Morten Gamst Pedersen silenced his critics by scoring the winner for Rovers against Leicester

Rovers’ global adviser Shebby Singh earlier this month labelled the Norwegian “a pensioner” – something which was met with criticism from boss Steve Kean and the PFA.

Singh apologised afterwards but this afternoon Pedersen, 30, rolled back the years with a superb 79th-minute strike – celebrated with the aid of a walking stick – which extended Blackburn’s unbeaten start to the Championship season.

Rovers had been far from impressive in collecting four points from their opening two games and the same could be said yet again.

The hosts were indebted to Paul Robinson after the former England number one pulled off a superb save to keep out a point-blank header from David Nugent.

And the dominant Foxes were made to pay shortly after the half-hour mark as 36-year-old Nuno Gomes, a free summer signing after being released by Portuguese side Braga, opened his account in English football with a sweet finish from the edge of the area.

Jamie Vardy, who bagged 34 goals for Fleetwood last term, took advantage of Scott Dann’s mistake to level matters soon after the restart, and then saw a header ruled out for offside, before Pedersen had the final say.

Leicester flew out of the blocks but it was City keeper Kasper Schmeichel who almost got caught out early on by an unorthodox bounce off a slick surface at Ewood Park.

If there was a touch of fortune about Schmeichel’s let-off then there was nothing but quality about Robinson’s 12th-minute save at the other end.

Foxes frontman Nugent, a matter a yards out, appeared certain to find the net with a header from Ben Marshall’s cross but Robinson somehow palmed the ball away.

Rovers, having made four changes with David Dunn, Bradley Orr and Colin Kazim-Richards all injured, were disjointed in the opening quarter and failed to match the intensity of their visitors.

An unmarked Vardy headed Liam Moore’s deep cross off target for Leicester before Dann made a last-ditch block to deny in-form midfielder Andy King, searching for his third goal in the season’s opening three league fixtures.

But out of nowhere Blackburn took the lead in the 33rd minute.

Jason Lowe escaped Paul Konchesky down the right and found Gomes, who had timed his run to perfection and dispatched into the bottom corner with a neat finish from 18 yards.

The pattern of the game continued after the goal and Nugent’s drive was parried out by Robinson, but Rovers maintained their lead going into the interval.

A frantic start to the second half saw Nugent denied again before Bruno Ribeiro also saw a header kept out at the other end.

And it was no surprise to see Leicester draw level in the 55th minute.

Rovers centre-back Dann was punished for defensive hesitancy as Vardy nipped in to finish from 12 yards out.

Vardy was then denied a 75th-minute second as his super header was wiped out by an assistant’s flag.

And just two minutes later Pedersen sealed an unlikely victory for Blackburn with a right-footed finish from the left side of the penalty area – sending a clear message with his celebration.

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Parachute Regiment Fail To Storm Championship Castle

See on Scoop.itWe Want Our Rovers Back

It’s the time of year when, for football fans up and down the land, hope springs eternal. The doldrums of the summer are gone and thoughts of this year being our year, have returned to the minds of supporters from Newcastle to Plymouth, and all points in between.

But for followers of some teams the feeling should be, if it isn’t already, anxiety. For Blackburn, Bolton and Wolves, the clock is ticking, and with each second that passes history turns against them. The fact is that not getting promoted back to the Premier League at the first time of asking can be costly, both financially and for the chances of seeing top class football in your city sooner rather than later. Just ask Wolves’ opening day opponents, Leeds United.

The beginning of 2012-2013 season marks the Whites’ ninth straight season outside of England’s top division since their relegation in 2004. For a club that was once a dominant force in English football the word dormant is perhaps now more appropriate.

Their story is not a unique one. The Championship is littered with sides who were perennial Premier League mainstays. Eighteen of the twenty-four teams have logged time in England’s top club competition, fourteen of those having spent multiple seasons in the promised land. Over the past twenty seasons only six clubs have won the top league in England. Two of those currently call the second tier of English football home.

All of which points to the stark reality that the Championship is harder than ever to succeed in. At least ten teams harbour realistic hopes of automatic promotion, with many more eyeing the playoff places. For the newcomers to the league coming down it is vital to strike while the iron is hot, because as tough a task as it is, it will only get tougher.

Premier League financial assistance, ‘parachute payments’, were introduced in order to help relegated clubs cope with the loss of revenue that a relegation from the world’s most commercially successful league brings. They allow those clubs to keep living the lifestyle to which they are accustomed. But, like the recently unemployed who might spend some time living off their savings, unless they find their way back to the financial levels they were at before, within a short period of time realities have to be faced and luxuries can no longer be afforded. For those Premier League dropouts, those luxuries usually consist of quality football players.

