Tag Archives: Queens Park Rangers

27th August 2022- Championship, Watford 2 Queens Park Rangers 3

https://www.watfordfc.com/post-match/watford-mens-team-queens-park-rangers-first-team-2022-08-27/statistics

Attendance: 19,977

BBC Sport: Substitute Albert Adomah scored the winner for Queens Park Rangers to end Watford’s unbeaten start in the Championship.

Sky Sports: Ilias Chair and Chris Willock were also on target for Michael Beale’s side, who won for the first time away from Loftus Road under their new head coach. Ken Sema and Joao Pedro had equalised for Watford, who saw a late goal ruled out for a questionable offside.

BHappy: Losing’s fine of course… well, not fine but certainly part of the tapestry, and a part that we’ve been all too familiar with over the past couple of years that we’ve been able to “enjoy” at Vicarage Road. This is different though, a different flavour of defeat to last season’s regular diet of inadequacy and helplessness.  This is stomp around scowling and looking for someone to argue with, nobody talk to me for a month frustration.  This is outrage at the unjustness and the AAAAARRRRGHHHH of it all.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/62614069

1st February 2021- Championship, Watford 1 Queens Park Rangers 2

BBC Sport: Troy Deeney smashed home from the penalty spot to put the hosts ahead early in the second half after Ismaila Sarr was brought down by Geoff Cameron.

Sky Sports: From the first whistle, a neutral viewer would have found it hard to distinguish which side was vying for promotion to the Premier League and which was just four points above the relegation zone, such was QPR’s dominance of the ball.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/55791569

21st November 2020- Championship, Queens Park Rangers 1 Watford 1

https://www.skysports.com/football/qpr-vs-watford/teams/429845
1-0

Ben Wilmot’s recent 21st birthday marked his ascension from a boy to a man. The occasion also nudged open the goalscoring floodgates, resulting in a first for his country and now a first for the club.

Wilmot was disappointed with his contribution at Barnsley in the previous away fixture, believing he had two presentable headed chances to make up for his part in the Tykes’ early goal. He made amends here, if indeed he needed to, by side-footing in an early goal that really should have set the Hornets on the way to a second away win of the season and only a second on their travels in 14 attempts.

It didn’t quite work out like that, however, with QPR recovering from the early blow, steadying themselves and in fact finishing the stronger of the two sides. They equalised through Ilias Chair 13 minutes from time and fully deserved their point. They thought they had got all three right at the death but Lyndon Dykes, on as a sub, all-but punched a cross from Tom Carroll into the back of the net.

The Hornets will wonder how they ended up being a bit relieved to leave West London with a point having looked so threatening in the first half. They really should have put the game to bed in the first period and paid the price for not doing so. Still, they are right in the thick of things at the business end of the table and this might look a good point if three are collected at Ashton Gate on Wednesday.

The first half was a breathless, end-to-end-affair, almost like a game of Étienne Capoue’s beloved basketball. There were 15 attempts in the first 45 minutes alone, which was just one more than in the entire 90 minutes at Oakwell in the last road trip. You needed the interval just to catch your breath.

You half-suspected it might be an open and loose affair when the Hornets scored inside three minutes. Ken Sema, the assist king, was again the orchestrator, slinging over a low centre that Wilmot escorted into the back of the net from the closest of ranges. The defender probably couldn’t believe his luck. It was fitting his mate William Troost-Ekong, who helped him so much at Udinese, was first to the scene to congratulate on him on a first goal for the club. It was a nice moment.

There was an anticipation that the Hornets might kick on and establish a vice-like grip on proceedings thereafter, but you can forget that in this league and at this ground, especially if you remember that ding-dong in the FA Cup here a couple of seasons ago.

QPR were in no mood to play second fiddle or be cowered by falling behind inside 270 seconds. Craig Cathcart, captain in the absence of his mate Tom Cleverley, made a wonderful sliding interception to cut out a dangerous cross from Bright Osayi-Samuel; Capoue headed one off the line; Yoann Barbet had Ben Foster scrambling across his line with a free-kick from distance that dipped and swerved all over the place; Foster denied Dominic Ball, the former Watford Academy player, from close range and then Macauley Bonne should really have steered a far-post header on target when largely unmarked.

