Sat 17th Sep
Kick-off 15:00

POR Portsmouth

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PLY Argyle

Portsmouth v Argyle Preview

Sync Fixtures

There are very few examples of Portsmouth v Argyle matches which are not cracking contests.

Seven of the last 12 games between the sides have finished in draws, including three 2-2 scorelines in the last two seasons.

Both of Argyle’s last two visits to Fratton Park have ended in a shared four goals. Two seasons ago, a Luke Jephcott double put The Pilgrims 2-0 up, before Pompey responded with goals in the 86th and 87th minute, the latter scored by James Bolton, who is now with Argyle.

Last season, it was Ryan Hardie scoring twice, putting Argyle 2-1 up following an early Lee Brown goal. Again, Portsmouth scored a heart-breaking late leveller, this time from defender Sean Raggett deep into injury time.

Argyle fared better at Home Park later in the season, though, with Hardie grabbing the only goal of the game in the second half.

Portsmouth are yet to lose this season in Sky Bet League One action. They began with two draws: 3-3 at Sheffield Wednesday and 0-0 at home to manager Danny Cowley’s old club Lincoln City. Following this, Pompey have won six in a row, beating Cheltenham Town, Cambridge United, Bristol Rovers, Port Vale, Peterborough United and Burton Albion.

In the cups, they won at Cardiff City in the Carabao Cup before losing at Newport County, and in the Papa Johns Trophy had a 2-2 draw at Crawley Town followed by a penalty shoot-out extra point.

Manager Danny Cowley is assisted, as usual, by his brother Nicky, with the duo having taken over at Fratton Park in March 2021. Last season, in their first full season in charge, they steered Portsmouth to a 10th-place finish in League One.

Prior to arrival on the South Coast, Cowley began his management career with Concord Rangers and Braintree Town before making his name at Lincoln. He steered The Imps to promotions from the Vanarama National League and League Two, both times as champions, as well as a run to the Emirates FA Cup quarter-finals.

He left Lincoln in September 2019 to join Huddersfield Town, but was dismissed at the end of the season.

This summer, Portsmouth have signed numerous players, with a pair of forwards perhaps the two most eye-catching arrivals. Colby Bishop has signed from Accrington Stanley, and has scored five goals in his first eight games for the club. He has been playing in a front pairing with Tottenham Hotspur loanee Dane Scarlett, a teenage prospect who has scored three times.

Marlon Pack, 31, after a decade of playing in the Championship with Bristol City and Cardiff, has joined to offer some experience to the midfield, while 34-year-old Michael Morrison, who has played over 100 games for Reading, Birmingham City and Charlton Athletic, adds even more to the defence.

Schumacher Says
“They brought in 12 players, I think, over the summer, so a big turnaround. They’ve changed the system a little bit, and how they are playing. We know it will be the same old tough game. Every time we have been there over the last few years, especially last year, it was a tough game, but an enjoyable one.”

Team News
Mickel Miller, Conor Grant, and James Bolton are expected to miss out with injuries that have prevented them from playing this season so far. Otherwise, Steven Schumacher reports an fit squad to select from.  

Tickets
Our allocation of tickets in the Milton End of Fratton Park is completely sold out. Please do not travel without a ticket. If you any questions about ticket collections, please click here for this useful resource.

Pre-Match
There will be a minute’s silence and playing of the National Anthem before kick-off, in memory of Her late Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II. 

Argyle TV
Audio commentary of the game is available for £2.50 in the UK, and live video streaming is available for overseas supporters. Click here to see what is available in your region.

 

Season Tickets

Pilgrims pile on the pressure at Portsmouth

Portsmouth 2 
Koroma 41 
Hackett 90 

Argyle 2 
Raggett o.g. 74 
Ennis 79  

Two top sides slugged out a fabulous match, as Argyle were once again denied by a last-minute leveller at Fratton Park. 

Portsmouth led through a Josh Koroma beauty at the end of a breathless first period but the Greens wrestled their way back into the tie via a Sean Raggett own goal and then looked to have won it with a fantastic team goal finished by substitute Niall Ennis 11 minutes from time. 

Pompey smuggled a dramatic late draw in this fixture last season and they did it again, Reeco Hackett saving his side this time around. 

Argyle boss Steven Schumacher made two changes to the side that beat 1-0 Oxford in midweek, with Jordan Houghton and Tuesday’s goalscorer Morgan Whittaker replacing Adam Randell and Danny Mayor. Teenage midfielder Will Jenkins Davies was included on the Pilgrims’ bench. 

Pompey started the weekend two points above the Greens in second place in Sky Bet League One, defeating struggling Burton 2-0 in midweek, but the only focus for everyone before kick-off was a beautifully observed minute’s silence for the HM Queen Elizabeth II and a stirring rendition of God Save the King. 

