Fulham 1 Middlesbrough 1: Monk happy with '˜improving' Boro

Cyrus Christie earned himself redemption with the 88th-minute equaliser which gave Middlesbrough a hard-fought 1-1 draw with Fulham at Craven Cottage.
BORO HERO: Middlesbrough's Cyrus ChristieBORO HERO: Middlesbrough's Cyrus Christie
BORO HERO: Middlesbrough's Cyrus Christie

With the ball bouncing around the Fulham penalty area, Christie kept his nerve to volley under the body of home keeper David Button to earn Boro a point.

Just two minutes earlier, Christie had allowed Ryan Sessegnon to send over a deep cross on to the head of Aboubakar Kamara. The Fulham substitute nodded the ball in off the post in what appeared to spare him his own embarrassment after skewing his shot wide 10 minutes earlier.

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The whirr of excitement in the closing stages made up for the opening 75 minutes which, while pleasing on the eye, were short on goal-scoring chances.

Middlesbrough manager Garry Monk viewed the point as one gained, not two lost as Boro extended their unbeaten record in all competitions to seven games.

Monk said: “We haven’t hit our full stride yet, but it’s coming. When it clicks, there won’t be many teams who can stop us. We are still improving.

“We knew it would be difficult coming here. Fulham will be challenging again this season. Both teams had an attacking mindset so it was always going to be an open game. Both teams had chances, but both could have been more clinical.

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“Our character was on show today. We came back quickly for the equaliser and ended up pushing for the winner. The character of the players is undeniable.

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“It must have been great entertainment for the fans. Fulham are always a threat but we dealt with them well and we will look forward to Tuesday’s game against Norwich.”

It took just 14 seconds for the first attempt on goal with Middlesbrough midfielder Lewis Baker skipping through but failing to connect properly with his 20-yard effort.

Seven minutes later, he tried again and connected more sweetly only for Fulham keeper David Button to tip his rising shot over the bar.

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Next, Fulham midfielder Oliver Norwood spotted that Boro keeper Darren Randolph had drifted away from his near post at a free-kick.

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The Northern Ireland midfielder tried to catch him out, but Randolph scrambled back to shovel the ball away just in time.

If ever there was a game which summed up the conundrum that is Fulham it was this one. Beguiling in possession with runners pulling the Middlesbrough defenders this way and that, the home side also had Floyd Ayite, Sheyi Ojo and Sessegnon running at the Boro full-backs and flashing low cross after low cross into the visitors’ penalty area.

The problem was that left only lone striker Rui Fonte in the box to try to finish the moves. Time and again, he was thwarted by Ben Gibson and Dael Fry who simply denied him the space he craved.

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It meant that for all the Fulham possession, their only serious attempts on goal came from just inside the area with Ayite foiled by the legs of Darren Randolph or from outside with Norwood shooting just over on two occasions in the first half.

At the other end, Boro right-back Christie, who was more effective going forward than trying to stop Sessegnon galloping past him, jinked his way into the Fulham area. From his pass, Baker’s shot was always rising as it flew over the bar.

The second half followed a similar pattern. Another Norwood free-kick came close, this one landing on top of the net.

Fulham were guilty of overplaying after 65 minutes, allowing Jonny Howson to set in motion an attack which ended with Patrick Bamford striking a left-foot shot just wide of the post. Marvin Johnson was similarly just off target three minutes with a low drive from just inside the area.

Neither opportunity was as clear-cut as the chance that then to Kamara 15 minutes from time and which preceded the breathless finish to the game.