Sunderland Echo

Black Cats slump to another woeful defeat to the Owls

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

A week is a long time in the world of Sunderland AFC.

Then it was pride and joy, opponents from a higher division beaten on penalties and more than matched through the ninety minutes.

And sure, the reaction was tempered. The league is the absolute and ultimate focus, these uplifting nights an added bonus in the bigger picture.

Even in the immediate afterglow, some injury concerns and the potential impact of that on league fixtures ahead ensured celebratio­ns were measured.

It would have felt a stretch all the same to imagine the shock and the concern just seven nights down the line.

Sunderland had vowed a response to that dismal afternoon at Rotherham and yet here we were again.

Forty minutes to play, and the game all but over as a contest. That utterly numbing feeling of going through the motions, the opposition comfortabl­e. Sunderland have a problem, and they know it.

Sheffield Wednesday are not known as one of the more aggressive sides in this division; far from it. By and large Darren Moore's style is to play, to build from the back as Sunderland do.

Unsurprisi­ngly, though, he had seen what we all had seen.

Florian Kamberi was introduced to the side to add a second physical presence up front and once again, the Black Cats were found wanting.

Lee Johnson said his Sunderland side were better here than they had been at the New York Stadium, and to an extent that was true.

Particular­ly through the first half, the energy levels were better and in terms of significan­tchances, there was not a great deal between the sides.

What Johnson also accepteden­tirely was that counted for little when his team defended their box, once again, so poorly.

The first goal was poor, failing to deal with a long ball and failing to track a simple forward run from the left wingback.

The second was even worse, particular­ly as it came in a spell when the home support were just beginning to get a bit restless, feeling that their side were sitting in at the major risk of throwing away that early advantage.

A long punt into the channel from the goalkeeper, again not dealt with. The wing back again not tracked on the opposite side, and two chances to deal with the cross missed entirely. There is no getting past the fact that on a foundation like this, Sunderland's automatic promotion push will get nowhere.

It had been something of a gamble from Johnson not to stick with the same back five who had struggled so alarmingly at Rotherham, particular­ly as the head coach himself had conceded that down his left flank inexperien­ce had been exposed.

At full back it should be said that his options have been limited severely by injury, but at the heart of defence the option was there to rotate.

Further forward the changes to add more energy and physicalit­y in the wide areas were understand­able, but the desired impact did not materialis­e. For much of the game it felt like Sunderland were again lacking balance.

Too easily exposed defensivel­y, and not incisive enough in possession.

The absence of players like Alex Pr it char dan dE lliotEmb let on was glaring. There were times when Sunderland played into relatively encouragin­g areas, but for the most part their creativity around the edge of the box was absent.

It was to Ross Stewart's credit that he was again Sunderland's most influentia­l player, but it spoke volumes that so often he was having to drop so deep in an attempt to build spells of possession in advanced areas.

Confidence has ebbed away, quickly and dramatical­ly.

Lincoln's request to postpone the upcoming fixture means that Sunderland are now facing a long wait until their next league fixture, one in which cup wins will only go a small way to arresting some of the growing concern.

After the game Johnson called for faith, noting that with so many young players in the side it was never going to be a linear path to success.

This is a point he is more than justified to make, and worth rememberin­g in the wider debate over where Sunderland go next.

The shift to a new style of play and a new recruitmen­t philosophy is no this alone and far from it. That has been decided by the hierarchy, Johnson recruited to implement it.

Johnson is now facing his biggest test on Wearside, to quickly rebuild confidence and to find that elusive balance between developmen­t and resolve in games.

Though some elements of the performanc­es may have improved, this still looked a game too far for some players in the side who had been surprising­ly retained.

The Sunderland boss was under no illusions that by the time Ipswich Town visit the Stadium of Light for what will be another challengin­g fixture, signs of clear improvemen­t will be expected and demanded.

Johnson had clearly been stung by some of the gallows humour in the away end in the closing stages, and here there is an obvious gap between the journey of the new regime and the journey of the loyal support.

For the former, these are the first steps of along process.

For the latter, this is the fourth draining season of a spell in footballin­g purgatory. You can understand the concern when, for example, debatesove­r being too vulnerable to the flat, direct ball dominated discussion­s in the 2018/19 season.

Johnson insists the goal remainstop place and that he believes this squad can do it.

After a punishing few days on the road, supporters have been left needing quick reassuranc­e that the plan remains on track.

 ?? ?? Sunderland midfielder Luke O’Nien is fouled.
Sunderland midfielder Luke O’Nien is fouled.
 ?? ?? Sunderland’s Aiden O’Brien is closed down.
Sunderland’s Aiden O’Brien is closed down.

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