|
Date: Wed 12th September 2001, 7.45pm.
Venue: St.
James' Park
Conditions:
Admission:
£15
|
|
Newcastle
United |
4
- 1
(aet) |
Brentford |
|
|
|
Teams |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
18
mins A speculative punt forward from the
visiting goalkeeper to Lloyd Owusu
found the attacker suddenly alone on the edge of the United area as both
Andy O'Brien and Aaron Hughes were caught flat-footed. The Bees striker steadied
himself before lifting the ball over and past Steve Harper into the net. 0-1
Half time: Newcastle 0 Brentford
1
59 mins Smart work from Alan Shearer, who released a perfect ball to the
overlapping Nolberto Solano down the United right. He made it to the byline before
crossing for Shola Ameobi to stab the ball home into the Gallowgate end
goal via an upright. 1-1
Full time: Newcastle 1 Brentford
1
ET / Half time: Newcastle
1 Brentford 1
108 mins After numerous passes had
gone astray all night, finally someone played an incisive through ball
along the ground to a colleague. The passer was Laurent Robert, and his low angled
pass released Craig Bellamy down the left. He cut inside on the edge of
the box and netted with a low straight drive into the bottom left hand
corner, between 'keeper and post. 2-1
118 mins A second goal for the substitute Craig Bellamy, in similar style to
Brentford's opener, Harper's punt landing favourably for the Welsh
international to move into the area unchallenged and beat the keeper. 3-1
120 mins Brentford won a
corner, and despite being two behind, their keeper bounded forward and
tried to get his head on the flag kick. The ball was won and Gottskalksson left stranded as LuaLua picked up possession on the right side of
the United half.
For half a second he looked as if he would try a strike
from a similar distance to Robert Lee against the Bees here in 1993, but for
once he held the ball and waited for support.
Solano presented himself in
space on the right, and when he unselfishly knocked the ball across the
box there was Craig Bellamy to tap home the ball for his hat trick, with
the 'keeper making back just in time to retrieve the ball from his net. 4-1
ET / Full time: Newcastle 4 Brentford 1
Uncle
Bobby said:
"When you look
at what we threw at the opposition, they coped remarkably well. They came
up against Bellamy, Alan Shearer, Shola Ameobi, Laurent Robert and
Nolberto Solano, but they still held out for most of the game.
"It was a very
difficult game for us and we have not been involved in such a difficult 90
minutes all season. Brentford were as good as Chelsea when we played there
- they had a team full of giants and defended superbly.
"We defended
the second ball very badly. We fell asleep and as a result we again found
ourselves a goal down. But at half time my instructions were not to panic
and that if we got level we would go on and win the match and that's what
happened. And in the end we had a good crowd who had a lovely night's
entertainment and we went through into the next round."
He also praised Alan
Shearer
for his contribution:
"Obviously the
penalty shoot-out was in my mind as the game went into extra time. Before
the game we had picked our five penalty-takers in Alan Shearer, Laurent
Robert, Nobby Solano, Wayne Quinn and Aaron Hughes.
"But we lost
Hughes and Quinn because of injury and I did not want to bring Shearer off
with this in mind. I did not
want Alan to play 120 minutes but he did. In fact, I only wanted him to
play 70 minutes.
"But he stayed
on for the full two hours and he's done very well and made a massive
contribution. He enjoyed it and the lovely thing is that he has come off
the pitch with his knee fine and we've won 4-1. He will be pretty stiff
today - stiff as a board - but he's got a couple of days to recover."
When asked about Robert,
he commented:
"There was
nothing in the booking. Why would
Laurent want to go down in that position? When you're a jockey you don't
deliberately become unseated when you go over the fence.
"The last thing
Laurent wants to do when he is in the box and bearing down on goal is to
fall down. We are talking to him about being careful because he is already
close to a first suspension. He was unlucky at Chelsea, picked up a
ridiculous booking against Sunderland and I thought this latest yellow
card was very harsh.
"Steve was very
clever and he knows what our strengths are. He played an extra defender
and we were never going to beat them in an aerial battle. We needed to win
the game by playing football and that's what we did in the end.
