Bristol City vs Sheffield United. Sky Bet Championship.
Ashton Gate StadiumAttendance18,736.
Report and free match highlights from the Sky Bet Championship match between Bristol City and Sheffield United at Ashton Gate on Tuesday night; Ryan One and Harrison Burrows snatch a late turnaround win for Sheffield United at Ashton Gate.
Tuesday 5 November 2024 23:04, UK
Harrison Burrows scored with almost the last kick of the game as Sheffield United came from behind to snatch a 2-1 Sky Bet Championship victory over Bristol City at Ashton Gate.
The hosts took a 75th-minute lead when substitute Sinclair Armstrong raced onto Max Bird's through-ball and was tripped as he rounded goalkeeper Michael Cooper.
Another replacement, Anis Mehmeti, drilled the resulting spot-kick low to Cooper's right and, although the keeper guessed the direction correctly, he could not prevent the ball from nestling in the bottom corner.
The Blades' 86th-minute leveller came from a left-wing corner, unnecessarily conceded by City goalkeeper Max O'Leary's mistimed punch when he could have caught the ball. His defence failed to get a telling touch and yet another sub, Ryan One, rose to nod home.
The seven minutes of indicated stoppage time had been played when Burrows struck a sweet left-footed shot past O'Leary from inside the box to send the Sheffield United fans behind the goal into rapturous celebrations.
The result ended City's eight-match unbeaten run and their misery was compounded by a red card for defender Rob Dickie for denying a goalscoring opportunity just before Burrows' winner.
The home side had to make a change after only six minutes, Mehmeti replacing the injured Mark Sykes.
With fireworks going off around the ground, the first half developed into something of a damp squib.
It burst into life briefly in the 25th minute when City's Nahki Wells shot inches wide of the near post from Yu Hirakawa's low cross from the left towards the six-yard box.
Seconds later, Gustavo Hamer broke clear at the other end and saw his low drive from an angle thump against the far post and back into play.
Those efforts apart, there was little to worry either goalkeeper in an opening 45 minutes full of attacking endeavour but littered with poor choices and final passes in the final third.
City made a change at the start of the second half, sending on striker Armstrong for Wells. They went close to taking a 56th-minute lead when Jason Knight's downward header from a Bird free-kick clipped a post.
Boss Chris Wilder responded with a triple change, introducing Ollie Arblaster, Kieffer Moore and Jesurun Rak-Sakyi for Sydie Peck, Tyrese Campbell and Andre Brooks. But it was City who were looking the more likely winners as Mehmeti's low drive from a narrow angle was saved with an outstretched leg by Cooper.
The goalkeeper had less difficulty dealing with a long-range effort from Marcus McGuane before Moore's brief contribution ended with injury and he was replaced by One.
City's second-half dominance was finally rewarded by Mehmeti's penalty. But after One's equaliser, Sheffield United finished the match strongly and created several openings before Burrows broke Bristol City hearts.
Bristol City's Liam Manning:
"Until they scored it had been an excellent performance and one thing I can't question is the attitude and commitment of the lads.
"We didn't manage the game well enough in the closing stages. We have spoken in the dressing room about coping with the pressures that come with being successful and it's something we need to work on.
"I felt we lost the game, rather than them winning it. I haven't seen the red card incident again, but there are no complaints. Obviously it had an effect on conceding the winning goal because we were a defender light."
Sheffield United's Chris Wilder:
"I didn't think it was a smash-and-grab. It was a tight game against good opposition. After going one behind, we began to show all our character and we started to play in those last 20 minutes. Why it has taken that for us to play quickly with more drive, more intensity and more quality is beyond me.
"The players deserve an enormous amount of credit. It's got nothing to do with myself or the coaching staff. They put themselves in a hole with their decision-making and attention to detail and they got themselves out of it.
"I was a definite penalty and it might have been a case of poking the bear a little bit to get us going. But I thought the players were extremely brave and we were rewarded with a memorable winner and memorable scenes for the supporters."