So getting off to a fast start is essential, and crucially for Rovers and the pair of Wanderers it seemed they have put themselves in the best possible position by not having the usual exodus of players, desperate to stay in the top division. Of those on their way out, only David Hoilett and Michael Kightly remained at Premier League level. This might be a continuation of the recent trend of relegated players willing to stick with their clubs for at least one season to see if an instant ‘bounce-back’ is possible. It could be, perhaps more likely, speak to the quality, or lack thereof, within the relegated squads; that the Premier League looked at what these squads had to offer and decided to pass. Whatever the reason, the continuity and maintenance of quality seemingly boded well for the recent Premier League orphans.

Unfortunately, for all the good omens, the results were disappointing. A return of just a single point from those three teams, the lowest for the three relegated clubs on the opening day of the season for over ten years. It should be noted that all three opened up away from home, and all against opponents who have been Premier League teams in recent years. However, and perhaps worryingly, these were the teams who finished thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth in the Championship last term, over twenty points off automatic promotion. In 2011-2012, the three teams who won promotion lost a combined twenty nine games. The Championship new boys combined have already lost two, with forty five games to go.

Even though they were the only one of the three to gain a point, it will be Blackburn who are the most disappointed. In a game against an Ipswich side with well documented problems at the back, they managed to muster little in attack, with only two attempts on target. Despite this they managed to lead for most of the game though loanee Colin Kazim-Richards’ first half header, his first goal in English football for over five years after spells in Turkey, France and Greece. Ipswich’s vulnerability at the back was exposed as first Scott Dann was left all alone to head Morten Gamst Pedersen’s corner back across goal, allowing a similarly lonely Kazim-Richards to nonchalantly nod home. It would have been a sweet moment for Pedersen after being described as a ‘pensioner’ by the Rovers Global Advisor Shebby Singh. The other target of Singh’s criticism, manager Steve Kean, was typically upbeat at the end of the match. Having been pegged back to a draw courtesy of a Jason Lowe own goal with less than ten minutes to go, Kean was quick to assert that he felt not many teams would come to Ipswich and win this year, a belief born out by the fact that Ipswich were a top half team last season in terms of home record. Still, this game felt like a missed opportunity for Rovers to whip up some early momentum and good feeling around the club, following the well documented turmoil which has surrounded it.

Wolves were presented with an early chance to steal a march on their rivals, after being handed Saturday’s early kick off. Perhaps unusually, the only team of the relegated three to part company with their manager, they came into the game with just one league win in their last twenty four, a run stretching back to 4th December last year. They were never dominated by Leeds, but never looked like winning either, with a solitary Luciano Becchio goal proving enough at Elland Road to kick-start their own promotion challenge. Without Steven Fletcher, Wolves fans were given a view of what life might be like if the striker moves on to Sunderland, and while they might be optimistic that against lesser defenses Sylvan Ebanks-Blake and Kevin Doyle could be a potent vanguard, against Leeds’ typically well organised and well marshalled back line they could not fire. Stale Solbakken, making his return to English football after a season playing with Wimbledon in the late 90′s, made no excuses for his side, feeling the result was fair. He perhaps will be aware that the Yorkshire clubs promotion ambitions will make Elland Road a difficult place for visitors to come this season.

Much of the hope for Bolton will surround the fact that they have lost very little of note from the side who were relegated by just a single point at the end of last term, and that in Owen Coyle they have a manager who very recently engineered a much less fashionable club’s rise from Championship to Premier League. Unfortunately for him, it was that much less fashionable club who had much the better of the chances and who deserved their victory over their Lancashire rivals. What might be more concerning for Coyle is the lack of any sort of potency from his attack, with Olympian Marvin Sordell still finding his place at Bolton and Kevin Davies showing clear indication that he will not be a player whose fitness will allow him to play a significant part every week. Coyle chose to focus on the shortcomings of his defence and the potential for offside in Martin Paterson’s opener, but the fact that his side were outplayed must have registered and must be worrying for the Glaswegian.

The sides might take solace from last years promotion trio’s opening weekend: a record of won one, drawn one, lost one. A sample size of just a single game means little over the course of a whole season. But for these three, every game this year is vital because the clock is ticking and the bank balance is falling. Every second counts. Forty five games to go.

See on mondaymorningsportsblog.wordpress.com

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Shebby Kean on sack at 4/1 – First Past The Post

See on Scoop.itWe Want Our Rovers Back

I HAVE a great deal of sympathy for supporters of Blackburn Rovers.

The latest farce unfolding over at Ewood has Steve Kean refusing to accept Shebby Singh’s apology for his recent comments and, according to reports, indicating that their relationship is now untenable to the point that Kean wants Shebby out.

So Kean wants Shebby out? A week ago it was Shebby that wanted Kean out.

