Wed, 18 Sep 2002

Bizarre goal helps Birmingham crush Villa

Reuters, London

One of the most bizarre own goals in the history of English professional football helped Birmingham City to a 3-0 premier league win over city rivals Aston Villa on Monday.

In the first meeting between the two clubs for 15 seasons, Birmingham had taken the lead after 31 minutes through Clinton Morrison but was hanging on in the face of a strong second-half Villa comeback.

There was no danger when Villa's Olaf Mellberg sent a throw-in back to his goalkeeper Peter Enckelman 13 minutes from time. But the Finnish international somehow allowed the ball to trickle under his boot and into the net.

His Villa teammates claimed he had missed it completely and, as the laws of the game state a goal cannot be scored direct from a throw in, an official urged the referee to award a corner.

However, the official, standing on the halfway line, decided there had been some contact with the goalkeeper's boot and duly awarded the goal.

Striker Geoff Horsfield then cashed in on another defensive error to fire home City's third seven minutes from time.

The win takes Birmingham up to ninth on eight points with Villa on 15th on six. Arsenal top the table with 14 points.

The match was the first meeting between the two rivals since the 1987-88 season, in the old second division, and their first in the premier league.

Birmingham players, roared on by a home crowd relishing every minute of their return to the top flight after a 16-year absence, totally dominated the first half.

They got their deserved lead when a hopeful long ball into the box found its way to Robbie Savage.

Savage mis-controlled the ball on his chest but it fell nicely for Morrison, who scored both in the 2-2 comeback draw against Liverpool last week. He swept it in.

Villa's best first-half effort came seven minutes later when Ecuador's Ulises de la Cruz thumped a long shot against the bar.

Villa was much improved after the break and had a Darius Vassell goal controversially ruled out for offside. Vassell then went close with a header in the 74th minute and the impressive Gareth Barry curled a free kick just wide a minute later.

But the pressure counted for nothing once Enckelman committed his terrible blunder.

Experienced Turkish international Alpay was almost as bad when he was caught in possession by Horsfield, allowing the substitute to run on and score the third.

It was Villa's third-successive away defeat, in which it has failed to muster a goal and left manager Graham Taylor "more than disappointed."

Of the bizarre own goal the former England manager said: "Very few people have seen the likes of that. I certainly haven't in all my career.

However, it was not all good news for Birmingham, who will be reported by the referee for failing to control its fans.

Several ran on to the pitch after each goal, with one supporter aggressively taunting Enckelman after his error.