Finally, he mentioned three-goal Bellamy:
"Brentford just
could not handle him and he took his hat-trick well - but Shola Ameobi's
equaliser was also an important goal for us."
Goalscoring hero Bellamy
spoke to the Chronicle:
"I was
delighted to get on and the hat-trick means a lot to me.
"I like playing
in that role behind the front two and breaking forward from deep. I get
into better scoring positions and my extra pace does help.
"My confidence
is sky-high at the moment but, with all due respect, I am playing with
better players at this club and I should be improving. The plan was for me
not to come on but obviously I am pleased I did. This was only the second
hat-trick of my career and I am absolutely delighted.
"My other
hat-trick for Norwich against QPR included two penalties but this was a
good old-fashioned one with three goals. To tell the truth, I was itching
to get off the bench and just get the tie over because I felt an extra
attacker would do the trick for us and that's the way it turned out.
"Obviously I
scored against Sunderland and I have also scored for Wales so I am really
feeling confident in front of goal at the moment. Confidence is a massive
thing in football. Players like Alan Shearer can be having a bad time yet
still score goals. Alan is a rare breed while I would say that I am not
really a natural goalscorer.
"I thought I
was running out of time but then Nobby Solano got in a great cross and I
did not mind that my third goal was a tap-in. But the most important thing
is we got through. This type of game is always tricky because you never
know what will happen."
"The match ball
and another ball for the sponsors were both being signed in the dressing
room afterwards but I made sure I got the right one with the grass stains
on it!"
Steve Coppell said:
"The league is what matters most
to us and although we did brilliantly up here we have to look ahead. There
was little to choose between the sides but the quality they had on the
bench decided it in the end.
"They (away fans) were magnificent and I hope they go back
with their heads held high despite the result."
Craig Bellamy became the first
Newcastle player to score a hat trick after having come on as a substitute,
and his 12 minute treble was the fastest individual bout of toon scoring
since Len Shackleton hit 3 of his 6 debut goals in a 5 minute spell
against Newport County in the famous 13-0 win of 1946.
Bellamy also became the first Welshman to net 3 goals for United in
a game since Wyn Davies hit a treble in a home 4-3 FA Cup tie
victory in January 1967. The opposition that day? Bellamy's old
club Coventry City.
The last player to score three goals in a League Cup match for Newcastle was
Andy Cole in 1993/94 away at Notts County. Bellamy becomes the fifth
player to net a hat trick in the competition:
Alan Gowling (v Southport h 1975/76) 4 goals.
Malcolm Macdonald (v Doncaster Rovers h 1973/74)
Malcolm Macdonald (v QPR h 1974/75)
Gavin Peacock (v Crewe Alexandra a 1991/92)
Andy Cole (v Notts County h 1993/94)
Andy Cole (v Notts County a 1993/94)
Craig Bellamy (as sub v Brentford h 2001/02)
Alan Shearer was the last player to score a hat trick in any first
team game, when he finished up with against Sheffield Wednesday here in
the 8-0 mauling of September 1999.
United are now unbeaten since May 3rd - a run of 12 games (5
Premiership, 6 Intertoto, 1 League Cup). Yet another game that we
avoided defeat in, despite scoring first - a feature of all four domestic
matches so far this season.
Nationwide banana skin avoided then,
thanks to a fleet-of-foot substitute. However, 12 minutes of late joy
can't obscure the previous wastelands of mundanity that had to be endured.
Far from enhancing their Premiership credentials, Bobby's B team did their
cause no good and squad rotation still looks viable when players drop out
with injuries.
It could even be argued that those that
didn't feature were the ones with bolstered reputations (i.e. Barton).
Rather than generally slag off the performance, we've elected to do it one
by one this time out:
Harper - a
kind person would say ring-rusty, but he looked exactly what he is - a
keeper who doesn't play games. A look at the stats shows that our 3rd
choice keeper Karelse has played more games in the last year, and it
showed in Harper's positioning and awareness. One effort in the second
half passed wide of his post when his body language showed he didn't have
a clue where the ball was - not a problem with technique as such, just not
sufficiently sharp.
