Sunderland Echo

Blades need ‘one big moment’ to spark recovery – Wilder

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Chris Wilder has urged his Sheffield United players to draw inspiratio­n from the team which beat the drop 30 years ago after a similarly terrible start to the season.

A 2-0 loss at Crystal Palace on Saturday meant the Blades have now set a new record for the longest winless run at the beginning of a Premier League campaign.

Bottom-of-the-table United have two points after 17 games, but Wilder has been in a similar situation before during the 1990-91 term.

Under the stewardshi­p of Dave Bassett, the newly-promoted Blades started life in the top flight with no victory from their first 16 fixtures, but once they got off the mark the shackles were off and they eventually finished in 13th position to stay up comfortabl­y.

On what his players need to do, Wilder said: “It has to come from within. It’s not going to come from outside, it’s got to come from players finding a big moment, a big half of football and finding a big result.

“The 17th game of that season 30 years ago it was similar. They were tight games and without looking at the record books I can’t imagine they were games where we were blasted out the water.

“There was a togetherne­ss which we’re seeing still to compete and do their best, but obviously it takes a hit with every game that goes by without that result. That group were tight, which they are now, and got that one win which set them off and it’s as basic as that.

“People are looking at everything from what the changing room’s like to the attitude, the selection, everything, and I get that. I understand criticism.

“It comes with one big moment, one big performanc­e, one big result as it did in that period 30 years ago which resulted in the team winning a few games in the second half of the season. That’s all we have to look for.”

This group will have to wait a little longer to end their barren run of form in the top flight, with the Blades in FA Cup action on Saturday away to Sky Bet League One outfit Bristol Rovers.

Wilder insisted nine players were unavailabl­e for the clash at Palace and while unsure if any will return next weekend, he discussed a positive from the defeat.

There was a debut late on for 16-year-old Antwoine Hackford, who became the club’s youngest player in the Premier League and almost scored when a close-range effort was blocked on the line by Joel Ward.

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