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  -   REPORTS   -   Premiership
Saturday, November 23, 2002
Full-time: Sunderland v Birmingham
Soccernet.com

Sunderland's recovery came to a juddering halt as Clinton Morrison snatched three points for Birmingham City with his goal earning a 1-0 win at the Stadium of Light.

Clinton Morrison, Phil Babb
Clinton Morrison battles with Phil Babb at the Stadium of Light.
(AlexLivesey/GettyImages)
Howard Wilkinson's men had gone five games without defeat under their new boss, but they were undone a minute before the end of normal time by the Republic of Ireland striker just when it looked as though they might force their way in front.

  • Bruce: No rift with Savage

    It was scarcely more than the visitors deserved on an afternoon when they were the better side for much of the contest, although Kevin Phillips - with his only shot of the game 10 minutes from time - went close and City substitute Damien Johnson saw an Olivier Tebily clearance cannon off him and on to the bar with just three minutes remaining.

    But Sunderland simply took too long to put Steve Bruce's defence under any real threat until it was almost too late, and really only had themselves to blame for defeat.

    Wilkinson has warned from day one that recovery might not be a pretty affair, and his words could hardly have been more resonant on a bleak afternoon on Wearside in more ways than one.

    The Black Cats, who had grittily defended Liverpool into submission at Anfield last Sunday, were just as uninspiring in front of their home fans in the opening 45 minutes, although alarmingly, looked nowhere near as likely to escape with a clean sheet.

    With the irrepressible Robbie Savage, aided and abetted by midfield partners Aliou Cisse, Paul Devlin and the excellent Stan Lazaridis down the left, running the show, Sunderland found themselves chasing shadows for long periods and in constant peril from livewire strike-force Morrison and Stern John.

    Indeed, had it not been for the positional sense of stand-in keeper Jurgen Macho, who had visibly grown in stature during his side's unbeaten run, Sunderland could have gone in at the break in deep trouble.

    Devlin twice tested the Austrian from distance, first after being set up by Savage and John with 12 minutes gone and then again six minutes later after he and Savage had mugged Michael Gray.

    Returning full-back Stephen Wright almost gifted Lazaridis the opening goal on 25 minutes when he drove his attempted clearance into the Austrian and allowed him a clear run on goal, but to his credit, he got back to redeem himself with a fine block.

    Uncertain at the back and untidy in midfield, the home side failed to muster a serious attempt on goal until eight minutes before the break when, after Savage had prevented Tore Andre Flo from getting in a cross, Michael Proctor fired in a low shot which skidded off the rain-soaked turf and forced a good save from Nico Vaesen.

    Birmingham's attitude as they emerged for the second-half was clearly that the points were there for the taking, and it took both Phil Babb and George McCartney to deny Morrison a clear header at goal on 54 minutes after John had played Lazaridis into space down the left.

    Wilkinson knew he had to do something to pose a greater threat to the visitors, and he replaced Michael Proctor with pacy Frenchman David Bellion two minutes later, but although his lighting turn of foot was always a problem for Jeff Kenna, he did not see enough of the ball to do any real damage.

    Savage's afternoon came to a premature end on the hour when, minutes after he had been booked for a foul on Gavin McCann, he was withdrawn, much to his annoyance, to hand Darryl Powell a chance.

    Macho came for and missed a 65th-minute Lazaridis free-kick and was relieved to see the ball drop wide, but after the Austrian had seen two shots in quick succession deflected just wide, it was the home side which finally started to function as an attacking force as the game entered its final quarter.

    They forced a series of corners which City struggled to clear, but got their chance when Powell was penalised for a foul on McCann 20 yards out.

    Phillips took aim from the resulting free-kick, but although Vaesen was rooted to the spot as his shot curled towards goal, it sailed wide of the keepers left post.

    After such a long period of inactivity, Vaesen found his goal under siege in the closing minutes, and he was rescued by the crossbar three minutes from time when Olivier Tebily's clearance came back off substitute Damien Johnson and looped up on to the woodwork.

    However, Morrison snatched victory at the death when he charged down Craddock's clearance before slotting past Macho to hand his side the victory much of their play had deserved.

  • Birmingham boss Steve Bruce and midfielder Robbie Savage were back on speaking terms after Clinton Morrison fired their side to a precious victory at Sunderland.

    The Welshman, who had been struggling with a groin injury, was hauled of after an hour of the contest at the Stadium of Light following his yellow card for a foul on Gavin McCann, and was clearly not impressed by his manager's decision.

    But it was he who leapt on Bruce's back in celebration as Morrison's 89th-minute strike clinched three more points for the Blues' survival campaign.

    'He behaved like my 15-year-old daughter,' said Bruce with a smile after the game.

    'Maybe I'll give him a hundred lines and tell him not to do that again.'

    However, despite his humour, Bruce insisted that the important message from his actions was that he will do what he needs to for the best of his team.

    'He's had a groin and he hurt his knee at half-time,' he said. 'He wasn't 100% before the game and then when he got the yellow card and Aliou (Cisse) got the yellow card as well, I just thought I had to do it.

    'I will do whatever I think is right for the best of the team and I couldn't afford three players in the middle of the park all on yellow cards, especially with Robbie not 100% - and he's got a sore knee as well now.

    'At the time, he didn't think I was right, but I'm the one who makes the decisions. That's what I'm paid for.

    'But it's all forgotten about. Sometimes it's nice to see a bit of emotion and a bit of passion. He desperately didn't want to come off.'

    Savage was understandably disappointed to be substituted after playing a major role in his side's domination of much of the first hour, and although Sunderland belatedly rallied and saw substitute Damien Johnson deflect on Olivier Tebily clearance on to his own crossbar, the visitors were worth the points.

    'It's always cruel to lose in the last minute, but I think by far we were the better side,' said Bruce. 'I thought we were a threat all day long.

    'We've had enough of the Aussies for the last three days, but I thought Stan Lazaridis gave an unbelievable performance, certainly the best performance he's produced under me, and I've been here a year now.'

    Bruce's elation was in contrast to the disappointment of opposite number Howard Wilkinson, who saw his side's unbeaten five-game run come to a sorry end in front of just 38,803 spectators as they misfired for long periods and only fleetingly threatened Nico Vaesen's goal.

    'I would have thought for the players it was very frustrating,' he said. 'But the most important thing about today is, just as we shouldn't - and didn't - allow ourselves to be over-ambitious or over-estimate our progress so far, by the same token, we can't allow today to wash all the positives that we've accumulated so far down the pan.

    'But yes, we've got to learn from today's game and we've got to move on. The biggest thing we've got to fear is the fear itself, the fear of making a mistake.

    'In the first-half we were not assertive enough.'

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