Independent match report:
The break that Charlton had waited weeks, if not months, for finally arrived
with the very last kick of yesterday's game at The Valley, sparing them a new
Premiership record of nine successive defeats and ensuring that justice was
seen to be done.
A minute earlier, Mark Bright had been denied his second goal although it was
evident even without Sky TV's magnified close-ups that the ball had crossed the
line. There was time for one more attack, in which another substitute, the
teenager Scott Parker, kept his head while all around were holding theirs in
frustration, and fed Martin Pringle, who climaxed his debut by winning
Charlton's first point since 14 November.
With eight defeats in a row since then, the
black hole at the foot of the Premiership seemed to be swallowing them up, all
the more so when Newcastle went 2-0 ahead by the 55th minute. Bright gave his
team a toe hold, which firmed up when Newcastle's Nikolaos Dabizas was sent off
12 minutes from the end. Things were slipping again before Pringle's dramatic
late intervention.
Newcastle's manager Ruud Gullit bemoaned a
"crazy day and crazy week" but he will have found few sympathisers,
least of all in this corner of south-east London, for a crop of injuries that
included the former Charlton hero Robert Lee. "The sending-off changed the
whole game," he said. "All these circumstances are out of my control
and that's very frustration." Gullit was equally annoyed by the decision
to show a yellow card to Alan Shearer, who will now be suspended, though the
tackle split Pringle's boot.
On Gullit's own admission, "sexy"
football is now off the agenda following two wins in 13 matches. Charlton have
long since abandoned any such pretensions and there was certainly nothing
pretty or seductive about yesterday's game. It became an eventful and
controversial one, however, in the second half.
Charlton's manager, Alan Curbishley, who
has been scouring Britain and the Continent for a striker, had given full
debuts to Pringle, a loanee from Benfica, in attack and Simon Royce in goal as
Sasa Ilic, faulted for a number of goals recently, was dropped for the first
time. The public address system played "Things Can Only Get Better"
but they got worse first.
Temuri Ketsbaia gave the visitors the lead
after 14 minutes when he latched on to Alan Shearer's flick-on before firing
past Royce from 25 yards.
Nolberto Solano then doubled the advantage
on 55 minutes after more good work by Shearer and Ketsbaia, the Peruvian
stabbing home the loose ball after Ketsbaia's shot had been only partially
saved by Royce.
Charlton looked dead and buried but an
inspired substitution brought them back into the game, Bright scoring with his
first touch seconds after coming on following Mills' long throw.
The home crowd then thought they had ended
their miserable run when another Bright header looked to have crossed the line
before being hacked clear. The referee, Peter Jones, and his linesman were not
convinced however - they will be when they see a video replay - and it looked
as though Newcastle, down to 10 men now, would escape.
But there was still time for another
dramatic twist as Swedish international Pringle, making his home debut since
joining on loan from Benfica, fired a volley past Steve Harper with the last
kick of the game to spark wild celebrations at The Valley.
The home side had started brightly with
Keith Jones, replacing the suspended Neil Redfearn, battling his way to the
byline but Harper, deputising for the suspended Shay Given, reacted quickly to
cut out the danger.
John Robinson then went close to breaking
the deadlock after seven minutes, volleying just over from Pringle's flick-on.
But Newcastle gradually began to get into
the game, Gary Speed firing inches wide after Ketsbaia's lay-off 20 yards out.
Shearer then escaped the attentions of Carl Tiler to race to the byline and
Mills did well to get to the cross before the lurking Ketsbaia.