What Sheffield Wednesday boss Garry Monk has had to say about accepting responsibility for mistakes and turning Owls form around
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The Sheffield Wednesday boss prepares to line up against his former club Birmingham tomorrow with his side desperate to make up for late concessions that have dropped five Championship points in their last three outings.
The 40-year-old admitted he has never experienced a run quite like it in his managerial career.
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Hide AdAsked about the nature of the mistakes that have cost them in matches against Blackburn, Swansea and West Brom, Monk said: “Unfortunately we are human beings and we have made some in a cluster in a short period of time.
“We don't accept that. We will go through it with them and work on it.
“Our performance is exactly what it should have been. It was a near perfect performance but for two things. We weren't clinical enough and we made mistakes.
“It is very weird. I have not had this before in my career in terms of where I have stood here proud of the performance but also deflated and frustrated that we didn't get the result we deserved.”
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Hide AdThe late lapses mean the Owls have fallen from the Championship play-off places in recent weeks despite encouraging displays. They sit ninth, four points from the top six, but Monk maintained that his squad have the experience to right wrongs that have straddled the latest international break.
He denied their disappointments were down to a lack of game management or a question of mentality.
“They are determined, experienced group and they are honest enough to know what they can do,” he said.
“The last three games have been down to mistakes. We have talked about game management and those things.
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Hide Ad“There were probably a couple of bits we could have done in the Swansea game where we could have managed it but today wasn't about game management. It was individual mistakes. We should have dealt with the goals better.”
That experience will be drawn upon against Birmingham, Monk said, and it is that and a dressing room full of big characters that will be needed to turn around a run of four games without a win.
Asked about the character in the squad, Monk said: “I don't think anyone can deny that. We showed an abundance of character and that is something that needs to carry us and will carry us through this period.
“If we continue to do that we are doing, those margins will turn. They have to. I have never been involved in a team where they haven't.
“We have to keep believing and keep working.”