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Match Details
03.09.1999
Burnley |
2 |
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1 |
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| Branch 38, Davis 62 |
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Burnley team:
Crichton, West, Smith (off 65), Mellon, Davis (2), Thomas, Little, Cook (off 88), Armstrong, Payton, Branch (off 78), Brass (sub), Robertson (sub), Cowan (on, 65), Jepson (on, 88), Johnrose (on, 78), Crichton, West, Smith (off 65), Mellon, Davis (2), Thomas, Little, Cook (off 88), Armstrong, Payton, Branch (off 78), Robertson (sub), Cowan (on, 65), Jepson (on, 88), Johnrose (on, 78), Brass (sub)
AFC Bournemouth team:
Referee: S. J. Baines
Reports
The Clarets went top of the table tonight with a 2-1 victory over
Bournemouth, Steve Davis scoring the winning goal in the second
half.
Burnley opened up the scoring in tonight's game, despite taking a
while to get into the match which the visitors had been
dominating early on.
Andy Payton broke through the defensive line on 38 minutes and
fed Little on the wing who found himself in acres of space.
Little had time to look up and pick his spot and his cross fell
perfectly for Graham Branch, just ten yards out, who powered a
header home past Ovendale.
Whilst the Claret army were still celebrating though, Bournemouth
took the ball straight up the other end and found an equaliser.
Mark Stein was put through and notched the goal that brought the
score back to level terms on 39 minutes.
At half time it was still one a piece but the visitors had
maintained the best of the chances and possession up to that
point and there was great concern as to whether the Clarets would
get back into gear for the second half.
Bournemouth
proved time and again to be top class opposition, but still the
home side took the lead with a goal from Steve Davis that turned
out to be the winner.
Cook whipped in a free kick and Davis rose to head the ball
across the face of goal and into the corner of the net.
There was no doubt about the manager's desperation to take all
the points as after the goal, Stan Ternant instructed his players
to shut up shop.
Andy Payton was left to plough a lone furrow up front whilst the
rest of the team closed down the defence and rode out the final
half an hour under a barrage of Bournemouth pressure.
In the end the tactics worked perfectly as Burnley took the
points and leapfrogged into No.1 spot at the top of the table on
13 points, with Wigan and Notts County the nearest contenders
both on 11, Burnley have played one game more.NO championship medals are handed out in September.
But being top of the table sure beats being at the bottom at any
time of the season.
And no-one who watched Burnley collect their most impressive win
of the season would argue with the Clarets' right to be leading
the Second Division going into the start of play today.
The good times have been so scarce at Turf Moor in recent years
that such lofty status even after just six games will have been a
source of great celebration among the Clarets faithful last
night.
But this may well prove than just a quick flirtation with the
promotion places, even if Luton or Bristol Rovers were able to
knock Burnley off their perch this afternoon.
The Clarets have been on an upward curve since the spring and
there are no signs of it levelling off yet.
One defeat in 16 games tells much of the story, but this win over
a Bournemouth side rated among the best in the division provided
arguably the most telling evidence yet that Stan Ternent has
assembled a squad capable of staying the pace.
Admittedly the Cherries are stuck in a disastrous run of away
form and were missing two midfield men on international duty.
But they still fielded a back four and a front pair many managers
in Division Two would gladly have at his disposal.
Not so Stan Ternent, however, and the faith he has shown in his
players is now being repaid.
Burnley outplayed the visitors throughout and anything other than
the win delivered by Steve Davis's 63rd-minute goal would have
been an injustice.
Apart from a costly lapse in concentration which allowed Mark
Stein to instantly cancel out Graham Branch's first goal at Turf
Moor, the Clarets defence was rock-solid and suffered few of the
anxious late moments that marked Burnley's previous three League
wins this season.
Up front, Branch had one of his best games for the club alongside
the razor-sharp Andy Payton as they caused the highly-rated pair
of Ian Cox and Eddie Howe plenty of problems.
And in midfield, the Clarets were in a different league to their
opponents. Micky Mellon continued his emergence as a key figure
and Paul Cook stamped his class and authority on proceedings from
the word go.
But perhaps the most encouraging aspect of an uplifting evening
was the return to his best form for Glen Little.
Yet to fire on all cylinders and not an automatic choice in the
opening games, Little turned in a breath-taking performance which
will hopefully see all his old confidence come flooding back and
confirm him as an integral part of the Clarets line-up.
It was no coincidence that Burnley produced their best football
of the season at the same time as he did as he bamboozled a
Bournemouth side that employed two and sometimes three players to
try and keep Little quiet in the second half. Not that this was
a one-man show from Burnley. Far from it. And with football now
seemingly such a squad game, Burnley look well equipped.
To be without Andy Cooke and John Mullin and still have Ronnie
Jepson, Chris Brass, Tom Cowan, Mark Robertson and Lenny Johnrose
on the bench shows that the Clarets mean business.
By the time it's next as warm at Turf Moor as it was last night,
that strength-in-depth may have reaped the rewards that are on
offer in May and not September.
Ternent recalled the fit-again Davis and Paul Smith and Burnley
wasted no time in getting the disappointment of their defeat at
Bristol Rovers out of their systems as they sprayed the ball
about with great style.
Only the accuracy of the final ball was lacking until Dean West
delivered a teasing cross for Payton which he headed just the
wrong side of the post at full-stretch.
Mellon blazed a shot just wide as Little and Smith teased
Bournemouth down the flanks and Cook and Payton stretched them up
the middle.
But the lead Burnley deserved for their enterprise finally came
six minutes before half-time when Payton's hard work allied to
Little's pinpoint cross allowed Branch to dive and head home a
goal that could work wonders for a player still striving to
fulfil his potential.~
Disaster followed delight, however, as Burnley were caught
sleeping within 60 seconds and the completely unmarked Stein
poked home the equaliser.
But that barely disrupted the Clarets flow as Little continued to
sparkle after half-time and Mellon became a greater influence.
When the pair combined at the end of a flowing move, Mellon was
just a fraction of a second late in meeting Little's cross when
glory beckoned.
The winner was not long in coming though and it was Davis, whose
raking pass to Smith won Burnley the decisive free-kick, who
produced it when he climbed to meet Cook's deep set-piece and
head powerfully home.
Bournemouth briefly threatened to deliver a repeat counter-punch
but Paul Crichton saved bravely at the feet of loan signing Kevin
Betsy, who posed a fresh threat to the Clarets until Tom Cowan
came on to help nip it in the bud.
And with Mitchell Thomas outstanding Burnley remained in control,
going close to extending their lead when Payton ran half the
length of the pitch and lacked only the power to beat Mark
Ovendale.
Thomas snuffed out the one piece of late danger with a brilliant
tackle on John O'Neill, and while their current tenure at the top
might have come under threat today, don't count on Burnley not
claiming poll position again.
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