Ryan Lowe feels Preston were inspired by anniversary of Sir Tom Finney’s death
Preston manager Ryan Lowe believes the anniversary of Sir Tom Finney’s death inspired his side to their 2-1 victory over Middlesbrough.
The club marked the 10th anniversary of the death of the Preston and England great by sporting special edition kits in honour of the famous number seven.
An ovation in the seventh minute seemed to rouse the Lilywhites and goals from Liam Millar and Emil Riis took them to the brink of the play-offs.
“It did give us extra motivation,” said Lowe. “We wanted to have a bit of a celebration because I think that’s what it was, we wanted to show the family and our fans what we can do.
“It was important that we got a win on the back of that because there can be too much pressure on it.
“I’ve obviously got to be mindful of the fact that we have a game to play and try and win and it was a great occasion.
“We kept it simple, we knew what we were here to do, we respected the occasion and I think we’ve sent the Finney family and all of our fans home happy.”
The Lilywhites went in front in the 23rd minute when Millar brought down Matt Clarke’s attempted clearance with his right foot and fired a left-footed shot past Tom Glover from just outside the box.
Boro continued to push for a leveller and it arrived through Finn Azaz in the 57th minute, opening his account for the club with a rocket of a shot into the top corner from 20 yards out.
Boro soon found themselves behind again, though, with Riis tapping home on the hour-mark – his sixth goal in as many games for Preston against Boro – after Will Keane’s shot deflected and fell kindly to him.
It earned Lowe’s side their third league win in a row and they are outside of the top six only on goal difference.
“The lads are dead on their feet, they’ve worked their socks off,” said Lowe. “Their resilience, wow, it’s massively pleasing.
“Sometimes you can’t help but drop the way we dropped and soak it up. We gave the ball away a couple of times, or more than a couple of times, to let them have penetration on us and we need to nullify it and stop it.
“But then for us to show that resilience and character and desire to get right back into the game right afterwards (after the equaliser) was massively pleasing.”
Boro, meanwhile, are without a win in four Championship games and have slipped seven points adrift of the play-off places.
“I think it’s a tough result to take for sure,” said manager Michael Carrick. “I think the results definitely aren’t going our way. I thought tonight we definitely deserved an awful lot more from the game.
“But we’re not getting it, so we need to accept that and we’ve got to do something about it.
“I can’t fault the boys in terms of effort. Some of the quality of the play was really, really good, but we’ve definitely not got the balance between performance and results at the moment.
“They hadn’t had a touch in our box and we were 1-0 down today. That was the only time they’d gone up there.
“It’s happened probably two or three times over the last six weeks or so. With that, there’s a lot of good things.
“There’s a lot of good things in the game, but those moments are going against us and we have to accept that and we’ve got to do something about it.”