
Chris Davies confident there is more to come from Birmingham's Jay Stansfield
Davies said: 'Jay is full of energy, enthusiasm. He's growing as a player – and he keeps delivering.
'People forget how young he actually is. He came here with a big price tag and with a lot of expectation.
'But I can see him growing and getting better, season by season. He's such a humble lad, professional. He concentrates, listens.
'And he's so dangerous. He can score off both feet. To read it the way he did in a big moment – there was a real coolness about it.'
Gus Hamer's spectacular effort from the halfway line cancelled out Kyogo Furuhashi's fifth-minute opener.
But Sheffield United boss Ruben Selles acknowledged making 10 changes from the side that was defeated 4-1 by Bristol City on Saturday had made life difficult.
Selles said: 'The game was difficult for us. We managed to come in one down at half-time and then we scored but we didn't have the game management to keep the game as it was.
'We gave opportunities to young players – sometimes mistakes happen. But we need to prepare some young players for the future.
'But they had more situations than us.'
Selles hailed Hamer's strike, which took the visitors to within three minutes of forcing a penalty shoot-out.
'We know his quality. When we have him on the pitch we have more control,' he added. 'He is a player that can change games – and he did that tonight.'

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North Wales Chronicle
2 hours ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Ruben Selles admits Sheffield United fans may already be running out of patience
The Spaniard saw his side slump to a third consecutive loss, with a Carabao Cup defeat sandwiched between Championship reverses, to leave the Blades rooted to the bottom of the table. Their muted display at Swansea came without a single shot on target. The decisive moment came in the 66th minute when Brazilian winger Ronald struck from the edge of the area after being set up by substitute Melker Widell. The result turned up the heat on Selles, whose tenure has opened with a 4-1 home thrashing by Bristol City, a cup exit to Birmingham and now a toothless display in south Wales. 'We need to find our platform, but it's the nature of football,' said Selles when asked if he feared supporters would turn on him. 'We know how it works and I can ask them to be calm. But they are going to tell me, probably, 'F*** off' – something like that, no? 'It's how you say in English? Sorry for my English, but I didn't know any better way to express that one.' Selles, previously in charge of Southampton, Reading and Hull City, faced scepticism when appointed in June after the sacking of Chris Wilder. While some expected a period of transition, few predicted three straight defeats with seven goals conceded. 'We are going to be honest, we are going to work hard, we are going to persist in what we do and we are going to give it our absolute 100 per cent,' he said. 'At some point the situation will turn and we will start to win football matches. 'That's as much as I can say, but everyone is free to feel what they want to feel.' On the pitch, the Blades looked disjointed and uninspired. Star midfielder Gustavo Hamer cut a frustrated figure and even exchanged words with angry fans at full-time. By contrast, Swansea were energetic, cohesive and deserving of the victory. Summer recruits Malick Yalcouye, Cameron Burgess and Widell all impressed and boss Alan Sheehan praised both their performance and resilience. 'I am really pleased,' said Sheehan. 'The only critical thing we can say again is not being more clinical and putting the game to bed. 'This was a team that was one game away from the Premier League. The stature of the club is big, so to go toe-to-toe and come out on top deservingly is great. 'My only criticism is that it wasn't by more. 'But to limit a team like that, with the quality they have, to zero shots on target shows a good defensive structure.' There was further good news for Swansea as Nottingham Forest's New Zealand international Marko Stamenic was in the stands ahead of completing a permanent switch to the club. Sheehan added: 'Marco is a player that we've been after for a while. He'll bring some physicality, athleticism and another international coming in the building.'


