Swansea City building rather than battling under Luke Williamspublished at 15:13 7 March 2024
Chris Wathan
BBC Sport Wales

Swansea City are only five points ahead of the Championship relegation places
There is an incongruity about Swansea City and their situation in the chaos of the Championship’s closing stages.
On the one hand, there they are, still within two bad weeks of being in the relegation places.
Five points and seven positions clear, but still close enough to see their name in the graphics that spell out how tight and tense it is at the wrong end of the second tier.
“Of course they’re in a relegation fight,” was Iwan Roberts’ pre-game verdict at Vicarage Road ahead of the 1-1 draw with Watford that leaves Swansea 15th on 43 points with 10 games to go.
Even a fleeting glance at the table makes it difficult to argue, suggesting the next two months are ones to be filled with fretting over survival.
And yet, watching Swansea at present, it does not look like a side looking over their shoulders.
Indeed, the players at Watford who looked like they had the world on their shoulders and the fans breathing down their necks were the hosts, a team two points and two places better off than Swansea.
Maybe it’s naïve to say, but Swansea do not look like a side in a relegation scrap.
Although they failed to pick up a third consecutive win – and instead continued a sloppy habit of conceding in the second-half – Swansea again look like a side moving in the right direction.
The possession has a purpose, with the much-missed pace out wide finally back.

Swansea's draw at Watford made it seven points from their last three games
Throw in some “rottweiler” defending and, all of a sudden, Swansea look like a team again – and a team who are building rather than battling.
“It’s natural to ask the question,” said boss Luke Williams at Watford having been queried whether the side is feeling pressure from sides such as QPR and Sheffield Wednesday picking up momentum below them.
“But I think we as a group feel in a good place and don’t feel like we’re in that position, we don’t feel like we’re low on confidence, that we can’t win a game, or that we’re in a scrap.
“We feel like we’re a team trying to improve the way we play, trying to understand the game plan and it feels like we’re starting to make progress. Now can we start to put a string of results together?”

Cardiff City's derby win in September typified Swansea City's struggles under previous manager Michael Duff
It all came with a caveat that there is much to improve, much more work to be done.
Not pulling further ahead when clearly on top, for one – Ronald and Przemslaw Placheta both could have done better with big chances at Vicarage Road. Not managing games out the other.
But, with the South Wales derby fast approaching, both the body language and mood music from within the camp is in stark contrast to the confused and calamitous look about Swansea when they suffered a bruising 2-0 defeat to the Bluebirds back in September.
Bristol City come before Cardiff and defeats in both may paint a very different picture, but Swansea’s final fixtures do show they can be masters of their own destiny: Norwich are the only opponents with a realistic promotion shot, three are in midtable, the remaining six games against sides either in the bottom three or no more than two points above it.
“We have a long way to go to be the best team we can be,” added Williams.
Amid the chaos of the Championship, maybe it is a case for Swansea to simply keep calm and carry on.