Liam Manning will not allow Oxford to get carried away after moving to summit
Liam Manning says he will not be getting carried away after Oxford moved top of Sky Bet League One after beating Charlton 2-1.
It was a fourth straight win for the U’s and owed much to two-goal Tyler Goodrham, who opened the scoring in the 10th minute and struck the winner five minutes from time.
Charlton had bossed the start of the second half and equalised through Alfie May’s second goal of the season in the 63rd minute, but the Addicks have now lost five on the spin in all competitions.
Manning said: “I won’t be looking at the league table. For me it’s just about keeping on chipping away and picking up points.
“We will just reflect on what we did well, what we can do better and it’s all about building on this for the next game.
“It was a cliched game of two halves. We controlled the first half, with the ball and out of possession.
“We got in some really good areas and had some really good chances and I thought we could have been more clinical.
“I would have liked us, while we had the dominance there, to have made the most of it and try to put the game to bed.
“But you’re never going to dominate a game for 90 minutes and in the second half they came out a little more aggressive, on the front foot and pressed a bit more.
“They got the goal, but despite their possession they didn’t create too many chances and James Beadle didn’t have too many saves to make.
“What we showed was a good response and a willingness to bounce back.
“Yes, the performance we can dissect, but ultimately we did enough to get three points.”
Goodrham, 20, also scored in Oxford’s previous game, a 3-1 win at Barnsley.
“Tyler’s fearless, his energy and bravery are tremendous,” Manning said. “It’s now about the consistency, which he’s starting to show, and we’ll be pushing him to produce.
“Knowing him as well as I do now, he’ll keep demanding of himself.
“He’s in a terrific spot where he’s consistently playing games and is on form at the minute.
“It’s an exciting time for young players here, and we’ve shown we’re not afraid to throw in young players.”
Charlton manager Dean Holden admitted: “It’s a tough one to take.
“We started excellently and had the best chance of the game in the first few minutes for Alfie May.
“Then we conceded poorly on 10 minutes and started getting pulled around a lot and were ragged and that wasn’t acceptable.
“That’s why I made changes and changed the shape and we were much better in the second half.
“I was really pleased with the second half – we came out of the traps quickly and took the game to them and deservedly equalised.
“But we were caught by a sucker punch, trying to find the winner, they break from their box and seven seconds later we’re 2-1 down.
“My players gave everything they’ve got. We deserved more from the game but didn’t get it. It’s a similar story every week.
“We have to get back to work and turn results around. It’s about regrouping quickly.
“For me it’s about staying positive…the first half wasn’t acceptable but the second half is something to build on.
“I’m absolutely certain we’ll turn this around.”