Newcastle 1 - 1 Sunderland: Magpies snatch draw in feisty derby

Shola Ameobi enhanced his reputation as a derby hero after coming off the bench to deny ten-man Sunderland with a dramatic equaliser.

The Nigerian-born striker stabbed home his seventh goal in the Tyne-Wear fixture a minute into injury-time to let leading scorer Demba Ba off the hook after he had seen an 83rd-minute penalty brilliantly saved by Simon Mignolet.

The Black Cats, who were reduced to ten men when Stephane Sessegnon was dismissed after 58 minutes and had skipper Lee Cattermole sent off after the final whistle, had taken a 24th-minute lead.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Referee Mike Dean pointed to the spot for Mike Williamson’s tug on Michael Turner’s shirt and Nicklas Bendtner calmly slotted the penalty past Tim Krul.

The visitors were the better side before the break, but Newcastle, who had earlier seen a Ba header come back off the crossbar, responded after it in front of a passionate crowd of 52,388 to lay siege to Mignolet’s goal.

And Sunderland manager Martin O’Neill, who was involved in angry exchanges with counterpart Alan Pardew on several occasions during a pulsating encounter, could only look on as his first derby ended with contrasting emotions.

Suggesting that Newcastle were themselves fortunate to finish the game with a full complement of players, O’Neill said of his first experience of the derby: “It was everything that people had told me about, everything, absolutely everything.

“Hostility, which I am kind of used to – that’s even from my own fans – fervour, everything, everything. In a perverse sort of way, I was enjoying it, but there was obviously disappointment at the end.”

Sunderland have not fared well on Tyneside in recent seasons, having not tasted victory at the home of their old foe since November 2000, and they went into the game with only one win in the last 14. But from the moment Cattermole senselessly careered into Cheick Tiote with just 40 seconds gone, it was they who largely set the tempo in an absorbing first half.

And while the visitors enjoyed the better of the first half, it was referee Dean who proved the central character as he slipped further in the estimation of the locals. Having already issued five cautions in the opening 23 minutes, he awarded the Black Cats a penalty as Williamson pulled Turner’s shirt in the area as the pair jockeyed for position under Kieran Richardson’s free-kick.

It took several seconds for the travelling fans high up in the stands behind Mignolet’s goal to understand what had happened, but their joy increased markedly when Bendtner slid the spot-kick beyond Krul’s dive to open the scoring.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Aggrieved as they were, the Magpies simply could not respond and Krul had to make a fine save to keep out Bendtner’s powerfully-struck shot on the turn 13 minutes before the break.But Newcastle finally found their feet and might have been level six minutes before the break had Mignolet not managed to beat away skipper Fabricio Coloccini’s firm header from a Ryan Taylor corner.

They went even closer in the final minute of the half when Ba met another Taylor corner at the near post and thumped a header against the bar. And the home side were themselves appealing for a penalty in injury time when Ba went down under John O’Shea’s challenge, but nothing was given.

Pardew made a change at the break when he replaced left-back Davide Santon with Hatem Ben Arfa and asked Taylor to slot back into the defence.

Newcastle immediately had a new momentum and they went close twice within seconds as Ba glanced a header across goal and then fired just wide after turning Turner 20 yards out.

However, it took a fine double save by Krul to deny first Sebastian Larsson and then James McClean as the home side were caught on the counter with 57 minutes gone.

But Sunderland’s task increased in difficulty seconds later when Sessegnon was dismissed for lashing out at Tiote, although with Turner and O’Shea defending doggedly, they held firm.

It took a fine save by Mignolet to deny Ben Arfa after he had cut inside from the left with 13 minutes remaining, and the Frenchman was convinced he should have had a penalty two minutes later after he went to ground under McClean’s challenge.

The referee did, however, point to the spot once again with eight minutes remaining after Fraizer Campbell had tripped fellow substitute Ameobi.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Ba stepped up in anticipation of his 17th goal of the season, but saw Mignolet dive to his left to make a superb save. However, there was nothing the Belgian could do to deny Ameobi when he stabbed home at the far post after Williamson had flicked on Cabaye’s cross to spare Ba’s blushes.