North Wales Chronicle
2 hours ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Brian Barry-Murphy sees room for improvement as Cardiff continue unbeaten start
Yousef Salech headed the Bluebirds into a deserved lead two minutes before the break and that dominance continued after the interval, with further goals from Cian Ashford and skipper Rubin Colwill to make it seven points from nine for Cardiff in League One. They have three wins from four under Barry-Murphy, having seen off Swindon in the Carabao Cup in midweek, but the Irishman is not entirely satisfied with what he has seen so far. 'I think consistently the players are applying themselves really well, the mentality seems really open to improvement,' said Barry-Murphy. 'There are going to be games where it goes different ways and I was very pleased with the performance of the team today – but I thought there were large parts of it that we can improve.' Although Cardiff's attacking players will grab the headlines after this performance, Barry-Murphy was also keen to praise his young central defenders Will Fish and Dylan Lawlor. He said: 'A lot of the focus will be on how we press from the front to try and protect those guys and deal with as least attacks as possible. 'But I thought when the balls came into the box, there were moments where Dylan and Will had to defend the box against Jordan Hugill, who is a really experienced striker, supported by (Cardiff goalkeeper) Nathan (Trott) and both full-backs.' Trott was hardly troubled, with only Rotherham substitute Marvin Kaleta's shot from distance late on needing him to make a testing save in what was the visitors' only real effort of note on a disappointing afternoon. Millers boss Matt Hamshaw says his side need to do better. He said: 'The game plan first half was try and frustrate them and I think we did that. I was pleased with some aspects, but then to concede from such a soft set piece is disappointing. 'And then all in all we weren't good enough second half. 'We were just too open and I think we showed our inexperience a little bit and it's something we've got to get better at. 'We should be better and the goals we've conceded were really poor. 'We're a work in progress – I've said that all summer – but the level of performance has to be much better and certainly in that second half. 'I'm well aware we're missing a few key players at the minute. We need to strengthen in certain areas, I think it's quite apparent. 'We're not scoring enough goals at the minute and as soon as a team gets a goal we're sort of struggling a little bit. 'But it's down to me and my staff to try and put that right.'

Leader Live
2 hours ago
- Leader Live
Brian Barry-Murphy sees room for improvement as Cardiff continue unbeaten start
Yousef Salech headed the Bluebirds into a deserved lead two minutes before the break and that dominance continued after the interval, with further goals from Cian Ashford and skipper Rubin Colwill to make it seven points from nine for Cardiff in League One. They have three wins from four under Barry-Murphy, having seen off Swindon in the Carabao Cup in midweek, but the Irishman is not entirely satisfied with what he has seen so far. 'I think consistently the players are applying themselves really well, the mentality seems really open to improvement,' said Barry-Murphy. 'There are going to be games where it goes different ways and I was very pleased with the performance of the team today – but I thought there were large parts of it that we can improve.' Although Cardiff's attacking players will grab the headlines after this performance, Barry-Murphy was also keen to praise his young central defenders Will Fish and Dylan Lawlor. He said: 'A lot of the focus will be on how we press from the front to try and protect those guys and deal with as least attacks as possible. 'But I thought when the balls came into the box, there were moments where Dylan and Will had to defend the box against Jordan Hugill, who is a really experienced striker, supported by (Cardiff goalkeeper) Nathan (Trott) and both full-backs.' Trott was hardly troubled, with only Rotherham substitute Marvin Kaleta's shot from distance late on needing him to make a testing save in what was the visitors' only real effort of note on a disappointing afternoon. Millers boss Matt Hamshaw says his side need to do better. He said: 'The game plan first half was try and frustrate them and I think we did that. I was pleased with some aspects, but then to concede from such a soft set piece is disappointing. 'And then all in all we weren't good enough second half. 'We were just too open and I think we showed our inexperience a little bit and it's something we've got to get better at. 'We should be better and the goals we've conceded were really poor. 'We're a work in progress – I've said that all summer – but the level of performance has to be much better and certainly in that second half. 'I'm well aware we're missing a few key players at the minute. We need to strengthen in certain areas, I think it's quite apparent. 'We're not scoring enough goals at the minute and as soon as a team gets a goal we're sort of struggling a little bit. 'But it's down to me and my staff to try and put that right.'