


Saturday 10th March 2018 - 15:00
Portman Road

Pre Match Thoughts - Mike
Just like a nagging toothache this Ipswich Town team just will not go away, following another win on the road, this time at Sheffield Wednesday we still find ourselves very much on the cusp of the play off battle. To read all the opinions etc on social media sites you would think we are about to go down to League One, of course we all know our problems go much further than our current league position but it really is a bizarre situation we find ourselves in, so many things seem to be wrong and yet here we are on a pretty decent run of form, Two defeats in Nine is not too bad at all and those Two reversals were against Wolves & Cardiff who currently occupy the top Two places in the division so again it is hardly a disaster to lose to those sides, we are now unbeaten in our last Five away games, you have to go back to Fulham on the 2nd January to find our last defeat away from home (Thanks Jordan Spence).
The win at Hillsborough was deserved if not dominant, why oh why do we not have belief in ourselves to go with a much more attacking line up ? Of course there would be no guarantees of victory if we did so but Mick would have far more fans behind him than against him, we are told it is the football that matters and which is the issue although the cynic in me wonders what the mood would have been like Wednesday morning had we put in a Barcelona-esque performance and got beat ? I actually know the answer, as Mach said to me as we left Hillsborough Tuesday evening, it is ALL about the result and our celebrations at the final whistle backed that up, I don't buy this "we want pretty football" rather than a result one bit, of course it helps with the mindset of fans but they have short memories and when the wins are flowing the ill feeling subsides a bit. I made this point elsewhere, if by some miracle we did creep into the play offs the Leg at PR would see at the very least 20,000 fans attending the game, it does make me sick if I am honest as they would all come crawling back for a possible piece of glory, I accept that is the nature of the beast but it riles me so much.
The positives from Hillsborough were the return to goalscoring form of Martyn Waghorn, his brace sealed the win and his strike from the Freekick was nothing short of sublime, the back Three again stood firm for the most part and a good understanding is developing, that is now Nine games in a row where we have not conceded more than a solitary goal, the cameos from Grant Ward & Freddie Sears showed a marked improvement on so many of their respective performances this campaign and changed the game, although at the time it didn't feel that way. So there are definitely positives to take form the win even if it was bang average at best and at times of poor quality, especially the opening Twenty minutes, I actually remarked to someone stood near me that we seemed to have invented "Zonal Hoofing" such was the crap we witnessed in the opening Quarter of the game as our hoofing just kept going back to the same damn spot time after time.
We now have Two very important Home games in the space of Four days, Hull visit on Tuesday in the re-arranged fixture from last week but first up it is the other Sheffield side, this time United come to town, must be honest I can't stand them at all, horrible club and not particularly nice fans either. It's quite amusing really, the Blades are, according to the experts, still very much in with a shout of the play offs while we have no chance, and yet Two wins in these games will in all probability see us above them !! Someone tell he how that works please ? I think for us to have any chance at all we need to beat not only Sheff Utd but also Bristol City next weekend too, they are Two of our main rivals in the quest for Sixth place. One thing I do know is we have to be 100 times better than we were in the FA Cup tie against the Blades to stand any chance and I think we will be. As with the Sheffield Wednesday game my Heart says 2-1 to Town but my Head says 1-1 draw, thankfully my Heart won the day Tuesday evening, a repeat of that will do very nicely thank you very much. COYB'S
The Opposition – Sheffield United

