Wigan boss Shaun Maloney hails a ‘very professional performance’ against Shrews
Shaun Maloney hailed a “very professional performance” after Wigan secured a third 2-0 victory on the spin in Sky Bet League One against a Shrewsbury side who played for all but four minutes with 10 men.
Former Wigan defender Chey Dunkley was shown a straight red card for hauling down Thelo Aasgaard on the edge of the box.
And goals in either half from Stephen Humphrys and substitute Callum Lang secured a comfortable win for Latics, who also hit the woodwork twice.
“I thought it was a very professional performance,” said Maloney.
“Obviously it was very hard for Shrewsbury when you go down to 10 men that early.
“I thought we started the game very well, and then the game completely changes.
“I was just really happy with how professional we were, because the sending-off changed our outlook dramatically.
“Give Shrewsbury credit, actually, even with 10 men.
“It changes how we play, the spaces become bigger and we have to make them even bigger for them, which is probably the reason why we created so many chances.
“We had to change how we played in the second half, we had to become more aggressive.
“I was really pleased with the guys who came on in the second half, especially Callum McManaman who brought that mentality back just at a time when I thought the game was starting to drift.
“This kind of game can drift and become a lot harder, even when you have the man advantage.”
Shrewsbury boss Matt Taylor had no complaints over either the red card or the result.
“It was a very difficult afternoon for us,” he said. “But you’ve got to put it into context, when you have your captain sent off inside five minutes away from home – and quite rightly sent off.
“It’s a bad decision from Chey, he gets himself into a position where he can’t affect the run of the player going through.
“Going down to 10 men inside five minutes, you know there’s going to be some suffering, and there was.
“Having said that, for large parts of the game I thought we were excellent, considering we had 10 men.
“The players trusted each other, they moved the ball very well and we got into some excellent positions.
“You have to understand that when you play with 10 men, you will have to give space away because you can’t cover the whole pitch.
“Therefore they had plenty of opportunities from crosses and we haven’t stopped crosses well enough today in one-v-one situations.
“With the ball I was pleased, we varied the ball well and overall I’m disappointed because I felt this was a good opportunity to pick up some points.
“But we weren’t able to do that because we went down to 10 men so early.”