This mentality is unstoppable - Why Crystal Palace fans deserved FA Cup glory more than anyone

Written by Dan Cooper

Dan Cooper explains why Palace fans deserved the to win the FA Cup 2016 more than any other team. And why it hurts so badly that they didn't.

At first glance, he looked unremarkable. Just another bloke trudging home from the game, deep despondency etched on his face. But then you began to notice. The first thing that stood out was the suit - sharply cut, tie still impeccably assembled. Then that famous expression, unmistakeable behind the disappointment - a peculiar hybrid of world weary resignation and twinkle-in-eye mischievousness. And then, to put the whole thing beyond any doubt, that subtle Scouse drawl, long since woven into the fabric of Crystal Palace folklore: 'If you see a cab driving around lads, let me know.'

I'd never really envisaged how my first interaction with Steve Coppell might pan out, but it sure as hell didn't involve searching for an errant cabbie outside a North West London chip shop. But you can't pick these moments, and so here I was, face-to-face with a bonafide, all-time hero. Looking for an Uber.

For a Palace fan of my vintage, this unlikely meeting was both poignant and staggeringly timely. Exactly 26 years earlier, having stitched together a rag bag collection of waifs and strays and taken them to the brink of FA Cup glory, Coppell had ignited a lifelong love affair between me and this mad little club from SE25. As an impressionable 7 year old, I had loved it all - the dazzling red and blue strip, the raw, unhinged genius of Ian Wright, the seemingly endless sea of red and blue balloons spilling out from the terraces onto that impossibly green Wembley turf. I remember Dad letting me stay up past bedtime to watch the replay. I also remember crying myself to sleep.

Heartbreak – it’s common currency at Palace. When it comes to the FA Cup, it seems that we're forever destined to measure it in portions of time. For Coppell and his class of 1990, it was seven minutes. The exact time left on the clock when, with the score poised at 3-2 and with glory within spitting distance, Mark Hughes rolled the ball past Nigel Martyn, setting the wheels in motion on a journey that would eventually culminate in the disappointment of that godforsaken replay.

Nine minutes this time. Believe me when I say that those extra two minutes do little to take the edge off. But this time around, rest assured that not a single one of those lousy minutes will define my Cup Final. Instead, it'll be 175 seconds. A fraction of time so fleeting, it barely warrants mention. And yet that was all it took – that impossibly small window between Jason Puncheon lashing the ball into the net and Juan Mata pulling United level – to capture the very essence of everything that's beautiful about Crystal Palace.

The scenes that greeted Punch’s goal were nothing short of life affirming; 26 years of ‘what ifs’ being exorcised in a riotous outpouring of unimaginable joy. Strangers were hugged as if lives depended on it. Tears were shed. I took off up the concourse, with all the purpose and coordination of a blind Jack Russell trying to run the 100 metres, for no reason other than the fact that I had absolutely no idea what else to do with myself. Meanwhile, the big, burly bloke behind me stood stone still and open mouthed, wearing the expression of a man who simply refused to believe what he’d just witnessed. It’s a hard thing to explain to the uninitiated; that visceral outpouring of collective joy that reduces otherwise stable adults to a flailing mess of misplaced limbs and unchecked emotion. But if you get it, you get it – and there’s simply no other feeling like it.

Perhaps it was just too perfect. The local lad, firing Palace to FA Cup glory in front of his adoring fans. This cup run had always carried with it a sense of inevitably. Though none of us were stupid enough to say it out loud, I suspect we all felt it – this was written. Meant to be. As a Palace fan, you’re hard wired to expect disaster. But when Punch smashed that ball beyond De Gea, there was a palpable sense of a club finally allowing itself to believe; a collective surrender to hope, permeating fans, management and players alike. It was glorious, thrilling, sublime. And, ultimately, it was fatal.

Like many others, I had convinced myself that, for all the hype and fanfare, this one didn’t matter as much as those famous days of yesteryear; Hillsborough, Edgeley Park, The Amex – those were the true nerve shredders, the ones that had a profound impact on the very future of the club. By contrast, this was only ever a bonus. In the cold light of day, I’m sure that assessment will still hold true. But for now, it's inescapable - this one hurts. Bad.

It hurts because the club needed it. Doc Brown wasn't joking when he wryly noted that ‘we want more than the Zenith Data Systems cup’; Palace’s history is a rich and proud one, but the absence of heavyweight silverware continues to weigh us down.

