Sunderland Echo

1 things we learned from cup exit: Honeyman can be trusted but Borini fluffs lines 2

- By Phil Smith philip.smith@jpress.co.uk @Phil__Smith

George Honeyman in action midfielder on the verge of a red card throughout the second half. It was also, however, recognitio­n that Sunderland’s new look never looked beating Nick Pope goal. Fabio Borini got a big chance to play through the middle and while he was industriou­s and pressed on occasions, it was all too for the Burnley in the last week or so. either through slack short passes or aimless balls lumped forward under pressure.

Mannone and the Sunderland defence struggled with their distributi­on but in mitigation, there was no one high up the field who could be relied on to compete in the air. Moyes has taken his fair share of flak for not throwing them in and while this selection again largely favoured experience, he did give George Honeyman a chance to impress in the middle of the park. The end result was solid if not spectacula­r. Honeyman started brightly, looking composed on the ball and keeping it as simple as possible with quick, precise passes. He had his part in Sunderland’s best move of the first half, playing a smart 1-2 with Patrick van Aanholt. Fabio Borini just couldn’t quite get the shot away after gathering the cross. Honeyman’s influence faded as the game went on, even if he continued to bustle from box-to-box. Showed he can be trusted but didn’t inject any major quality. Vito Sunderland fell to a 2-0 defeat in the FA Cup third round replay at Turf Moor. Sam Vokes and Andre Gray were on target for the hosts, the Black Cats struggling to offer much threat in attack. There was a new system for Sunderland and some youth blooded, so here’s a snap summary… front-line like in New system, same deficienci­es: Moyes changed the system but the lack of an excellent ball-player in midfield or a target man up front remained clear. Larsson moved the ball as well as anyone in the team, the Black Cats looking best when he took control of possession. again, however, the ball was gifted back to Burnley repeatedly easy defence. Sunderland never looked like scoring.

Borini returned to the midfield when Defoe arrived and is unlikely to move into the middle for the trip to West Brom. Fabio Borini:

Moyes inevitably and understand­ably didn’t risk Jermain Defoe from the start, but he was on the pitch by the hour mark. Part of that was in order to take Donald Love out of the action; the stand-in Seb George Honeyman: Debate has been lively, to say the least, regarding Sunderland’s youngsters Yet

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