Jason Puncheon fires Southampton to victory against Reading
by Richard Rae at St Mary's Stadium 5 months ago
Also about this match
Southampton have shaken off Premier League nerves, says Jason Puncheon

Before Southampton played Swansea on 10 November, Nigel Adkins was generally understood, not least by himself judging by his comments at the time, to be within 90 minutes of being dismissed as the Southampton manager.

Since then the Saints have won three games and drawn two, losing only at Liverpool, a run that has lifted them to 15th in the Premier League.

This though was a performance which pleased Adkins as much as the result, because Southampton dominated from the start, and Jason Puncheon's winner on the hour was the least they deserved. Reading could argue they were unfortunate when Hal Robson-Kanu hit the post with a header shortly before half-time but Brian McDermott admitted his disappointment with his side's lack of creativity.

"It's important that you win the games against the teams that are close to you in the division but I was happy with the performance, though we should have scored more goals than we did," Adkins said.

He praised Puncheon, the former Barnet winger who has re-established himself in the team after a public spat with the chairman, Nicola Cortese, and time spent out on loan.

"He's matured, he's worked very hard and he's won a place on merit by giving us a lot," Adkins said. "He's bought into the culture here."

He had a word too for Kelvin Davis, the experienced goalkeeper he brought in to replace the injured 20-year-old Paulo Gazzinga. Many Saints' supporters will suggest the clean sheet may not have been a coincidence.

Reading found themselves defending from the start. With the full-backs Nathaniel Clyne and Luke Shaw quick to get forward in support of Puncheon and Adam Lallana down the flanks, Southampton sent in a series of crosses and nearly took the lead when Puncheon gave the overlapping Clyne the chance to drive in a low cross which Morgan Schneiderlin diverted just outside Adam Federici's left-hand post.

Lallana, with a half-volley, and Lambert, with a an attempted curler, both forced Federici to make a save – the second more demanding than the first – and it was not until Jay Tabb, driving from midfield, got in an angled shot shortly before the half-hour that Davis was required to make his first save.

Southampton may have been fortunate not to concede a penalty when Tabb, attempting to reach the subsequent rebound before Jack Cork, went down under the defender's clumsy challenge.

Puncheon, coming in at the far post, then headed in a Lallana corner only to have his effort disallowed for what the referee, Jon Moss, appeared to indicate was a push by Maya Yoshida on Federici. It was a genuinely baffling decision: if anything Federici pushed Yoshida.

After all their possession, if not pressure, it would have been a body blow for Southampton to go in behind, but they came within a post's width of doing so when Sean Morrison headed a corner back across goal and Robson-Kanu headed firmly against Davis's left post with the goalkeeper well beaten.

Clyne, with another excellent overlap and intelligent pass inside, has to take a lot of the credit, but Puncheon's finish, looking up and driving the ball beyond Federici with his right foot, was assured.

McDermott used all three substitutes in an effort to galvanise his side but it was Southampton who continued to look the more likely to score.

Guly do Prado, whose introduction for Jay Rodriguez was not welcomed by a crowd that would have preferred to see Manuel Mayaka, curled a shot just over, and with two minutes remaining, should have done better than shoot too close to Federici from no more than six yards.

McDermott was clearly upset, especially with the lack of response when Reading conceded. "We've had a bad day today, we were as poor as we've been. We always have a response when we go behind, but we didn't this time," he said.

Recent articles about Southampton and Reading
Premier League's managerial shift may bring end to patience as a virtue 2 days ago
NYCFC has Man City and Yankees as backers but there are still big obstacles 2 days ago
Ten Premier League storylines that will dominate this summer 3 days ago
Manchester United bank £60.8m in Premier League TV payments 3 days ago
The shot-phobic striker and other Premier League statistical curiosities 3 days ago

More from
PremiershipReadingSouthampton
Share your thoughts
Sign in to comment
Related videos
08:44 • 5 months ago
5 months ago
Trending articles
PSG lure Wayne Rooney with promise to match Manchester United wages
José Mourinho will face greater expectations at Chelsea this time round
Chelsea ask Galatasaray if Turkey striker Burak Yilmaz is for sale
How Germany went from bust to boom on the talent production line
Premier League's managerial shift may bring end to patience as a virtue
Manchester United's David Moyes considers move for Marouane Fellaini
Brian Greenhoff obituary
The great European Cup teams: Barcelona 2009-2011
The great European Cup teams: Milan 1989-90
Mike Phelan and Eric Steele in Manchester United coaching clearout
Robert Lewandowski brings goals and fortitude to Borussia Dortmund
Tony Pulis departure from Stoke City signals the end of an error
Champions League final: webchat with Barney Ronay
The Joy of Six: Football League play-off finals
David Moyes can settle down to a sneak preview of his Judgement Day
MLS week 13: Reviews and previews
   
Kick4Life - changing lives through football