Sat 4th Jan
Sky Bet Championship
Kick-off12:30

STO Stoke

0
-
0
- :
- :
- :
-

PLY Argyle

Ibrahim Cissoko

The Game   
Stoke City v Argyle. bet365 Stadium. Saturday, 4 January. 12.30pm. Sky Bet Championship.  

The Opposition  
Stoke began the season with Steven Schumacher in charge, having stayed up following a revival towards the end of the 2023/24 season. Schumacher was dismissed in September, and replaced by Narcis Pelach, but the latter won just three games of his 19 in charge and was also sacked.  

Stoke come into this weekend in 19th place in the division, with 26 points from 25 games. They have six wins, eight draws and 11 defeats. Five of those wins came in the Potters’ first 14 games, but things have been more difficult of late.  

That said, after a run of nine games in which they only attained four points, their last two encounters have yielded two clean sheets, a home win against Sunderland, and an away draw with Burnley.  

The Gaffer
The game will be the first in charge for Mark Robins, who took the job at the bet365 Stadium this week.

Robins spent nearly eight years in charge at Coventry City, taking them to two promotions, from Sky Bet League Two to the Championship, and to a play-off final against Luton Town in 2022/23, which the Sky Blues lost on penalties. He was sacked at Coventry, to the surprise of many, in November.  

Mark Robins

Robins came through the ranks at Manchester United, and was part of the squad that won the 1990 FA Cup and the 1991 European Cup-Winners Cup. In a career that also took in spells in Denmark, Spain and Greece, Robins represented Leicester City, Norwich City, Walsall and Rotherham United, among others. 

His first managerial job was at Rotherham, having previously been the assistant manager. This led to a move to Barnsley, followed by a first stint at Coventry, beginning in September 2012. After five relatively successful months, he took a job with Huddersfield Town, where he remained for 18 months.  After a similar amount of time with Scunthorpe United, Robins was re-appointed as Coventry boss in March 2017.  

The Squad  
Tom Cannon is Stoke’s leading goalscorer this season, with ten goals. Four of those came against Portsmouth in a 6-1 victory in October. The 22-year-old forward striker is on loan from Leicester City, having previously been an Everton player. He has previously spent time on loan to Preston North End.  

Wouter Burger (below) is likely to play at the heart of Stoke’s midfield. The 23-year-old Dutchman is yet to score this season, but he notched when the Potters played Argyle last season. Burger began his career with Feyenoord, had loans with Excelsior and Sparta Rotterdam, before moving to Basel. He then joined Stoke in the summer of 2023. He is a Netherlands Under-21 international.  

Wouter Burger

South Korean international Bae Jun-Ho was named 2023/24 Player of the Year for Stoke in his first season at the club. The attacking midfielder, who typically plays centrally or from the left, is only 21, but has impressed with his performances since arriving. He is yet to score this season, but has provided five assists.  

Recent Meetings 
Earlier this season, Stoke won 1-0 at Home Park, with a goal from Million Manhoef in the 83rd minute. Last season, Argyle won the home fixture 2-1, with Stoke winning 3-0 late on the campaign.   

Tickets  
Tickets for the trip are now off sale. There are no sales on the day.

Collections are available from the bet365 Stadium on Saturday.

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

Argyle TV  
Argyle TV’s  coverage will begin at midday, with Charlie Price and Katie Middleton bringing you build-up to the game, before handing over to the ground for commentary provided by Nathan Albon and Joel Grant. 

Click here for more information on how to buy match passes to watch the game live.  

Darko Gyabi

A great former Argyle manager used to often to say, ‘every point is a prisoner’. On a day like this, you know what he meant.  

If Stoke City put a DVD of this game in their club shop (they won’t) then no amount of January sales marketing activity is going to shift any units. Suffice to say: not a classic.  

No matter, though. For Argyle, it was a rare away point to add to the tally, and an even rarer clean sheet – just the second of the season.  

While technical quality was not to the fore, what was on show was heart, organisation and kiln-fired spirit from Argyle, who restricted Stoke – a side who have recently drawn with Burnley and beaten Sunderland – to precious few chances on a cold lunchtime in the Potteries.  

Argyle made one enforced change for the game, with Michael Obafemi taking the spot of Ryan Hardie, whose shoulder injury sustained in the 2-2 draw against Bristol City three days prior had not recovered sufficiently.  

