And Jagielka heads it away - report Tuesday, 24th Mar 2015 22:53 by Clive Whittingham QPR slipped to a tenth defeat in 11 matches on Sunday, losing to a tired Everton side at Loftus Road. Relegation now seems almost certain for Rangers. Another defeat, the tenth in the last eleven matches, means Queens Park Rangers are now surely Championship bound. Requiring five wins from their final nine games to at least post a target for others to chase, a home loss to a tired Everton side that had been humbled in Kiev just three days previous has the writing firmly on the wall. Similar setbacks in the next two matches, away at West Brom and Aston Villa — who Rangers once had designs on catching — and the demotion will be all but confirmed. More positive results, you feel, may only prolong the agony. It's the hope that kills you, as we've said so often on these pages, and after every single result went for Rangers on Saturday this one depressed more than most. Of greater concern than a crucial nail going into the coffin lid was the quality of the match overall. If, as now seems certain, the R's are to be playing in the second tier next season it's a great worry that with so much riding on it, with supposed Premier League quality players who presumably won't be here next season at their disposal, they were unable to win, or even draw, a game of distinctly Championship standard.
Martinez has changed his style, belatedly, by introducing two big, powerful, quick centre forwards — Romelu Lukaku and Arouna Kone against Nedum Onuoha and Steven Caulker was more tag-team wrestling than professional football. That was good enough to run all over an awful Newcastle side last week but the ordeal in the Ukraine should have given QPR a chance here. Everton have won one, drawn two and lost four of their Sunday games after European matches this season. Somehow, QPR have now contrived to lose to them twice in those circumstances, albeit the first game moved back a further 24 hours to the Monday.
Moss later booked Yun when a free kick would have sufficed, and Hoilett who was late on Lennon.
Instead Rangers went long far too often - big long punts down the centre of the field towards Bobby Zamora. Jagielka, for the most part, needn't have changed out of his club suit. He just stood and headed the ball straight back from whence it came. On the one occasion Zamora did find some space and joy, he thrashed at a chance and blazed it into the Loft End — Everton too busy appealing that Karl Henry had committed a foul in back play to bother defending. Moss waved them away, the goal would have stood, had QPR possessed somebody capable of scoring it. Everton — tired, out of form, season effectively over, restless away support, totally new formation and unfamiliar system — simply didn't have to work hard enough for this. Well below their best they created chances in the first half regularly — you could admire Barton's superb block tackle on James McCarthy as the Irish midfielder prepared to shoot from 20 yards after seven minutes but the way Everton cut through a fresh defence right at the start of the game was alarming. They did so again, with the same result — a fabulous Barton tackle on McCarthy as he prepared to shoot — after 27 minutes with Kone showing a clean pair of heals to Nedum Onuoha. Leon Osman, the smallest man on the pitch, calmly ran to the near post unmarked to meet a Leighton Baines corner and whipped it a foot over the bar. After half time Isla repeated Barton's first half feat, executing a perfect tackle to rob Osman of a clear sight of the goal. It means that a back four of Isla, Onuoha, Caulker and Yun — which I personally don't think would look too bad in a better Premier League team — is exposed all too easily. Transitions of possession are lethal to QPR because it only takes one pass to get in behind that midfield four and once you're there, nobody has the pace or energy to catch you. It means you get situations like the two goals here with monotonous regularity — Premier League players bearing down on a totally exposed back four. Links >>> Knee Jerks >>> Photo Gallery >>> Ratings and Reports >>> Message Board Match Thread QPR: Green 6; Isla 6, Caulker 6, Onuoha 6, Yun 6; Phillips 6, Barton 8, Sandro 5 (Henry 71, 6), Hoilett 6 (Vargas 60, 5); Zamora 5 (Taarabt 82, -), Austin 6 Subs not used: McCarthy, Hill, Ferdinand, Kranjcar Goals: Vargas 64 (assisted Barton/Austin) Bookings: Hoilett 39 (foul), Yun 56 (foul) Everton: Howard 6; Coleman 6, Stones 7, Jagielka 7, Baines 6; Lennon 6, McCarthy 6, Gibson 6, Osman 6; Kone 6 (Naismith 79, 6), Lukaku 6 (Barkley 67, 5) Subs not used: Robles, Besic, Browning, Garbutt, Alcaraz Goals: Coleman 18 (assisted Osman), Lennon 77 (assisted Coleman) Bookings: Naismith 90+4 (kicking ball away) QPR Star Man — Joey Barton 8 Too little, too late from Captain Fantastic after his own stupidity meant he had to sit out three crucial games which all ended in defeat. But credit where it’s due, he couldn’t have done more to drive the team on and get a result here. Referee — Jon Moss (West Yorkshire) 5 The stoppage time booking for Steven Naismith was the first attempt to stop the flagrant time wasting that had gone on for an hour before that. Moss watched it all, pointed at his watch, and added the standard two minutes to the first half and four or five to the second. Niggled at the game from the side, like a mouse with a bit of cheese. Booked Yun harshly, justified yellow card for Hoilett. Made sure everybody’s throw in was taken from exactly the right spot. Annoying. Attendance — 17,706 (1,800 Everton approx) No anger, no vitriol, no disappointment really, just a general quiet acceptance and resignation. The Twitter @loftforwords Pictures — Action Images Photo: Action Images via Reuters Please report offensive, libellous or inappropriate posts by using the links provided.
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