Sunderland Echo

CATS FIND A WAY FOR VITAL WIN

AFTER A BAD START, SUNDERLAND WRESTLED CONTROL OF THE GAME AND DESERVEDLY CAME AWAY WITH THE

- By Phil Smith at the Stadium of Light @Phil__Smith

There will not be many more draining weeks than this.

It started with a brutal encounter at Adams Park against Wycombe Wanderers, Gareth Ainsworth’s side leaving Sunderland nursing all manner of wounds.

That game had, of course, come just days after the second trip in as many weeks to Bristol.

Then came the 0-0 draw at Oakwell, a testing game against a powerful side who had not lost at home all season.

Throw in Storm Gareth and a raging wind that penned in the away side for a relentless opening 45 minutes, and you can understand why Jack Ross felt this visit of Walsall, themselves scrapping for survival, would be a challenge.

He knew fine well how important it was that his side found a way to win.

Those two points had left Sunderland still in the hunt but a touch off the pace.

Those two games could have ended up an awful lot worse but significan­tly better, too.

By the time the Black Cats return to league action, Barnsley will have had two further opportunit­ies to open up a gap to second. Failure to win here would have led to a fortnight of understand­able anxiety on Wearside and taken the edge off growing Wembley excitement. But win Sunderland did. And it was a win they deserved, over the course of 90 minutes. Defensivel­y they started very poorly, and those key positions at the heart of the back four are perhaps the one area that Ross will still be weighing up his best options at this stage of the season. That is certainly one area in which Barnsley and Luton Town have an advantage.

There will be frustratio­ns, too, that Sunderland have not been able to create more of the kind of openings for Will Grigg that the Northern Irishman took with such decisivene­ss with 20 minutes to go.

That, it must be said, should improve quickly when George Honeyman and Chris Maguire return to the fold in thecomingw­eeksandCha­rlie Wyke should take confidence from an encouragin­g cameo.

Neverthele­ss, by half time they had by far the best of the openings and that continued into the second period.

Aside from the previous two tricky away games, that has been an encouragin­g trend since the woeful showings at Scunthorpe and Oxford United.

Ross will feel that this 24 hours in which the automatic promotion race turned again was also a vindicatio­n of the message he has continousl­y stood behind.

With nine games to game, it is obvious that Luton and Barnsley will feel very good about their place in the table.

Ross, though, has said all along that his Sunderland side are better than they have often had credit for .

As for the automatic promotion race, he has been insistent that there will be many twists and turns before the ned of the regular season.

He understand­s the anxiety that stems from the desire to get Sunderland back to the top two tiers, but probably also feels it can overplay the strengths of other sides and the weaknesses of his.

Perception is everything, and while Barnsley are on a long unbeaten run with six consecutiv­e clean sheets, the 0-0 draw with Doncaster Rover on Friday night means they have also now drawn four of their last six.

In the absence of Kieffer Moore, all four of those have been games in which Daniel Stendel’s side have failed to score. They are a good, powerful side, but not an infallible one.

Ross had been particular­ly bullish about this on Thursday.

He said that it was dramatic to say automatic promotion was out of Sunderland’s hands, that they should have gone for broke days previously at Barnsley.

He wasn’t convinced that it would take too much more than the two-points-pergame ratio he has said all along should achieve a top two finish. The 48 hours that followed suggested he is right.

Ceetainly, his calm is a big asset for Sunderland. They are, in his own words, not an outstandin­g side.

But they are a good one, and when they return from a fortnight break they are still in a good position to achieve all of their goals.

 ??  ?? Max Power has a go at goal.
Max Power has a go at goal.
 ??  ?? GOOD DAY FOR CHARLIE WYKE Sunderland will need him to crash the promotion picture and so this cameo was
GOOD DAY FOR CHARLIE WYKE Sunderland will need him to crash the promotion picture and so this cameo was
 ??  ?? BAD DAY FOR ADAM MATTHEWS Limped out of the game in the second half, giving Denver Hume a chance to return
BAD DAY FOR ADAM MATTHEWS Limped out of the game in the second half, giving Denver Hume a chance to return
 ??  ??

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