Yorkshire Post

Wilder welcomes Farke to Lane with open arms

Experience proves key as Wednesday progress

- AT STADIUM OF LIGHT LEON WOBSCHALL

ON a night when a debutant born since Sheffield Wednesday last graced the Premier League laid bare just how long the club has been out of the big time, a quartet of more familiar faces stepped centre stage to seal a safe passage to the Carabao Cup second round.

Marco Matias, in his fifth season at Hillsborou­gh, and onetime record signing Adam Reach got the goals as the Owls saw off another club to have fallen on hard times in recent years.

The assists came from Steven Fletcher and Barry Bannan, as Jos Luhukay’s men booked a Carabao Cup second round tie at home to Wolverhamp­ton Wanderers.

It was a deserved victory, Reach probably the pick of several in blue and white who had a good night in the North East.

League One Sunderland battled hard and had their moments in a first half in which the visitors took a while to get going.

But, come the final whistle, there could be few complaints from the home fans at their side’s involvemen­t in the Cup being ended by a side featuring Alex Hunt, a teenager born 15 days after Wednesday last played in the top flight fixture.

He lasted only until half-time but the midfielder’s presence still shone a light on just how long the Owls have been out of the Premier League.

Just when Wednesday will have a chance of reclaiming that place at the top table of English football remains to be seen.

Two near misses have left the club with problems, a Football League transfer embargo meaning there have been no signings since last January.

There have been suggestion­s in recent days that this may soon be lifted but, even without any new additions, this is a squad that boasts plenty of strengths.

Playing out from the back, however, is not one of them and yet that was what the Owls tried to do time after time in the first half against their League One hosts.

It was a risky strategy, not least because Sunderland quickly caught on to the visiting defence’s vulnerabil­ity in possession and pressed the ball high up the pitch.

That Wednesday weren’t punished in those opening exchanges was down to the home side’s final ball being poor and their finishing even worse.

Elliot Embleton dragged a shot wide when well placed, while Luke O’Nien was far too slow when found unmarked on the edge of the Wednesday six-yard box with the goal gaping.

His hesitation allowed Joost van Aken to scramble back and divert the eventual shot behind for a corner.

Wednesday’s tendency to overplay at the back was made all the more nonsensica­l by how the opening goal came about.

Route one was the order of the day, Joe Wildsmith’s punt forward being flicked on by former Sunderland striker Fletcher.

Alim Ozturk was still the favourite to reach the ball as it landed in the home penalty area but Matias had other ideas by nipping in and rolling a shot past former Bradford City goalkeeper Jon McLaughlin.

Ozturk, who had a wretched night, was at it again 10 minutes after the restart with an attempted clearing header that merely went straight up in the air.

Matias quickly swooped to fire a shot that Jack Baldwin did very well to head off his own line.

Wednesday spurned another chance moments later when Reach’s first touch took him wide enough for McLaughlin to race from his line and block the shot.

Sunderland, like in the first half, had their moments after the restart.

George Honeyman fired high and wide for the hosts, while Josh Maja got himself in a tangle on the edge of the area when a shot was on.

But justice was done 11 minutes from time when Reach ghosted in to meet a Bannan cross with a flicked header to beat McLaughlin and kill off any hopes of a Black Cats comeback. SHEFFIELD UNITED manager Chris Wilder insists that there will be no lingering ill-feeling between himself and Norwich City counterpar­t Daniel Farke tomorrow.

In the correspond­ing fixture at Bramall Lane last season, the Blades chief was incensed by some of the gamesmansh­ip tactics employed by the visitors in their 1-0 win.

Wilder subsequent­ly claimed that Norwich showed a ‘lack of respect’ in a heated post-match tirade in which he was critical of the Canaries behaviour throughout the afternoon, which started with the late arrival of their team coach.

But the United manager, dismissed from the home technical area in a feisty second half, says that he has made his peace with Farke and envisages no fresh problems.

Wilder, sweating over the fitness of a handful of players feeling the effects of a virus, including Mark Duffy, said: “There is nothing personal between myself and their manager. We had a drink after and at their place too.

“I said things from my point of view that I believe were correct and how it works here. It was disappoint­ing that we were left waiting on the pitch and the referee has got an obligation to get their team out of the dressing room (at half-time) and not keep us standing about.

“There you go, you say it as it is and move on. There is no illfeeling or lingering situations about that, no problems between myself and their manager at all.”

Wilder says he has no option but to play a game of patience in his quest to land further loan signings following the arrival of midfielder Oliver Norwood.

He is keen on adding another striker and has been strongly linked with a move for Middlesbro­ugh winger Marvin Johnson and is not yet ruling out the prospect of things changing before the weekend.

Wilder added: “There are a couple of players we are looking to bring in that cannot come out of their clubs until they have found replacemen­ts. That is the top and bottom of it, it is a timing situation.

“Do I think we will get it done? Yes. I am hopeful we will get it done for the weekend.”

Meanwhile, Wilder says that he anticipate­s key midfielder Paul Coutts will be available for first-team selection again by ‘middle to late September’.

United are looking to arrange a behind-closed-doors game in the next week, with Coutts and summer signing Kean Bryan both pencilled in to feature.

 ??  ?? Adam Reach celebrates Sheffield Wednesday’s second goal, a glancing header from Barry Bannan’s cross, to secure a 2-0 win at Sunderland.
Adam Reach celebrates Sheffield Wednesday’s second goal, a glancing header from Barry Bannan’s cross, to secure a 2-0 win at Sunderland.
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