It hurts because there isn’t a fan base in the land that deserves it more. Much has been written about Palace’s game-changing support over the last few years, but the effort on Saturday was a genuine revelation. 15 minutes before kick-off and the Palace end was absolutely rocking; a relentless onslaught of noise, colour and positivity, that continued unabated until long after the final whistle had been blown. The lamentable effort from the other half of the ground, blunted by the sort of entitlement that only unimaginable success can bring, served only to highlight the pure passion emanating from the other end. Performance in the stands may never win you a trophy, but my God, as consolation prizes go it wasn't half bad.

 

"They are the best fans in the country without a doubt." (Video by @superbreaker) #cpfc

A video posted by Five Year Plan (@fypfanzine) on

But most of all, it hurts because for many, there may not be a next time; fans who might not be afforded the luxury of waiting for another quarter of a century, and players for whom this was almost certainly the last chance saloon. From the little old lady trudging out of Wembley proudly adorned in 1990 regalia, to those battle hardened warriors laid out on the pitch at full time, you couldn't help but pick up on an unspoken sense of regret, of a golden chance not taken. I wish we could’ve done it for them.

Standing next to Steve Coppell in the North London drizzle, it was tempting to question the futility of it all. 26 years on, and here we all were – crestfallen, regretful, knackered. Just like back then. All that time, money and emotion and you wind up right back in the same place. Pissed off. But then you look around, and see a bunch of mates who you’d never have otherwise met. You think of all those people who flew in from every imaginable corner of the globe, just to watch a football match that they only ever had an outside chance of winning. You think about all those away days, from Scunthorpe to Old Trafford, Plymouth to Stamford Bridge. The barmy celebrations and, more often than not, the wall punching frustration.

Palace matters. It’s real. It brings people together like no other. A crazy, infuriating, bewildering beast with the biggest of hearts. We’ll all continue to suffer at its hands. And we’ll all wake up tomorrow (and the next day, and the day after) still wondering why someone – anyone – didn’t put Wayne Rooney on his arse. But when all’s said and done, we’ll keep on showing up. And eventually, we will get there.

After all, as a few wise men once said, this mentality is unstoppable. You'd better believe it.


Why Crystal Palace is not just a club, it's a family

Written by Matt Tassell

Still feeling rubbish after Saturday? Here's Matt Tassell with a bit of perspective.

Why do we put ourselves through it?

111 years. Generation after generation. Nothing to show for it. Not a single trophy.

Yes, we’ve had defining moments. Playoff successes. Semi-final victories. Last gasp survivals. But no one could argue that the trophy cabinet doesn't look a little spartan. A threadbare collection of Zenith Data boondoggles and U21 promotion medals. I think there’s a best haircut 94/95 award in there for Bruce Dyer.

Yesterday, while my Dad and I hurtled towards Wembley on the Metropolitan line, he turned to me and said, “I really want this”. For a man so customarily reserved and philosophical about our club’s fortunes this was an admission that hit hard. This was 65 years worth of passion now desperate to validate, vindicate, legitimize the years of all consuming support. Of course I wanted it too. So much. For myself, for my Dad, for his Dad before him. For everyone who has dared to love this club since 1905. This was payday for the whole cpfc family. So when the dreams we took to Wembley vapourized yesterday evening it was like being hit by a freight train.

It had nothing to do with the opposition being Manchester United. That so much was made of the 1990 final being replayed simply magnified the occasion, but it did nothing to increase my desire to win something. A recognised trophy. Something proper. As soon as that final whistle blew I knew it would take some time to accept the outcome. How could so much of the fairytale have slotted perfectly into place (the valiant blockade of the Palace goal, players throwing their bodies on the line, the Punch of the Rovers substitution, his subsequent 79th minute thunderbolt) yet lack the fairytale ending we so desperately hoped would come? It never materialised. The script was there and it very nearly played out to the end. So close. Again. And yet.

‘Hard luck’, came the flurry of texts from friends who’d watched back home. ‘Great effort’, ‘You gave a great account of yourselves’, ‘Shit result but your fans were immense’. “Nevermind,” my response. “Didn't want to win that cup anyway. Too big. Can’t drink soup from it. Rubbish.” Who was i kidding?

