to launch a promotion bid of some substance.

Technical issues outside of the club’s control meant those Hornets suffering at home missed the cracker against Stoke City, but the team showed it was no fluke by doing it again, this time against Coventry and even more dramatically with all five goals coming in a madcap second-half. The fans might even need to watch a re-run to check this one unfolded the way it did. They’ll certainly have plenty of time during this month-long lockdown to do so.

There was absolutely no sign of the goal rush to come after a fairly lifeless first-half, which featured just one shot on target. Things then exploded into life in the second period, with five goals in just over half an hour. Ismaïla Sarr won it again, this time from the spot despite the presence of the 400th appearance boy and penalty king Troy Deeney on the pitch. It was that sort of afternoon when little made sense but the upshot is the Hornets are one point off the top and looking a real dangerous prospect now the goals are starting to flow, particularly at home. This is now the third time in four games they have found the back of the net three times and no other side in the league has won more points on their own patch this season. Not many will look forward to coming here, that’s for sure.

The first half only ended all square thanks to a goal-saving tackle from Christian Kabasele. Maxime Biamou, lurking at the far post like all good No.9s, looked certain to the roll a delicious low centre from the right into the back of the net, but the Belgium international defender produced a wonderful smothering, sliding intervention to deny Biamou the chance to beat Ben Foster from close range on 36 minutes. It was right up there with the defensive contributions Kabasele has produced since signing from Genk more than four years ago.

Biamou had a couple of chances before that, one from distance that flew over and a header he nodded wide from a Ryan Giles cross. That flurry of chances was reflective of a nice spell from the visitors who made of a mockery of the difference in places between fourth top and fourth bottom. They were very progressive, very neat and tidy and weaved some nice attacking patterns.

The stats made it look like the Hornets made the most of the running: 51 per cent of the ball, seven shots to the visitors’ five and winning the corner count six-nil but they never ever had things all their own way and managed to engineer just the one shot on target in the first 45 minutes – and that came right at the end of the half when Tom Cleverley forced a flying near-post save from Marko Maroši after hitting one with the element of surprise from a short corner.

There were a couple of low crosses across the face from Sarr, a neat reverse pass from the restored James Garner and a trademark cross-field pass from Étienne Capoue, this time to Ken Sema with his left foot, but the attacking fluency was not quite there.

Coventry were at it again at the very start of the second half, forcing a smart tip over from the airborne Foster with a rising drive on the angle from Callum O’Hare. Something was needed to spark the Hornets into life, a bit of inspiration, and it was Capoue, that multi-talented midfield operator, who provided it. He unfurled another of those cross-field passes, again with his weaker left foot. It was played with such weight and precision that Sema was able to take it in his stride, push it past his man with his first touch and punch it across the face of goal. And there was Gray, the arch poacher, to bundle it home.

You hoped the Hornets might kick on from there and either pull clear or shut the game down, but they did neither. Coventry got a second wind and scored twice in 60 seconds through Gustavo Hamer and Tyler Walker to completely turn the match on its head.

You wondered exactly where the game was heading at that point, just which way it might swing next. The next goal was going to be prove decisive and fortunately for those of a yellow persuasion, it came for the home side when William Troost-Ekong rose at the near post to head in a Garner corner. What a time to net your first goal for the club. Fortunately for those of a nervous disposition, that was the end of the scoring for a while, but only a little while.

There was one more turn to come and it proved a decisive one. Sarr won a penalty for the second successive match, this time via a hand ball from a cross he attempted to clip over O’Hare, and stepped up to take it, despite the imposing presence of Deeney on the field. What a script that would have been on his landmark appearance for the club, to ram in the winning penalty against a team from the Midlands, but Sarr was having none of it and rolled the ball in like a seasoned spot-kick taker with seven minutes to go. And that’s how it stayed. Everyone probably needs the international break after this bonkers game to get their breath back.

RELIVE: Watford go second in the Championship with win over Coventry

Watford beat Coventry City to move up to second in the Championship

Vladimir Ivic felt Watford were not amazing in Coventry win

Ismaila Sarr struck an 83rd-minute penalty to secure the win, after William Troost-Ekong had equalised following a Coventry comeback.

Andre Gray gave Vladimir Ivić’s side the lead shortly into the second half with his first goal for almost exactly a year, only for Gustavo Hamer to equalise for Coventry with a header from 25 yards out. The Sky Blues then went ahead a minute later as a long ball was flicked on to Tyler Walker to thrash home his first league goal of the season. Their advantage only lasted two minutes before James Garner’s corner was headed in by centre-back William Troost-Ekong for his first goal since joining Watford from Udinese in September.

Today was a good day. On a bad day, maybe we don’t get that equaliser and the game disappears into a miserable, frustrating defeat.  On a bad day, maybe James Garner is pulled up for his challenge in the box prior to the penalty – a coulda rather than shoulda been a foul.  But definitely a coulda.  But today was a good day.  Troy was on by this stage, half the man he used to be but twice as mobile for it;  despite this Ismaïla Sarr picked the ball up and rolled in his third strike in four games. At almost exactly the same time, news broke from the United States that the racist, misogynist, narcissistic, malevolent manchild in the White House had finally been disposed of, and a great big party started.  Today was a good day.

27th August 2019- League Cup Second Round, Watford 3 Coventry City 0

Javi Gracia’s final programme notes.

Goal 1  2  3

Watford beat Coventry City in the second round of the Carabao Cup

Ismaila Sarr helps Watford beat Coventry City in Carabao Cup

Javi Gracia was not surprised by the quality of Watford’s goals against Coventry City

Watford players rated after their Carabao Cup win over Coventry City

Tom Dele-Bashiru insists the Watford players are firmly behind head coach Javi Gracia

Club record signing Ismaila Sarr marked his first Watford start with a goal to help the Premier League’s bottom club overcome League One Coventry in the Carabao Cup second round.

 If there’s something fundamentally wrong at the club then it clearly hasn’t extended to this lot, who made up for a little rawness and rustiness with a performance of refreshing positivity.

Coventry had been given the whole end and their fans had come in droves, which was great to see.

30th July 2014- Watford 0 Coventry City 1 (played at Meadow Park, Boreham Wood FC)

The clip doesn’t include the Coventry goal

Six days after our last visit, we were back at Meadow Park for a game against Coventry. 

Watford suffered their first defeat of pre-season as a disappointing Hornets performance resulted in a 1-0 defeat against Coventry City at Boreham Wood’s Meadow Park stadium.

17th March 2012- Championship, Watford 0 Coventry City 0

Coventry goalkeeper Joe Murphy produced a string of fine saves to help his relegation-threatened side contain in-form Watford.

John Eustace and Troy Deeney had the best of the chances but Murphy stood firm to earn Coventry a vital point.

The fiftieth graduation from our Academy in 12 years is something to be hugely proud of, rightly celebrated over the tannoy.  Assombalonga looked the part, keen, strong, rangy… but also raw, and not helped by the limited service he received from a hurried midfield.

https://www.soccerbase.com/matches/results.sd?date=2012-03-17
https://www.11v11.com/league-tables/league-championship/17-march-2012/