Tag Archives: Sheffield Wednesday

2nd April 2021- Championship, Watford 1 Sheffield Wednesday 0

BBC Sport: Promotion-hopefuls Watford beat struggling Sheffield Wednesday, who were without boss Darren Moore after he tested positive for Covid-19, to record a sixth successive victory.

Sky Sports: Ismaila Sarr crossed from the right hoping to find Isaac Success but instead saw the ball turned into the Wednesday net by Owls centre-back Lees. A raised flag indicating Success had been offside saw the goal initially disallowed but referee Chris Kavanagh consulted with assistant Dan Cook and ruled the Watford man had not been interfering with play.

BHappy: Sarr’s rapid recovery had already seen him play a ball in towards Isaac Success which was smuggled out of play by the attentions of two Wednesday defenders.  The goal itself will prove to be the one truly exquisite move of the game;  Adam Masina had made a pig’s ear of a crossfield ball less than a minute earlier but his second go is magnificent, a searing pass from left to right dropping into the feet of Sarr.  Sarr’s cross does Masina’s work justice, it’s completely undefendable scything between the defence and the goalkeeper;  we get a break, on another day Chris Kavanagh sympathises with Wednesday claims that Isaac Success, lurking on Tom Lees’ shoulder, is offside and interfering with play.  This time he doesn’t, Lees propels the ball past his goalkeeper and the ‘orns are ahead.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/56532930

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.

2nd May 2015- Championship, Watford 1 Sheffield Wednesday 1

1-0

Watford denied Championship title by late Sheffield Wednesday leveller

Watford missed out on the Sky Bet Championship title after Bournemouth won 3-0 at Charlton and the Hornets were held to a 1-1 home draw by Sheffield Wednesday.

Atdhe Nuhiu’s stoppage-time strike saw Sheffield Wednesday secure a dramatic draw against Watford to deny them the Championship title. Matej Vydra’s headed the hosts in front during a dominant first-half display.

As for the supporters… similarly, perhaps Watford’s best ever season in this regard (cap doffed again to the 1881) doesn’t deserve to be remembered for the cretin whose pitch invasion interrupted Wednesday’s free kick, for the vermin responsible for flares who deserve bans from the ground, for the vanity of those who decided that invading the pitch was more important that having a reason to invade the pitch.  Ed Perchard has penned a wordier assassination of these imbeciles in In the Wolf’s Mouth but in any case, choking as the narrowness of the margin was these were all irritants.  None should be used as excuses for our failure to put Wednesday away.

As Wednesday won a deep free-kick, the crème-de-la-crème of unneeded intrusions – some pissed-up toss pot waddling into the penalty area, waved through by the hundred lurking stewards – took the attention of the players when it was needed most.

What happened next came as no surprise, though maybe it did to those idiots crowding round the goal line before the final whistle had been blown. With a hint of offside the ball made its way to the back post. A header back across goal wasn’t cleared, and with Wednesday’s first shot on target they found the back of the net and with Bournemouth winning their game, this meant that Watford would no longer be champions.

I have to say that, while I am all for pitch invasions when the game is over, it was disappointing to see how many people were more concerned with getting selfies on the pitch than with the result of the game.  I felt totally deflated and, talking to many people afterwards, that was a common feeling.  Eventually the pitch was cleared and the players came out.  Jon Marks interviewed a number of them on the pitch and eventually reached Troy Deeney who said how p*ssed off he was but then launched into a chant of “Watford FC” which brought a smile back to my face.

More games from 2nd May at https://oldwatford.com/tag/may2

14th December 2013- Championship, Watford 0 Sheffield Wednesday 1

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

BBC: Sheffield Wednesday earned their first away victory of the season as Connor Wickham grabbed the only goal in their game at Watford. Wickham scored with a 20-yard free-kick for his fifth goal for the Owls since joining on loan from Sunderland.

Sunday Telegraph, 15 Dec 2013

BHappy: You really have to wonder how we got here.  Even those who didn’t expect this season to be a cakewalk, who anticipated difficult games at home as attitudes towards us changed and we had to adapt to new circumstances and a different squad, can’t have anticipated this.  It stands to reason, of course, that last season’s flamboyant style was never something that was going to succeed in moderation;  we’re not equipped to grind out results when the going is rough, less so given the summer departures.  The viability of playing open, confident football is kinda dependent on the “confident” bit.  Otherwise you’re just “open”, with the inevitable consequence that you’re rather easy to score against without the verve to overturn a side with something to cling on to.  Nonetheless the chasm between the performances that yielded so many goals last season, goals that didn’t entirely desert us as we were finding our feet again early this, and performances that have yielded no goals in the last four at Vicarage Road is vast and would have been all but inconceivable even in the wake of the Wembley disappointment six months ago, a result that arguably did neither manager any favours at all.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/25275110

5th March 2013- Championship, Watford 2 Sheffield Wednesday 1

WFC.Net goal commentary: 1.  2

BBC: Substitute Fernando Forestieri scored twice as Watford moved up to second in the Championship with victory over Sheffield Wednesday.

Evening Standard, 6 Mar 2013

BHappy: In short, we’ve got to second by playing with freedom. By following our attacking instincts even when coaching manuals, common sense and British fair play say we ought to back down. By honouring a commitment to passing football even when it gets us into trouble (NOT THERE, FERNANDO). Especiallywhen it gets us into trouble (NOT THERE, FERNANDO). By scoring goals and making mistakes and having fun and not losing too much sleep when it doesn’t work out. This is the least constrained Watford side any of us have ever seen…and there’s no sense in fetching the harness and whip now. If we’re going to do this, it won’t be by heaping pressure on ourselves or by bowing to convention. Let’s face it: the best possible outcome of the season is one hell of a peak; the worst possible outcome ain’t much of a trough….

https://www.soccerbase.com/matches/results.sd?date=2013-03-05
https://www.11v11.com/league-tables/league-championship/05-march-2013/

23rd October 2009- Championship, Watford 4 Sheffield Wednesday 1

BBC: Watford moved to within three points of the Championship leaders with a superb win over Sheffield Wednesday.

Daily Telegraph, 24 Oct 2009

BHappy: Well I have to confess to not having seen that coming. The continuing absence of H and the Duke still on the bench didn’t particularly lift the spirits on the way into the ground either. It’s never as much fun as when you don’t expect it, is it…?

https://www.soccerbase.com/matches/results.sd?date=2009-10-24
https://www.11v11.com/league-tables/league-championship/23-october-2009/
https://www.11v11.com/league-tables/league-championship/24-october-2009/