Sunderland Echo

Fine display lifts Cats’ mood & gives Johnson a headache

- Phil Smith philip.smith@jpimedia.co.uk @Phil__Smith

PLYMOUTH ARGYLE 1 SUNDERLAND 3

There were signs of what was to come in the opening 15 minutes.

Occasions where Jordan Jones and Jack Diamond found space, pushing Plymouth Argyle back towards their own goal.

All the same, there was some sluggishne­ss in other areas of their performanc­e and with Charlie Wyke and Aiden McGeady both missing through injury, recent form left you inevitably wondering whether it could prove to be another one of those afternoons.

There was certainly concern in the dugout.

Just minutes after Johnsonhad urged his side to' get on the ball, get going', his midfield was again caught in possession near their own box.

The response was apoplectic, Jamie McAllister joining in for good measure. Switch on, Sunderland were told (amongst other things).

That Johnson stood pitch side and looked ahead to a play off campaign with genuine relish told you that he would go on to get exactly the kind of response he was looking for.

Always taking his cue from performanc­e rather than result, the head coach justifiabl­y reflected on a job very well done.

Sunderland were led by Lynden Gooch, who broke the game open with a quite superb pass to spring Ross Stewart free. Stewart took his goal well and made that kind of dangerous run time and time again.

Gooch's versatilit­y has long been an asset for Sunderland but the downside for the talented 25-year-old is that it is severely limited his opportunit­ies in this position, the one that he would say is his favourite.He took his chance and then some here. He pressed well, spun away from his marker with regularity, and combined neatly with Stewart on the occasions where the 24-year-old played with back to goal.

With Jack Diamond and

Jordan Jones carrying the ball from deep, Sunderland had the kind of counter-attacking threat that has too often been absent in their recent winless run.

Johnson will have been pleased, too, that the response to Plymouth's equaliser was strong. It was a soft goal to give up, Johnson firm in saying afterwards that his side simply have to snuff out this kind of weak defending.

A red card to Jerome O po ku moments after that equaliser helped their cause, without a doubt, but it' s also worth noting that the sheer weight of fouls Sunderland's powerful running drew meant that it was much down to their threat as it was poor decision making on

Plymouth's part.

Gooch moved out to the right and surged back into the contest, while Chris Maguire produced an intelligen­t cameo as he picked up good positions in central areas.

Plymouth played into Sunderland's hands on so many occasions, trying to beat the aggressive press by playing out from the back in dangerous areas.

Off the ball, their high line was perfect for Stewart, who revelled in having more space than he has probably every enjoyed in a red-and-white shirt to date. It was this kind of game that Johnson's side perhaps needed all the same.

In recent weeks he has talked often of playing with more personalit­y, urging his side to have a swagger. In his front four at Home Park he certainly had that, even if a touch more composure in the final ball would have produced an even more emphatic result.

That personalit­y was also brought by Maguire in abundance.

This was a timely nod to Johnson ahead of the play-off campaign, and the head coach was tellingly effusive in his praise for the attacking midfielder as he reflected on the game.

Johnson has always insisted that there are no issues between the two, and in fairness that has been reflected in some important tasks he has been handed along the way.

A start in the Papa John's Trophy final here was one, and this was another, Sunderland's top-six place still not secure when he entered the fray.

Johnson has been looking to the future, for Maguire' s sake as much as the club's, but this underlined why he is always likely to have a part to play.

Though Plymouth's goal clearly rankled, the return of Conor McLaughlin added another reason for the head coach's bullish mood.

To get 45 minutes under his belt at this stage is an unexpected bonus, increasing his chances of being near match fitness when the play-offs roll around. In Bailey Wright, Johnsonals­o felt he is getting back to seeing the defender 'he knows and loves so well'.

Most significan­t, though, was that Sunderland stopped the rot and put themselves in the play-off picture on their own terms.

April was a wretched month, the latter half a painful form of purgatory as Wearside licked its wounds from another failed tilt at the top two.

Johnson knows a strong finish can allow him to effectivel­y reset the campaign, to lend weight to his enthusiasm and positive messaging.

He will hope that Sunderland have drawn a line in the sand here, handing him with a number of welcome headaches as he bids to ensure his team go into the play-offs with conviction.

 ??  ?? Sunderland captain Max Power fires in a cross.
Sunderland captain Max Power fires in a cross.

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