It wasn’t all QPR. Far, far from it. In between times and, as a result of various counter-attacks, Andre Gray headed instinctively wide from a Kiko Femenía cross; Troost-Ekong headed past the post from an uncannily similar position to the one he thumped in against Coventry City; Ismaïla Sarr had an effort he slammed at goal blocked; QPR ‘keeper Seny Dieng made a finger-tip save to deny Gray and then Sarr, for a player of his rich quality, should have scored after being sent clear down the inside right channel.

It was a wonder the teams didn’t go in locked at 3-3 at the break. It was that open.

There was no thought at the interval by either coach to lock things down, like most of the country right now. Within ten minutes of the second half, Ivić and his opposite number, former Hornets Academy Manager Mark Warburton, had thrown on two attacking players each in Troy Deeney, Domingos Quina, Chris Willock and Dykes.

With such a commitment to attack, it was no surprise to see Conor Masterson hit the top of the bar for Rangers and then Wilmot guide a header just wide. It felt like that wasn’t going to be the end of the scoring and so it proved, with Chair putting away a very well-taken chance past Foster. The Hornets just didn’t get going in the second half and couldn’t hold on like they did in the FA Cup quarter-final here in early 2019. There are, as always, plenty of hoops to jump through in this division.

Watford draw away at Queens Park Rangers

Watford have to settle for draw away at Queens Park Rangers

Vladimir Ivic left frustrated after Watford draw with QPR

Ben Wilmot’s second-minute opener – his first goal for Watford – gave the visitors the perfect start at the Kiyan Prince Foundation Stadium

Ilias Chair’s late equaliser earned QPR a share of the spoils and denied Watford top spot in the Championship.

There’s been a degree of reflection and stock taking of the season so far during the international break.  My own view for what it’s worth, as these reports have probably reflected, is that us getting to where we’ve got to without being particularly convincing is a Good Thing.  If Vlad was giving the impression of thinking we were sorted there’d be a concern.  This isn’t the case at all, and as such woe betide the division when we get our shit together.

Win your home games and draw your away games and you’ll be promoted, that’s what Jas has been telling us for the last ten years. But this away draw at QPR, after a poor second half performance, didn’t feel like a promotion pushing side. Jon, Jason and Mike gather to discuss the game, and hear from Vladimir Ivic in the post match press conference.

15th February 2019- FA Cup Fifth Round, Queens Park Rangers 0 Watford 1

Referee:
Michael Oliver
Attendance:
17,212

Relive our coverage of Queens Park Rangers vs Watford in the FA Cup fifth round

Queens Park Rangers vs Watford: Etienne Capoue sends Hornets into FA Cup quarter-finals

Queens Park Rangers vs Watford: Javi Gracia staying focused after Hornets reach FA Cup sixth round

How we scored Watford in their FA Cup win at Queens Park Rangers

Javi Graca praises Watford players’ professionalism and commitment

Heurelho Gomes calls on Watford to believe they can reach Wembley

A selection of images from Watford’s FA Cup win at Queens Park Rangers

Watford reached the FA Cup quarter-finals for the second time in four seasons after a hard-fought win against battling Queens Park Rangers.

As four minutes of added time were shown at the end of the first half, Capoue swept the ball home after a mis-hit from Tom Cleverley and it proved to be the winner.

Queens Park Rangers had to wait for this moment. Their previous appearance in the FA Cup fifth round had come at Wimbledon in 1997 and it is doubtful whether any club has since endured a more dismal record in the competition. The London club had won only four ties – each of them in the third round – before this season.

Prior to kick-off there was a minute’s applause for Gordon Banks who passed away this week.  It has to be said that nobody waited for the referee’s whistle to start the tribute.

Watford’s road to the FA Cup final: Into the quarter-finals in west London