Sunderland Echo

SCRAPPING CATS GETTING REWARD

- By Phil Smith at the Keepmoat Stadium @Phil__Smith

Two deafening roars, one quickly followed by another.

First Luke O’Nien, increasing­ly influentia­l for his new side, won a challenge and headed for the corner. A foul from a frustrated opponent followed, and the 4,000 in the away end exploded.

Then came the final whistle, greeted with an outpouring of relief and ecstasy.

Dylan McGeouch led the celebratio­ns, stoking the passion of those who turned the Keepmoat Stadium into what felt like a home arena for the Black Cats.

The chanting was relentless for long afterwards.

‘We’re on our way’, the staple song of promotion pushes from yesteryear, sung with gusto.

After three away wins on the bounce, it is starting to feel apt.

Why did this win feel so good?

Not because it had been an exhibition of attacking football, a show of prowess and individual skill.

It felt so good because it had been so hard fought.

Sunderland have arguably not faced a better opponent than Doncaster Rovers. Grant McCann’s side have won praise for their quality on the ball and their intensity off it. Both were on show, particular­ly in a first half when Jack Ross’s side were unquestion­ably second best. The hosts were quicker to the ball in midfield and in possession they were able to move it swiftly through the lines. That Sunderland’s midfield were all on yellow cards before the half was out told its own story.

The Black Cats unquestion­ably had their moments, Jerome Sinclair battling hard and creating some openings when he fought his way into the channel.

Doncaster would have been worthy of the lead neverthele­ss, and only the brilliance of Jon McLaughlin prevented them taking it.

Two oustanding saves helped keep the scores level and Chris Maguire capitalise­d soon after.

McLaughlin has quickly establishe­d himself as arguably the most consistent, impressive player in the squad.

It is no great stretch to say that he could have kept Sunderland in the Championsh­ip last season. He is making vital stops week in, week out and his quality gives the Black Cats a significan­t advantage in the push for promotion.

Bringing him in on a free is already one of Jack Ross’s best moves since taking charge.

Doncaster continued to threaten as the game developled but as they had done with ten men a fortnight or so ago, the visitors managed a difficult period impressive­ly well.

Ross agsin was able to bring some energetic players on from the bench, carrying the ball away from danger and relieving the pressure.

At the heart of defence, Tom Flanagan and Jack Baldwin delivered another display that matched quality with real tenacity.

The away support, with Chairman Stewart Donald in their ranks, responded to a performanc­e that did not showcase the best of Sunderland’s quality, but did highlight the impressive unity they have built in a short space of time.

Ten games into the season Jack Ross had admitted his frustratio­n with certain results, but highlighte­d how good the mood was behind the scenes.

He felt certain that at some stage it would begin to deliver consistent results.

That is now happening, and the togetherne­ss has been apparent in the way Sunderland have closed out these last three games. It has also given the support a team they’re proud of.

They will see better performanc­es this year, but they may not see many more significan­t wins. Their joy on the final whistle underlined that. Again it wasn’t plain sailing, but Sunderland are on their way.

GOOD DAY FOR LYNDEN GOOCH Reaffirmed his quality and importance with an excellent, vibrant atatcking display BAD DAY FOR AIDEN MCGEADY Dropped from the side but did perform well off the bench, helping seal the points

 ??  ?? Jerome Sinclair battles it out at Doncaster.
Jerome Sinclair battles it out at Doncaster.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom