Matusiwa Magic Ends Hull City’s Unbeaten Away Run as Ipswich Edge a Tight Contest 1-0
Final Score: Ipswich 1-0 Hull City
Competition: Sky Bet Championship
Venue: Portman Road
Date: Monday 3rd March 2026
Attendance: 26,103
Referee: Lewis Smith
A moment of genuine quality from Azor Matusiwa was the only thing that separated two well-matched Championship promotion hopefuls at Portman Road on Monday night. The midfielder’s stunning long-range drive — his first goal in 31 Ipswich appearances — broke Hull City’s resolute defensive block 19 minutes from time, ending the Tigers’ eight-game unbeaten run on the road and their five-match winning streak.
Ipswich - Recent League Form
Hull City - Recent League Form
Match Summary
Hull City arrived at Portman Road with their defensive organisation and discipline very much in evidence, deploying a deep 3-4-2-1 block that kept the hosts at arm’s length for long periods. Ipswich dominated possession and territory throughout but found the Tigers well-drilled and hard to break down. In the first half Lewis Koumas and Liam Millar offered Hull dangerous counter-attacking moments, with Ivor Pandur at the other end producing two excellent saves to keep the scores level. The deadlock was finally broken on 71 minutes when Matusiwa collected a pass from the newly-introduced Leif Davis and rifled a right-footed effort into the top right corner from outside the box — striking the underside of the crossbar on its way in for a finish of the highest quality. Jack Clarke came agonisingly close to doubling the lead moments later, only for Pandur to make a brilliant save at his near post. Hull pushed for a leveller late on, with Pandur himself joining the attack for a last-minute corner, but Ipswich held firm to claim a 1-0 victory that moves them into third place in the Championship.
Ipswich
Hull CityGoals & Key Moments
Match Timeline
- 🟨 35′ — Yellow card: Lewie Coyle (Hull City)
- 🔄 42′ — Substitution (injury): Akin Famewo replaces Lewie Coyle (Hull City)
- ⏸️ 45+5′ — Half Time: Ipswich 0-0 Hull City
- 🔄 45′ — Substitution: Oliver McBurnie replaces Joe Gelhardt (Hull City)
- 🔄 57′ — Substitution: Leif Davis replaces Jacob Greaves (Ipswich Town)
- 🔄 57′ — Substitution: Wes Burns replaces Sindre Egeli (Ipswich Town)
- 🟨 62′ — Yellow card: Matt Crooks (Hull City) — 10th booking, triggers 2-match ban
- 🟨 63′ — Yellow card: Ivor Pandur (Hull City)
- 🔄 66′ — Substitution: John Lundstram replaces Matt Crooks (Hull City)
- 🔄 66′ — Substitution: Kyle Joseph replaces Liam Millar (Hull City)
- 🔄 68′ — Substitution: Anis Mehmeti replaces Jack Taylor (Ipswich Town)
- 🟨 70′ — Yellow card: John Egan (Hull City)
- ⚽ 71′ — GOAL — Ipswich Town 1-0 Hull City: Azor Matusiwa right-footed shot from outside the box into the top right corner. Assisted by Leif Davis.
- 🔄 73′ — Substitution: Amir Hadziahmetovic replaces John Egan (Hull City)
- 🧤 74′ — Attempt saved: Jack Clarke (Ipswich) left-footed shot — outstanding save by Pandur
- 🏹 74′ — Jack Clarke (Ipswich) hits the left post from very close range
- 🔄 78′ — Substitutions: Iván Azón replaces George Hirst; Dan Neil replaces Marcelino Núñez (Ipswich Town)
- 🟨 82′ — Yellow card: Cédric Kipré (Ipswich Town)
- 🟨 90+4′ — Yellow card: Christian Walton (Ipswich Town)
- 🏁 90+6′ — Full Time: Ipswich Town 1-0 Hull City
First Half
The first half was a study in tactical contrasts. Ipswich, buoyed by a packed Portman Road under the Monday night lights, dominated possession from kick-off and created several promising situations early on, with Sindre Egeli seeing a left-footed shot blocked in the 10th minute and Marcelino Núñez firing over from a corner shortly after.
Hull, meanwhile, sat in their familiar 3-4-2-1 with Lewis Koumas and Liam Millar providing twin attacking threats from deep positions, looking to catch Ipswich on the counter. Their best moments came through these channels — Millar twice caught offside in promising situations, while both he and Koumas had efforts blocked from the left side of the box in the 30th and 34th minutes. Regan Slater also had a long-range effort blocked. These weren’t clear-cut chances but they demonstrated Hull’s intent on the break and kept the Ipswich defence honest.
The only genuinely clear chance of the half fell to Ipswich when George Hirst latched onto a Jack Taylor cross to force Ivor Pandur into an excellent near-post save in the 31st minute. Dara O’Shea then saw a header drift wide from a set piece on 36 minutes.
The half’s major talking point came when Lewie Coyle was booked for a foul on 35 minutes and then had to depart injured in the 42nd minute with what appeared to be an ankle problem, with Akin Famewo coming on as a direct replacement at left wing-back. Hull’s manager and bench were visibly agitated at several refereeing decisions throughout the half — notably when Coyle was booked for a foul and moments later the same tackle went unpunished against Paddy McNair. Dean Holden, Hull’s assistant, was also shown a yellow card for his protests. Sergej Jakirovic was equally irked by the frequency with which Jack Clarke was awarded free kicks. All of which contributed to an edgy, combustible atmosphere, despite the match remaining goalless at the break.
Second Half
Hull made an immediate change at the break, introducing Oliver McBurnie as a focal point up front in place of Joe Gelhardt, shifting their shape slightly in search of something to hold. Ipswich made a double substitution just after the hour, bringing on Leif Davis and the lively Wes Burns to provide fresh attacking impetus down both flanks.
The second half followed a similar pattern to the first, with Ipswich enjoying the lion’s share of possession and Hull’s low block remaining disciplined. Pandur continued to impress, saving from Dara O’Shea (55′), Marcelino Núñez on two separate occasions (60′, 69′), and a George Hirst header (62′) as Ipswich battered repeatedly at the door. Hull’s defensive shape — reorganised after Famewo’s introduction — remained largely intact, and a draw looked the increasingly likely result.
The deadlock was finally broken in the 71st minute. Davis, newly introduced, played the ball into Matusiwa on the edge of the area and the midfielder struck a powerful right-footed effort that flew into the top right corner off the underside of the crossbar. It was his first goal in 31 Ipswich appearances, and a finish of the very highest quality — the kind of moment that only a truly top-quality player produces.
Moments later, Burns drove into the box down the right and squared for Clarke, whose close-range left-footed effort was brilliantly turned away by Pandur — a save arguably as impressive as the goal itself. Clarke then struck the left post from the rebound in the same move. Had that gone in, the game would have been killed off; as it was, Hull had a nervous 15 minutes ahead of them.
With their eight-game unbeaten away run now ended, Hull threw men forward in search of an equaliser. Pandur himself joined the attack for a last-minute corner — a measure of how desperately Hull needed something from the game. But Ipswich held firm, seeing out the 1-0 with relative comfort. Matt Crooks had already departed having picked up his 10th booking of the season — a suspension that will now rule him out of Hull’s next two fixtures at the worst possible time in the campaign.
Talking Points
Key Talking Points
- Matusiwa’s wonder goal was the difference. In a tight game that could easily have ended 0-0, it took a genuinely world-class strike to separate the two sides. Matusiwa had gone 30 previous Ipswich appearances without a goal; this was worth waiting for.
- Hull’s defensive shape was highly effective. Despite conceding, the Tigers restricted Ipswich — a side with the best home record in the Championship — to very few clear-cut opportunities. The stats confirmed Hull had zero shots on target, but Ipswich didn’t carve them open either. It took something exceptional to win this.
- Matt Crooks’ 10th booking is a major blow. Arriving back in the side after injury, Crooks was excellent before his 62nd-minute booking — a foul that was perhaps unnecessary given the position on the pitch. He now misses both the Millwall home game and the trip to Wrexham, two massive fixtures in Hull’s season.
- Lewie Coyle’s ankle injury is a concern. Forced off in the 42nd minute, Coyle was pictured icing his ankle at half-time. He picked up his ninth booking before leaving, and he’ll be assessed ahead of Saturday. Famewo covered well in his absence, but Coyle’s availability is pivotal to Hull’s system.
- Ivor Pandur was outstanding in defeat. The Hull goalkeeper made multiple crucial saves throughout, most notably his point-blank stop from Clarke late on. Without him, this could have been a very different scoreline.
- McKenna’s 100th win as Ipswich manager. This was a significant milestone for the Ipswich head coach — his 100th victory in charge, achieved in his 210th match. It beats the record held by England’s 1966 World Cup winner Sir Alf Ramsey. Two promotions already secured, and a third potentially on the horizon.
Match Statistics
Match Stats
| Ipswich | Hull City | |
| 64% | Possession | 36% |
| 16 | Shots | 6 |
| 7 | Shots on Target | 0 |
| 7 | Corners | 4 |
| 8 | Fouls | 16 |
Possession and shot totals estimated from play-by-play data — official figures may vary slightly.
Ipswich - xG Analysis (Last 10 Games)
Hull City - xG Analysis (Last 10 Games)
Ipswich - Goals vs xG 2025/2026
Hull City - Goals vs xG 2025/2026
Hull City - 10-Match Rolling xG 2025/2026
Rolling 10-match average | Green above red = Creating more than conceding
Player Ratings
Hull City - Player Ratings
Ipswich - Player Ratings
Hull City Player Ratings
Ivor Pandur — 7/10. The standout Hull performer and arguably the best player on the pitch. Made a string of fine saves throughout — most notably his stunning stop from Jack Clarke’s close-range effort in the 74th minute — and had absolutely no chance with Matusiwa’s goal. Without his contributions this could easily have been a 3-0 defeat.
Charlie Hughes — 6/10. Diligent and hard-working throughout, winning his share of aerial duels and covering well when Ipswich found space in behind. Didn’t put a foot wrong defensively.
John Egan — 5/10. Solid enough before picking up a yellow card in the 70th minute and being replaced shortly after. Will be frustrated that, with five Hull players to one Ipswich man when Matusiwa struck, nobody managed to get across and block the shot.
Paddy McNair — 5/10. Composed in possession and tidy, but like the rest of the Hull backline, found himself caught in no-man’s land for the decisive goal.
Lewie Coyle — 5/10. Booked before limping off with an ankle injury on 42 minutes. His early departure disrupted Hull’s left-side structure at a key point in the game. A doubt for the weekend.
Cody Drameh — 6/10. Active down the right, got forward when opportunities arose and tracked back diligently. One late opportunity to cross in a dangerous area was wasted when his delivery went behind. Could have made more of that moment when Hull needed it most.
Matt Crooks — 6/10. Excellent on his return, controlling the midfield with authority and helping Hull keep their shape. The 10th yellow card of the season, for what looked a needless foul in a non-threatening area, was avoidable and will cost him dearly. Two-match ban a real blow.
Regan Slater — 5/10. Worked hard and had a blocked effort from distance in the first half. Struggled to provide enough quality in the final third when Hull needed to push for an equaliser late on.
Liam Millar — 6/10. One of Hull’s brightest attacking threats alongside Koumas, particularly in the first half. His darting runs and clever link-up play caused Ipswich problems on the counter. Replaced on 66 minutes.
Lewis Koumas — 6/10. Showed some lovely moments in behind on the counter-attack in the first half, finding good pockets of space in combination with Millar. The final ball let him down on too many occasions — a recurring frustration when Hull found themselves in promising positions.
