Date:
Venue:
Competition: English Premier League.
Score:
Scorers:
Attendance: 29,069.
Teams:
Referee: Mr M. Halsey (
Leeds
United have found St Andrews an unforgiving venue over
the years. On two occasions before 1950 United were subjected to a 5-1
hammering at the home of
Eddie Gray's side were in desperate need of points
with nine games of the season remaining, and the three dropped points would
prove crucial when
The forward
had been denied by goalkeeper Maik Taylor before
hitting the net, but the game's decisive moment came on ten minutes when he was
presented with a simple opportunity to double United's
advantage. James Milner's delivery into the box was asking to be finished off
but Viduka's side-footed strike flew the wrong side
of
Clinton Morrison and Viduka's Australian compatriot
Stan Lazaridis combined to lay on a simple strike for
Bryan Hughes and, from a position of strength, United began to look vulnerable.
Martin Grainger's free-kick struck the crossbar before half-time only for lanky
defender Martin Taylor to waste the rebound, but a decisive two-minute spell in
the second half broke the resistance of
Hughes
claimed his second goal on sixty-seven minutes with a strike from inside the
box and as
Alternate
Report
Leeds United were left counting the cost of failing to ram home their advantage
after missing out on three more valuable points in their bid for survival.
Games were fast running out for Eddie Gray's side if they were to pull off
their own version of the great escape and secure their Premiership status for
another year. That Saturday's 4-1 reversal was another case of three points
going begging against a side who, for long periods,
were there for the taking.
To say the
score-line flattered the hosts would be an understatement, but it would have
been churlish of them to refuse the generous offerings from their beleaguered
visitors. To make matters worse
Had Mark Viduka side-footed the ball the right side
of the upright after just ten minutes it would have been 2-0 and game over, but
the chance was missed and the rest is history. You could not blame Viduka for failing to score, but questions should be asked
elsewhere because
The Blues
started the afternoon as the lowest scorers in the top half of the table, but
they gratefully accepted what was on offer to record their own piece of history
against United. Ironically, the Blues are normally renowned for their miserly defending,
but their backline started the clash as if they had just arrived from a night
on the beer at nearby
Their
build-up play was incisive, Mark Viduka and Alan
Smith frightened the life out of Matt Upson and Kenny Cunningham, and they
defended in numbers. It was all very encouraging. The work-rate was good and
James Milner and Jermaine Pennant tucked in well in
the middle to deliver some good service. But yet it still went wrong. Horribly
wrong. That, however, didn't look like being the case early doors as United
started like a house on fire. By the time Mark Viduka
gleefully prodded the ball home in the third minute, following a delightful
pass from Jermaine Pennant, the Aussie had already
been denied by the agile Maik Taylor in the
So far so
good, Birmingham were carrying on where they left off against Middlesbrough a week earlier, they lost 5-3, and Leeds had
the bit between their teeth. Stephen McPhail and Seth
Johnson knocked the ball around at will and it was only a matter of time before
But the
Blues did re-group and when no-one picked up Bryan Hughes' run from midfield
the former Wrexham midfielder converted the easiest
of chances after great work by Clinton Morrison and Stan Lazaridis.
Failing to pick up Hughes' bursts from midfield was something that haunted
United came out of the blocks well again in the second half with James Milner,
who has run himself into the ground over the past few weeks, causing all manner
of problems, but United were unable to make their pressure count. And then
United
could also have gone ballistic when the final nail was hammered in the coffin
thirteen minutes from time. Clinton Morrison backed into Steve Caldwell before
hitting the deck and referee Mark Halsey, who had done well up to that point,
amazingly pointed to the spot. Mikael Forssell made no mistake with the penalty. The
Match Action:
Mark Viduka holds off
Kenny Cunningham to give United the lead Alan Smith, Mark Viduka
and James Milner celebrate
Stephen McPhail, Alan
Smith and James Milner congratulate Stephen Caldwell tackles Mikael Forssell as Seth Johnson
Mark Viduka
looks on
Mark Viduka holds off Kenny Cunningham Mark Viduka
cannot believe he missed
Seth Johnson gets in his tackle Mark Viduka
tries a flying header Stephen
McPhail in an aerial duel
Stephen Caldwell tackles Mikael
Forssell as Seth Johnson looks on
James Milner holds off Stan Lazaridis
Gary Kelly slides in to tackle Stan
Lazaridis
Substitute Simon Johnson takes on the
Bryan Hughes celebrates one of his goals Mikael Forssell is disposed by Didier Domi’s
sliding tackles
James Milner on the charge Despair
for United’s position Despair
for Stephen Caldwell, Stephen McPhail and Alan Smith
on the pitch
and the fans watching off it Despair
for Eddie Gray
Players:
Mark Viduka opened
the scoring for United but Bryan Hughes (2) and Mikael
Forssell (2, 1 a penalty) replied for
Jermaine Pennant later played for James
Milner set up an easy chance Stephen
Caldwell was Paul
Robinson saved from
Stephen McPhail and
Seth Johnson dominated early on Alan Smith and Mark Viduka frightened
the
Compared to the early season encounter at
while Stern John came on as substitute