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Premier League · 2012/2013
Reading 0-0 Norwich
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Match Report

Reading
No goals
Norwich
No goals
After a cautious start Reading managed to dominate a City side lacking in any real attacking threat, but could not find sufficient quality in the final third of the pitch to make their territorial superiority count. Garath McCleary managed the only direct strike on goal in the fourteenth minute which Ruddy saved fairly comfortably. There was much positive talk after the game of keeping a clean sheet, but it was in fact a missed opportunity to register a first win of the season. City were clearly happy to hang to a point.

City’s defence was uncompromising and conceded free kicks and corners at regular intervals throughout the game but Reading were not able take advantage of them. Gorkss and Morrison came close with headers but City back four won most of the balls played into the box. Even Hunt was unusually unable to get his head to the ball. Bassong was dominant at the back. Snodgrass, having served his apprenticeship at Leeds, pushed tripped and complained to the referee throughout the first half. Roberts was lively and persistent forcing some errors in the City defence but promising situations were not converted into clear chances. It was a poor first half.

As Brian McDermott correctly acknowledged after the game, you could not fault Reading’s commitment. As the game wore on Robert’s became increasingly frustrated, spending too much time tumbling and protesting, and Hunt never really got into the game. Both were substituted along with McCleary. On came Pogrebnyak, Le Fondre and Kebe in an unsuccessful bid to freshen up the attack. One good run from Kebe won a free kick on the edge of the box. Referee Foy took ten small paces diagonally from the ball allowing the City defensive wall to block Shorey’s free kick from less than ten yards.

McAnuff thumped a shot just over the bar after good work by Shorey wide on the left. Shorey himself made a good run into the box and looked to have gone clean through until he was crowded out. The quality of Shorey’s play stood out throughout the game. His touch as always was excellent and he threaded thorough some perfectly weighted and directed passes on several occasions. Holt was a nuisance all afternoon pushing, backing in and falling over, without looking likely to score. Reading pressed for the elusive breakthrough and City had some promising situations on the break, but like Reading were unable to create any clear cut chances.

The most worrying statistic for me was published in the Guardian this morning. Reading’s passing accuracy is the poorest in the Premier League so far this season with only 68% of their passes reaching their intended destination. That inability to keep the ball has contributed significantly to their inability to hang on to the lead this season on more than one occasion, perhaps most spectacularly illustrated against the Gunners recently. I believe there are at least three teams who could finish below Reading this season, so I am still hopeful of Reading staying up, but I am not expecting the recovery to begin at home to a very strong Everton side next week.
John Wells

League Position — 2012/2013

Post-Match Fans' Opinion

Absolutely dire!

I had thought McDermott deserved to be given until at least the end of November to start to show that he can turn things around. I'm now beginning to wonder whether that will just be wasting time and games.

A damning indictment is the fact that today we had not one player on the bench capable of playing in centre midfield. Our only option would have been to move Jobi inside, in other words replacing one tired player with another tired player! Why the f*ck waste a squad place on Bryn if you're not even prepared to put him on the bench in this situation? !

Yes, Jem is injured but don't forget he hadn't fully recovered from his injury at the time the window slammed shut, so that was always a bit of a gamble. And yes Guthrie is supposedly out with a thigh (or should that be a pride?) injury. However, this just shows how painfully lacking in cover McDermott had left the central midfield (given he won't play Bryn).

As for all the celebration of a clean sheet - what a load of delusional b*llocks! The only reason we kept a clean sheet was that Norwich were probably even worse than us. In the last third of the game, Reading made a number of significant errors and/or left Norwich players free with miles of space. Rest assured, those opportunities would have been exploited by any decent premiership strikeforce.

And the substitutions? Yeh, brilliant, take off Hunt - the only striker capable of jumping and winning a header - and then proceed to revert to our much favoured hoofball! Bring on Pog for Roberts and hit it long. Oh and bring on ALF just so your team can avoid passing the ball to him!

Today McDermott spent an awful lot of time pacing backwards and forwards along the touchline looking at his feet either in desperation or in search of inspiration. Off the pitch it looked as though he had run out of ideas and on the pitch the team seemed to confirm that.

If Madjeski and AZ didn't give McDermott the funding he needed, then they should be big enough to stand up and publically admit it. If McDermott had the money but chose to 'do a Coppell' then I'm afraid he will end of paying the price. Unfortunately the club may also pay the price in relegation.
RoyalBlue

This is supposed to the Premier League, the best, if it were a restaurant it would be fine dining, Michelin star stuff, well, this load of dross was more akin to the crap that's served up in the rip off greasy burger bars outside the ground each game. It looked a nailed on 0-0 after five minutes and I just knew McDonut was going to take the positives after the game and praise the clean sheet, what a load of bollocks. This was quite woeful and Norwich were rubbish too, they were there for the taking but unfortunately it would appear we're not capable of putting more than three passes together look as lost and clueless as a very poor team that would struggle in the Championship. Without stating the obvious we simply do not have any quality, if JM has influenced our new Ruski owner and told him we don't need quality new players that cost a few bob then he should be ashamed, as I'm afraid the old fashioned pathetically naive "Reading" way of doing things is being cruelly exposed. We've spent nothing and ten games without a win says it all. I'm actually quite angry the way Alex Pearce is being treated , last season player of the year by a mile and never missed one single minute of the season, and this season he's ostracised, it's a disgrace. Only Shorey did well yesterday the rest huffed and puffed look utterly devoid of confidence and can't take much inspiration from McDerm pacing up and down looking at the floor like a poor lost soul. It really is quite depressing.
Nick Newbury

Quotes from the Press

Reading continued to be frustrated in search of their first Premier League win of the season as they were held to a draw by a stubborn Norwich. Garath McCleary had a well-struck shot saved by Canaries' keeper John Ruddy in a first half short of chances.

The home side upped the pace after the break and Sean Morrison headed wide before Jobi McAnuff shot over the top. A Jimmy Kebe cross hit the Norwich crossbar while, at the other end, an unmarked Grant Holt nodded wide.

Reading have now drawn six of their 10 top-flight games this season and, while they have struggled to hold onto leads, they did not even have the chance to do so in a game in which both chances and quality were at a premium. Reading manager Brian McDermott:
"We could have nicked it. I thought in the first half both teams looked nervous. I made a couple of changes to try to win the game [but] it is a clean sheet and gives us a good platform to try to build on. We didn't create enough chances for our strikers. We need to dig in at times like this and we will just try to catch the team in front of us and then the one in ahead of them."
BBC Sport

This Premier League game took place 4983 days ago in the 2012/2013 season.