John Savours St Andrew's Return to Give Sunderland Another Late Lift
Soccer: Premier League: Birmingham 2-2 Sunderland. Sunderland scored late again as Stern John's header salvaged a point against his old club at St Andrew's.
There was a sense of inevitability when Stern John emerged from the Sunderland substitutes' bench to rapturous applause from the home supporters that the former hero might turn villain. It was a script that John followed to the letter last night, the former Birmingham striker climbing highest at the far post in the 90th minute to pilfer a point for Sunderland after Garry O'Connor appeared to have secured a precious victory for Steve Bruce's side.
Having held onto their first-half lead until the 75th minute, Birmingham were pegged back when Michael Chopra, further endearing himself to Sunderland fans, struck a wonderful left-footed volley. Birmingham responded swiftly though, with O'Connor drilling across goal to restore the home team's advantage. It was a lead they looked like retaining until Ross Wallace's free-kick was turned onto the crossbar by Colin Doyle and John nodded in.
Given that the early exchanges were more memorable for passion than panache, it hardly seemed surprising that the breakthrough should arrive through an own goal. Sebastian Larsson's flighted free-kick pushed Sunderland's backline deep into the six-yard box, enabling Stephen Kelly to head back across goal. With Craig Gordon exposed, Paul McShane, under pressure from Gary McSheffrey, glanced the loose ball into the net off his chest.
The goal liberated both sides after a soporific opening. Sunderland, showing four changes despite their win over Tottenham on Saturday, could not find any rhythm as Birmingham snapped into tackles and pressed in numbers. No one typified the home team's approach better than Fabrice Muamba, though the former Arsenal midfielder was over-zealous on occasions and fortunate not to earn a yellow card.
Sunderland's opportunities were scarce although Keane was palpably frustrated to see a penalty appeal turned down when Chopra tumbled to the ground as Kelly closed in moments after Birmingham had taken the lead. Earlier Chopra appeared set to put Sunderland ahead but as he prepared to unleash the right boot that accounted for Spurs last weekend, Johan Djourou perfectly timed his intervention, sweeping the ball behind to safety.
The second half was much better, with Chopra's second goal in five days bringing parity. The former Newcastle forward arrowed a true shot beyond Doyle after shaking off Liam Ridgewell. Within seven minutes Birmingham were back in front, Olivier Kapo combining with Mikael Forssell to release O'Connor. The substitute wonderfully sidestepped McShane before shooting low into the far corner. John ensured it would not be the final blow.
Having held onto their first-half lead until the 75th minute, Birmingham were pegged back when Michael Chopra, further endearing himself to Sunderland fans, struck a wonderful left-footed volley. Birmingham responded swiftly though, with O'Connor drilling across goal to restore the home team's advantage. It was a lead they looked like retaining until Ross Wallace's free-kick was turned onto the crossbar by Colin Doyle and John nodded in.
Given that the early exchanges were more memorable for passion than panache, it hardly seemed surprising that the breakthrough should arrive through an own goal. Sebastian Larsson's flighted free-kick pushed Sunderland's backline deep into the six-yard box, enabling Stephen Kelly to head back across goal. With Craig Gordon exposed, Paul McShane, under pressure from Gary McSheffrey, glanced the loose ball into the net off his chest.
The goal liberated both sides after a soporific opening. Sunderland, showing four changes despite their win over Tottenham on Saturday, could not find any rhythm as Birmingham snapped into tackles and pressed in numbers. No one typified the home team's approach better than Fabrice Muamba, though the former Arsenal midfielder was over-zealous on occasions and fortunate not to earn a yellow card.
Sunderland's opportunities were scarce although Keane was palpably frustrated to see a penalty appeal turned down when Chopra tumbled to the ground as Kelly closed in moments after Birmingham had taken the lead. Earlier Chopra appeared set to put Sunderland ahead but as he prepared to unleash the right boot that accounted for Spurs last weekend, Johan Djourou perfectly timed his intervention, sweeping the ball behind to safety.
The second half was much better, with Chopra's second goal in five days bringing parity. The former Newcastle forward arrowed a true shot beyond Doyle after shaking off Liam Ridgewell. Within seven minutes Birmingham were back in front, Olivier Kapo combining with Mikael Forssell to release O'Connor. The substitute wonderfully sidestepped McShane before shooting low into the far corner. John ensured it would not be the final blow.

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