After New Year’s Day’s point against the Robins, Argyle now met another Robins – Mark, of that ilk, taking charge of Stoke for the first time, having recently been appointed Potters boss.  

As you may expect with a new head coach, Stoke were the team on the front foot from the off, their home crowd buoyed by their team’s energetic start to the game.  

For their early pressure, Stoke did not threaten directly in the opening quarter of the game. When they did look likely to get into a good position, Argyle were often architects of their own near-downfall, losing the ball in key areas or simply not being on the same wavelength of a team-mate.  

It became apparent that the flow of the game could become a bit cat-and-mouse, with Argyle’s best hopes being from counter-attacking football. One particular swift, neat move saw several Greens involved in getting the ball to Darko Gyabi, who skipped past a couple of challenges before taking a shot from outside the box. It was on target, but Viktor Johansson saved comfortably.  

Stoke responded with a move down the right which saw Bae Jun-ho release Lewis Koumas with a lovely pass in behind. Koumas put across an inviting ball, too, but somehow it evaded all legs in the area.  

Argyle were definitely coming more into the game, although any cutting edge was still sheathed. From one encouraging move on the right, Gyabi got to the bye-line and fed Morgan Whittaker. With not much wriggle room, Whittaker teed up Brendan Galloway, but his effort from 20 yards was not close.  

Similar was occurring at the other end. Former Argyle Academy player Sam Gallagher had a ball fall to him just outside the area, but his shot sailed into the Stoke City faithful occupying the space where the away end used to be.  

Now tucked into the corner of the stand, the 1,407 Argyle fans would have been the happier of the sets of supporters at half-time. This was far from a classic, but Argyle had thus far prevented Stoke from breaking through.  

That nearly changed earlier in the second half. Tatsuki Seko drifted, unchecked, into a dangerous inside-left position, and cut back to Junior Tchamadeu, who brought a smart save out of Conor Hazard.  

For Argyle fans, the second half was bringing a feel of cognitive dissonance. This was not a good game by any stretch. Chances were almost non-existent, and neither side could muster much in the way of fluent play.  

This, however, was probably better news for the team with two points on the road all season, as opposed to the team trying to capitalise on a new manager in situ and a recent uptick in form.  

That said, as the 70-minute mark appeared, so did some chances from Stoke. Koumas was becoming increasingly influential on the City right, and one incursion got him to the line, where he cut back to Wouter Burger, recently on as a substitute. Burger got into the area and pirouetted, but was eventually halted by a combination of Galloway and Julio Pleguezuelo, at full stretch.  

Then came the best Stoke chance so far, with Koumas again involved, crossing to Potters leading goalscorer Tom Cannon, who would probably have expected to convert, but instead dragged his effort wide.  

The longer the game clock eroded, the more home players and fans demonstrated their frustrations, but aside from the odd foray forward, Stoke offered little, their vexation negating their intent.  

Argyle saw the game out and – go on, let’s say it – are unbeaten in 2025.   

Argyle: 21 Conor Hazard, 2 Bali Mumba, 5 Julio Pleguezuelo, 6 Kornel Szucs, 14 Michael Obafemi (35 Freddie Issaka, 64), 10 Morgan Whittaker, 18 Darko Gyabi (27 Adam Forshaw, 70), 20 Adam Randell (capt), 22 Brendan Galloway, 28 Rami Al Hajj (4 Jordan Houghton, 79), 29 Matty Sorinola (3 Nathanael Ogbeta, 79). Substitutes: 31 Daniel Grimshaw (gk), 7 Ibrahim Cissoko, 34 Caleb Roberts, 39 Tegan Finn, 44 Victor Palsson. 

Booked: Hazard 41, Al Hajj 59 

Stoke City: 1 Viktor Johansson, 2 Lynden Gooch, 9 Tom Cannon, 10 Bae Jun-Ho, 11 Lewis Koumas, 12 Tatsuki Seko, 16 Ben Wilmot, 20 Sam Gallagher (6 Wouter Burger, 49), 22 Junior Tchamadeu, 24 Andy Moran, 26 Ashley Phillips. Substitutes: 13 Jack Bonham (gk), 3 Enda Stevens, 5 Michael Rose, 14 Niall Ennis, 18 Bosun Lawal, 23 Ben Gibson, 30 Sol Sidibe, 37 Esre Tezgel.  

Booked: Gooch 27 

Referee: Dean Whitstone  

Attendance: 26,169 (1,407 away)