Joe Gelhardt — 5/10. Struggled to make much of an impact as the lone striker, isolated at the top of Hull’s low block. Replaced at half-time for McBurnie.
Akin Famewo (sub) — 6/10. Came on in difficult circumstances after Coyle’s injury and did an excellent job. Kept Clarke and the arriving Mehmeti largely at arm’s length and showed no signs of being caught cold coming on so early.
Oliver McBurnie (sub) — 5/10. Brought on to offer a focal point but saw very little ball in the final third. Hull’s counter-attacking opportunities dried up in the second half.
John Lundstram (sub) — 5/10. Tidy when he came on but didn’t have sufficient time to make a decisive impact. Steady.
Kyle Joseph (sub) — 5/10. Little time to influence things after coming on for Millar.
Amir Hadziahmetovic (sub) — 4/10. Brief cameo after replacing Egan. Insufficient time to make any impression on the game.
Man of the Match
Man of the Match: Azor Matusiwa
In a game that looked destined for a 0-0 draw, Matusiwa produced the one moment of genuine quality that either side could muster. His first goal in 31 Ipswich appearances was an absolute belter — a thunderous right-footed strike from outside the box that crashed in off the underside of the crossbar with the keeper completely beaten. Beyond the goal, the Ipswich holding midfielder was composed and authoritative throughout, helping Ipswich retain the ball under pressure and providing the platform from which their attacking players could operate. On a night when he was arguably the difference between a point and three, it was a performance worthy of the match-winner award.
Azor Matusiwa
Ipswich | Rating: 8.0
Azor Matusiwa - Form Chart
Average Rating: 7.09
Key Player: Ivor Pandur
Ivor Pandur - Recent Form
Hull City
| Date | Opponent | Result | Saves | CS | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11 Apr 2026 | Sheffield Utd (A) | L 1-2 | 0 | 6.5 | |
| 06 Apr 2026 | Coventry (H) | D 0-0 | 1 | ✓ | 7.0 |
| 21 Mar 2026 | Sheffield Wednesday (H) | W 3-1 | 2 | 7.2 | |
| 14 Mar 2026 | West Brom (A) | L 0-3 | 5 | 7.2 | |
| 10 Mar 2026 | Wrexham (A) | W 2-1 | 1 | 6.9 | |
| 07 Mar 2026 | Millwall (H) | L 1-3 | 1 | 6.3 |
Key Duel: Lewis Koumas vs Marcelino Núñez
Player Comparison
Post-Match Reaction
Kieran McKenna (Ipswich Town Head Coach)
McKenna: “When you win a game with a goal like that at this stage of the season it always feels big. That’s three wins in a row with clean sheets. We had to overcome a compact side who made it really hard for us.”
McKenna: “We defended well and limited them to nothing, and then we scored a brilliant goal. He’s having a fantastic season and you need your holding midfielder to do that at some point in a season.”
McKenna: “It’s going to take a healthy points total to go up, and we’ll take the momentum from tonight. I’m sure we won’t win all of our games and neither will the other teams up there — we can only tick off good performances and good results.”
Sergej Jakirovic (Hull City Head Coach)
Jakirovic: “Ipswich were the better side but they did not have many chances. They started to play with three number 10s and we got too deep.”
Jakirovic: “The goal I cannot understand. We must take the ball. We had five players there and they had one.”
Jakirovic: “We tried to push and create something but we could not score the goal. They have very good players who are technically fantastic, so we had a low block and it worked apart from needing better decisions. Our idea was good. They have a bigger budget and this is the only way we can compete with them.”
What This Means
Championship Table
Championship Table
The result moves Ipswich into third place in the Championship with 63 points from 34 games — three points behind second-placed Middlesbrough and eight behind leaders Coventry, but crucially with a game in hand on both. For Hull, the defeat leaves them fifth on 60 points, six points off the automatic promotion places but still seven clear of seventh-placed Southampton and the chasing pack outside the play-offs. With 11 games remaining, the Tigers’ play-off spot looks secure, but closing the gap to the top two will require maximum effort and results. The visit of Millwall on Saturday — a side directly below them on 62 points — makes it a near must-win fixture. Hull will take some consolation from the fact that no team in the chasing pack played on Monday night, so they have not lost any ground on those around them.