Are we to expect a grovelling apology from Kean before Blackburn’s first game of the season? How long will the soap opera last?

One of the first things he did was confirm that Kean would not be sacked, then followed up in an interview with, quite frankly, a load of old bollocks about his ‘views on Blackburn as a pundit and as a global adviser’ and ‘being constructive’.

The most constructive thing to do was replace the manager with a popular choice and get the fans back on side, but it seems that this was never considered.

 

“and they expected Huddersfield to take them seriously”

 

Blackburn’s pursuit of Huddersfield’s Jordan Rhodes has been nothing short of laughable.

Fulham made an offer to the Terriers of, if press reports are to be believed, close to £3 million, with a percentage up front and a series of add-ons for goals, appearances etc.

That was in January, when Huddersfield were entering their worst run of form for many months and in danger of losing ground in the League One title race.

The offer was rejected out of hand and Huddersfield officials were quoted as saying that the minimum valuation of Rhodes had not been met.

Blackburn then declared their interest in the summer transfer window, knowing full well that Rhodes had been priced at £8 million by his club following their promotion, and proceeded to let the speculation roll on and on until, finally, last week they made on offer. £2m. What?

A quarter of the established price, and they expected Huddersfield to take them seriously.

Now that that’s over with they want John Guidetti on loan from Manchester City, a player who apparently has a virus that is preventing him from playing, and even if he recovers has several Premier League suitors (including Liverpool and Sunderland).

So why choose Blackburn?

 

“Kean is gone if Blackburn go on a losing streak”

 

The latest farce at Ewood is the ‘global adviser’ (what the hell is he actually advising them about?) mentioning in passing that Kean would be sacked if he lost three games in a row this season, and that 30-year-old forward Morten Gamst Pedersen, in my opinion the most talented player in Blackburn’s squad at present and someone they are bloody lucky to still have around, is a ‘pensioner’.

He is known for his forthright comments on Asian TV and, in his ‘I-must-say-something-anything-will-do-quickly-before-this-gets-out-of-hand’ apology he talked more bollocks about ‘blunt honesty’.

Let’s face it – Kean is gone if Blackburn go on a losing streak this season and look like they won’t go up, that’s what Singh is ‘bluntly’ saying, apology or not.

So it seems okay if you are the manager at Blackburn to be relegated from the top division, have players turning against you, have pretty much all the fans wanting you out, chasing players you clearly can’t afford, chasing players you’ll never get, signing players you don’t need (Danny Murphy, Dickson Etuhu, are either of those two strikers, full backs or centre backs?) and acting as though you don’t know what everyone’s problem is.

All that’s fine.

But don’t lose three games in a row, or you’re out.

And don’t refuse to accept any apologies, or you’re out. Farce much?

Steve Kean is 4/1 (brilliant value) to be the first Championship manager to be sacked this season with Stan James; incidentally this makes him second favourite in the division behind Ipswich manager Paul Jewell at 7/2.

William Hill are offering 7/2 for Kean, Pedersen and Singh to have all left before the end of the season.

I would take the former but not the latter, as Singh seems likely to cling on irrespective of what’s going on around him.

See on www.fptp.co.uk

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Steve Kean will face review unless Blackburn gain 16 points from first seven

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Telegraph.co.uk

 

Steve Kean will face review unless Blackburn gain 16 points from first seven.

But despite retaining the support of Venky’s chairperson Anuradha Desai, senior figures within the Rao family who own the club are…

See on www.telegraph.co.uk

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Rovers reject Bunn offer

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Rovers reject Bunn offer

Lancashire Telegraph

 

Rovers have rejected a bid for goalkeeper Mark Bunn from Premier League Norwich City – as they continue to try keep the majority of their squad together.

See on www.lancashiretelegraph.co.uk

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Third kit…. opinions ?

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Rovers are still a shambles

BY MICHAEL BLACK

Is everyone looking forward to the new Championship season? Thought not. 3 months have passed since Rovers’ less than dignified exit from the Premier League & it’s safe to say nothing much has changed.

On the face of it bringing in 8 new players so far looks like the club means business, but when you balance these off against player departures and some pretty nifty wage bill juggling, the outlay is minimal at best. Factor in the players who’ve been made available for transfer (Pedersen, Petrovic etc) and Rovers still look they’re trying to turn a profit on transfer dealings.

With the less than Special One Kean still at the helm, the club’s approach to squad building has been decidedly hare-brained. With the team clearly in need of strengthening at the back, Kean’s seen fit to add 4 midfielders & 4 forwards. Or maybe ‘global advisor’ Shebby Singh’s in charge of all that. Who knows? As for Shabby – we’ll return to him later.