The trek back down Wembley way brought tears and pride flooding to the surface. The stoic Palace faithful continued to sing in the face of Cantona-clad plastics, waggling their wanking hands with all the class of Roy Keane in a semi-final replay (how did they get to the station so quickly - did they even bother to watch their team lift the cup?). But as Wembley's great arch dipped down behind the horizon and me and my Dad returned to our respective homes back in the real world, I was left with a deeper sense of loss. Away from the crowds, away from my fellow Eagles, came a kind of loneliness. I should have gone to the pub. I should’ve gone anywhere but home. But i didn’t feel like doing anything. I couldn’t forget. I just didn’t want to remember.

Saturday night turned into a late one. The usual foray onto twitter couldn’t provide the usual catharsis. Aside from the odd comment there was radio silence from so many of us. Even the players stayed schtum - the emotion too raw and too clean to put into words. One long, sleepless headache followed. Visions of THAT Lingard goal danced in my head along with a host of other niggling flashbacks. Punch’s strike. Mata’s equaliser. Smalling’s red. Lingard’s winner. The hope. Jedi’s tears. That dance. Clattenburg's clammy embrace with Sir Alex (is it too late for him to pull the game back?). My poor Dad wondering how much longer he’d have to wait. When? When? When? A whirling dervish of so many might have beens. A kaleidoscope of heartache.

This morning was no better. No doubt we all experienced those first few seconds upon waking where our heads raced to remember whether perhaps we had won after all. No such luck. Why does it have to hurt this much?

It would have been glorious. It would have meant so much more than I can allow myself to imagine. It would’ve been a vindication of the collective efforts of a group of owners, a core set of players, a fan base and a family that have all stood by a club in it’s darkest hour and fired it towards the light. There’s no denying that winning the FA Cup will have meant a lot to many Manchester United fans this morning. But you can bet it would’ve meant much more to us.

So what now?

We do what my Dad has done. We go on holiday. Not necessarily abroad. Not necessarily anywhere. Just away from football. Stupid, painful football. Then when things become a little more bearable, we can all soften the blow of defeat with an inevitable summer capitulation from the national team. Together witnessing the irony of Wayne Rooney doing none of the things in white we’ve seen him do in red. We can lament England’s shocking performances and moan about the Scott Dann shaped hole at the back along with the Wilf shaped hole out wide. We can enjoy watching Joniesta become the toast of europe. We can then politely applaud as Yohan parades the winners trophy around the Stade De France, all the while trying desperately to forget that this could’ve been quite the sight in a different kind of red and blue.

Then we go again next season. Because like life, we’re deluded if we think satisfaction lies in the arrival at a shiny cup-shaped endpoint. It's about the journey. The one we take together. This is why we do it.

Let’s take heed from the message we sent the world yesterday. We’re not like other football teams. We’re a family. Our song is loudest. Our mentality IS unstoppable. We will keep supporting our wonderful club. It's what we do. Because supporting Palace is never comfortable. It's the way football, sport, family should be.

Our love will last now
Till the end of time
Because this love now
Is gonna be yours and mine


FA Cup Final Week: Why Wilf Zaha will be the difference

Written by Bryan Davies

Saturday's FA Cup final is a big day for everyone at Palace, but it's a massive chance for Wilf Zaha to prove to Man United what the missed out on. And Bryan Davies is confident the Eagles winger will do just that.

If ever a showpiece occasion was a bespoke fit for an individual, it is surely Saturday's FA Cup final between Crystal Palace and Manchester United. It is surely Wilfried Zaha.

It is old and new versus old. A clash of cultures, histories and priorities. At Palace – his club – Zaha is loved, nurtured and cherished. At United, operating within a stifling framework, he was unwanted, untrusted and marginalised.

Given what we have been through together, and the impact he has had on our football club, it is easy to forget that Zaha is still only 23. He has been a talisman this season, particularly as the post-Christmas blues gripped, and he fully deserves his POTY accolades. More broadly, he has personified the progress made by Palace since the dark spring days of 2010.

Zaha has stamped his personality all over this season's FA Cup, producing winning goals and MOTM contributions. In this year of undervalued and underrated underdogs and cast-offs, you can be sure his impact on Saturday will be massive. He has the form, the motivation, the demeanour, the narrative arc. On the biggest stages, he has always delivered for Palace.

With the extravagant tricks and tools to trouble any defence and any individual, Zaha and Yannick Bolasie must be relishing their match-ups with United's fallible full-backs. Often derided by the wilfully ignorant as a show pony, his skill-set is far broader, the trickery allied with pace, power, work-rate and defensive awareness.

