Wycombe were too physical

Posted on 24 October 2010

Wycombe were too physical.” Having given Saha a bloody nose, they set about doing the same, metaphorically, to his team and had as many ­ or as few ­ chances in a dull first half. Jermaine McSporran, whose pace had been compared by Fulham’s Steve Finnan to Thierry Henry’s, demonstrated it on a couple of occasions early on but did not have the finish to match when the best opportunity materialised; errors by Sean Davis and Zat Knight, both diverting the ball back towards their own goal, let the former Arsenal trialist in to drag a disappointing shot wide of Maik Taylor’s goal. The goalkeeper’s near-namesake at the other end, Martin Taylor, was barely troubled as Wycombe defended with vigour. Cousins and two team-mates were booked by half-time ­ as well as Fulham’s Rufus Brevett for a dive that added to the bad feeling ­ and by the interval the home side had not managed a shot on target. “When you come to a Premiership ground, the idea is to nullify the opposition,” said Sanchez’s assistant, Terry Gibson. His side achieved that until after half-time, though it did nothing for the tie’s entertainment value.

There was some work to do at last for the goalkeepers soon after the break, the two Taylors having to save low down from Stuart Roberts, a Wycombe substitute, and Steed Malbranque respectively. The hard-working Malbranque, the most forward point of Fulham’s midfield diamond, volleyed wide after having his first effort blocked and Marlet was given offside as he turned Knight’s mis-hit shot over the line. The tide was slowly turning and in the 69th minute it brought a goal. Steve Brown dwelled on the ball, allowed the industrious Malbranque to dispossess him and feed Hayles, who shimmied this way and that before hitting a fine low shot just inside a post.Six minutes later Wycombe’s hopes diminished further with an unarguable second yellow card for Cousins, who again crashed into the back of Hayles, and it took three fine saves from Wycombe’s Taylor to prevent further damage.

Fulham will now provide a welcome pay-day for the impoverished York City at Bootham Crescent in the fourth round.Wycombe’s consolation, apart from being able to hold their heads up in front of their noisy supporters at the Putney End in a poor crowd of less than 12,000, is that they have not lost anything like as much ground in the league as last season, when they began a famous run in sixth position and finished it 20th, fighting relegation. Fulham (4-1-3-2): Maik Taylor; Finnan, Melville, Goma, Brevett; Knight (Stolcers, 67); Davis, Malbranque, Boa Morte; Hayles, Saha (Marlet, 20). Substitutes not used: Hahnemann (gk), Betsy, Trollope.Wycombe Wanderers (4-3-1-2): Mark Taylor; Carroll (Roberts, 43) Rogers, Cousins, Vinnicombe; Bulman, Simpson, Brown (Lee, 70); Currie; McSporran (Devine, 80), Rogers. Substitutes not used: Osborn (gk), Johnson.Referee: G Barber (Tring).* A High Court judgment is expected tomorrow on whether Fulham can go ahead with the redevelopment of Craven Cottage next season without the full public inquiry being demanded by local residents.. Mark Robins was acquainted with FA Cup glamour early in his career when, as a goal-poaching 20-year-old, he hammered home the extra-time replay winner which sent Manchester United through to the FA Cup final in 1990.

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