Sunderland Echo

ROSS HAS FOUND RIGHT BALANCE

ALL THE EVIDENCE POINTS TO SUNDERLAND HAVING SUSSED OUT EXACTLY WHAT’S NEEDED IN LEAGUE ONE

- By Phil Smith at the Stadium of Light @Phil__Smith

SUNDERLAND 3 SOUTHEND UTD 0

In any successful season, the path is marked by moments that turned in your favour.

Sunderland’s has already had plenty.

From Lynden Gooch’s breathtaki­ng opening day winner to Jon McLaughlin’s penalty heroics at Bradford.

Sunderland’s one and only defeat so far, however, might be the most significan­t of them all.

The Black Cats were shown up at Burton Albion, inferior technicall­y but also mentally and physically.

Much soul-searching followed, both in the dressing room and the week that followed.

Since then, they are unbeaten in seven and have won five on the spin.

It has been a run characteri­sed by resilience, individual quality and clever management of resources.

All of that was on show in a 3-0 win over Southend United that wasnowhere near as comfortabl­e as the scoreline suggests, yet never really seemed in significan­t doubt.

At the Pirelli Stadium, Jack Ross went for an attacking selection that badly misfired. Since then, he has found a better balance in his side, one that has been unaffected by the occasional, inevitable minor changes of personnel. Jerome Sinclair did not play the Rochdale game that followed the Burton defeat but has been ever-present since and his important cannot be understate­d. Capable of battling with centre-backs, his unselfish willingnes­s to make runs off the shoulder and into the channel has been vital for his manager, who bemoaned his team’s inability to stretch the game at Burton and in games previous.

Sinclair’s endeavour has not quite been rewarded with goals yet but the team is stronger for that outlet in pressurise­d moments.

In defence, Ross is finally able to establish real continuity in selection and it is no coincidenc­e that he has named the same defence in all five games of the winning streak.

That quartet has now delivered three clean sheets in a row.

In front of them, Dylan McGeouch is providing intelligen­t cover and behind Jon McLaughlin has taken his form from very good to simply outstandin­g.

The upshot is that Sunderland are able to cope better with the demands of League One opposition, both at home and away.

Earlier in the season a team like Southend might have pushed them very close for a result.

Like Oxford and Fleetwood, they came not to sit back and ride their luck but to be pro-active and positive. They created numerous overloads on wide areas and moved the ball well between the lines.

That makes them a threat and Sunderland’s improving balance and experience of the third tier is enabling them to handle it.

Their quality in the final third means they can pounce when their opponents err, as they did for the first tw goals as slack Southend passes became Sunderland goals within seconds.

Ross himself continues to impress with his decision making.

Yes, it is a major luxury to go two-nil up on the vast Stadium of Light turf, in front of 30,000 jubilant fans, and be able to bring on players with the quality of Aiden McGeady and Josh Maja.

But it was also brave and clever to sense the opportunit­y to truly kill the game off, sacrificin­g McGeouch knowing that McGeady could capitalise on the extra space as Siuthend pushed for a winner.

Maja, meanwhile, looked at his sharpest for weeks as he battles back from a niggling ankle problem.

Sunderland are strong and can get even stronger still. Their impressive run is no fluke and show no signs of grinding to a halt.

 ??  ?? Lee Cattermole makes a strong challenge. Pictures by Frank Reid.
Lee Cattermole makes a strong challenge. Pictures by Frank Reid.
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