Wed 12th Mar
Sky Bet Championship
Kick-off19:45

POR Portsmouth

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PLY Argyle

Portsmouth (A)

The Game  
Portsmouth v Argyle. Fratton Park. Wednesday, 12 March. 7.45pm. Sky Bet Championship. 

The Opposition 
Portsmouth were promoted last season from Sky Bet League One, but when they lost at Home Park in early November, it meant they had only won one of their first 14 games of this season.

Slowly, but surely, Pompey started to improve. They followed the Argyle defeat with a four-game unbeaten run – two wins, two draws – and although they lost 4-0 to Derby County after that, they reacted with a 4-1 win a home to Coventry City.

Portsmouth lost six of the next nine, but won the other three, all at home, against Swansea City, Middlesbrough and Stoke City, scoring nine goals in those three victories.

Since the start of February, Portsmouth have lost just one of the last seven, hitting their best form of the season. They have won four of the last five, beating Cardiff City, Oxford United and Queens Park Rangers in succession, before losing at Luton Town. Then, on Sunday, they won 1-0 at home to league leaders Leeds United.

Portsmouth now sit 17th, with 42 points from 36 games. They are ninth in the home form table, with nine wins from their 18 fixtures at Fratton Park.

The Gaffer 
Head Coach John Mousinho’s appointment at Portsmouth was his first job in management, and he very much hit the ground running.   

John Mousinho

He took over at Fratton Park in January 2023, with Portsmouth in 15th, but he rallied them to eighth, giving confidence for the following season. That confidence was well-placed, as Pompey won League One with 97 points, sealing a return to the English second tier.  


As a player, Mousinho featured notably for Brentford, Wycombe Wanderers, Stevenage and Preston North End, before playing over 100 times for Burton Albion and Oxford United. During his time with the latter, he was elected as chairman of the Professional Football Association.  

The Squad 
Portsmouth’s leading goalscorer is Callum Lang, with 10 goals. Lang signed for Portsmouth in the January transfer window of 2024, however he will not feature after suffering a hamstring injury against Oxford in February. Adil Aouchiche, signed on loan from Sunderland in January, could feature in his place.

Josh Murphy (below), 30, seems to be in the form of his career. The former Norwich City, Milton Keynes Dons and Cardiff City man helped Oxford United to promotion last season, but moved to fellow promoted side Portsmouth in the summer. He has six goals this season, and has had acclaim for his performances.

Josh Murphy

Andre Dozzell came through the ranks at Ipswich Town, the club where his dad Jason was a club a legend. He played almost 100 times before moving to Queens Park Rangers, and spent three seasons with them, including a loan spell at Birmingham City during last season. He moved to Portsmouth in the summer, and has been a mainstay in their midfield.

Recent Meetings
The teams met on 5 November, at Home Park, with Argyle winning 1-0 thanks to a Michael Obafemi goal. The last three league meetings at Fratton Park have all ended 2-2, with each game seeing Portsmouth score a late equaliser.

Tickets 
Tickets for this match are now off sale. Collections are available on the day from the away turnstiles (19-22) at Fratton Park, from 90 minutes before kick-off.

A Strip for the Trip
Argyle will wear their green home kit for this game.

Argyle TV 
Argyle TV’s coverage will begin at 7.15pm, with Charlie Price and Ian Stonebridge bringing you build-up to the game, before handing over to the ground for commentary provided by Harry Salvidge and Garry Nelson.

Match passes to watch this game are available to certain international audiences. Click here for more information.

Sky Sports
The game will be available to watch on Sky Sports+

Ryan Hardie

Have you heard the one about Victory in Portsmouth? 

No? Well, it’s a famous warship, commanded by Admiral Horatio Nelson, a man who was great friends with a man called Hardy. Some 220 years ago, in the Battle of Trafalgar, Victory prevailed.

And have you heard the one about victory in Portsmouth?

No? Well, it’s a terrific evening where Argyle, with Garry Nelson commentating on Argyle TV, attained victory following a goal by a man called Hardie. Some 341 days after their last away win, Argyle prevailed. 

It was a nervy one, mind. With only a few minutes of the 90 remaining, Argyle were 2-0 up, with goals from Mustapha Bundu and Ryan Hardie, and looked good for the win. However, Matty Sorinola was sent off moments before Adil Aouchiche got one back, and nearly a dozen worrying minutes of stoppage time were enough to send any Pilgrim’s sealegs wobbly.

The whistle, when it came, was the most welcome of the season.

Argyle Head Coach Miron Muslic made four changes to the side, notably bringing in Michael Obefemi to the starting line-up.

When these two sides met in November, Obefemi was far from popular with Portsmouth fans to begin with, as a former Southampton player. His stock with Pompey fans plummeted further when he scored the only goal of the game late on; Muslic was looking for some similar outcomes here.

Hardie also returned to the starting 11, joining Obafemi in flanking central striker Bundu. Behind them, Jordan Houghton and Darko Gyabi anchored the midfield, with Sorinola and Tymoteusz Puchacz playing as wing-backs. Maksym Taklovierov, Nikola Katic and Julio Pleguezuelo continued as the back three, with Conor Hazard in goal. 

Portsmouth controlled the early flow of the game, but it was Argyle who had the first chance. It was a good one, too, and Hardie would probably have expected to score from it Not that the Scotsman did anything wrong; the connection he got on a ball he had run on to, and that sat up for him, was basically perfect, but the save from Nico Schmid was outstanding, diving to his right and tipping away with a strong right hand.

