Bolton manager Owen Coyle bemoans officials as Wanderers are relegated

Coyle bemoans officials at Stoke as Wanderers are relegated after 11 years in Premier League

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UPDATED:

19:21 GMT, 13 May 2012

Relegation came with a bitter taste for Owen Coyle as Bolton's 11-year stay in the Barclays Premier League came to an end following a 2-2 draw at Stoke.

The Trotters knew only victory at the Britannia Stadium, coupled with defeat for QPR at Manchester City, would be good enough to keep them in the top flight.

Ref justice: Owen Coyle protests to the assistant referee

Ref justice: Owen Coyle protests to the assistant referee

Things were going Bolton's way at half-time, with bizarre goals from Mark Davies and Kevin Davies cancelling out a controversial opener from Jon Walters, while City were also ahead.

But QPR came back to lead and, even worse, Walters equalised from the penalty spot, while City's dramatic turnaround meant Bolton's fate was only back in their own hands when the final whistle had blown in Stoke and it was already too late.

Frustration: Coyle left bemoaning officals

Frustration: Coyle left bemoaning officals

Coyle and trouble: Bolton's boss ran the gamut of emotions at Stoke, but ultimately saw his side relegated

Frustration: Coyle left bemoaning officals

Frustration: Coyle left bemoaning officals

Coyle reserved much of his anger for referee Chris Foy, who allowed Walters' 13th-minute opener to stand despite the striker appearing to head the ball out of Adam Bogdan's hands, and the Bolton boss also felt the goalkeeper should not have been penalised for felling Crouch to concede the penalty 13 minutes from time.

'It's hard to take,' said Coyle. 'We had a slow start in the game but I think the events that happened today, and I know people will talk about sour grapes, but how can that first goal be allowed to stand when Adam Bogdan had clearly got the ball in his hands

'Jonathan Walters is a good player but he sticks his head and his elbow halfway up Adam's arm, I find it incredible. I've been in to see the officials – I've done that a lot this season and I can't say you come out any the wiser.

Trot-timistic: Trotters fans put on a brave face after seeing Bolton relegated

Trot-timistic: Trotters fans put on a brave face after seeing Bolton relegated

'But we bounced back, got 2-1 in front, had chances to make it 3-1. Crouch has a great chance and Adam makes a great save, but in the aftermath Crouch has knocked it by Adam and it's actually Crouch who's clambered into Adam.

'I don't think we've come out on top of the decisions today, but we've picked ourselves up again. Lee Chung-yong had a good chance to get that third goal and then Tim Ream's header in the last minute, where the keeper's made a great save.

I Wandered lonely as a crowd: A Bolton fan shows his dejection at the final whistle

I Wandered lonely as a crowd: A Bolton fan shows his dejection at the final whistle

'And that's the margins in this league. If that goes in, we're still in the Premier League.'

It was a cruel end to the most difficult of seasons for Bolton, who have been beset by long-term injuries to key players and also had to deal with the trauma of Fabrice Muamba's on-pitch cardiac arrest.

The midfielder's remarkable recovery will certainly put relegation into some perspective, and Coyle has no doubt the Trotters will get over the disappointment ahead of next season.

The Scot said: 'There's nothing that takes away from the disappointment and everything that will come with that.

Reo-Choker: Hands on hips time for Bolton's Nigel Reo-Coker (left) and Sam Ricketts

Reo-Choker: Hands on hips time for Bolton's Nigel Reo-Coker (left) and Sam Ricketts

'We'll take our medicine, I will as a manager, but we certainly believe, regardless of the personnel we had missing and the trials and tribulations of the season, that we still had enough quality, and we do.

'Our young players will continue to get better, that's the transition we've been making this year, but we wanted to do that off the platform of being in the Barclays Premier League.

'My feelings are not for me, they're for our wonderful support and the chairman and the owner. It's a wonderful club.

'The players are very quiet and sombre, it's not a feeling I've become accustomed to as a manager but it's happened and it's about how you react to adversity. We will regroup and we'll look to bounce back straight away.'

Field of screams: Tim Ream (left) knows it will be life in the Championship for Bolton

Field of screams: Tim Ream (left) knows it will be life in the Championship for Bolton

Stoke certainly played their part in shaping the relegation battle after losing to QPR last week, and boss Tony Pulis admitted the nature of Bolton's goals left him thinking they would stay up.

In the 40th minute, Robert Huth's clearance smashed against Mark Davies and flew into the net, then five minutes later Kevin Davies' mis-hit cross caught out Thomas Sorensen at his near post.

Pulis said: 'We have a responsibility as a football club, and I think we did at QPR last week, to do the best we possibly can. Irrespective of whether you're playing against friends or whether you've got a soft spot for a team, you have to do your best.

