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Post by Football News on Dec 26, 2016 16:58:56 GMT
Burnley 1-0 MiddlesbroughHome team scorersAndre Gray 80 Burnley were outplayed for much of this game yet still managed to leapfrog Middlesbrough in the table and become the first of the two promoted sides to reach 20 points thanks to a late decider from Andre Gray. For 80 minutes the game looked to have nil-nil written right through it, after spending over an hour cancelling each other out in trying conditions both sides appeared ready to settle for a draw by the time Burnley managed to open up their opponents with a smartly executed bit of route one attacking. Middlesbrough had spent the previous 20 minutes looking marginally the more likely side to score, yet they were caught cold as Tom Heaton sent a free-kick up the middle, Sam Vokes won the header to nudge the ball forward and Gray struck with a perfectly executed right-foot volley. It had to be perfectly executed too, for Victor Valdes had the shot covered until the ball squirmed out of his grasp at the last moment and crept across the line behind him. The only goal of an unmemorable game will therefore go down as a goalkeeping mistake, a gift from the visiting defence, yet Gray deserves a huge amount of credit for the venom and accuracy he put into his shot. He could hardly have struck it any better, and after getting down low to reach the shot at the foot of his left-hand post, Valdes must have been as surprised as everyone else by the power Gray had been able to summon. Burnley’s Andre Gray scores the only goal of the match with 10 minutes remaining. Photograph: Craig Brough/Reuters Both sides had chances in an untidy and sometimes fractious first half, though there was little actual football to reward supporters for braving a chilly Lancashire afternoon. Mostly that was due to a stiff breeze blowing the length of the pitch that made control difficult, though there was also a touch of needle between two teams who came up from the Championship together last season. Middlesbrough could have taken an early lead when Christhian Stuani stole behind the Burnley defence to reach Antonio Barragan’s long ball over the top, but after getting himself into a good shooting position the forward missed the target with only Heaton to beat. Burnley took a while to hit their stride, with Boro’s neat, short-passing game helping them gain dominance in midfield, but gradually they pushed forward and managed to create a couple of scoring opportunities. Valdes had to scramble an Ashley Barnes shot around the foot of his post, Dean Marney had an appeal for a penalty turned down when Calum Chambers appeared to handle, though the closest the game came to a goal before the interval was a George Boyd shot from a free-kick on the edge of the area that Valdes appeared to misjudge in the air before pushing away. Boyd was Burnley’s liveliest attacker, beating Fabio da Silva twice in the move that led to the penalty shout, when Marney also appeared to be impeded in the act of shooting. The second half opened with Craig Pawson managing to spot a Marney handball, conceding a free-kick on the edge of the area for illegally blocking a Marten de Roon shot, yet though Gastón Ramírez took an age to line up his shot all he came up with was the gentlest of prods straight at Heaton. The Burnley goalkeeper had to work harder a couple of minutes later to keep out a Stuani header as Boro suddenly upped the tempo, with Stephen Ward becoming the fourth Burnley player cautioned by the referee, the full-back being pulled up for a scything challenge on Barragan. Gray joined him in the book shortly afterwards as Burnley began to find themselves pushed back into their own half, though when Vokes joined the fray for the final quarter the home forwards were able to have the last word. Boro must have left the field feeling mugged, but if so even they must acknowledge it was a heist of the highest class. Guardian
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