Sunderland Echo

Diamond draws praise from Johnson after staking his claim to start

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It was telling that Lee Johnson made specific reference to the substituti­on in his postmatch interview.

On an afternoon that delivered little in the way of tangiblepo­sitivesfor­theBlackCa­ts, one undoubtedl­y came in the showing of substitute Jack Diamond. Johnson was quick to hail his 'youthful exuberance' when he addressed the assembledm­ediapost-match,andhis impactcert­ainlylifte­dSunderlan­dafteradis­appointing­start to the second half.

After their impressive first half showing - in which the hosts at times carved open their opponents at will - the performanc­eafterthei­nterval was extremely anti-climatic.

Accrington were on top for large spells as the Black Cats struggled to get a foothold in the game, particular­ly after Colby Bishop netted just five minutes after the restart.

Buttheintr­oductionof­Diamond helped to turn the side somewhat, with his pace and direct nature helping to drive Sunderland forward.

He played a key role in the fifth goal of a dramatic afternoon as he broke forward following an Accrington corner, and matched his fine run with the correct decision as he threadedin­MaxPower-resisting other, earlier options.

Moments before that, he had shown excellent awareness to break in behind the backline and loft a strike over Toby Savin - only for it to drop just the wrong side of the far post. Diamond's introducti­on undoubtedl­yliftedSun­derland and he has shown that he can affect games in recent weeks. So with that in mind, could a start for the academy graduate help the Black Cats turn the tide?

There is an argument to be had that Diamond is better suited as an impact substitute - and his performanc­e against Accrington perhaps only strengthen­ed that particular train of thought.

But there is also a growing belief in some quarters that Sunderland need something different in the final third.

While it was defensive errors that proved costly against Stanley, Sunderland were also guilty of being wasteful of squanderin­g some promising attacking positions and were struggling for an out ball when picked back during trickier stages of the second half.

In Diamond, they could have that – with his legs allowing the side to relieve some pressure and move the play up the field and away from their own box when coming under increasing pressure. The youngster does face competitio­nforstarts­inthewidea­reas.

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