Amongst the glut of goals at Ewood Park and Rodrigo Muniz’s Samba dancing on the very spot where Sean Davis gyrated after his dramatic Blackburn winner twenty years ago, a notable Fulham landmark might have not got the recognition it deserved. Wednesday night’s romp in Lancashire was Bobby Decordova-Reid’s hundredth appearance in the black and white and the hard-working midfielder marked it with a brilliant assist for Neeskens Kebano that set Marco Silva’s on their way to a fifth win in a row.
Decordova-Reid’s best position may still be the subject of a fierce debate. He starred as a forward for Lee Johnson’s Bristol City in a breakout season that saw him score nineteen goals in the Championship, despite being reluctant to line up as a number nine initially. He has filled in a whole host of positions for Fulham, used on either flank by Scott Parker in the Championship, behind the striker, and even as an auxiliary forward at times as the Whites went up via the play-offs.
Decordova-Reid’s versatility was on full display during an ultimately frustration spell in the top flight last term – deployed as a marauding wing back once Parker switched to a back three in a bid to prevent a porous defence from being picked apart too often. There were no complaints from the model professional: he was happy to serve the team however his gaffer felt best, but Decordova-Reid still managed to deliver in the final third – scoring seven goals and adding three assists in a year when his consistency, energy and unbelievable fitness levels made him one of the first names on the teamsheet.
Decordova-Reid’s endeavour and desire have seen him become a pivotal player under Silva since the summer as well. Every manager loves a player upon whom they can rely – and it is Decordova-Reid’s work rate that adds another option to Fulham’s front line. He leads a relentless pressing game from the front, one of the reasons he has been preferred to Tom Cairney and the fit-again Fabio Carvalho as the number ten in recent weeks, and has the directness and guile to unlock stubborn defences in the blink of an eye. The Jamaican international already has five assists to his name this season – as well as goals against Stoke City and QPR.
His willingness to fit in everywhere has been noticeable under Silva as well. Most comfortable on either wing (three appearances), he has found the number ten berth his most regular starting position (eleven appearances), but he has also lined up on the left and right side of midfield and filled in as an emergency full back after Kenny Tete succumbed to injury. He has thrived in advanced role in a more adventurous side, linking the play together impressively under Silva, with his movement posing serious problems for Championship defences. Decordova-Reid’s ability to drift into pockets of space in the last third presents potential markers with the sort of dilemma they dread, whilst also creating room for his fellow attackers.
A seasoned Championship performer, the likeable forward is a quiet cult hero at Craven Cottage. His commitment to the cause can never be questioned and his ability to come with a crucial goal has proved priceless in the past. Think of the way he scored one of the goals of the season against Huddersfield, carrying the ball infield from the right flank before finishing magnificently, or the thunderbolt that shocked the league leaders Liverpool last December. His fifteen goals and twelve assists in Fulham colours underline his value that might be underappreciated by the casual viewer or pundit, but never by his team-mates.
Decordova-Reid is a footballer’s footballer: he’ll never shirk a challenge, pass up responsibility or go missing in a crisis. His ability to create a yard of space in a tight area is invaluable, those tricky feet can take him away from a couple of defenders in an instant – as Blackburn were the latest to find out – and he’s certainly got an eye for goal. His first hundred whole-hearted performances have firmly established him as a Fulham favourite; and here’s to another century.
Jack of all trades-master of none!
For sure he has been used in a variety of positions, most notably under Parker, but he has never been accomplished in any of them. If you get applauded for a willingness to try and slot in anywhere at anytime these days instead of for ability, then he should be Player of the Season.
Silva has tried playing him as a winger and that clearly didn’t work. He is now being used as an attacking midfielder-probably his best position -but he consistently gives the ball away. He did brilliantly for Kebano’s first at Blackburn but showed that he is not a true striker by his miss when clear on goal second half.
He is moderately decent in spells and, occasionally, scores or creates but he is one of the sloppiest passers in the team alongside Robinson and, when he plays, Cavaleiro.
I’m just giving my honest view. He is far from being the star that Dan portrays -as the many critical fans’ comments on his performances testify on this forum almost every week.He is also the first to go “missing” in a game and IMO is our weakest link.
Got to agree with Charles. Championship player and at times great and at others non existent. Whatever position he plays we have a better option.
Attacking midfielder…better option Carvalho, Cairney
Forward….better option Mitro, Muniz, Stansfield,
Right Back…better option Tete, Odoi
Winger…better option Wilson, Kebano
Yep he is a useful player. Good enough to play and deserves his place in the starting line up when others out and plays well but then goes missing again. Good but no better than that. If every Fulham player was available I don’t think he’d make the 11.
He has rare brilliant moments but is anonymous for long period of matches. He should always be on the substitutes bench due to his versality
I feel as though some of these comments are very harsh on Bobby Decordova-Reid. I thought he had an underwhelming first season but was brilliant in a pretty poor Premier League campaign. He played everywhere, scored goals and worked exceptionally hard. You can see why Silva trusts him to do a job – and he took that goal against QPR brilliantly. The fact that he’s playing as the number ten in this side tells you a lot about his value.
A good squad player but not one beingbztbsutomstic choice to start but very useful to have on the bench