Norwich City 5-0 Huddersfield Town
- Published
Norwich scored five second-half goals as they thumped 10-man Huddersfield.
Terriers' defender Murray Wallace was dismissed early on after bringing down Cameron Jerome, but it remained goalless until Bradley Johnson scored from close range just after the break.
Headers from Nathan Redmond, Johnson and Jerome extended the lead.
Substitute Lewis Grabban raced onto Wes Hoolahan's through ball to complete the rout, with the visitors restricted to only a couple of half-chances.
The win lifted Neil Adams' Canaries to within two points of the play-offs, while Huddersfield - who have only won two of their last nine games - slipped to 17th.
Norwich, who had only won one of their last eight home games, had their task made easier on 17 minutes when Wallace was shown a straight red card by referee Mark Brown.
Norwich's topsy-turvy season |
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The Canaries were top of the Championship in mid-October, but a run of one win in ten games saw them slide to 11th. Back-to-back victories has seen them climb back up to seventh. |
A high punt forward was mis-controlled by visiting skipper Mark Hudson, allowing Jerome to latch onto the loose ball and he was through on goal when he was fouled by last man Wallace.
However, it took until 44 seconds into the second half for the home side to break the deadlock as Gary Hooper skilfully pulled the ball back for Johnson to tap in.
Two minutes later Norwich doubled their lead as Martin Olsson's cross was met by half-time substitute Redmond, who nodded into the top corner.
The third goal in five minutes had a touch of fortune about it as Jonny Howson's blocked shot fell perfectly to Johnson, who headed in his second.
Hooper's flick found Huddersfield-born Jerome to make it 4-0 before ex-Bournemouth striker Grabban fired the ball high into the net just seconds after coming onto the pitch.
Norwich manager Neil Adams: "We have dropped too many points at home, there's no doubt about that. Away from home we have done okay, but here we have drawn five games and that has cost us.
"It was important today that we let everyone know what we are capable of. Yes it was against 10 men but as we have seen so many times in the past that is not always easy. You have got to go out and do it.
"In the end it was reminiscent of the flowing football we played earlier in the season and we can now go to Derby full of confidence next weekend. We'll be going there to win, that will never change."
Huddersfield manager Chris Powell: "You can't start that way in any game of football and expect to get anything from it. It was so unlike us. In the first half I thought we coped okay with going a man down but after the break we weren't at it and we got punished.
"Now I have got to pick them up and then we'll go again. I have certainly got some decisions to make about my next team."
- Published20 June 2016
- Published7 June 2019