Fulham determined to finish the job against Cardiff in Championship play-off semi-final, says Scott Parker

Superb strikes from Josh Onomah and Neeskens Kebano put Fulham in a commanding position

Phil Blanche
Tuesday 28 July 2020 03:43 EDT
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Scott Parker said Fulham are determined to finish the job after seizing a 2-0 first-leg lead over Cardiff in their Championship play-off semi-final.

Superb strikes from Josh Onomah and Neeskens Kebano put Fulham in a commanding position ahead of the return game at Craven Cottage on Thursday.

“Overall it was a good performance,” said Fulham head coach Parker. “We weathered the storm early on and got a foothold in the game. I think we’re well worthy of the two-goal lead at this stage.

“We worked our socks off and our foundation was built on concrete, but it will be another huge battle on Thursday. This is only halfway through and we’ll stand up to the challenge.”

Kebano’s free-kick in stoppage time sparked huge celebrations on the Fulham bench.

Cardiff manager Neil Harris suggested the celebrations were excessive – “it looked like they had won the tie” he told Sky – but Parker rejected that claim with 90 minutes to come in west London.

“Neil has said a lot over the last week and few weeks, I just see a group of players,” said Parker, who lost 26-goal top scorer Aleksandar Mitrovic before kick-off with a slight hamstring injury.

“I didn’t see anything that was over the top, I just see a professional team that understood that there is only half of this tie done.

“The players were pleased, and rightly so, to score two away from home, but at the end of the game I see a real professionalism from us.”

Cardiff counterpart Harris described the second Fulham goal as a “right kick in the nuts”, but insisted the Bluebirds are not out of the tie.

“The first 25 minutes we were excellent, but we have to take one of our chances then and get on top,” Harris said.

“After the drinks break Fulham were better, but at half-time we were relatively happy. Second half, we never really got going.

“They pressed much better and made it more difficult to build attacks.”

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