Injury Update
Injury & Suspension News — Hull City
Lewie Coyle (ankle): Forced off in the 42nd minute after a collision, Coyle was seen icing his ankle at half-time as he walked down the touchline. He will be assessed in the coming days ahead of Saturday’s home game against Millwall. His availability is a significant concern — Famewo covered capably but Coyle’s role as left wing-back is central to Hull’s system.
Matt Crooks (suspended): His 10th yellow card of the season in the 62nd minute triggers an automatic two-game suspension under EFL rules. Crooks — who had only just returned to the side — will miss the Millwall game at the MKM Stadium and the trip to Wrexham in midweek. His return after the suspension at least comes with a clean disciplinary slate, with the next threshold at 15 bookings.
Up Next
Hull City’s Next Matches
Hull City - Upcoming League Fixtures
| Date | Home | Away |
|---|---|---|
| 18 Apr 2026 | Hull City | Birmingham |
| 21 Apr 2026 | Leicester | Hull City |
| 25 Apr 2026 | Charlton | Hull City |
Hull City face two crucial back-to-back fixtures without the suspended Crooks. First up is the home game against Millwall at the MKM Stadium on Saturday (12:30 kick-off) — a side directly below them in the Championship standings. Three points there would firmly cement the Tigers’ play-off place and close the gap on the top two. Then comes the midweek trip to Wrexham — Phil Parkinson’s side sitting sixth, just three points behind Hull. Sergej Jakirovic will know that results in these two games will go a long way to defining Hull’s season. West Brom away and Sheffield Wednesday at home follow before the international break.
Conclusion
Hull City will ultimately be frustrated that a disciplined, hard-working and well-organised performance at one of the Championship’s most difficult venues yielded nothing. The truth, however, is that they came up against a single moment of exceptional quality that they could do very little about. In a game that could easily have finished 0-0, Matusiwa’s stunning strike was precisely the kind of brilliance that settles tight Championship contests. The Tigers had their own moments on the counter-attack — particularly through Koumas and Millar in the first half — but when those opportunities arose, the final ball consistently let them down. Pandur’s excellence kept the scoreline respectable and reminded everyone what Hull possess between the sticks. With 11 games left and a seven-point cushion to seventh, the Tigers remain in a genuinely strong position. But the Crooks suspension and Coyle injury cloud what is otherwise a resilient campaign, and how Jakirovic’s side responds over the next two games will say a great deal about their promotion credentials.
Line-ups
Team Line-ups
Hull City (3-4-2-1)
Ivor Pandur; Charlie Hughes, John Egan, Paddy McNair; Cody Drameh, Matt Crooks, Regan Slater, Lewie Coyle; Lewis Koumas, Liam Millar; Joe Gelhardt
Substitutes used: Akin Famewo (for Coyle, 42′ — injury), Oliver McBurnie (for Gelhardt, 45′), John Lundstram (for Crooks, 66′), Kyle Joseph (for Millar, 66′), Amir Hadziahmetovic (for Egan, 73′)
Ipswich Town (4-2-3-1)
Christian Walton; Darnell Furlong, Cédric Kipré, Dara O’Shea, Jacob Greaves; Azor Matusiwa, Marcelino Núñez; Sindre Egeli, Jack Taylor, Jack Clarke; George Hirst
Substitutes used: Leif Davis (for Greaves, 57′), Wes Burns (for Egeli, 57′), Anis Mehmeti (for Taylor, 68′), Dan Neil (for Núñez, 78′), Iván Azón (for Hirst, 78′). Unused: Kasey McAteer, Chuba Akpom, Jens Cajuste, Alex Palmer

