Kieran McKenna reflects on his team’s performance against Crystal Palace in their recent match. The team is still struggling in the league standings and hasn’t secured a home win yet, which adds to the frustration.
Kieran McKenna said “It was a frustrating night. There were probably too many similarities to Saturday for our liking. It’s a really tight first half, not fantastic in terms of flow, lots of stoppages and we didn’t manage to create the game that we wanted or the chances that we wanted. Having said that, neither did the opponent. We were solid, there was very little in the game and very few opportunities at either end.”
Kieran McKenna discusses the improvements needed in the team’s approach and reflects on the impact of conceding a goal in the second half.
Kieran McKenna said “We knew at half-time we just needed to get more intensity in the game one way or another. We needed to be more aggressive, more positive and play forward quicker, even if it wasn’t perfect, just to create some atmosphere in the stadium. We did that, to be fair. Second half we came out much better. I think we were in the ascendancy, we felt like we could really push on in the game, we got ourselves to a pretty good position with some momentum, then we concede a really poor goal. In a tight game like today that ends up decisive. When the first goal goes in then the whole dynamic changes. We tried at the end to break them down, but they were defending and counter-attacking well.”
Kieran McKenna elaborates on the challenge of breaking down the opponent’s strong defensive lineup.
Kieran McKenna said “Newcastle have a top, top forward line and they didn’t have a shot against them on Saturday. With the back five they have in place now they’re going to be hard to break down. Guehi, Lacroix, Chalobah – that’s a really physical, dominant one-v-one back line. When they match you up, as they did, and go man-for-man it’s not easy to create chances against them. I think lots of teams will find that difficult. We couldn’t get superiority in any individual duels. We got into some good areas, but we weren’t able to produce the quality that we needed to create a clear chance. In most of our home games we’ve managed to create intensity, atmosphere, chances, pressure and make it more like the game we want. We certainly didn’t today. I don’t think it’s a trend. I think you have to give Palace some credit. We’re up against a lot of Premier League quality, experience and physicality. It’s a big challenge.”