Showing posts with label Portsmouth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Portsmouth. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Distin agrees Everton deal

Everton have agreed a deal to sign defender Sylvain Distin from Portsmouth. Everton are armed with funds after selling Joleon Lescott to Manchester City for £22 million, and Distin will be effectively a like-for-like replacement. The fee involved has not been disclosed, but 31-year-old Distin has agreed a three-year contract and will sign - providing he passes his medical.

Everton chief executive Robert Elstone said: "After Sylvain made it clear his preferred destination was Goodison, the chairman [Bill Kenwright] moved quickly to finalise the deal - and Sylvain is now on his way to Merseyside to undergo a medical."

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Wigan 1-0 Portsmouth

Chairman Dave Whelan may have been a little premature in raising the possibility of redistributing some of the Premier League's millions to allow Wigan fans in for free next season - many more displays like this and the locals will be happy to pay more to watch Steve Bruce's effervescent team.

If ever a side were hammered by a single goal, then it was Portsmouth, who were outclassed by a sparkling display from the hosts, whose only failing was that they did not reward their dominance with a glut of goals as they finished in 11th place.
Hugo Rodallega.

Hugo Rodallega scored the only goal of the game as Wigan ensured a winning end to their season

Bruce said: 'It's a terrific finish if you consider the size of some of the clubs who've been relegated.'

The hosts settled for just the one goal, after 27 minutes, rolled into an empty net from two yards by Hugo Rodallega for his third goal of the season. Sol Campbell, making his final appearance before leaving Fratton Park, failed to cut out a low cross from Charles N'Zogbia.

Rodallega should have scored more, but was one of several Wigan players thwarted by Portsmouth keeper Asmir Begovic.

It proved a fruitless return for Wigan-born Portsmouth manager Paul Hart, his task already complete having kept the south coast club up. 'I've been asked where this ranks among my achievements as a manager,' he said. 'If you look at my c.v. there aren't that many achievements anyway.'

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Portsmouth 2 - 1 Everton

Leighton Baines fires Everton's opener at Pompey

Double joy for Crouch as Fratton goes frantic over relegation relief

Staying in the Premier League clearly matters more than dreams of the Champions League.

There is no other way to explain the limp Everton performance in the second half of this game which allowed Portsmouth to take charge and come from behind to earn a vital victory when Peter Crouch headed his second goal with 15 minutes remaining.

The visitors, beaten only by Manchester United in their previous 18 games, had seemed set fair for a win and a tilt at the top four when Leighton Baines scored a fourth-minute free-kick.

But a poor decision by referee Peter Walton to award Portsmouth a corner, almost the only favour he did the home team all afternoon, led to Crouch's equaliser midway through the first half and Paul Hart's team never looked back.

For all Everton's failings, this was a very impressive display by the home side, who would have slipped into the bottom three if they had lost.

Hart said: 'The players have proved how much desire they have to stay in this league. We were all over the place in the first five minutes, but credit to the lads, they got it together, steadied themselves and started to play.

'Everton's recent record shows the magnitude of our performance. I thought we were excellent.'

That was pushing it a bit, as was Hart's assertion that centre halves Sylvain Distin and Sol Campbell were 'magnificent'.

In truth, both looked a shadow of the players who anchored last season's FA Cup win and after a nervy first half were let off the hook by Jo and Louis Saha, whose performance must have had the visiting fans yearning for the weeks when they did not have any fit strikers.

Everton manager David Moyes rightly felt that his team failed to capitalise on the early lead given to them by Baines.

Distin was harshly judged to have fouled Saha on the edge of the area and Baines curled the free-kick not so much over the wall as past it, sending the ball in off David James's left-hand post.

Rise and shine: Peter Crouch (centre) rises highest to score the winning goal

The Portsmouth crowd, who had questioned Walton's ability to referee, had cause to soften their stance in the 22nd minute. He decided right back Glen Johnson's shot with his swinger of a left foot could only have gone so far wide with the aid of a deflection.

The initial corner was cleared but Niko Kranjcar clipped the ball back into the area, Johnson nodded it across goal and Crouch headed firmly into the corner of the net from close range.

'It wasn't a corner,' said Moyes. When it was suggested that you still have to defend set-pieces better, however they come about, the Everton boss agreed, but added: 'You don't have to if they are not given.'

It was an uncharacteristically meek response from the usually spiky Scot and his team's second-half display was just as insipid.

Moyes said: 'I always felt we were lacking that little bit of spirit and punch throughout the game.'

He was at a loss to explain why, but you suspect he had a little bit more to say to his players afterwards.

Portsmouth 2 Everton 1

Doing it for kicks: Hermann Hreidarsson and Joleon Lescott battle for the ball

Portsmouth, driven on by man-of-the-match Sean Davis, threatened to score only once, when Tim Howard saved from David Nugent, until Younes Kaboul forced a corner. Davis swung the ball to the back post and Crouch was there again to head home.

Davis later hit the post with a superb drive, but victory was never in doubt once Crouch claimed his third goal in two games and his 50th in the Premier League, a competition in which Portsmouth can now be much more confident of featuring next season.

PORTSMOUTH (4-4-1-1): James; Kaboul, Campbell, Distin, Hreidarsson; Johnson, Mullins, Davis, Nugent (Kanu 74min); Kranjcar; Crouch.
Subs (not used): Begovic, Pamarot, Utaka, Hughes, Basinas, Belhadj.
Booked: Hreidarsson, Kaboul.

EVERTON (4-1-3-2): Howard; Jacobsen (Gosling 86), Jagielka, Lescott, Baines; P Neville; Osman, Fellani, Pienaar; Saha, Jo (Rodwell 90).
Subs (not used): Nash, Castillo, Agard, Baxter, Wallace.
Booked: Osman.
Referee: P Walton (Northamptonshire).

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Middlesbrough 1 - 1 Portsmouth


As the old saying goes, it was a six-pointer at the Riverside this afternoon and unfortunately for both sides, the game ended in a draw.

Yes, both Middlesbrough and Portsmouth remain right, slap bang in the middle of a relegation dog fight after they drew 1-1 this afternoon. It's a three points which Gareth Southgate or Paul Hart could have really used right now, however both will have to be satisfied with a single point after the hosts came from a goal down to leave the visitors to contemplate what might have been.

Boro now face an uphill task to maintain their Premier League status with just nine games to go. They currently sit 19th in the league, two points behind Pompey in 17th and with difficult trips to Stoke City and Bolton coming up next, it would take a brave man to predict Boro will survive.

Meanwhile, Pompey also have a massive fight on their hands to stay up this season, with the south coast club only evading the relegation zone on goal difference. They, too have a difficult fixtures coming up with the likes of Everton and Arsenal still to visit Fratton Park in the run-in.

 
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