Aouchiche went reasonably close for the home side, a few minutes later, curling wide from the angle on the edge of the penalty area, as again Pompey took command of the pattern of play, but were not creating copious chances.

Bundu saw stars when he tried to lob Schmid from 40 yards; it was not the worst effort, drifting a little wide of the target with the goalkeeper beaten, but an on-running Hardie might have been a better option.

Portsmouth’s best moments of the first half came around the half-hour mark. A low cross by Jacob Murphy from the left side was a difficult one to deal with, and Pleguezuelo did excellently to get round before Colby Bishop pounced.

From the corner, taken by Murphy, Aouchiche connected and sent his header goalwards. It was a really good stop by Hazard, to repel the ball on the goal-line and push away.

As half-time approached, Argyle produced their best move of the half (Of the month? Of the year?) and took the lead. Puchacz advanced on the left, in his own half, then released Obafemi down the line. What happened next was a front three working in perfect harmony.

Obafemi crossed early, and low, to find the angled run of Hardie in the box. There was no real option to shoot, but Hardie’s lay-off was sublime, into the path of Bundu and, a touch to set later, he wrapped his foot and around the ball and fired into the bottom corner.

Pompey started the second half with purpose. Murphy had one shot blocked by Pleguezuelo, then a more speculative effort, probably more of a cross, found its way to a surprised Hazard, who pushed away well.

Argyle may well have been setting up for a second half protecting their single-goal lead, but they were always going to feel like a threat if they could hit on the break. Five minutes into the second period, they did just that – and it led to a second goal. 

It came from Portsmouth trying to work down their left, but Sorinola intercepted and played the ball forward in one move. This, on the halfway line, released Hardie, who needed little invitation to try to run beyond. This he did, blue shirts in his wake, and he entered the area. 

In the first half, Schmid had saved a Hardie effort he had no right to. This time, he failed to stop one he perhaps should have. No matter, to anyone in green. They celebrated in the away end as Hardie gave his familiar salute. For several games, the problem was Hardie’s back. Now, for Portsmouth, their issue was: Hardie’s back.

Argyle quickly made one change – Callum Wright, for Obafemi – and a planned second turned into a worrying third. Bali Mumba for Hardie was going to happen anyway, but a nasty landing for Pleguezuelo meant he was carried from the field on a stretcher, replaced by Kornel Szucs. Be well, Pleggy. Que se mejore.

On 73 minutes, Murphy sent in another good cross from the Portsmouth left, and picked out one of three subs that the home side had made, Mark O’Mahony. He was in space as he headed, but in letting the ball come to him and trying to be delicate, all he did was steer wide.

Five minutes later, O’Mahony again glanced a left-wing cross – an inswinging one this time – and got a better contact, but again saw the ball miss Hazard’s post on the outside.

In all of this, Argyle brought on Nathanael Ogbeta for Bundu, with the former coming on to play on the left of a front three that consisted of him, Wright and Mumba.

Portsmouth kept pushing, but Argyle were resolute. However, Sorinola picking up a second caution for a foul on the edge of the area, and being sent off on 87 minutes, was not ideal.

Neither was Aouchiche smashing in from distance after the free-kick had been partially cleared. If you are wondering how his name is pronounced, and how everyone of an Argyle persuasion reacted to the goal, the answer to both questions is: ‘Oh, sheesh’.

And now, for the Green Army, came the reminders of the fact that the last THREE visits to Fratton Park had ended 2-2, and all of which saw Pompey equalise in the final throes of the game. 

Up went the fourth official’s board, and it signalled an amount of minutes to be added on that tallied one more than the players had on the field.

Crosses came into the box, again and again, but the Greens held firm; Houghton, Szucs and Talovierov in particular making stunning blocks and headers to keep the other Dockyard side at bay.

The Green Army expects every Argyle player to do their duty. Tonight, they certainly did.

Argyle: 21 Conor Hazard, 4 Jordan Houghton, 5 Julio Pleguezuelo (6 Kornel Szucs, 64), 9 Ryan Hardie (2 Bali Mumba, 64), 14 Michael Obafemi (11 Callum Wright, 52), 15 Mustapha Bundu (3 Nathanael Ogbeta, 77), 17 Tymoteusz Puchacz, 18 Darko Gyabi, 25 Nikola Katic (capt), 29 Matty Sorinola, 40 Maksym Talovierov. Substitutes: 31 Daniel Grimshaw (gk), 8 Joe Edwards, 19 Malachi Boateng, 28 Rami Al Hajj, 35 Freddie Issaka.

Goals: Bundu 44, Hardie 50

Sent off: Sorinola 87

Booked: Sorinola 68, Gyabi 90+6 

Portsmouth: 13 Nico Schmid, 3 Connor Ogilvie, 5 Regan Poole, 7 Marlon Pack (capt, 18 Cohen Bramall 55), 8 Freddie Potts (11 Mark O’Mahoney, 62), 9 Colby Bishop, 17 Adil Aouchiche, 21 Andre Dozzell, 22 Zak Swanson, 23 Josh Murphy, 30 Matt Ritchie (14 Kaide Gordon, 55). Substitutes: 31 Jordan Archer (gk), 4 Ryley Towler, 10 Kusini Mengi, 20 Tom Waddingham, 24 Terry Devlin, 45 Isaac Hayden.

Goals: Aouchiche 89

Booked: Bramall 90+8

Attendance: 20,394 (1,401 away) 

Referee: Matthew Donohue