JONATHAN WOODGATE felt Middlesbrough’s “inner steel” made the difference as his side extended their unbeaten run to four matches with a 1-0 win over Reading.

Marvin Johnson’s second-half free-kick made the difference at the Riverside, but Woodgate’s side had to cling on in the closing stages as Reading created a succession of late chances.

Darren Randolph made three crucial late stops, and Middlesbrough’s defenders produced a succession of last-gasp blocks as they secured their second clean sheet of the season.

Woodgate said: “I thought we deserved to win it. I thought towards the end of the game they piled the pressure on, but we stood strong. Like I said in the week, we needed to find that inner steel, that belief and I thought we did that.

“I thought we deserved to win the game. I thought we looked very dangerous on the counter-attack at times and could have been a couple of goals up. It was well deserved, and I was so pleased for the lads, they gave me everything.

“We ground it out towards the end, that's what I said I wanted from the team in the week and I thought they gave me that. I thought the subs that came on as well were excellent, they shored it up and did well.

“Does that result make a statement? I’d like to think so. We’re four unbeaten now, and it’s hard to go four unbeaten in this league but we’ve done that.

“We look forward to the next game now against Cardiff, there's momentum with the team at the minute and we'll keep on working and doing what we're doing every day on the training pitch.”

Woodgate reserved special praise for Johnson, with the winger having claimed his first goal for more than a year as his second-half free-kick evaded everyone in the penalty area before nestling in the corner of the net.

Johnson spent the second half of last season on loan at Sheffield United, but has emerged as a key performer under Woodgate.

The Boro head coach said: "I'm really pleased for Marvin, I thought he deserved it since he came back from loan.

"Last season, he didn't get a kick here, he went to Sheffield United and kept his head down and now he's come back in and done really well for us.” 

Reading boss Jose Gomes defended his decision to leave George Puscas, Lucas Joao and Pele out of his starting line-up, even though the trio had claimed four goals in the opening month of the season.

Puscas and Joao both came on from the substitutes’ bench as Reading chased the game in the closing stages, but Gomes stood by his decision to name Yakou Meite and Lucas Boye ahead of them, citing their performance in last month’s 2-0 home defeat to Charlton Athletic as the reason for their demotion.

Gomes said: “Puscas, Joao and Pele didn’t start. Pele and Puscas had travelled for their national team, but that was not the only reason why they did not play. The reason was that I did not like the way that they played in the last game.

“I have six strikers, they are all good players, and they must all fight for their position. They must give everything they have inside them, and it is my obligation as their manager to demand that. If they do not give the maximum they can, in my opinion, then we have very good quality players that can replace them and play.”

Gomes admitted his side were punished for not being clinical enough in the final third, but felt Middlesbrough should have been reduced to ten men when Adam Clayton appeared to catch Meite with a stray elbow in the first half.

He said: “I don’t like to talk about referees, but the referee is the only person on the pitch who can protect football, and that means protecting the players.

“It should have been a red card, there is no doubt about it. It wasn’t even given as a foul, so it’s strange it happened. But that is not an excuse for the result.”