Phil Parkinson hails Wrexham’s mentality after comeback victory over Salford

By Sports Desk October 14, 2023

Phil Parkinson praised Wrexham’s character as they came from behind to stun Salford with a 3-2 victory.

The travelling Ammies raced to an early 2-0 lead thanks to Matt Smith’s ninth goal of the season and a Matty Lund strike.

An accurate Elliot Lee header halved Salford’s lead shortly before the interval and ignited an unlikely fightback.

Wrexham left it late to pull off a miraculous comeback with two substitutes proving to be the hosts’ heroes.

Steven Fletcher levelled with a simple tap-in and Jordan Davies notched the winner a matter of seconds after the restart.

“We’re so pleased with the win,” said boss Phil Parkinson, whose side stretched their unbeaten run to five games.

“It’s another great example about what the club’s about; the character and strength of mentality in the group shone through and we never ever give in.

“At half-time, I felt if we upped the quality in our play and decision-making that we’d have a great chance to go on and win the game.

“We had all the best chances and we felt if we got it to 2-2 then the momentum would be with us and we’d go and win the game.

“I owe a special mention to the subs because we needed a lift of tempo, energy and a bit of freshness, and they really gave us it.

“We put them under so much pressure in that second period and there was a spell where you thought whether the goal was coming.

“We had some unbelievable chances and once it got to 2-2, the whole stadium lifted and it felt like there was only one winner.

“The teams which are ultimately successful are the ones with strong squads because you’re going to have injuries and suspensions throughout the season.

“You’ve got to have a squad capable of dealing with that and you can never knock us in terms of the work ethic and desire of the team.”

It was a bitter ending to the afternoon for Neil Wood’s outfit, who let a fourth successive league victory slip through their grasps.

“We weren’t good enough, that’s the brutal honesty of it,” said the Salford boss.

“We didn’t keep the ball well enough, we weren’t sharp enough and two naive mistakes cost us the game.

“It’s really poor from our point of view; they’re schoolboy goals to concede and the minimum is that we leave here with a point.

“It’s very disappointing to lose the game and we should be able to withstand the pressure.

“We’ve got a major chance to make it 3-1 and that has to be a goal; it’s criminal to miss a chance like that and that was a massive turning point in the game.

“It would’ve taken the sting out of it and given us the chance to get back in control of the game.

“We showed a big lack of quality and a naivety to our play, so it’s a big learning curve.

“We just need players back and the squad is light as it is and it shows; we’ve got two first-team players on the bench.

“You almost don’t want to put our B team lads into that situation because it is sink or swim and a difficult environment to put them in.

“They could make three or four subs that are quality first-team players who can make an impact and that’s the difference.

“But our lads are giving their best and that’s all that I can ask for.”

Related items

  • Sane looking to replicate Yamal, Williams impact when Germany face Spain Sane looking to replicate Yamal, Williams impact when Germany face Spain

    Leroy Sane is hoping he can replicate the impact of Lamine Yamal and Nico Williams when Euro 2024 hosts Germany face Spain in a huge quarter-final tussle on Friday.

    Germany will face La Roja for a spot in the last four in Stuttgart after overcoming Denmark 2-0 in the last 16, while Luis de la Fuente's side beat Georgia 4-1 after falling behind.

    Spain have arguably been the standout team at the tournament thus far, with the impact of their young wing duo Yamal and Williams turning heads.

    Sixteen-year-old Yamal assisted as he became the youngest player to feature in a Euros match against Croatia in the group stage, also teeing up Fabian Ruiz against Georgia to become the first teenager with multiple assists at the Euros since Cristiano Ronaldo in 2004 (also two).

    Williams, meanwhile, netted a fine solo goal on Sunday, becoming the first player on record at the Euros (since 1980) to score, assist and complete 100% of his passes (46/46) in a game he started.

    Yamal (11) and Williams (nine) rank joint-third and joint-seventh for dribbles completed at Euro 2024, with the former also fifth for the total distance he has carried the ball upfield (556.8 metres).

    Having replaced Florian Wirtz in Germany's starting lineup against Denmark, Bayern Munich man Sane is desperate to match his fellow wingers.

    "Especially when they win possession, they instantly look to play forward. They now have an added weapon with their two very quick wingers," Sane said of Spain.

    "What happened in the past against Spain, we cannot change that. Our goal is to get to the next round and we will do everything we can to achieve that."

    Sane endured a stop-start season with Bayern, with a groin problem he sustained during the Bundesliga run-in threatening his place at Germany's home tournament.

