Burnley 2-1 West Bromwich Albion: Leaders come from behind to beat Baggies

Scott TwineImage source, Rex Features
Image caption,

Scott Twine's winner for Burnley sent them 19 points clear of third-placed Watford

Championship leaders Burnley came from behind to beat West Bromwich Albion at Turf Moor as Vincent Kompany's Clarets cemented their hold on top spot.

After being stung by Darnell Furlong's controversial early first-half opener, Burnley trailed at the break in an exciting, high-intensity contest before turning it round with two goals in the final 15 minutes.

Top scorer Nathan Tella raced clear to level with his ninth goal of the season before injury-hit summer signing Scott Twine stepped up off the bench to curl in a deserved 87th-minute winner and condemn Carlos Corberan to only his third defeat in 12 games as Baggies boss.

Burnley's eighth league win in a row moved the Clarets 19 points clear of third-placed Watford, and five clear of second-placed Sheffield United, who also won at home to Hull City. And that leaves an immediate return to the Premier League looking increasingly inevitable for a Burnley side who have lost just twice this season in 28 league games.

Albion took a seventh-minute lead when John Swift swung the ball in from the right, and Furlong got away with a blatant shove in the back on home defender Charlie Taylor to head in from close range - only the Albion defender's second goal of the season.

Burnley had opportunities to level before the break, chiefly when Ashley Barnes' run to the left byline ended with the ball being touched onto the post and wide.

Then Barnes might have done better when he hammered a left-foot shot against the bar.

But Burnley were most frustrated by two strong but unanswered penalty shouts - and they then really stepped up the pace in their search for a deserved equaliser after the break.

Image source, Rex Features
Image caption,

Albion were ahead inside six minutes but ended up losing at Turf Moor in the league for the first time since August 2007

With former Albion striker Jay Rodriguez coming off the bench to provide an extra physical and aerial threat, it seemed inevitable that the equaliser would come.

But Albion defended well - and it took until the 75th minute to level when Anass Zaroury's long ball down the inside right channel sent Tella clear - and he fired a powerful angled right-foot shot beyond Alex Palmer.

When these two sides had met at The Hawthorns in September, Albion had dominated, yet still needed an equaliser deep into injury time to earn a 1-1 draw - but there was to be no repeat.

And instead this time it was Burnley who came up with the late strike when Josh Cullen was brought down by Jed Wallace right on the edge of the box.

Twine, who had only been on the pitch for four minutes, took responsibility. And the £4m man from Milton Keynes Dons, who is still to start a game for Burnley, threaded a right-foot beauty up over the wall into Palmer's unguarded top right corner.

Who's next?

Both sides now face FA Cup fourth-round ties next weekend. Burnley are at League One side Ipswich on Saturday, when Albion go to Bristol City.

They then both return to league action the following weekend when the Baggies host Midlands rivals Coventry City on the Friday night (3 February) before Burnley go to Norwich the following day.

But Albion may have to manage without winger Matt Phillips for up to 12 weeks after he suffered a quadriceps muscle in his right leg in the midweek Cup replay win over Chesterfield.

Burnley boss Vincent Kompany told BBC Radio Lancashire:

"I've been close to many successful players and many successful teams but this feels very special. This feels different. I don't know how to explain it.

"They have left me a bit speechless, which means there are not a lot of words. I should say I'm not surprised but, in a game of such high standards, I am surprised, even though there have been so many things we have already seen from them this season.

"It's about character almost as much as quality. And they've earned it. There is a group dynamic and an energy that they bring every single day."

West Bromwich Albion head coach Carlos Corberan told BBC Radio WM:

"We should have done more to attack them second half. But they had a lot of the ball which made it difficult to press.

"The first goal changed everything. At that moment we still had possibilities to take something.

"Matt Phillips is going to take more time than we expected with his injury. At least six weeks and the maximum will be 12 weeks."

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