Sheffield United formed on 22 March 1889 at the Adelphi Hotel, Sheffield (now the site of the Crucible Theatre) by the President of the Cricket Club Sir Charles Clegg.
The Wednesday had moved from Bramall Lane to their own ground at Olive Grove, and the tenants of Bramall Lane needed to create a new team to generate income. Sir Charles Clegg was incidentally also the president of The Wednesday.
Undoubtedly United's heyday was the 30-year period from 1895–1925, when they were champions of England in 1897–98 and runners up in 1896–97 and 1899–00, and FA Cup winners in 1899, 1902, 1915 and 1925, finishing runners up in 1901, and also eleven years after their cup final win in 1936. United have not won a trophy since 1925, bar those associated with promotion from lower-leagues, their best performances in the cup competitions being several semi-final appearances in the FA Cup and Football League Cup.
Their darkest days came between 1975 and 1981. After finishing sixth in the First Division at the end of the 1974–75 season, they were relegated to the Second Division the following season and three years after that setback they fell into the Third Division. They reached an absolute low in 1981 when they were relegated to the Fourth Division, but were champions in their first season in the league's basement division and two years afterwards they won promotion to the Second Division.
They did fall back into the Third Division in 1988, but new manager Dave Bassett masterminded a quick revival which launched the Blades towards one of the most successful eras in their history. Successive promotions in the aftermath of the 1988 relegation saw them return to the First Division in 1990 after a 14-year exile. They survived at this level for four seasons (being founder members of the new FA Premier League in 1992 after peaking with a ninth-place finish in the last season of the old First Division) and reached an FA Cup semi-final in the 1992–93 season before being relegated in 1994.
They would remain outside the top flight for the next 12 years, although they did qualify for the play-offs under Bassett's successor Howard Kendall in 1997 and caretaker manager Steve Thompson in 1998.
They were struggling at the wrong end of Division One when Neil Warnock was appointed manager in December 1999, and a financial crisis was preventing the club from being able to boost their squad, but in 2002–03 they enjoyed their most successful season for a decade, reaching the semi-finals of both domestic cups and also reaching the Division One play-off final, where they were beaten by Wolverhampton Wanderers.
Three years later, however, Warnock delivered a Premier League return as the Blades finished runners-up in the rebranded Championship. They lasted just one season back amongst the elite, before being relegated from the Premier League amidst the controversy surrounding Carlos Tevez, the player who was controversially signed by West Ham United and whose performances played a big part in their remarkable escape from relegation. Neil Warnock resigned as manager after the Blades went down.
The club struggled to come to terms with life back in the Championship, with a spiralling wage bill not being matched by the quality of the players brought in, and a succession of managers within a short period of time. The Blades did reach the Championship playoff final in 2009 under Kevin Blackwell, but a period of decline then set in. The 2010–11 season proved disastrous, with the club employing three different managers in the space of a season, which ultimately ended in relegation to League One under Micky Adams, meaning they would play in the third tier of English football for the first time since 1989, and only five years after gaining promotion to the Premiership.
In the 2011–12 season, the club finished third in League One, narrowly missing out on automatic promotion to rivals Sheffield Wednesday, and entered the playoffs. With victory over Stevenage in the semi-final, United missed out on an immediate return to the Championship after suffering a penalty shootout defeat to Huddersfield Town. The Blades again made it to the League One playoffs in 2012–13 after a fifth-place finish, but were knocked out by eventual promotion winners Yeovil Town.
On 3 September 2013 it was confirmed that Saudi Prince Abdullah bin Musa'ed bin Abdulaziz Al Saud of the royal House of Saud had bought a 50% stake in United's parent company 'Blades Leisure Ltd' for the fee of £1 with the promise of providing "substantial new capital" with the aim of returning the Blades to the Premier League as "quickly as possible".
In 2014 the Blades began to be described by areas of the media as "giant-killers", having reached the FA Cup semi-finals at Wembley, losing 5–3 to Hull City.
In 2014–15 the team reached the quarter-finals of the FA Cup and semi-finals of the Football League Cup, and despite being eliminated they remained in contention for promotion to the Championship.
United secured promotion back to the second tier of English football in the 2016–17 season under the management of lifelong fan and former Blades player Chris Wilder.
The Manager – Chris Wilder

Past Match - Video Highlights - Trev
Media Watch - K L Blue
Form Guide
Ipswich Last 5 Matches – Currently in 12th place with 51 points
10 Feb Ipswich Town 0 - 0 Burton Albion
18 Feb Norwich City 1 - 1 Ipswich Town
21 Feb Ipswich Town 0 - 1 Cardiff City
24 Feb Preston 0 - 1 Ipswich Town
6 Mar Sheffield Wed 1 - 2 Ipswich Town
Sheffield United Last 5 Matches – Currently in 9th place with 55 points
10 Feb Sheffield Utd 2 - 1 Leeds Utd
20 Feb Sheffield Utd 2 - 1 QP Rangers
23 Feb Hull City 1 - 0 Sheffield Utd
27 Feb Reading 1 - 3 Sheffield Utd
6 Mar Fulham 3 - 0 Sheffield Utd
Fixtures of Interest that could influence Towns position on the table
MILLWALL VS BRENTFORD
READING VS LEEDS UTD
HULL CITY VS NORWICH
Match Referee – John Brooks

IPSWICH TOWN 2 SHEFFIELD UNITED 1