Griffin - some good work going forward, but off the pace at the
back and almost left embarrassed by average Nationwide league players on
more than one occasion. Needs games to regain form.
Quinn - painful to watch. Brady, Hamilton and Cordone were shown the door,
this lad should be next. Full marks for trying, but out of his depth in a
Premiership club. Has the distribution of a leaky hosepipe.
O'Brien - Hesitant, didn't look 100% happy all night - suspicion he was
carrying an injury. No problem with his effort, but some suicidal passes
to colleagues that had people in the East Stand howling in anguish.
Suffered from cramp in the latter stages - I know how he felt.
Hughes - has timed a dip in form to coincide with renewed competition in his
position, and picked up a knock in this game. Not having a happy time of
things at present.
Solano - early endeavour when everything was coming down the right for
United, but sent in a succession of rotten corners and flat crosses. A
peripheral figure for the final hour of the contest, aside from his two
right wing centres that set up the first and last goals.
Acuna - Not a flash display, but hard-working and tireless. Formed a
possibly unique central defensive partnership with Shearer in the latter
stages.
Bassedas - said it before, saying it again.....not good enough. Too easily
knocked out of his lolloping stride and unreliable in terms of basic work
- short passing, tracking runs etc.
Ameobi - Spent a lot of the game being dragged and pulled around by home
defenders without a word from the ref. However when he did get the ball
out wide and start to go past his men, his decision-making about passing,
crossing and shooting was again questionable. Vital goal, but suspicion
he's believing his own hype.
Shearer - talisman-like quality and reliability from the spot ensured a two
hour stint that he came through without incident. No direct threat to the
Brentford goal save for one good chance in the second half, but in his
familiar style held the ball up and dropped back on occasion when his
defenders were struggling. Noticeably ordering his players around in the
latter stages to defend corners etc. in the absence of Dabizas.
Robert - not really his night, not really his game. Starved of the ball in
the first half as much as he had been at Middlesbrough and got involved in
one or two skirmishes. Booked in a crazy decision but didn't seem to be
too affected by it. However, given his lack of involvement and the
possibility of a second yellow from a bungling arse of a ref, a major
surprise that he stayed on the field for the duration. Whether leaving him
on for possible penalty duty will rebound on Bobby won't be known until
just before 5pm on Saturday.
Elliott - better
than Quinn, which may be interpreted as being damned with faint praise.
Bellamy - In the words of John Travolta in Grease, "Why
it's Greased Lightning!" After the mackem goal, his hat trick is
genuine cause for more celebration, that another of Robson's purchases has
been an asset to the team. Pace like his will unsettle anyone, and
although he's a little rough and ready, he is a handful and possesses that
mean streak that annoys defenders - a bit like Mark Hughes without the
Kung fu kicks.
LuaLua - not on long enough to warrant praise or criticism, but he
seemed to worry tiring Nationwide defenders enough to suggest an earlier
introduction may have proved beneficial.
It's always tempting to criticise a top league team in this situation and
praise underdogs propelled from obscurity into the spotlight for one
night, but to be frank Brentford were nowt startling. Well regimented at
the back, adept in filling midfield with bodies, but not blessed with
any real playing assets to be flogged and fill Chairman Ron's sky rocket.
In those circumstances (and with memories of 1990's leatherings of lower
league teams), it's difficult not to moan and whinge with the plain fayre
that was served up at Gallowgate in normal time, but the job was done and
we're in the Third Round.
Like the Intertoto cup games, the end justify the means and those who
stuck out the 120 minutes were rewarded with a small piece of Newcastle
United history. Still unbeaten, still scoring goals - two facts that
obscure some of our present shortcomings.
Who knows, Sylvain Distin may be the one who melds the backline into something
approaching a unit. He watched this game from the Milburn stand, but
perhaps fortunately wasn't asked by journalists for his
thoughts....
Biffa
Reports
Back to Main
Page
|