Friday night wasn’t pretty. Scott Parker’s side chose what felt like a glorious opportunity to escape the drop zone as the time to put in their worst display since November as Leeds finally ended their capital curse with a 2-1 win at Craven Cottage. The performance sparked memories of the way the Whites started life in the Premier League and, coming hot on the heels of the fifteen minutes of madness that allowed Manchester City to ease to victory last week, was particularly deflating. Parker himself called for calm afterwards and, despite the disappointment, no Fulham fan should give up hope, especially given Newcastle’s present predicament.
The Leeds defeat should serve as a sharp wake-up call to Parker’s charges. Fulham have been on an upward trajectory since the difficult start to life in the top flight but improved performances alone won’t guarantee survival, especially if they don’t translate into wins. Drawing has been particularly painful – Fulham share the prize for the highest number of stalemates in the division with Brighton on eleven – and Friday’s defeat at the hands of Leeds, wasting an opportunity to apply pressure to both the Seagulls and Newcastle, was undoubtedly a missed opportunity.
But the nature of the Premier League means that there are surely plenty of twists and turns ahead. Steve Bruce’s Magpies looked utterly bereft of ideas on the south coast and, the strong suggestion that Mike Ashley is not about to pull the trigger on his beleaguered manager, might just give Fulham another bite at the cherry. After an international break that might allow Parker to consider his best plan of action, there are winnable games against Wolves and Aston Villa offering a second chance to leapfrog the Geordies or at least close the gap.
Both sides have a fairly similar run in, both facing three ‘big-six’ sides in their remaining fixtures, as well as a side that has exceeded expectations thus far and that poses a major threat on their day – Aston Villa for the Cottagers and West Ham United for the Geordies. However, Newcastle also face Leicester, who embarrassed Manchester United in the FA Cup yesterday and are determined to finish the season strongly, and the mood music coming out of the north east is far from encouraging at the moment.
Fulham have largely been consistent since early autumn, looking much more competitive and picking up points but struggling to find the finishing touch. I felt the reaction to a defeat by Manchester City was a little overblown – there’s no shame in being beaten by arguably the best side in Europe, who are still on for a remarkable quadruple. The Leeds defeat was disappointing, but Parker has proven adept at putting poor displays aside and concentrating on the job at hand. He was tactically out-thought by Marcelo Bielsa – and there are plenty of more season managers who can relate to that.
Parker has pointed to parallels with Fulham’s famous great escape in 2008. Thirteen years ago today, Fulham were comfortably beaten by Newcastle United at St. James’ Park – leaving them four points from safety with eight games to go. Birmingham, just above the relegation at zone at that point, and Reading – in fifteenth with an eight point cushion – both went down with Roy Hodgson’s heroes surviving on the final day courtesy of Danny Murphy’s memorable header in the Fratton Park sunshine. All is not lost.
Belief and determination has got Fulham this far. Both Joachim Andersen and Tom Cairney have spoken in recent weeks about tuning out the noise from outside and controlling the controllables, which are our own performances. Parker has imbued this side with serious resilience and has already proven himself capable of tactical tweaks to bolster a leaky defence. One more, at the other end of the pitch, could prove decisive. Eight cup finals remain and Parker will ensure Fulham are up for the fight.
We can do this! Come on you Whites!
What’s happened with Josh Onamah ? Probably our best player during last year’s run-in and looking the most likely to score in the short cameo he played at the end of the Man City game he then doesn’t even make the bench for the Leeds game ahead of Ream, Hector or Odoi and with Bobby Reid injured.
Would anyone agree that we should have kept Kebano (even if only for free kicks) and let Cavalhero go out on loan – the man’s a liability !
Onomah injured
John, we absolutely should have kept Kebano. I’ve been banging on about Cav for months. The decision to alienate Mitro and invest in Cav after about 6 games was a big mistake. I’m not saying Mitro is a world beater at this level but I believe his loss in form was partly brought about by his treatment. Imagine being the emotional character that Mitro is and being told Cav is a better centre forward than you. What a kick in the teeth that is. Cav is a truly awful finisher. He was awful in the Championship and awful in the Prem. Parker has done a great job but I’m afraid his fascination with Cav is a total mystery and probably cost us a few points in that spell. The 2 Brighton games were crying out for Mitro given our domination of the ball and ease at which we worked it up the pitch. At best Cav is a Championship winger and personally I think Kebano is better. Cav and Knockaert’s loan conversions to permanent were both a complete waste of money. Neither were better than average at Championship level in my opinion. Parker has done a great job with what he was given but Cav is the one decision I think he got badly wrong,
Just a bit worried if we get an injury to Andersen or Tosin or Areola knowing Fulham’s luck something will go wrong how fit is Kongolo our other Centre Back let’s hope our Centre Back pairing don’t get any injuries, Lastly sad news about Alan Slough always gave his best for Fulham and a better player than given credit for RIP Alan
Anyone who saw Mitro’s goals for Serbia last night should finally accept that he is a world class striker and finisher. Should be the first name on the Fulham team sheet.
2 absolute class goals. I’m afraid dropping Mitro for Cav for all those games was a big error by Parker. The balance of Parker’s performance this season is overwhelmingly positive. But, the Cav / Mitro decision was a shocker. We should have invested in the one decent striker we had and not undermined him whilst trying to turn an average Championship winger into a striker. I hope we haven’t given Mitro the excuse to leave if we go down. Personally, I wouldn’t blame him if he does leave.