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Full Time After Extra Time This is a live match. Extra Time Half Time

Sunderland vs Swansea City. Sky Bet Championship.

Stadium of LightAttendance41,030.

Sunderland 1

  • L O'Nien (sent off 18th minute)
  • D Neill (65th minute)

Swansea City 3

  • J Piroe (50th minute)
  • L Cullen (70th minute)
  • O Cooper (78th minute)

Sunderland 1-3 Swansea: Joel Piroe, Liam Cullen and Ollie Cooper see off 10-man Black Cats

Report and free match highlights from the Sky Bet Championship clash between Sunderland and Swansea at the Stadium of Light as Joel Piroe, Liam Cullen and Ollie Cooper scored after Luke O'Nien's early red card for the Black Cats.

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Highlights of the Sky Bet Championship match between Sunderland and Swansea City.

Swansea made their numerical advantage count as they beat 10-man Sunderland 3-1 at the Stadium of Light.

Luke O'Nien's early dismissal meant the Black Cats had to play more than 70 minutes with a player less, and while they kept their opponents out until the interval, they were blown away as Swansea scored three goals in the second half.

Joel Piroe opened the scoring in the 50th minute, and while Dan Neil equalised for a spirited Sunderland, Liam Cullen and Ollie Cooper scored two goals in the space of eight minutes to ensure the points went back to south Wales.

Sunderland started the game brightly, and were marginally the better team when both sides had 11 players on the field, with Patrick Roberts firing an early free-kick over the crossbar.

However, the complexion of the game changed completely when the Black Cats were reduced to 10 men in the 18th minute.

Liam Cullen of Swansea City celebrates his goal vs Sunderland
Image: Liam Cullen of Swansea City celebrates his goal vs Sunderland

Amad Diallo went down in Swansea's 18-yard box wanting a penalty, and Sunderland's players were clearly incensed when referee Keith Stroud waved play on, enabling their opponents to break.

O'Nien took matters into his own hands, leaping into a reckless challenge on Cooper close to the centre-circle. The incident sparked a bout of pushing and shoving involving players from both sides, which was halted by Stroud brandishing a straight red card to O'Nien.

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Unsurprisingly, Swansea became the dominant side once they were handed a numerical advantage, although it took them a while to seriously threaten the Sunderland goal.

Anthony Patterson turned a well-struck shot from Piroe around the post, and when the Sunderland goalkeeper should have been beaten a minute before the interval, Piroe was found wanting.

The Swansea striker had plenty of the goal to aim at when Ryan Manning's cross was touched into his path, but he only succeeded in shooting straight at Danny Batth, who had been brought on as a defensive replacement in the wake of O'Nien's dismissal.

It was a bad miss, but Piroe made amends when he opened the scoring five minutes after the interval.

Manning steered Matt Grimes' cross back across the face of goal, and an unmarked Piroe was left with the simple task of tapping home from a couple of yards to claim his 10th goal of the season.

A goal and a man down, it would have been easy for Sunderland to have folded, but to their credit, they continued battling away and equalised in the 65th minute.

Jack Clarke beat his man to swing over a cross from the left, and after Batth nodded down, Neil steered home a slick first-time volley.

Parity was restored, but it only lasted five minutes before Swansea reclaimed the lead in a fortuitous fashion.

Batth cut out Manning's left-wing cross as he slid inside his own six-yard box, but his clearance struck Cullen, with the ball rebounding back into the net.

Swansea added a third goal with 12 minutes remaining, Cooper swooping on the loose ball after Piroe's shot had been blocked by Dan Ballard and drilling a fine finish past Patterson.

The managers

Sunderland's Tony Mowbray:

"Luke's a very level-headed kid. Yet I think it's quite natural to get wrapped up in the game. It felt as if for a spell, the supporters could be our 11th man and make it an even game as such. The crowd can play such an important part, but maybe they overwound Luke O'Nien up a bit. My job today was to try to make sure these players played with intensity against this team that were coming to try to dominate the ball, and I thought we did it brilliantly well for however long it was before the sending off.

"Luke was stepping out from a central-defensive position into a midfield area, where their number nine had dropped down, and we'd talked about how the centre-halves had to drop in with them because they play in the spaces. It was just an overly-aggressive challenge. I've told him that. There was no need for that intent, yet you can imagine if he had made real clean contact and the ball had flown 50 yards up the field, the crowd would have roared and it would have kept the momentum going. Ultimately, though, on the back of that decision, the game swung pretty dramatically."

Swansea's Russell Martin:

"I'm really pleased with the players. It's such a tough place to come. We knew it was going to be tough, and they started the game really well. The crowd and the atmosphere here is so good, and there's been a shift in the feeling towards the club because of the promotion.

"It's not an easy place to come, but then the game obviously changes on the sending off. It took us a little while to manage the emotion of that because the crowd was so up, and we've got so many young players experiencing that kind of atmosphere for the first time. It was about settling things down and trying to stay calm, and I thought we did very well in the second half."

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