Playing in glorious sunshine, Argyle started full of purpose and poise, although Portsmouth conjured the first chance on the break, Colby Bishop nodding over from a good position with a Nigel Lonwijk challenge providing just enough distraction. 

In terms of possession and territory, the opening 15 minutes belonged to Argyle and a cross from Joe Edwards led to the first shooting chance, Matt Butcher’s effort charged down by a stretched home defence. Pompey replied with a Tom Lowery strike from distance held by Mike Cooper. 

A soft free-kick for the hosts found Bishop for a glancing header deflected wide by Dan Scarr before Cooper intervened with a super save to deny Dane Scarlett following a swift Pompey break.  

The Pilgrims responded with Ryan Hardie chasing a clever ball into the channel from Finn Azaz and laying the ball back to Butcher for a 25-yarder claimed at the second attempt by Portsmouth ‘keeper Josh Griffiths. 

Argyle had the ball in the net moments later, Azaz brilliantly shifting his feet for a shot that rebounded to Edwards. The skipper’s effort scuttled back to Azaz who poked home but the assistant’s flag stumped Pilgrim celebrations. 

Argyle’s frustration was soon matched at the other end, Pompey desperately claiming for a penalty and / or the ball crossing the line after an almighty scramble but referee James Bell was unmoved.  

The hosts did grab the lead four minutes before the break, Koroma curling a stunning finish beyond Cooper and into the top corner. Griffiths matched that brilliance at the other end, saving low to his right to thwart Butcher after a superb Argyle move. 

A frantic first period ended with Pompey scrambling clear from a corner, with Macaulay Gillesphey and Hardie both firing into the crowd. The action immediately switched back to Portsmouth, Bali Mumba somehow recovering to tackle Scarlett with the young forward bearing down on Cooper. 

Koroma attempted to repeat his party piece on 51 minutes, this time drilling into the side-netting after jinking inside from the left. Ennis for Hardie was the first Pilgrim change before the hour. 

Sam Cosgrove and Randell replaced Edwards and Houghton midway through the half, and the Greens quickly increased their tempo, Randell threading passes through the lines before a Whittaker shot from 22 yards fizzed wide. 

Brendan Galloway for Gillesphey was the next Argyle switch, as Schumacher looked to freshen the ranks for a final push, and it worked. 

A delightful pass from Lonwijk released Mumba down the right and his vicious cross toward the near post tempted Raggett into a diving headed clearance that instead flashed past his own ‘keeper to level matters. 

If the equaliser carried an element of luck, the next goal was pure class. Lonwijk threaded a lovely ball into midfield and Whittaker trumped that pass with a wonderful assist into the path of Ennis, who calmly slotted a low finish beyond the exposed Griffiths. 

The Greens almost sealed it with a tremendous counter-attack, Mumba leading the march and feeding a pass to Whittaker, who rounded Griffiths but the angle was incredibly tight, as Connor Ogilvie recovered to clear. 

Galloway was dismissed for two yellow cards in the dying seconds and Pompey somehow pinched a point through Hackett glancing the ball over the line from a quick throw. Painful for the Pilgrims but still an outstanding display, and brilliant entertainment. 

Portsmouth: 1 Josh Griffiths; 4 Clark Robertson (capt), 6 Connor Orgilvie, 7 Marlon Pack, 9 Colby Bishop, 15 Owen Dale (18 Reeco Hackett 81), 19 Dane Scarlett (10 Joe Pigott 70), 20 Sean Raggett, 26 Tom Lowery (16 Joe Morrell 40), 27 Josh Koroma (11 Ronan Curtis 70), 28 Michael Morrison. Substitutes (not used): 21 Josh Oluwayemi (gk), 2 Zak Swanson, 25 Jay Mingi. 

Booked: Pack 43, Morrison 90 

Argyle: 1 Mike Cooper; 21 Nigel Lonwijk, 6 Dan Scarr, 3 Macaulay Gillesphey (22 Brendan Galloway 70), 17 Bali Mumba, 4 Jordan Houghton (20 Adam Randell 66), 7 Matt Butcher, 8 Joe Edwards (capt) (16 Sam Cosgrove 66); 19 Morgan Whittaker, 9 Ryan Hardie (11 Niall Ennis 56), 18 Finn Azaz. Substitutes (not used): 25 Callum Burton (gk), 5 James Wilson, 44 Will Jenkins Davies. 

Booked: Galloway 89, Azaz 90 

Sent-off: Galloway 90 

Attendance: 19,009 (1,899 away) 

Referee: James Bell