A couple of the new additions – Murphy & Best – certainly looked the part in pre-season and the loss of Best to injury is bad luck Rovers could have done without. Replacing him has been turned into yet another circus by Kean/Singh/whoever, as we’ve lurched from one target to another. How hard can it be to identify who you need, ask how much and then pay the money? It seems simple, yet we’ve gone from Cox to Rhodes to Guidetti to Chamakh without ever looking like we’ve any idea who we really want.

Typically, the most obvious target has never been mentioned – Southampton’s Billy Sharp. They want Scott Dann, Rovers need a proven Championship forward. Simple really, isn’t it? Then all that’s needed is to take whatever money the club were going to throw at a forward (around £6 million for Rhodes wasn’t it?) and go and buy a couple of defenders who can actually defend – because after being relegated twice in two seasons it appears Dann’s not really up to that particular job.

So all-in-all, Rovers are still a shambles. Which brings us nicely back to Shebby Singh. No-one can really be sure just yet how much influence over proceedings Singh actually has. He’s certainly trying to make all the right noises but, if last weekend’s events are anything to go by, the signs aren’t promising. In front of a packed fans’ forum, Singh declared Kean would be gone if he lost three games in a row and Pedersen’s legs had gone. The day after he promptly apologised to the pair. Why? Kean’s record as manager means he should thank his lucky stars he’s still in a job, never mind getting the chance to lose another 3 games, while if Pedersen’s legs haven’t gone then he’s been doing a brilliant impression of someone’s who have for the past few seasons.

Apologising for saying nothing more than what should be said, suggests Singh has no real clout. If that’s the case then the shambles is likely to continue for some time yet. It might actually be worth losing the first three games just to see what happens.

SOURCE

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Are You Sitting Comfortably? Let The Game Begin

Roverstan's Blog

You pay your money, you take your seat and hopefully enjoy a great game. Well, if only it were that simple. Go to lower league or non-league football and you can pretty much pick your spot if you get there early. You can chose to sit or stand, to stretch your legs, move to different parts of the ground, even take your canine friend with you if you feel like it at non-league games. The Guide dog that regularly takes his place on the front row of the Ronnie Clayton Stand is a model of devotion to his master. Whilst those around him sing, shout, swear, gesticulate and berate the opposition or the team; as the mood takes them. He sits quietly and patiently looking at his friend and receives the odd pat on the head while the crowd goes wild. I often wonder who made the decision to make…

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Blackburn adviser apologises to Steve Kean and Morten Gamst Pedersen

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Blackburn Rovers suffered a public relations disaster when a top official was forced to apologise to the manager and a senior player…

 

Shebby Singh has issued a public apology to Steve Kean and Morten Gamst Pedersen after saying that the Blackburn Rovers manager would be sacked if he lost three games and calling the 30-year-old winger a “pensioner”.

Speaking at an open meeting organised by the Blackburn Rovers Action Group, the club’s global adviser Singh told supporters Kean would be sacked if he lost three games in a row but it was the personal comments directed at Pedersen that caused the most upset.

Kean and Pedersen were so furious with Singh that the Malaysian was forced to apologise to both men at a squad meeting. In addition, he deemed it necessary to make a public apology through the Lancashire Telegraph.

Singh had said Kean’s promises of a strong promotion challenge had to be taken “with a pinch of salt”, while he likened Pedersen, who has been at the club for eight years, to a “pensioner”.

He said: “I would like to extend an apology to Steve Kean because some things were said on Saturday. I think they would have hurt Steve Kean’s feelings and for that I sincerely apologise.

“I would also like to apologise to Morten Gamst Pedersen for what was said. There are no excuses and Morten is a great character.

“My blunt honesty sometimes upsets people and sometimes rubs people up the wrong way. I am making efforts to bring the club back to the fans and in trying to do that I have gone too far. I am trying to find the middle ground.”

Blackburn’s Indian owners, Venky’s, appointed the 51-year-old former Malaysia defender in June and one of Singh’s tasks is to act as a go-between for Venky’s and Kean. He has a reputation for forthright views earned while working as a football pundit for Asian TV.

The Blackburn striker David Goodwillie has been called up by Scotland for Wednesday’s friendly against Australia at Easter Road. Goodwillie scored in his last appearance – a 3-1 Euro 2012 qualifying defeat to Spain in October.

The 23-year-old moved to Ewood Park from Dundee United in August 2011, scoring two goals in 20 Premier League appearances, although he started only four games.

See on www.guardian.co.uk

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We Want Our Rovers Back | Facebook

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For all the latest shenanigans from the chicken pluckers and what the rags are saying about us….

 

Venkys take note. When you insult the intelligence of Blackburn Rovers supporters, you also insult the intelligence of the people of Blackburn. Because Blackburn Rovers are Blackburn and Blackburn is Blackburn Rovers.

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