Hayes & Harlington Gazette

Rangers win but boss hits out at defending

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QPR manager Mark Warburton has warned his side they must improve defensivel­y if they are to sustain a promotion challenge.

They beat Preston 3-2 at the Kiyan Prince Foundation Stadium, where Ilias Chair was a key man for them once again.

Chair scored the winner three minutes after his free-kick had led to Jimmy Dunne equalising.

However, Rangers’ ongoing tendency to concede soft goals against the run of play was evident again.

They were in control after Lyndon Dykes’ opener but Emil Riis Jakobsen got away from Dunne and capitalise­d on goalkeeper Seny Dieng’s hesitation to equalise. Josh Earl’s goal in the first minute of the second half meant Rangers, who go into the internatio­nal break with 18 points, had to come from behind.

“The negatives are two awful goals given away,” Warburton admitted. “It was an individual error for the first and then straight after half-time not tracking a runner – poor basic defending.

“You can’t give two goals away. That’s an honest fact. You can’t keep scoring three goals.

“We know we’re going to be on the front foot and create chances, but we have to be better defensivel­y.

“We’re a dangerous team going forward but we need to be solid and compact behind the ball. When we do that we look very good.

“But it’s a good three points and important. That’s the bread and butter of the Championsh­ip – those type of games are easily drawn and easily lost.

“They are the scrappy games you have to win, but we have to recognise that defensivel­y we have to be better. We’ve got to cut out the basic errors.

“We’re in a good place but we know we’ve let ourselves down in terms of not getting the results from the performanc­es they’ve delivered. We should be sitting with 22 or 23 points.”

Chair, who wears the number 10 shirt previously worn by club legends Rodney Marsh and Stan Bowles and more recently Ebere Eze, continues to impress.

Warburton said: “He wanted that shirt. We talked about it and he knows the weight of expectatio­n that comes with it.

“He’s a talented player and, a bit like Ebere, the system suits him as he gets a lot of the ball.

“He’s got a big career ahead of him but knows he needs to keep working hard.”

Preston manager Frankie McAvoy was also unhappy with his team’s defending.

“I’m disappoint­ed with the outcome. I felt we were comfortabl­e at 2-1,” he said.

“I felt it wasn’t a free-kick which leads to their second goal, but we’ve got to defend it a bit better.

“The third goal, again we’ve got to defend better.

“We wanted to try to win the game. We felt that if chances arose our way we were good enough to take them.

“It’s just disappoint­ing because, where we’ve been defensivel­y solid in terms of set-pieces going into our box, we conceded from one and should defend it better.

“You always know that QPR will be a threat, but I felt that if we could keep it at 2-1 we would get a third goal.

“At 3-2 we wanted to keep pushing to try and get a third goal and get back into it. I’m disappoint­ed to be sitting here with nothing. I don’t think we deserve that.”

 ?? STEVEN PASTON/PA ?? Lyndon Dykes (left) celebrates scoring QPR’s first goal
STEVEN PASTON/PA Lyndon Dykes (left) celebrates scoring QPR’s first goal

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