Burton Albion 1-1 Aston Villa
- Published
Burton came from behind to improve their hopes of avoiding relegation with a draw that hampers Aston Villa's late Championship play-off push.
Villa looked set for an eighth win in nine games when top scorer Jonathan Kodjia scored his 19th Championship goal of the season in the third minute.
But former Villa youngster Lloyd Dyer, who also used to play for West Brom and Birmingham, levelled after 61 minutes.
He latched onto Kyle McFadzean's angled pass to fire home a searing drive.
That equaliser lifted Burton five points clear of the relegation zone, while Steve Bruce's Villa are now 11 points adrift of the top six with five games to play, thanks to Sheffield Wednesday's win over title-chasing Newcastle.
Villa took the lead when Ivory Coast international Kodjia - a winner at the Pirelli Stadium with former club Bristol City in August - swooped on a poor pass from Burton defender Ben Turner to race in unchallenged and slot past goalkeeper Jon McLaughlin.
Since Kodija's signing in late August, Villa have netted 38 times in the Championship, of which the Ivorian has now netted 18, despite him missing five games because of his involvement in the Africa Cup of Nations.
But the visitors' key player limped off with a dead leg on 36 minutes, to be replaced by Scott Hogan, and they failed to press home the advantage.
Burton's Marvin Sordell glanced a header just off target early in the second half before Dyer deservedly equalised with his sixth goal of the season - only the second goal Villa have conceded in their past nine games.
Brewers substitute Lucas Akins fired just wide late on, while Villa went close through Jordan Amavi, and the home side also had to be thankful to Turner at the end, when the defender made two crucial clearances.
Burton Albion boss Nigel Clough:
"We deserved a point after the start we got off to.
"It was less than ideal to give a team like Villa a goal start after a couple of minutes, especially with them being so resilient and resolute in defence of late.
"We knew it was going to take something to break them down and we had to take the game to them which I thought we did for the majority of the game."
Aston Villa manager Steve Bruce:
"We have to admit that we were poor. We lacked sharpness and some of them were running on empty, to be honest.
"In my experience, that happens when you play two or three games quickly after an international break.
"It was frustrating but Burton are good at what they do. It's never easy to come here. We knew that. But, after getting off to a good start, we have to take care of the ball better than we did."
- Published8 April 2017
- Published30 August 2016