Many cite Zaha's temperament as an area of concern, but I've never regarded it as problematic. Indeed, considering some teams are given carte blanche to tag-foul him, he keeps his cool rather impressively. His end product is criticised and, while the player himself admits it needs to improve, there have been mitigating factors this season, and there is time and scope for that improvement to happen – this is one young player who will improve with age, rather than fizzle and fade away.

Onlookers tend to question the value of dribbling and take-on statistics, but why are they any less important than pass completion or distance covered? They are all part of the process of creating chances and scoring goals, and the facts show that within these key metrics, Wilf is the leading Englishman in 2015/16, and one of the best across Europe.

Palace's historical and contemporary identity is about pace and power and wing play, which is why Zaha – along with Bolasie and Jason Puncheon – is so important in capturing the zeitgeist and defining how we play and how we win. He occupies defenders, who usually arrive mob-handed, and creates space for teammates. He protects his full-back with diligence, and moves the team from one end of the pitch to the other with direct running and adhesive skill.

He will be pivotal on Saturday, and as ever it will be a pleasure to watch him do his thing – to play without fear, with scope to dare and create and do different.

Given Zaha's qualities and growing consistency, aligned to England's deficiencies in wide areas, it seems baffling that he hasn't yet added to his two international caps, all the more so when you consider some of the names ahead of him in the conversation.

Whatever his weaknesses, Zaha can do things with a football that no other England-qualified player can, yet still doesn't get an opportunity in a squad that struggles for width and creativity, and often flaps around for back-up plans. He is a difference-maker, capable of beating a man from a standing start and doing something extraordinary. He is maverick, and perhaps that doesn't chime with Roy Hodgson's inherent conservatism.

Maybe, too, Hodgson swallowed some of the guff which came out of United as they tried to pass the buck and explain away why they failed so spectacularly with Zaha. Briefings were made with regard to his time with United and England's under-21s, but none of it rings true to Palace fans, who know Zaha – such an extrovert on the pitch – to be a quiet, polite and family-oriented man who does a lot of unheralded charity and community work.

Built-up and knocked down by the press in time-honoured fashion, it is easy to forget that Zaha never worked with the manager he signed for – a manager who still speaks highly of him. Instead, he was faced with David Moyes and Louis van Gaal, who both treated him with distain and scarcely gave him a competitive kick.

Both of those managers have fumbled in a messy post-Alex Ferguson climate of sterile, passive football, wasted transfer millions, official noodle partners and bomb scares. It was a wasted period for Zaha, but it has toughened him mentally.

For United, Saturday is a big game, but nothing out of the ordinary. For Palace, it is momentous; defining. It is a day for family and friends and loved ones and much-missed ones, and Zaha and the Palace players understand the significance.

For Zaha, it is the cumulation of a fantastic FA Cup campaign. It is an opportunity to show his former employers what they are missing. It is a chance to show the watching England manager what he is missing. It is a chance to lead the club he loves to their first major trophy. He'll take that chance.

Can Wilf be a matchwinner in the FA Cup final for Palace? Comment below!


This is what Crystal Palace need to do this summer to progress

Written by Mark Silverstein

Unless there is a dramatic pick up in results in the last two matches of the league season, Palace will be most definitely limping over the finishing line in the league. Hopefully we have done enough to avoid relegation but there is no getting away from the fact that for half the season our results were of Aston Villa like quality.

Yes, we have stayed up (fingers still crossed) and of course we are in a FA Cup final for only second time in our history, but if I were the captain of the good ship Crystal Palace, I would be seeing alarm bells ringing all over the place for next season.

For a football supporter I am not too superstitious or fixated by historical precedent, so I am not too perturbed by the fact that the last three "smaller" clubs in FA Cups finals have all been relegated the same or next season after the final. I am also not too bothered by the fact we have never stayed in the top flight for more than four consecutive seasons.

What I am worried about is the alarming drop in form which coincided with a bad run of injuries (and a bit of bad luck thrown in). Specifically: 1) our squad is not getting any younger - so who is to say that we will not have a similar run of injuries next season; 2) the run of injuries has shown up that our back up players could not maintain the same quality level - the results speak for themselves and 3) with the exception of Souare and Wickham (I am not counting Cabaye as he was very much a known quantity) our recent signings have not really improved the squad or shown massive future potential - combined with an ageing squad - this is a real worry for next season.

