Out-of-form and emotionally explosive - yet Portsmouth's Ronan Curtis cares
There is often a touch of melodrama, an ounce of exaggeration, sometimes excessive whirling of arms befitting a tantruming teenager, yet his is no well-rehearsed act.
At the age of 23, Curtis remains a raw talent and emotionally explosive, whether on the field of play or with Twitter at his fingertips. It’s his nature, he possesses spirit.
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Hide AdAdmittedly, currently he infuriates, such is the alarming plunge in form the Fratton faithful is witnessing.
His end product is presently unrecognisable from the player who arrived from Derry in the summer of 2018, albeit those eye-catching energy levels and the enthusiasm refuse to buckle.
Yet none will be more frustrated than the player himself.
Curtis doesn’t need reminding of his ongoing performance issues, certainly he doesn’t require cheers sarcastically greeting his substitution against Bolton.
In truth, the Irishman should have been removed from the firing line at the interval, ensuring there was no grand exit in front of the packed auditorium. Departing through the side door would have been fine.
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Hide AdThere is also a strong argument he shouldn’t have started the match, such is the absence of form at present. Sometimes a manager demonstrating his faith in a player can be destructive.
As it was, on 62 minutes, Curtis’ replacement in favour of Gareth Evans created an uncomfortable moment – and brutal on a youngster whose confidence has already received a battering.
No question, it was another poor display from the winger amid a uninspiring team showing against the struggling Trotters.
A misplaced pass, taking too many touches inside the box following Brett Pitman’s clever dummy, a wild shot, and an ugly challenge driven by frustration which warranted the yellow card it earned. Curtis’ Saturday contribution in a nutshell.
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Hide AdWith the scoreline goalless and a bench from which Jackett sacrificed central defender Paul Downing in favour of more attacking options, the Irishman required substituting.
He left the Fratton Park pitch to scornful cheers and later Tweeted: ‘Could have done with the 12th man today’.
Shortly afterwards it was deleted, an ill-advised outburst, yet indicative of Curtis’ footballing approach. He cares.