
Agen Bola SBOBET - Leicester City climbed out of the bottom three
as they defeated relegation rivals Burnley 1-0 in an attritional battle
at Turf Moor, the game turning on one dramatic second-half minute.
Matt
Taylor, making his first start since August, won a penalty for the home
side and took it himself but he could only strike the outside of the
post with Kapser Schmeichel beaten.
City promptly broke down the other end and when Marc Albrighton swung
in a cross Michael Duff deflected the ball goalwards and despite Tom
Heaton's best efforts, Jamie Vardy was on hand to force home what proved
the matchwinner (60).
The scoreline meant Leicester won four
successive top flight matches for the first time since October 1966 and,
after 140 days at the bottom of the table before last week's win over
Swansea, they are now clear of the drop zone by a single point,
something not seen since November 17.
For Burnley the wait for a
goal goes on as another blank means they are one minute short of eight
hours since they last scored on 14 March.
That win over defending champions Manchester City now seems a long
time ago as they have taken
just one point from five matches and are now
five points from safety.
Burnley had been dealt a blow before
kick-off when striker Sam Vokes was ruled out by injury, handing Lukas
Jutkiewicz his first Premier League start in six months.
The
26-year-old had more yellow cards (one) than goals in 25 previous
Premier League appearances this season so it is safe to assume the
Clarets were not pinning their hopes on any survival miracles from him.
Danny
Ings saw an early shot blocked by Wes Morgan and the best other chance
of the error-strewn first half dropped to Taylor but Schmeichel was
equal to his close-range flick.
How pivotal the 90 seconds around the hour mark were may not yet be
know but there was no doubt in the minds of the visiting supporters, who
celebrated wildly after going ahead.
Judi Online - Taylor had been brought down
by Paul Konchesky when Schmeichel parried a shot from Ings after the
Burnley striker had jinked one way and then the other to create an
opening.
Taylor, whose last goal was against the Clarets for West
Ham in the Capital One Cup in October 2013, picked himself up to take
the most pressurised of spot-kicks but - having sent Schmeichel the
wrong way - he could only watch in despair as the ball hit the outside
of the post and flew behind.
To add potential catastrophic injury to that insult, Leicester went
straight down the other end where Marc Albrighton's cross cannoned
goalwards off Duff for Vardy to pounce on the goal line.
Burnley
had one real chance to salvage a point but Schmeichel produced a fine
reaction save after Robert Huth inadvertently turned Ben Mee's cross
goalwards.
Survival often hangs on fine margins and Leicester's latest victory could yet yield far greater reward.
Phil Thompson's Soccer Saturday verdict
Both
teams did lack that quality today, both teams were launching it. It's
paracetamol all round because there were so many headers! It is just
great drama, though. The three centre backs for Leicester – Wasilewski,
Huth and Morgan – were absolutely fantastic. Four great victories for
Leicester City; they weren’t as good as they were last week but they put
in a shift.
Player ratings
Burnley: Heaton
(6), Trippier (5), Duff (7), Shackell (6), Mee (6), Boyd (6), Jones
(7), Arfield (6), Taylor (6), Ings (6), Jutkiewicz (5).
Subs: Wallace (5), Sordell (5), Kightly (5).
Leicester City:
Schmeichel (7), Wasilewski (6) Huth (7) Morgan (8), Albrighton (7) King
(6), Cambiasso (6), Drinkwater (6), Konchesky (6); Vardy (7), Ulloa
(6).
Subs: De Laet (6), James (5), Kramaric (6).
Man of the match: Wes Morgan
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