To be confident of staying in the division next season, we are going to need to sign a good quality centre back, defensive and attacking midfielders and a striker. These are not necessarily players to go straight into the first team in every position, but they need to be good enough or have the potential to at least maintain the standard of our current first team and hopefully improve it over time. So, not quite a full squad overhaul but I would say more than just the tinkering that has been done since the end of last season (excepting Cabaye of course).

Adding to the list of worries is that lack of any real quality players coming through the academy. I am still hopeful that at least one of Sullay Kaikai, Jake Gray or Hiram Boateng will break into the first team in the way that Wilf did six years ago but our recent track record has not been great.

I know that this may come across as a negative, moaning rant from a spoilt supporter, unappreciative of the great things achieved by the club since 2010, but that is not my intention at all. I still have to pinch myself sometimes; we are on course for a fourth consecutive season in the Premier League, we are in a FA Cup Final for only the second time in our history (and fully there on merit given the clubs we have played in each round) and have some of the most talented players who have ever graced the red and blue of the Crystal Palace kit.

However, I just hope that all that success does not distract the owners and management from the fact that next season could be very tough for us, if we do not take a very hard look at our squad over the summer. Steve Parish & Co. have got very little wrong so far, so I will remain optimistic.


FA Cup Final Week: I Was Wrong to Write the Competition Off

Written by Naveed Khan

Kicking off the FYP FA Cup Week, here's an article from Naveed Khan, who has had to reevaluate his stance on the competition in recent months. 

DSC 5289 resized

(Photo credit: Michael Hulf)

In the first Palace game I attended, we went 1-0 down in a quarter of an hour against the team we'd lost 9-0 to a few months prior. A matter of 105 minutes later, we'd won 4-3 and I was trapped in love with the Eagles. You would assume this game, followed by the enthralling 3-3 final would mean I would equally be in love with the FA Cup. Sadly, this is was not the case.

My memories of the final are 0-1, Lee Martin, a gold and black top and the first time football made me cry. I can also recollect losing 1-0 to Hartlepool and then the semi-final in 1995. I don't remember much of the 2-2 match nor much of the replay apart a stamp on Southgate's chest, a horrid atmosphere and ultimate relegation.

Everton and Portsmouth aside, the winners of the Cup have been the usual suspects and I've long felt the magic of the cup is a myth. Palace have by and large been disappointing - we did have the Butterfield hat trick & Ambrose free kick but those felt like triumphs over administration rather than cup progress.

Fast forward to 2016 and I can't say I cared much for the competition. We were riding high in the league by the Third Round and I felt the cup could detract from that. I suggested before each of the 3rd, 4th and 5th rounds that we should be using the cup as an opportunity to give squad players and youngsters a game. Such was my dismissal, after the 4th round I offered my semi-final ticket to a friend - I had assumed either we wouldn’t get there or if we did, I wouldn't care enough to attend.

Even after Frazier Campbell scored a screamer from one yard against Reading, I wasn't caught up in the euphoria. I was not even planning on going to the Watford game – it was only when my wife asked why I am not going to Wembley did I decide to go and then all of a sudden, I caught the bug.

I let go of thinking it mattered to be top 10 in the league. Sure, I want the club to do fantastically in the Premier League and I am envious of Leicester but just staying up was suddenly OK (not that it stopped me moaning ad nauseam on Twitter). Resting players was OK. One win in half a season was OK (well, it wasn’t, but nearly). I have dared to dream and by dreaming, I have fallen in love with the cup, albeit a quarter of a century belatedly.

I’ve spoken to fans who have sold the cup to me like never before. Fans who have been home and away for decades and all they want is a cup final with the hope of a European adventure. Social media is awash with fans who have travelled from the USA, Singapore and Australia to come to Wembley, even without a ticket, just to experience the atmosphere of Palace at a cup final. For fans who have lived through two administrations, numerous false dawns, relegations and missed opportunities, the FA Cup is their holy grail. I disagreed at the time when they said that neutrals would not remember Palace finishing between 5th and 17th in the league but would remember Palace winning the cup.

I didn’t fully appreciate that. I still don’t, but I do get it more and more. I’ve craved the stability of a long run in the Premier League but my realisation is that staying up beyond a first season is a sense of relief whereas as football fans, we have to dream of glory. And our realistic glory (notwithstanding Leicester’s title win) which would conjure emotions of jubilation and raw emotion is the FA Cup. It’s only taken me 26 years to realise that is the feeling to really crave beyond the satisfaction of the monetary glory Premier League status gives.  So, I apologise to those who I said were wrong to focus on the cup. I apologise to those who spent their hard earned to see us beat Stoke, Southampton, Spurs and Reading to be so dismissive of the competition. And I apologise to those who said winning the FA Cup was more worthy than league progress.

