Portsmouth News

Marquis backed to respond after Crewe horror show

Blues’ leading scorer sees second-half penalty saved during nightmare return from suspension. JORDAN CROSS reports...

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JOHN MARQUIS’ name on the team-sheet was championed as Pompey went in search of the winning away formula which will likely decide their play-off fate this season.

Yet, it was the Blues’ top scorer’s returning presence which ultimately had the deciding factor in the failure of Danny Cowley’s side to gain three precious League One points at Gresty Road.

Marquis’ botched second-half penalty was the difference between a draw and a fifth win from six games for the new management team, in an often disjointed showing against opposition reeling from their biggest defeat in nearly half a century.

That came moments after the Blues’ chief poacher wasted the kind of gift-wrapped opportunit­y which should be his stock in trade, to ensure it finished goalless against the Railwaymen.

With the encounter the first of a triple header on the road for Pompey and one of the five remaining games away from Fratton Park, it’s away form which is set to prove decisive to top-six ambitions.

Yet, Pompey lacked the fluency and cohesion required to snaffle a win to cement that position.

And it was their failure to do more to test their foe’s brittle confidence after taking a 6-0 hammering at the hands of Oxford United which frustrated.

Ultimately, though, it’s periods of play like the one Marquis went through after the break which can often be rued when margins are so fine between success and failure.

Let’s hope that’s not the case for Pompey in the final reckoning.

The sight of Marquis joining his team-mates before the game was one to enthuse on social media, as one of two Pompey changes. The other saw Charlie Daniels replace the injured Lee Brown at left-back.

The fallout from Crewe’s biggest defeat since 1973 saw boss David Artell make six changes as they looked to improve inconsiste­nt form.

Pompey came out of the blocks with purpose, producing two chances of note in the opening minutes.

First, Marcus Harness headed wide when picked out by Ronan Curtis’ inviting cross from the left in the sixth minute. Then it was Luke Offord who frustrated as Harness advanced down the left and crossed with Ryan Williams poised to apply the final touch, before the Crewe defender intervened.

The offside flag was eventually raised after Sean Raggett had drifted free of the Crewe defence and planted a free header wide from Daniels’ in-swinging free-kick from the left. The home side’s response was for Tom Lowery to drift a header wide from Antony Evans’ ball in, but the general pattern establishe­d in the Cowleys’ reign of Pompey commanding possession remained at Gresty Road.

Crewe were forced into a change after 30 minutes when Rio Adebisi was unable to continue after taking an earlier kick in the head from Curtis. He was replaced by Donervon Daniels.

After the impetus of the opening games of the Cowleys’ stewardshi­p, this was once again failing to maintain those levels set after the weekend Burton reverse.

Pompey ended the half with some greater fluency in the final third, but there was little cohesion to the stoppage-time scramble which proved their most presentabl­e opportunit­y of the opening stanza.

Raggett made a connection from Daniels’ corner with Jack Whatmough halted from applying the final touch at the back post, before Tom Naylor couldn’t do better from the ensuing melee.

Marquis’ angled drive was dealt with by Will Jaaskelain­en, continuing the late flurry of activity which failed to distract from a fragmented game of football.

Crewe’s Daniels almost gifted Marquis the kind of sight of goal he usually relishes seven minutes after the restart as his clearance from Harness cannoned across the box, but the striker couldn’t react in time.

Naylor then breathed a sigh of relief as he gifted Chris Porter possession but Owen Dale could only fire at Blues keeper Craig MacGillivr­ay.

Then came the two minutes Marquis will want to quickly forget.

First the striker should have done much better with a free header from Williams’ cross when front and centre of goal, but instead simply headed into Jaaskelain­en’s accepting arms.

STAR MAN Jack Whatmough

Closing in on his most imperious form Then things got much worse. Curtis’ driving run was upended illegally by the Crewe keeper, but Pompey’s top scorer produced a meek effort which Jaaskelain­en easily kept out to his left.

The visitors huffed and puffed from there but it was largely bluster, with Lowery and Porter having the game’s most presentabl­e late chances.

John Westwood’s bell-ringing present was enough to attract the attention of the Cheshire Constabula­ry through the dying embers of a game which will quickly be consigned to memory.

It failed to distract, however, from a missed opportunit­y in the spring east Cheshire sunshine.

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Pompey protest to referee Darren Drysdale
DIFFERENCE OF OPINION Pompey protest to referee Darren Drysdale
 ??  ?? PAYING THE PENALTY Pompey
PAYING THE PENALTY Pompey

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