Wanderer winces: Martin Petrov

Wanderer winces: Martin Petrov closes his eyes after being relegated

Make the world go away: Wincing Wanderer Martin Petrov (right) closes his eyes after being relegated

'And I thought in the first 20 or 25 minutes we were really on top. I have to say I came in the dressing room at half-time and I thought it was going to be Bolton's day. They were two bizarre goals.

'But we kept at it second half and the draw wasn't good enough for Bolton. I'm disappointed for Owen and Bolton but it's a reminder to everybody in this league that you have to keep pushing on because it's such a tough league.'

Not this time: Bolton Wanderers fans held out hope before kick-off

Not this time: Bolton Wanderers fans held out hope before kick-off

Ricardo Fuller wanted by Cardiff, Ipswich and Wigan

Fuller set to leave Stoke with Wigan, Cardiff and Ipswich hunting striker

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UPDATED:

08:07 GMT, 17 April 2012

Cardiff and Ipswich are leading the chase to sign Ricardo Fuller this summer with the striker set to bid farewell to Stoke.

Moving on: Ricardo Fuller is set to leave Stoke this summerMoving on: Ricardo Fuller is set to leave Stoke this summer

Moving on: Ricardo Fuller is set to leave Stoke this summer

The Jamaica international has spent six years at the Britannia Stadium playing a key part in club's rise from the Championship to Barclays Premier League mainstays since he signed for 500,000 from Southampton in 2006.

But the 32-year-old has made just one league start this season and is seeking a fresh start having grown frustrated at a lack of first-team opportunities.

Fuller has slipped behind the pecking order with Peter Crouch, Cameron Jerome, Jonathan Walters and Kenwyne Jones all favoured before him.

Wigan are also monitoring Fuller but it looks likely that he will drop down a division next season.

Stoke boss Tony Pulis admitted it would be a sad day when Fuller leaves, describing the hitman as one of the club's finest ever players.

He said: 'Whatever happens with Ric, he has been one of the best players to have ever represented this club.'

Stoke 2 Wolves 1: Peter Crouch heads winner

Stoke 2 Wolves 1: More woe for Connor's basement boys after Crouch's header

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UPDATED:

18:50 GMT, 7 April 2012

Peter Crouch's brilliant header capped a Stoke City comeback and condemned Wolves to a sixth successive defeat.

The former Tottenham man angled his effort from Jermaine Pennant's controversially awarded free-kick shortly after the hour.

The evening had started well for Wolves – not least because of defeats for Wigan and Blackburn – when Michael Kightly fired them in front.

However, before the break, Robert Huth had blasted Stoke level and from that point one there only looked to be one winner.

More to follow…

Head boy: Peter Crouch won the game for Stoke with a towering header in the second half

Head boy: Peter Crouch won the game for Stoke with a towering header in the second half

MATCH FACTS

STOKE: Begovic, Shotton, Shawcross, Huth, Wilson, Pennant (Palacios 86), Whelan, Whitehead, Etherington (Jerome 69), Crouch (Delap 90), Walters. Subs Not Used: Sorensen, Jones, Fuller, Upson.

Booked: Etherington.

Goals: Huth 37,Crouch 61.

WOLVES: Hennessey, Stearman, Zubar, Bassong, Ward, Kightly, Henry (Davis 86), Edwards, Jarvis, Ebanks-Blake (Doyle 83), Fletcher. Subs Not Used: De Vries, Johnson, Berra, Milijas, Forde.

Booked: Kightly.

Goals: Kightly 26.

Attendance: 27,005

Referee: Mark Halsey (Lancashire).

L.

Driving forward: Jonathan Walters provided the energy from behind the strikers

Driving forward: Jonathan Walters provided the energy from behind the strikers

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Bright start: Wolves went ahead with Michael Kightly's well-shaped effort

Bright start: Wolves went ahead with Michael Kightly's well-shaped effort

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Flare up: There were ugly scenes when Kightly clashed with Matthew Etherington

Flare up: There were ugly scenes when Kightly clashed with Matthew Etherington

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Helpless: Terry Connor watched on as his side lost for the sixth game in a row

Helpless: Terry Connor watched on as his side lost for the sixth game in a row


Back in it: Stoke's Robert Huth blasted home a first-half equaliser from Ryan Shawcross' pass

Back in it: Stoke's Robert Huth blasted home a first-half equaliser from Ryan Shawcross' pass

Getting to grips: Crouch was a constant source of frustration for the Wolves defence

Getting to grips: Crouch was a constant source of frustration for the Wolves defence

Stoke 1 West Bromwich 2

Stoke 1 West Bromwich 2: Dorrans strikes at the death for Baggies

West Brom finally ended their 30-year hoodoo at Stoke and brought the curtain down on their miserable run in the Barclays Premier League.

After losing 13 games and drawing five of their previous 18 visits to this part of the Potteries, it required two mistakes from Stoke goalkeeper Thomas Sorensen to gift Albion the points.