When Mile goes to lift the FA Cup on 21 May, I will feel more ecstatic than when he did the same three years ago; I did not think that Palace would ever evoke such emotion again. Once more, I was wrong.

What do you think? Is it right that Palace focused on the FA Cup? 

Newcastle 1-0 Crystal Palace: Townsend punishes tired Palace - 5 things we learned

Written by FYP Fanzine

1. A game reflective of the league season

The general feeling among Palace fans was that the first half against Newcastle United was a good one. Palace had forced the issue, controlled possession and looked the better side. Opportunities to score were rare but we still looked the side most capable of winning the game.

However, much like Palace's league form this season, that first half of excellence petered out into a disappointing trudge to the finish line. Newcastle took advantage of a free kick in a dangerous position and the rest is history.

This Palace side needs to be more clinical when it comes to league matches. It's a bit late to say so with just two matches remaining, but it does. There have been a few too many league games this season where decent starts have been let down by poorer second halves.

2. FA Cup fatigue is real

One of the criticisms we've seen oft repeated in response to Palace's poor second half of the season is that the FA Cup has papered over some major cracks.

Arguably, the cracks we've seen are likely to have been created by what has been an incredibly challenging (but brilliantly rewarding) cup run.

Accounting for Palace's injury problems since December, the remaining squad has been tasked with playing an additional five competitive matches, all at a level required to win each one. There have been no 'easy' ties in this run - beating Southampton, Stoke, Tottenham and Watford along the way - with the majority playing strong sides too.

A fully fit Palace side might have dealt with the fatigue better. As it is, this injury-ravaged side have lost every league match directly after a cup fixture. If there's anything to learn from it, it's that this squad still lacks depth to be competitive on multiple fronts. With the focus going on the FA Cup, the league form has disappointingly suffered.

3. Hennessey takes a step backwards

Wayne Hennessey has come under a lot of stick this season from Palace fans; some of it justified some of it not, but there’s no denying his improvement in recent weeks. He was superb in the wins over Norwich and Watford.

However one regular criticism of his game is his footwork and again it came under inspection up at St James Park after Andros Townsend’s free-kick. The Welshman appeared to take a step to the left as the shot was taken only to see it fly in to his right side as he dived that was but couldn’t get near it.

Would he have had more of a chance if he hadn’t gambled on that step to the left? Possibly. And should a keeper be taking a step to the side of the goal already covered by the wall? Probably not, that is what the wall is there for after all.

It’s a shame after a few good weeks where Hennessey has shown why Pardew starts him but sadly it’s another week where his decision making comes under the spotlight.

4. McArthur is back and it’s like he’s never been away

One of the positives from Saturday’s game was the return of James McArthur to the starting lineup. The Scot has been absent for a while thanks to an ankle injury. Indeed the injury picked up at the start of February was so bad he himself suggested on Twitter he might not be seen again this season.

But he returned off the bench at Watford last weekend and was back in the starting lineup St James Park. And it was like he’s never been away. The tenacious midfielder wasn’t at his best but still showed what Palace had missed over the last three months with an energetic display in the middle of the park.

He was replaced just after the hour but showed enough to hint that he could play an important part in the Eagles final three games of the season.

5. Puncheon is not a winger

Like McArthur Puncheon is a recent returner from injury and in the past few weeks has been fantastic; he scored the winner against Norwich and was brilliant against Everton and Watford in that FA Cup semi-final win.

But he’s been brilliant because he’s been played in that number 10 role in the hole behind the lone forward. It’s a role that gives him freedom to drift into spaces between the opposition defence and midfield and it’s one he thrives in.

Unfortunately at Newcastle he was asked to play out wide again and we’ve seen before it’s a position he struggles to have an impact in. There is a big responsibility on defending while playing there, which he doesn’t shirk, but it means his involvement in the areas he is dangerous diminishes.

Unfortunately due to Zaha's injury he was forced to play there but with Bolasie also having an indifferent game on the other flank Palace struggled to create decent chances. Because of the formation we play when the wingers are on form we are almost unstoppable but when they aren’t (or aren’t playing) there doesn’t appear to be a Plan B.

This was another of those days. Maybe some backup wingers are needed in the summer. I hear there’s an England international winger at Newcastle who might be available if they go down…