Premier League
August 14, 2004
Blackburn 1-1 West Brom
Scoring Summary
Blackburn Rovers | West Bromwich Albion |
---|---|
Craig Short (70') | Neil Clement (33') |
Teams
Blackburn Rovers | West Bromwich Albion |
---|---|
1 Brad Friedel | 1 Russell Hoult |
4 Lorenzo Amoruso | 3 Paul Robinson |
6 Craig Short | 2 Riccardo Scimeca |
22 Dominic Matteo | 19 Neil Clement |
33 Michael Gray | 6 Darren Purse |
23 Vratislav Gresko | 22 Bernt Haas |
11 Javier De Pedro | 10 Andy Johnson |
7 Brett Emerton | 8 Jonathan Greening |
16 Barry Ferguson | 4 Thomas Gaardsoe |
15 Dwight Yorke | 9 Geoff Horsfield |
9 Jonathan Stead | 25 Nwankwo Kanu |
Substitutes | |
13 Peter Enckelman | Tomasz Kuszczak 29 |
14 Nils-Eric Johansson | Darren Moore 5 |
8 Tugay Kerimoglu | James O'Connor 23 |
10 Paul Dickov | Scott Dobie 12 |
19 Paul Gallagher | Zoltan Gera 11 |
Substitutions | |
Tugay Kerimoglu for Javier De Pedro (45) | Darren Moore for Neil Clement (75) |
Paul Dickov for Vratislav Gresko (45) | Scott Dobie for Geoff Horsfield (76) |
Paul Gallagher for Brett Emerton (84) | Zoltan Gera for Andy Johnson (87) |
Yellow Cards | |
Dominic Matteo (65) | |
· Squads: Blackburn Rovers | West Bromwich Albion |
Craig Short shattered West Brom's hopes of a Premiership return to remember at Ewood Park on Saturday.
The veteran defender headed a 70th-minute equaliser for Blackburn to save Graeme Souness' blushes and cancel out Neil Clement's first-half opener.
But there is no doubt the Baggies went home happier after being forced to hold on under intense Rovers pressure to bag their precious point.
Clement had booted Albion ahead in fortunate fashion when his 34th-minute free-kick took a big deflection and sailed past Brad Friedel.
But Dwight Yorke and Brett Emerton both missed golden chances to pull Rovers back into the game, before Short struck and set up an increasingly frantic finale.
Ultimately Albion deserved their draw amid signs of a more positive approach to their second Premiership campaign.
While they retained their trademark tightness at the back which prevented the home side having a shot on target throughout the first half, their new boys provided plenty of flair.
Jonathan Greening was a constant threat from set-pieces, while the tricky skills of Nigerian Kanu can still fox many top-flight defenders.
Gary Megson's men started brightly by winning a corner in the first minute and then almost releasing Kanu's strike partner Geoff Horsfield for a clear run on goal.
Rovers showed the same sluggishness which had contributed to their poor 15th place last season, with the recalled Yorke failing to make an early impression.
Souness' men were struggling against a tightly-packed Albion midfield who slowly sapped their energy.
Rovers new boy Javier De Pedro saw plenty of the ball in the early stages - but when he got his first chance on the quarter-hour after Clement's misplaced pass he could not find space to shoot.
At the other end, Kanu tricked Emerton brilliantly on the left before hitting a low cross which just eluded Andy Johnson in the box.
Rovers claims for handball were rejected in the 20th minute after Vratislav Gresko's speculative shot was blocked by Thomas Gaardsoe in the box.
Then Yorke made his first contribution with a speculative header which flashed wide of Russell Hoult's right-hand post.
But Albion began to step things up on the half-hour, and Darren Purse was the unlikely source of the first on-target effort with a low shot blocked by Barry Ferguson.
Four minutes later Albion grabbed their lead when Clement's going-nowhere free-kick was deflected home.
Rovers new boy Dominic Matteo immediately flashed a header over at the other end, and the half ended with Yorke given another fine chance by Emerton, only to head high from close range.
Souness' introduction of Paul Dickov for his competitive Rovers debut at half-time perked up the home side, who launched into a period of pressure.
But it almost all turned sour in the 50th minute, Lorenzo Amoruso's poor back-pass close to letting in Kanu before an alert Friedel cleared the danger.
With Emerton beginning to emerge as more of a threat on the right, Rovers continued driving forward.
Jonathan Stead was only inches from connecting with a long Amoruso hump upfield in the 56th minute.
Rovers' best chance appeared to have arrived just before the hour when Yorke's goal-bound snap-shot was blocked by a posse of Albion defenders on the edge of the box.
Emerton stabbed at the loose ball, but saw a bobbling effort stretch across the face of goal with Hoult helpless.
Referee Chris Foy did not endear himself to the home fans by waving away two loud appeals, firstly for handball against Horsfield and then for a challenge on Dickov in the box.
As the game heated up, Matteo was lucky to stay on the pitch after pulling back Kanu when the Nigerian was about to go clean through 35 yards from the Rovers goal.
Instead it was the unlikely figure of Short who saved Rovers' day with a fine glancing header which beat Hoult 20 minutes from time.
Tugay and Emerton both had late chances as the home side pressed for the win - and Albion were understandably content to cling on for the draw which already presents them with one point more than they managed in their first three Premiership matches two years ago.
Gary Megson has urged West Brom to ditch their defensive image if they are to survive in the Barclays Premiership this season.
Megson said: 'I thought there was a bit of a lack of belief in wanting to sit and hang on for 1-0.
'We could have pushed on and we did have opportunities to push on and score the goal which would have won the game.'
Megson added: 'Blackburn had a lot of possession, and when you concede that much you are sailing close to the wind.
'It is a shame, because we were close to getting three points today and we would have got a massive amount of belief if we had done that.
'In the end they had four centre-forwards on the pitch and were putting us under a great deal of pressure. It was tally-ho stuff.'
Rovers boss Graeme Souness was satisfied following his side's second half display.
He said Albion's sturdy tactics were responsible for the building frustration before Short's equaliser.
'It was a pleasing afternoon for us after all, and we got the goal which was thoroughly deserved,' said Souness.
'It was their only shot of 90 minutes, and they got a large chunk of luck - although it was poor defending to allow the ball through our wall.
'They are a resolute team and they didn't make any attempt to get forward in numbers. At one point I thought it would be their day.'
'The last thing we wanted was to lose our first game of the season,' he added.'Our immediate games are extremely hard, and it would have been disappointing to have got off with no points today.
'It is my job to take those positives, and the biggest thing we will take is that in the second half we were determined not to lose that game.'