Middlesbrough 2 Barnsley 0: Superior Boro leave Hill’s Reds searching for away-day remedy
Tony Mowbray’s men were superior throughout, and although denied a host of chances by a stubborn Barnsley defence, Seb Hines’ header on the hour mark had proved enough to guarantee all three points.
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Hide AdBut the Tykes’ fourth straight defeat on the road was confirmed as Ogbeche lobbed Luke Steele as he tracked back from a desperate rush toward the opposition’s goal deep into stoppage time.
Jason was the first of the two Steeles to be tested as Andy Gray jabbed into his gloves.
Then, Julio Arca twisted and turned on the edge of the visitors’ box.
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Hide AdAfter allowing the ball to drift out of his feet, he wrested back control to ping high above Luke Steele’s crossbar.
The Argentinian midfielder nearly turned provider in the seventh minute, his early cross from the left missed by the onrushing Marvin Emnes before Lukas Jutkiewicz just reached it on the byline to nod wide.
Craig Davies inspired what little creativity Barnsley showed in the first half.
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Hide AdAs Boro failed to clear their lines, he danced forward to pump the ball into the hoardings.
The hosts soon answered back, Emnes stretching to poke Barry Robson’s cute pass against Luke Steele.
A clear chance went begging as Richard Smallwood directed a sweet through ball to Justin Hoyte on the right side.
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Hide AdThe ex-Arsenal trainee clipped a delightful ball across the six-yard box, Jutkiewicz’s toe arriving just too late.
With Barnsley content to camp out in their penalty area, Nathan Doyle failed to pick up an Emnes run, the Dutchman wriggling free to blast into the side netting.
But Doyle would then enjoy the Tykes’s best opportunity in a lacklustre opening period, volleying a wayward clearance just over the bar and into the home fans.
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Hide AdMowbray made a double substitution at the break. Jutkiewicz was replaced by youngster Curtis Main as Faris Haroun took over from Arca in the middle of the park.
The tactical switch was slow to pay dividends, but the consistently bright Emnes soon made a menace of himself, his speculative strike cut out by a brave Stephen Dawson.
Middlesbrough made their long-awaited breakthrough on the hour mark. Robson directed a regulation corner into the box and there was no volunteer willing to deny Hines his headed conversion.
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Hide AdHaroun would not trouble the scoreline further with a misguided strike from distance just four minutes later, but Boro were now firmly in the ascendancy.
Chris Dagnall was withdrawn for Jay McEveley as Keith Hill ordered his charges to retreat.
McEveley looked set to rescue a point with 89 minutes on the clock, but Jason Steele dropped quickly to smother his goalbound header on the line.
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Hide AdIt was Boro’s day though, as two minutes into stoppage time Ogbeche caught Luke Steele in the wilderness to lift a delightful lob high and into the Barnsley net.Middlesbrough: Steele, Hoyte, Hines, Bates, Bennett, Smallwood, Emnes, Robson, Arca (Haroun 46), Hammill (Ogbeche 84), Jutkiewicz (Main 46). Unused substitutes: Zemmama, McMahon.
Barnsley: Steele, Wiseman, Foster, McNulty, Golbourne, Davies, Doyle (Smith 76), Dawson, Done, Dagnall (McEveley 66), Gray (Cotterill 84). Unused substitutes: Preece, Tonge.
Referee: P Walton (Northamptonshire).
Nigel Adkins’ Southampton missed the chance to move four points clear at the top as a late equaliser from Jason Scotland grabbed Ipswich a point at St Mary’s Stadium.
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Hide AdSaints looked on their way to another priceless victory when Rickie Lambert lashed home his 25th goal of the season in the 74th minute – but Scotland struck five minutes from time to claim a 1-1 draw.
Saints are now just two points above second-placed West Ham, who have a game in hand, and three over third-placed Reading, for whom Noel Hunt hit a first-half winner in a 1-0 win over crisis club Portsmouth.
Pompey slumped to the bottom of the table.
Also at the bottom, Cody McDonald rescued a potentially priceless point for Coventry with a last-minute equaliser against Crystal Palace. A fourth-minute penalty from Darren Ambrose had given Palace the lead.
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Hide AdBlackpool blew a second-minute lead through Thomas Ince at Derby, with a Steve Davies brace giving the Rams a welcome 2-1 victory.
Bristol City grabbed a dramatic 3-2 win over Nigel Pearson’s Leicester City.
Lloyd Dyer’s opener for the Foxes was cancelled out by Kalifa Cisse and Brett Pitman for the home side.
Neil Danns equalised before Jon Stead won it for City in the 79th minute.
Millwall continued their recent recovery with a 3-0 win at Peterborough.