Derby County 0 - 4 Reading
Derby 0-4 Reading: Heroic failure for Royals
| Scoring Summary | |
| Derby County | Reading |
| James Harper (15) | |
| Dave Kitson (61) | |
| Kevin Doyle (69) | |
| Leroy Lita (90) | |
| Match Stats | ||
| Derby County | Reading | |
| Shots (on Goal) | 6(2) | 11(7) |
| Fouls | 17 | 13 |
| Corner Kicks | 2 | 0 |
| Offsides | 0 | 3 |
| Time of Possession | 47% | 53% |
| Yellow Cards | 0 | 1 |
| Red Cards | 0 | 0 |
| Saves | 2 | 4 |
| Match Information |
|
Stadium:
Pride Park Stadium, England
Attendance: 33,087 Match Time: 15:00 UK Official(s): Mike Riley (Referee) |
| Teams | |
| Derby County | Reading |
| 31 Roy Carroll | 1 Marcus Hahnemann |
| 24 Tyrone Mears | 2 Graeme Murty |
| 23 Darren Moore | 3 Nicky Shorey |
| 30 Lewin Nyatanga | 16 Ivar Ingimarsson |
| 44 Robbie Savage | 29 Michael Duberry |
| 21 Mile Sterjovski | 15 James Harper |
| 15 Eddie Lewis | 10 Stephen Hunt |
| 40 Hossam Ghaly | 11 John Oster |
| 7 David Jones | 28 Marek Matejovsky |
| 14 Kenny Miller | 12 Dave Kitson |
| 9 Emanuel Villa | 8 Leroy Lita |
| Substitutes | |
| 1 Lewis Price | Adam Federici 32 |
| 2 Marc Edworthy | Andre Bikey 22 |
| 32 Miles Addison | Kalifa Cisse 4 |
| 22 Benny Feilhaber | Jimmy Kebe 30 |
| 41 Paris Simmons | Kevin Doyle 9 |
| Substitutions | |
| Marc Edworthy for Mile Sterjovski (46) | Kevin Doyle for Dave Kitson (66) |
| Benny Feilhaber for Robbie Savage (46) | Kalifa Cisse for Marek Matejovsky (83) |
| Paris Simmons for Emanuel Villa (63) | Andre Bikey for James Harper (86) |
| Yellow Cards | |
| Kevin Doyle (70) | |
| · Club Squads: Derby County | Reading | |
Updated: May 11, 2008, 5:18 PM UK
Reading were relegated from the Barclays Premier League despite a convincing 4-0 victory over Derby at Pride Park.The Royals put in a performance to be proud of as they swept the Rams aside with relative ease. James Harper curled home to hand the Royals a deserved half-time lead before Dave Kitson, Kevin Doyle and Leroy Lita made it a second-half rout.
However, their efforts were to prove in vain as Fulham's victory at Portsmouth ensured Steve Coppell's men will join Derby and Birmingham in the second tier next season by virtue of goal difference.
It was tough on the visitors, who were a class above their opponents throughout.
Skipper Graeme Murty, John Oster and Marek Matejovsky were returned for Reading, while David Jones, Emanuel Villa, Mile Sterjovski and Lewin Nyatanga were restored to the relegated Rams' starting line-up.
And within five minutes the Royals had a clear chance to take the lead.
Matejovsky dispossessed Hossam Ghaly in midfield and sent Lita clean through but the striker got caught in two minds and County goalkeeper Roy Carroll was out swiftly to smother.
Coppell's side had gone six games without a goal coming into the game and were left to rue another missed opportunity three minutes later when Matejovsky's low drive flashed beyond the far post.
It appeared only a matter of time until the deadlock would be broken and the goal duly arrived after 15 minutes.
Kitson unselfishly laid the ball off to Harper on the right edge of the area and the Royals midfielder bent a delightful curling effort into the top-left corner.
Two minutes later the advantage should have been doubled and, not for the first time, Lita was the guilty party.
Kitson was again the creator, this time crossing from the left wing for the unmarked England under-21 international in the penalty area, but his sloppy touch enabled the Rams to recover.
The Rams, now officially the worst team in Premier League history, certainly lived up to their billing.
It was not until the 40th minute that they mustered an effort on the visitors' goal, Marcus Hahnemann down quickly to push Jones' 25-yard drive around the post.
Considering the sweltering conditions it was no surprise the Royals failed to maintain the high tempo set in the early stages but they rarely looked troubled at the back against a Derby side in need of one more goal to avoid adding the tag of outright lowest scorers in Premier League history to their string of unwanted records.
Rams skipper Robbie Savage and Sterjovski were replaced on the resumption by Benny Feilhaber and Marc Edworthy as Jewell attempted to swing the game in his side's favour.