    Reflecting on his disrupted preparations, Sane added: "I didn't know how long the injury would last and if I would make the tournament.

    "At the end of the day I am here and happy that it worked out and that I could recover and be here for the Euros.

    "It is not yet completely gone but it is much, much better than before. I have no pain any longer and that is very good. 

    "Before when I had a game I needed five or six days for the pain to subside. I don't have that anymore."

  • Southgate salutes England's 'togetherness and spirit' but acknowledges need for improvement Southgate salutes England's 'togetherness and spirit' but acknowledges need for improvement

    Gareth Southgate hailed the togetherness and spirit demonstrated by England, but acknowledged the need to improve ahead of their Euro 2024 quarter-final with Switzerland.

    The Three Lions were considered one of the pre-tournament favourites to go all the way in Germany, but have produced generally underwhelming displays in their four matches so far.

    England topped Group B despite winning just one of their three games, and were just seconds away from a humbling last-16 exit against Slovakia, until Jude Bellingham's sublime acrobatic effort spared their blushes.

    Harry Kane then completed the turnaround in the early stages of extra time, as Southgate's relieved side scraped through to the last eight by the skin of their teeth.

    Nevertheless, the England boss is adamant his players' last-gasp exploits against Slovakia will provide momentum ahead of facing Switzerland in Dusseldorf on Saturday. 

    "There's no question it will give the whole group belief," said Southgate.

    “We know we should be better than we've been, but we've ended up with a lot of young players in important positions and trying to solve problems right the way through the four weeks of the camp.

    "But the standout is the way the players are dealing with it. Their togetherness, their spirit."

    Southgate referred to the 1990 World Cup and Euro 96 as similar instances where England were slow out of the blocks, before going on to reach the semi-finals at each tournament.

    "Everybody now, 30 years on, looks back at [Euro] 96 in a different way to how it was at the time," the Three Lions boss added.

    "We were bang average against Switzerland [in the opening game at Euro 96]. We were the same against Scotland; Scotland missed a penalty at 1-0 [down]. Spain should have beaten us in a 0-0 draw [in the quarter-finals].

    "1990 was similar, so you do go through these moments in tournaments."

    The 53-year-old will oversee his 100th England game in charge against Switzerland, becoming only the third Three Lions head coach to reach triple figures after Walter Winterbottom and Bobby Robson.

  • Martinez salutes Ronaldo and Diogo Costa as shootout hero revels in 'best game of my life' Martinez salutes Ronaldo and Diogo Costa as shootout hero revels in 'best game of my life'

    Roberto Martinez paid tribute to Cristiano Ronaldo's character and Diogo Costa's penalty shootout heroics after Portugal scraped through to the Euro 2024 quarter-finals.

    The 2016 champions were given an almighty scare by a stubborn Slovenia, who kept them at bay for 120 minutes at Frankfurt Arena - thanks largely to Jan Oblak in goal.

    The Atletico Madrid stopper reduced Ronaldo to tears when he saved his tame penalty in the first half of extra time. However, the Portugal skipper made no mistake in the shootout, where Diogo Costa took centre stage.

    The Porto goalkeeper, who produced a crucial save to deny Benjamin Sesko in the second half of extra time, then kept out all three Slovenia kicks from Josip Ilicic, Jure Balkovec and Benjamin Verbic.

    And Martinez was full of admiration for the efforts of both players.

    "Ronaldo missed a penalty and then was decisive when he started the penalty shoot-out, he paved the way," the Portugal head coach told EURO2024.com.

    "It was a victory for unity, from the dressing room and Cristiano is our captain. He showed that in life and in football, there are difficult moments and we can't give up, we have to keep going and it was a demonstration of what to do when things aren't going well."

    "We worked very well, the energy, strength and passion in the dressing room to win a game like that is incredible."

    On Diogo Costa, Martinez added: "The secret of Portugal is Diogo Costa, he's the most hidden secret in European football.

    "Today, he appeared on a different level, he was incredible in the one-on-one situation [with Sesko], and then he had the focus and quality to make three consecutive saves in the shootout. We have to be very proud of him."

    Diogo Costa became the first goalkeeper to ever save three penalties in a European Championship shootout.

    "This is probably the best game of my life," he said. "I focused on doing what I had to do. I went with my gut feeling. Of course, we analysed the penalty takers, but players change, and they change how they shoot.

    "I am very happy and very excited to have helped the team. These are the hardest games as I barely touched the ball, but the hard work paid off.

    "We all felt we needed to keep believing [after Ronaldo's first penalty]. We believed until the very end, and we're all very happy."

© 2023 SportsMaxTV All Rights Reserved.