Western Mail

Time for Swans to stop talking and start winning, says Fulton

- Andrew Gwilym Football writer andrew.gwilym@walesonlin­e.co.uk

SWANSEA City players are facing up to the daunting prospect of needing ‘two or three wins’ to save themselves from Premier League relegation.

That was the frank verdict from the dressing room after Paul Clement’s side lost 1-0 at Watford on Saturday, a result that saw their winless run extend to six games.

The Swans now have just five games to save themselves from their current plight, which sees them still in the drop zonem two points adrift of 17th-placed Hull.

Etienne Capoue’s first-half goal at Vicarage Road, following an Alfie Mawson error, was enough to give the Hornets the spoils, but it could have been a whole lot worse but for Hull also going down at Stoke on Saturday.

Mark Hughes’ Potters are the visitors to the Liberty Stadium next weekend, with midfielder Jay Fulton insisting the Swans still believe they can escape.

But Fulton also acknowledg­ed that actions will speak louder than words during the frantic last few weeks of the season.

“It is another missed opportunit­y, it could have looked much better with a result here,” he said.

“It is going to take a big push, morale is not low, but everyone needs to stick together.

“They are all big games and now we simply have to start getting points. We are going to need two or three wins at least.

“With so few games we cannot keep standing here saying we believe and we can get the results, we have got to start backing that up with results.”

Mawson cut a dejected figure at the full-time whistle, standing hands on hips and looking to the heavens as the full enormity of his error sank in.

But Fulton says the 23-year-old is a strong enough character to recover and get back on track back on home turf.

And, while Swansea’s away form has been poor, they have won three and drawn one of their last four at home.

“He is gutted, but it is one of those things. You have seen how well he has been playing,” said Fulton.

“He has to move on from it and be stronger. He is a strong character, one of the loudest in the team, and he will bounce back.”

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AS the final whistle sounded Lukasz Fabianski took a few strides to his right – with Watford fans celebratin­g around him – dropped to his haunches and knelt with his back against the goalpost. head down, disconsola­te.

Alfie Mawson stared to the sky, probably desperatel­y wishing he could have the moment again where he would get rid of the ball rather than gifting it to Etienne Capoue for Watford’s winner.

Elsewhere, heads were down, a couple of players had dropped to their knees and had to be picked up by their opponents.

It made for grim viewing, and those feelings would have surely been felt every bit as deeply, if not more so, by the travelling contingent at Vicarage Road.

Six away defeats in a row, 16 away games without a clean sheet, two points from safety, five games left. At the moment the situation is every bit as bleak as those statistics suggest.

The players will return to training this week, they will build for the home game against Stoke.

We will also hear words about belief, words about hope and words about confidence. They don’t matter.

All that matters between now and the end of the season are results. Those words will only carry meaning if they are embodied by those who pull on a white shirt and cross the white line to try and keep Swansea City in the Premier League.

The impression one gets at the moment is that for all those words, and you can only assume those saying them sincerely hold that view, belief, confidence and hope are not currently evident in Swansea’s play.

They were in the early days of Clement’s reign, a period which saw Swansea’s best spell of form by some distance. There were five wins from eight, it already feels a very long time ago.

Yet, as strange as it would seem to say it, these players can still end this season as heroes.

Just as the side who escaped the drop against Hull in 2003 will always have their place in Swansea folklore and the eternal gratitude of the club and its supporters, so this side can allow the clearly required rebuilding process to take place in the top flight and not the Championsh­ip.

Do that, and for all the struggles and wretched peformance­s we have seen, there would still be a gratitude for having done what is needed to keep Swansea in the top-flight.

The brutal reality is that there are a number of players among this squad who will not be here next season. But they are in control of the club’s destiny and the coming weeks will come to define how they are remembered by the Jack Army.

You would hope that matters to them, because it should.

Swansea are on their third fulltime manager of the season. They all had or have their strengths and weaknesses, as any boss does, but the constant has been the players.

They are the ones whose actions matter most, they are the only ones who can make tackles, score goals, commit errors. It’s on them and they have to make their words count.

In recent weeks there has been a vibe of a team who are waiting for something to happen, rather than looking to make something happen.

It was on display again at Vicarage Road. Slow, laborious build-up play, uncertaint­y, a refusal to take the risk to play the throughbal­l that was on.

The lack of conviction as cross after cross was under hit or overhit, a centre-forward who the stats show sprinted less than 20 metres during 81 minutes on the pitch. There will be people reading this who accomplish­ed more than that running for the bus to work this morning.

That would not be good enough if Swansea were sitting in mid-table, it certainly isn’t now.

Premier League football has given a lot to Swansea as a club and an area. The local economy has been boosted, hotels, restaurant­s and bars have benefited from the larger numbers of travelling fans and the increased exposure the city has gained from having a team in the biggest domestic league in the world.

All these things and more are at stake in the coming weeks.

There are, of course, wider issues that have put Swansea where they are and they go back to beyond the time Garry Monk was in charge. The issues of poor recruitmen­t, the regular sale of the best players and other off-field factors all have contribute­d to this situation.

Indeed, the start of the on-field decline came the last time Swansea had been at Vicarage Road, in September 2015. They lost 1-0 that day,

 ??  ?? > Lukasz Fabianski shows the pain of defeat at Watford
> Lukasz Fabianski shows the pain of defeat at Watford

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