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QPR’s Niko Kranjcar nicks point on mixed day for Stoke’s Peter Crouch | QPR’s Niko Kranjcar nicks point on mixed day for Stoke’s Peter Crouch |
(about 4 hours later) | |
If there is a Niko Kranjcar fan club, chances are Harry Redknapp is its founder, president and lifetime member. Here the Croat showed why the QPR manager admires him so much. Kranjcar sparkled before rescuing a point with an exquisite free-kick two minutes from time, leaving the home crowd grateful that Redknapp persuaded the player to come here on transfer deadline day, the fourth time he has signed Kranjcar. | |
The fondness seems to be mutual, as Kranjcar apparently turned his back on a fortune in order to join QPR from Dynamo Kyiv, the conflict in Ukraine perhaps a push factor to complement the pull of Redknapp. “We pay a third of what he was being paid in Ukraine and [Kyiv] don’t pay any of it. So he took a massive cut to come here, that’s how much he wanted to come back.” | |
Kranjcar’s goal was the ideal way for him to avenge the fouls that he suffered at the boots of Ryan Shawcross and Steve Sidwell towards the end of the match. Until then it had looked like Mark Hughes would be the man gaining retribution. The Welshman was booed by a smattering of home fans on his first return to Loftus Road since being sacked as QPR manager nearly two years ago but most locals seemed to confine themselves to hoping that their current team would provide comment on Hughes’s reign by demonstrating that the club is now much better off than when he left. That should not have been hard given that QPR were bottom of the Premier League back then with four points from 12 matches, but Redknapp’s men have made an unconvincing start to this season and were woeful for long periods here. | |
Stoke helped themselves to the lead in the 11th minute, when Victor Moses ambled down the left and lobbed the ball towards the unmissable Peter Crouch, who headed down for Mame Biram Diouf to nod in from close range. | |
Moses could have scored again one minute later but fired straight at Rob Green from the edge of the area. QPR were looking stodgy in midfield, dodgy at the back and devoid of ideas going forward. There seemed little prospect of them being able to pick a way through a defence that had shut out Manchester City on their last away trip. | |
Diouf twice dallied when given chances to increase his team’s tally on the counterattack, before Crouch slashed wide from 18 yards in the 31st minute. | |
Kranjcar went close with a swirling long-rangeshot before playing a key role as the home side got the break they badly needed. He swung a corner towards the back post, Steven Caulker met it and Crouch and Charlie Adam confused each other as they tried to clear and ended up helping the ball across the line. | |
The hosts were soon behind again, and once more it was all too easy for Stoke. Moses shrugged off Mauricio Isla down the left and sent a low cross into the area. Somehow it ran past Caulker and Ferdinand and all the way to Crouch, who smashed it into the net from 10 yards. | |
Erik Pieters and Steven N’Zonzi missed further chances to deepen QPR’s problems. Stoke did not look in jeopardy until Sidwell clattered Kranjcar and the Croat curled the free-kick into the net. | |
“QPR looked a beaten team but unfortunately we encouraged them somewhat,” said Hughes. “When you give a player of that ability a chance centrally, there’s always a danger he will score.” | |
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