Skip to main content
‘No goal-of-the-month contender’: QPR scrap their way past misfiring Rovers
Warburton says side got the basics right to beat high-flying opposition and claim first home win since November
Queens Park Rangers' Yoann Barbet during the Sky Bet Championship match at the Kiyan Prince Foundation Stadium, London

QPR 1-0 Blackburn Rovers
by Dan Nolan
at Kiyan Prince Foundation Stadium
 

MARK WARBURTON admitted that Yoann Barbet’s scrappy winner was “no goal-of-the-month contender,” but credited QPR for their hard graft in shutting out in-form visitors Blackburn Rovers on Saturday.

Travelling to west London after an unbeaten January, Blackburn enjoyed the best of a goalless first half and could easily have gone ahead had Adam Armstrong’s 21st-minute free-kick not been tipped over by flying Seny Dieng.

But after the visitors squandered several gilt-edged chances, QPR made the most of their best period of the match — a set-piece-laden restart which put Rovers under heavy pressure — as Barbet fired them to their fourth win in five.

It came from Charlie Austin’s free-kick on 54 minutes which set off a game of six-yard pinball — Blackburn bodies blocking QPR shots at close range till Jarrad Branthwaite’s push away finally opened up Barbet for an easy slot across Thomas Kaminski.

“It wasn’t pretty at times,” Warburton admitted of QPR’s first win at home since late November.

“We’ve had some good performances here, we’ve played a lot better than that, and not won.

“But that’s the Championship and it’s about defending your goal, understanding the key moments of the game and getting the rewards.

“We got a scrappy goal — that’s no goal-of-the-month contender that’s for sure — but it’s an important three points.”

It lifted the hosts from 18th towards mid-table, and though the goal was nothing to write home about, more exciting elements like the mazy midfield running of Ilias Chair and top wing-back play from Todd Kane seemed to lift Warburton’s hopes that his season is not simply about avoiding relegation.

“This divisions’s all about consistency,” he said. “If you can get four, five, six in a row — or five wins and a draw — in those type of runs you go from 18th to 8th quickly. That’s the Championship, that’s the beauty of it. 

“You see teams at the bottom now winning and the gap’s getting closer and closer.

“So it’s a great division, it’s a great league for the neutral — it can cause you to lose a bit of hair when you’re involved in it — but it’s a great league.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Fulham's Tosin Adarabioyo celebrates scoring the equaliser o
Men's football / 4 December 2021
4 December 2021
Solanke's 16th of the Championship season cancelled out by Tosin's late header, as visitors suffer another torrid second half
Bournemouth's Dominic Solanke (left) and Millwall's Murray W
Men's football / 25 November 2021
25 November 2021
Rowett disappointed to not take all three points as Solanke's 15th of the season was cancelled out by Benik Afobe in a dominant second half
Nu Civilisation Orchestra in full swing
Music Review / 21 November 2021
21 November 2021
DAN NOLAN thoroughly enjoys a flawed but heartfelt rendition of the politically charged song cycle, performed by an exciting jazz orchestra that’s bursting with talent
Luton Town manager Nathan Jones
Men's football / 20 November 2021
20 November 2021
Lack of composure 'cost us the game,' Nathan Jones says
Similar stories
Everton manager David Moyes (right) speaks with assistant co
Men’s Football / 3 April 2025
3 April 2025
Luton Town manager Rob Edwards during the Sky Bet Championsh
Men’s Football / 9 January 2025
9 January 2025
Scotland's Scott McTominay, March 25, 2023
Men's Football / 12 June 2024
12 June 2024