Sunderland Echo

Johnson explains Sanderson confusion and reacts to his first victory

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Lee Johnson said Sunderland’s standards ‘have to be better’ after Dion Sanderson was withdrawn from the starting line-up less than an hour before the clash with Oldham Athletic.

Sanderson had been selected to make his first appearance under Johnson, before the Sunderland Head Coach was informed that he was cup-tied having featured for Wolves’ U21s earlier in the campaign.

Johnsonsai­dhewould‘take responsibi­lity’ and praised his team for their resilience in battling back to book their place in the last 16 of the Papa John’s Trophy.

Goals from Chris Maguire and Josh Scowen sealed Sunderland’s progressio­n despite an early goal from Bobby Grant.

"I take that on my chin," Johnson said of Sanderson’s late exclusion.

"I’m the one that selects the side. Yes, I’ve only been here a couple of days, but it’s my fault. What we’ve got to do is drive standards. Our organisati­onal standards need to be better.

"Our on-pitch performanc­e was better, there was more movementin­theboxandm­ore aggression and cohesion. Of course you’re playing a side of a slightly lower standard, but I thought they gave us a really good game. They hustled and worked our hard, but I think our class showed in the end."

Johnson had criticised his side’s attacking play in the disappoint­ing 1-0 defeat to Wigan Athletic on Saturday, and felt that there were signs of improvemen­t on show at Boundary Park.

“It’s probably because I said if you get 28 box entries in the final third, I’ll give you Christmas Day off, so there was a bit of a carrot there,” he said.

"We’ll have to see [whether we did]. It’s mentality really – we have to makesure that we’re aggressive. When I watched backthecro­sses from thegame on Saturday, I was almost embarrasse­d. Even though I’d only been there a couple of hours, it’s not what I want to see in terms of a personalit­y from my teams.

"Massive credit has to go to the lads – after one training session, we’ve managed to look dangerous from not looking dangerous at all.

"That was because there were aggressive runners to the front post, there was violence in the cross, and there were earlier crosses.

“I was pleased with them, evenwhenwe­wentagoald­own it could have been a bit sameold, same-old, but we started to create cleaner-cut chances and with a bit morecompos­ure we could have had three or four goals.”

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