whosthedaddy
striker256
Personally for me it's been a tale of two halves.
Having attended all six games so far I can honestly say I'm concerned about the dreadful first halves to at least three of the games.
In particular...
Watford We managed to totally let them have the game to themselves and we never got out of first gear.
Southampton Never turned up for the first half which was woefully inadequate considering the opposition, great comeback though.
Spurs Why oh why do we let the top teams off the hook by standing off of them to see how well they can play, again in this game the first half energy was absent.
After the Watford defeat it was evident from the players and manager post match that this lacklustre performance wasn't acceptable to anyone, consequently we put that right in the very next game by beating Man Utd. We upped the tempo considerably and took that approach into the Liverpool game where we performed well in both halves. Fulham at the Amex was a strange affair but the tempo wasn't lost and we pulled a draw out of the bag.
Then this Saturday against Spurs we were back to starting slowly, we let them play how they wanted and consequently didn't have a chance of any note on their goal whereas you felt that they would score at any given moment, (great save from Maty from almost point-blank). Again, as in some other matches, we played a high tempo and pressing game in the second half and matched them man for man.
I don't understand what is said in the dressing room for our team to enter the football arena without the will or spunk to have a go at the opposition. If a high tempo and challenging approach appears to work as it did against a quite good team such as Man Utd then why oh why do we change the way we play against subsequent opposition, namely Southampton and Spurs?
TV pundit Danny Murphy on Match of the Day on Saturday summed it up for me when he said he was disappointed with Brighton's first half approach, Spurs were vunerable after recent defeats and we should have tested them, we didn't which begs the question, Why not??
The next home game against Hammers will be massive, as will the two after that, I would suggest we play well in both halves if we want all three points, not just for forty-five minutes.
Having attended all six games so far I can honestly say I'm concerned about the dreadful first halves to at least three of the games.
In particular...
Watford We managed to totally let them have the game to themselves and we never got out of first gear.
Southampton Never turned up for the first half which was woefully inadequate considering the opposition, great comeback though.
Spurs Why oh why do we let the top teams off the hook by standing off of them to see how well they can play, again in this game the first half energy was absent.
After the Watford defeat it was evident from the players and manager post match that this lacklustre performance wasn't acceptable to anyone, consequently we put that right in the very next game by beating Man Utd. We upped the tempo considerably and took that approach into the Liverpool game where we performed well in both halves. Fulham at the Amex was a strange affair but the tempo wasn't lost and we pulled a draw out of the bag.
Then this Saturday against Spurs we were back to starting slowly, we let them play how they wanted and consequently didn't have a chance of any note on their goal whereas you felt that they would score at any given moment, (great save from Maty from almost point-blank). Again, as in some other matches, we played a high tempo and pressing game in the second half and matched them man for man.
I don't understand what is said in the dressing room for our team to enter the football arena without the will or spunk to have a go at the opposition. If a high tempo and challenging approach appears to work as it did against a quite good team such as Man Utd then why oh why do we change the way we play against subsequent opposition, namely Southampton and Spurs?
TV pundit Danny Murphy on Match of the Day on Saturday summed it up for me when he said he was disappointed with Brighton's first half approach, Spurs were vunerable after recent defeats and we should have tested them, we didn't which begs the question, Why not??
The next home game against Hammers will be massive, as will the two after that, I would suggest we play well in both halves if we want all three points, not just for forty-five minutes.