Stewart pays price in front of Grip

Ipswich 1 Leeds 2

Rio Ferdinand chose the perfect platform of a 2-1 Leeds victory at Ipswich to display the credentials he hopes will persuade Sven Goran Eriksson to retain him in the England team against Spain later this month.

And he did it in front of the Swede's right-hand man, Tord Grip, who said afterwards: 'Rio was very good but we already knew he was a fine player.'

Faced with the Premier-ship's in-form striker, 17-goal Marcus Stewart, Ferdinand rationed him to so few chances that the Ipswich man had little opportunity to stake his own international claim.

Ferdinand said: 'We didn't give Ipswich a kick up front. We've worked out now how to get results.'

Certainly, Ferdinand has grown in stature over the last few weeks and he and his team-mates have benefited financially, too - they are on a bonus of £2,000 a point.

But there was more than money on Ferdinand's mind. With Tony Adams retired from international football and Martin Keown struggling to recover from a knee injury, he knows there is no better chance to impress.

'I want the job very badly,' he added, 'and it's my ambition to hold the position at least for the next five years.

'I'm ready for the challenge. I've always had a real belief in my ability and I've always wanted to wear my country's shirt.'

An international career is now more important to him than ever after being rejected by Kevin Keegan for the European Championship Finals.

'I wasn't happy,' he said. 'But I must look forward, not back. I have a new manager to impress and if I'm to get into the team, I have to maintain my form for Leeds. So far I'm happy with what I've achieved. The door is open.'

An own goal from Mark Venus and a slick finish from Robbie Keane were enough to give Leeds victory, even though Venus hammered home a free-kick for Ipswich. But the Tractor Boys look in need of a service. There is a tiredness about Ipswich, and yesterday they left for a four-day break in Spain before going to Arsenal.

What they have achieved is in danger of being overshadowed as the pace and tension of playing in the Premiership kicks in. It had to happen at some time and George Burley does not have sufficient depth in his squad to rotate and give some play-ers much-needed rest.

It was frustration more than intent that saw Stewart rashly challenge Ian Harte and receive a red card that will keep him out of the side for three matches. Referee Peter Jones consulted his assistant before making the decision but Ferdinand said: 'It seemed a little harsh to me. Stewart is a good player, he moves and makes space well, so I was well pleased I was able to keep him under control.'

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