It almost had the desired impact when American midfielder Feilhaber's header looped inches over the crossbar in the 52nd minute.
Yet not for the first time this season County were made to pay for defensive ill-discipline after Villa fouled Murty on the right touchline in the 60th minute.
Stephen Hunt squared the resulting free-kick to Nicky Shorey on the edge of the area and Carroll could only palm the left-back's shot out to his left.
Unfortunately for him Lita was lurking and he squared the ball to the unmarked Kitson at the back post to leave his strike partner with the simplest of finishes.
He was swiftly replaced by Doyle and soon the Republic of Ireland international had a goal of his own when he prodded into the bottom-left corner from close range - earning a booking for his celebrations.
With the game now well and truly won the visitors were quite happy to hold onto possession as their fans began to dream of a fairytale survival story.
However, the celebrations were soon silenced when news filtered through of Fulham taking a late lead at Portsmouth.
As for County, they have now become only the second team in the history of English football to win just once in an entire league season - the first was Loughborough College 108 seasons ago.
They almost gave their supporters a rare reason for cheer when Jones fired narrowly over the crossbar in the closing stages.
But it was the Royals who had the final say.
Lita grabbed the goal his efforts had deserved in the stoppage time with a diving header at the near post but it was not enough to prevent his side joining County in the Coca-Cola Championship next season.
Fulham's 1-0 win at Portsmouth rendered the Royals' 4-0 success at Derby insignificant as they were condemned to the Coca-Cola Championship along with County and Birmingham.
The Cottagers' superior goal difference proved to be the decisive factor after both sides finished the season with 36 points - 25 clear of the rock-bottom Rams.
And Coppell, who has been in charge at the Madejski Stadium since 2003, failed to confirm he would still be at the helm come the start of next season.
'I have got to look at things,' he said. 'It's too close (after the game) now. I have a huge affection for this club and I want to do what I think is right for this club.'
Despite just two places separating the sides in the final league table, the gulf in class today was marked.
Coppell conceded he expected the three points to be enough to keep his side afloat but paid tribute to the recent form of Fulham, who won four of their last five games to complete an unlikely survival bid.
'I thought if we had got three points here today it would be enough,' he said.
'At the end of it all, you have to give huge respect to Roy (Hodgson) and Fulham. We wouldn't have been looking forward to going to Portsmouth today.
'I don't know how they have played but, whatever, Fulham had to go there and get a result and that was to their credit.
'The run they have had has been brilliant. Obviously, to say we are bitterly disappointed is a huge understatement.
'The dressing room is a very sad place at the moment and it's difficult to know what to say to ease their pain.
'I'm lost for words, there is no comfort in words at the moment. It is a bit of a numb feeling.
'We have brought some good stuff to the Premier League so it is a shame for it to end that way.'
While Reading at least went down with their heads held high, the same could not be said for dismal Derby, who were second best from the off.
Manager Paul Jewell said: 'I think it sums up the season, the players are not good enough for the club.
'The supporters are quite right to say they are not fit to wear the shirt because collectively and individually this season, we haven't been.
'I'm the manager so I'm part of that group but I know I've got the desire, the fire in my belly and the passion to have a good go at turning it around.
'Too many of those players haven't, it's as simple as that.'
County have now become only the second team in the history of English football to win just once in an entire league season - the first was Loughborough College 108 seasons ago.
They can also add the unwanted record of lowest goals tally to earliest relegation and smallest points total in Premier League history.
A furious Jewell added: 'You can't believe it really that a team that's fighting for their lives, who are nervous and edgy would come and dominate a game here like they have.
'But they have, it's a complete embarrassment.'
Jewell also confirmed the club had accepted a bid for Rob Earnshaw, who was left out of the 16-man squad.
He added: 'We have had an offer from a club that we have accepted. Whether it happens or not, I don't know but that was the reason Rob was left out of the squad today.'
Sunday, May 11, 2008
| Birmingham | 4 | |
| Blackburn Rovers | 1 | FT |
| Chelsea | 1 | |
| Bolton Wanderers | 1 | FT |
| Derby County | 0 | |
| Reading | 4 | FT |
| Everton | 3 | |
| Newcastle United | 1 | FT |
| Middlesbrough | 8 | |
| Manchester City | 1 | FT |
| Portsmouth | 0 | |
| Fulham | 1 | FT |
| Sunderland | 0 | |
| Arsenal | 1 | FT |
| Tottenham Hotspur | 0 | |
| Liverpool | 2 | FT |
| West Ham United | 2 | |
| Aston Villa | 2 | FT |
| Wigan Athletic | 0 | |
| Manchester United | 2 | FT |