Hayes & Harlington Gazette

Warburton’s game plan puts Rangers on front foot

- By PA SPORT STAFF

QUEENS Park Rangers manager Mark Warburton was delighted with ‘an excellent team performanc­e’ in the Hoops’ 2-0 win at Bristol City on Saturday, and reckoned the game could have been won by a wider margin.

Rangers were two up inside 22 minutes and never looked like surrenderi­ng the advantage against opponents who created little.

llias Chair escaped the attentions of Adrian Mariappa to head home Todd Kane’s 11th-minute cross. Then more questionab­le defending allowed Rob Dickie to fire in after Yoann Barbet’s shot had come back off a post.

Warburton said: “We were aware of the quality in Bristol City’s ranks. I wanted our two number 10s, Chair and Chris Willock, to get forward and make sure Charlie Austin was not isolated. They did a great job in that respect and after a sloppy opening five minutes when we could have conceded, it was an excellent team performanc­e.

“There are such fine lines between success and failure in the Championsh­ip, which is what makes it so exciting and why we all love it.

“We played really well at home to Bristol City this season and lost the game 2-1. But today we got what we deserved because we were good all over the park.

“It was our intention to get in a lot of early crosses and Chair has got on the end of one to put us in front. Dickie is a very talented player. He relished his battle with Famara Diedhiou and came up with the second goal.

“All our back line played well and we could have been 4-0 up at half time against a very good team.

“Sometimes we didn’t get the final pass right, which is something to work on, but overall I was very happy with the way we played.”

City’s Nahki Wells wasted a great opportunit­y to reduce the arrears when firing wildly over after 68 minutes, and to add to boss Nigel Pearson’s woes, the Robins lost Adam Nagy and Zak Vyner to head injuries, sustained in separate incidents during the first half. They are added to an already lengthy injury list.

Pearson, who brushed aside congratula­tions on reaching 500 games as a manager, said: “It wasn’t the way I wanted to mark my 500th game. I judge our performanc­es against what we can produce rather than how the opposition play.

“Since I arrived there have been three good displays, two of which brought wins, but today we slipped below the standards we set.

“We allowed Rangers to score their goals without having to work hard for them, which is not what we want. And we were too passive in the first half.

“Having to rejig the team so early on made the game more of a challenge, but that’s football. It’s important that when we cannot dominate games our collective work ethic and positive mentality gets us through. That wasn’t the case today.

“The second half performanc­e was honest and we had chances, but overall we allowed the game to somewhat pass us by.

“I am not going to blame injuries because the players selected have shown they are capable of playing a lot better.

“We now have a free week before our next game and I must use it to improve certain areas, while hoping some of our injured players become available. The players know how I feel about the game. We have discussed it – put it like that.”

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