Reds Fall Flat as Shrewsbury Deliver Final Blow at Oakwell
Well, that’s that. Oakwell’s curtain came down not with a bang, but a familiar whimper as Barnsley slumped to a 2–1 defeat against relegated Shrewsbury Town. The visitors, already condemned to finish bottom, arrived winless in 15—but that didn’t stop them from turning the Reds over with ease.
Despite a Jon Russell consolation late on, Barnsley’s final home game of the season summed up what has been an underwhelming, at times bewildering, campaign—especially on home soil. 12th in the table. Just six home wins. And, if reports are to be believed, the lowest ever third-tier home points total in club history.
Shrewsbury strike first – and it's all too easy
The first half started at a pedestrian pace, with Barnsley enjoying the lion’s share of possession but offering little cutting edge. Then came a warning sign. Shrewsbury had the ball in the net on 12 minutes through Mal Benning, only for the flag to go up. It didn’t take long for them to make it count properly.
On 18 minutes, Toto Nsiala pinged a peach of a crossfield ball to Luca Hoole, who skipped past Josh Earl far too easily and slid in a low ball that Jon Marquis gleefully tapped home from close range. 1–0, and Oakwell was stunned—but not surprised.
Missed chances and misfiring moments
Barnsley huffed and puffed. Roberts blasted over after a Cotter long throw. Phillips was denied at the near post by Jamal Blackman. A header from Maël de Gevigney was comfortably caught.
Connell came closest, cracking the bar with a curling effort after a clever Keillor-Dunn dummy. Cotter then had two chances—one shout for a penalty, another fierce strike saved—but the Reds just couldn’t find a way through.
At the other end, Shrewsbury carved through us on the counter far too easily, with George Lloyd and Harrison Biggins both wasting decent openings. You sensed the longer it stayed 1–0, the more nervous the crowd grew.
Watters enters—and wastes golden chances
Max Watters replaced Lembikisa at half-time and was straight into the action. Within seconds, he missed a decent header from Cotter’s cross.
Then came the real sitter. Cotter again was the creator, laying off for Phillips whose shot was parried into the air. It fell kindly for Watters just yards out, but he somehow nodded it backwards with the net gaping. Cue groans.
It felt like one of those days—and sure enough, it was about to get worse.
Marquis makes it two with a touch of class
Shrewsbury’s second goal came against the run of play, but you couldn’t say they hadn’t earned it. On 67 minutes, a cleared corner found its way back to Hoole, who picked out Callum Stewart unmarked on the right. He whipped in a low cross that Marquis—completely untracked—backheeled home with style. 2–0. Game over?
Russell responds—but the comeback fizzles
To their credit, the Reds didn’t roll over. Jon Russell, one of the few bright spots this season, offered a glimmer of hope on 80 minutes. A low cross wasn’t cleared, and Russell pounced to slot home his 10th of the season.
Keillor-Dunn had a late free-kick that curled just over, and substitute Kelechi Nwakali blazed wildly from distance, but the reality was that Barnsley never truly looked like levelling. It was an all-too-familiar story.
Team Line-ups
Barnsley (4-3-3): Gauci; Lembikisa (Watters HT), de Gevigney, Roberts, Earl; Bland, Connell (Nwakali 64), Russell; Phillips, Keillor-Dunn, Cotter.
Unused Subs: Flavell, McCarthy, Barratt, Rodrigues, Graham.
Goal: Russell (80)
Shrewsbury (3–4–1–2): Blackman; Feeney, Nsiala, Nurse (Pierre 90+2); Hoole, Biggins, Gilliead, Benning; Stewart (Perry 80); Marquis (c), Lloyd (Oliver 83).
Unused Subs: Young, Dinanga, Loughran, England.
Goals: Marquis (18, 67)
Yellow Card: Nurse
Match Stats:
Possession (%) | 68.8 | 31.2 |
Shots | 25 | 5 |
Shots on Target | 7 | 5 |
Corners | 7 | 3 |
Fouls Committed | 9 | 10 |
Yellow Cards | 0 | 1 |
Fan Reaction:
It wasn’t just the performance that left a sour taste — the response from supporters on Barnsley Football Club’s official Facebook page was scathing, with hundreds of comments laying bare the anger, disappointment, and disillusionment felt across the fanbase.
Here’s a taste of what Reds fans had to say:
“Only watched the first half… that was enough. The team in red wo strolling around like it was a friendly.” – Stephen Walker
“That’s as bad as I’ve seen in nearly 30 years watching them. Shameful performance.” – Dominic Woodward
“Beaten at home AGAIN… by a team already relegated. Our players have been on the beach for two months.” – Barry Skelley
“Club tells us this is a top 4 squad. Laughable. Some of this lot would struggle in Sunday league.” – Ian Heppenstall
“Shame on you.” – Kevin Roper
The club can’t be blind to this. Fans are disillusioned — not just with the results, but with the direction of the club, the ambition of the board, and the worrying signs for next season. Whether anything changes now depends on what actions follow.
Final Whistle
This wasn’t just another bad result. It was the exclamation mark on a dreadful Oakwell season—one which ends with just 26 points at home and a finish outside the top ten. For a club that had promotion ambitions, that simply isn’t good enough.
Fans applauded Russell’s goal and a few late flashes, but the general feeling is one of frustration—an acknowledgment that this performance might look decent on paper, but in reality, it only masks bigger issues.
There’s plenty to sort this summer. Recruitment. Identity. Purpose. Because this version of Barnsley, especially at home, has lost its way.