Sorensen first allowed past him a low 30-yard shot from James Morrison, and after substitute Cameron Jerome seemingly salvaged a point in the 86th minute, Graham Dorrans then beat the Norwegian in injury time with a 25-yard free-kick.

Late: Graham Dorrans struck late to earn victory for the Baggies

Late: Graham Dorrans struck late to earn victory for the Baggies

In fairness, Albion thoroughly
deserved this rare win over their Midlands rivals as Morrison also twice
hit the woodwork, whilst they carved out other more memorable
opportunities to end a run of three straight league defeats.

The first came in the fifth minute,
with winger Jerome Thomas thwarted by the outstretched left foot of
Sorensen after shaking off the challenge of right-back Jonathan
Woodgate.

Thomas then turned supplier in the
14th minute, picking out Simon Cox just inside the area with a
delightful pull back, only for the Republic of Ireland international to
slice his shot horribly wide.

It was not until midway through the
first half that Stoke finally created their first effort, albeit
somewhat fortuitously as a long punt upfield was missed by both Nicky
Shorey and Gabriel Tamas.

That allowed Jonathan Walters a clear
run on goal, but as he fired off an early shot, Tamas did superbly to
backtrack and produce a vital block.

Moments later Morrison tested
Sorensen for the first time after being allowed a 20-yard run on goal
before letting fly with a rasping shot from 25 yards.

However, leaping to his left, Sorensen brilliantly tipped the ball onto his crossbar.

Celebration: James Morrison is mobbed by his team-mates after opening the scoring

Celebration: James Morrison is mobbed by his team-mates after opening the scoring

MATCH FACTS

Stoke: Sorensen, Woodgate (Pennant 52), Shawcross, Huth, Wilson, Shotton (Jerome 78), Whelan, Delap (Wilkinson 88), Etherington, Walters, Crouch

Subs not used: Begovic, Jones, Fuller, Whitehead

Goal: Jerome 86

West Brom: Foster, Tamas, McAuley, Olsson, Shorey, Thomas (Dawson 90), Mulumbu,
Dorrans, Morrison, Cox (Tchoyi 87), Fortune (Long 83)

Goals: Morrison 35, Dorrans 90 + 1

Subs not used: Fulop, Mattock, Jara Reyes, Odemwingie,

Referee: Anthony Taylor (Cheshire)

Attendance: 26,865

It was a portent of what followed
just moments later, and at first there was no danger when captain Ryan
Shawcross cleared a long ball upfield.

Collecting Youssuf Mulumbu's nod
forward inside the centre circle, Morrison was still 70 yards from goal,
but he was allowed to run and run by a Stoke side that stood off him
before he struck a 30-yarder directly at Sorensen.

The City goalkeeper should have
collected, only to be beaten by a slight last-second swerve on the ball,
clawing at it desperately as it ran behind him and crossed the line.

One contentious moment before the
half ended when Peter Crouch and Albion skipper Jonas Olsson clashed,
the latter returning after missing the previous four games with a calf
injury.

The Stoke striker reached around the front of the centre back, with his right hand coming in contact with Olsson's face.

Fortunately for Crouch the incident
was missed by referee Anthony Taylor, but picked up on replays as it was
shown a couple of times, whilst Olsson to his credit did not make a
meal of it.

Inside the first six minutes of the
second half Albion should have put the game to bed, but first
Marc-Antoine Fortune was denied by a block from Robert Huth after a pull
back from Dorrans.

Within a minute Sorensen was beaten
again by Morrison, only for the Scot to despair as his stunning hooked
half-volley from 20 yards struck the right-hand post.

When Jermaine Pennant replaced Woodgate in the 52nd minute, a previously off-colour Stoke side raised their game.

Marc Wilson first fired a 25-yard drive wide and Walters glanced a header inches past the right-hand post.

Delight: Ben Foster saved a Jon Walters penalty

Delight: Ben Foster saved a Jon Walters penalty

In between, with gaps on the counter,
Cox's failure to adequately connect with a sidefoot shot after racing
onto a clearance from Foster and stealing in behind the Stoke defence
allowed Sorensen to save.

The reprieve seemed mighty in the
71st minute when referee Anthony Taylor harshly appeared to have awarded
a penalty when Walters ran into Gareth McAuley.

But from the spot the Stoke striker went for power, with his shot striking the left knee of a diving Foster.

With the game reaching its
conclusion, 73rd-minute sub Jerome then glanced Pennant's right-wing
free-kick beyond Foster 13 minutes later, seemingly keeping the hoodoo
alive.

But in the first minute of injury
time Sorensen was guilty of allowing Dorrans' long-range free-kick flash
past him into his bottom left-hand corner to further add to his
afternoon of woe.

Gillingham 1 Stoke 3: Jon Walters, Cameron Jerome and Robert Huth ensure Tony Pulis enjoys winning return

Gillingham 1 Stoke 3: Walters, Jerome and Huth ensure Pulis enjoys winning return to the Priestfield

Tony Pulis enjoyed a victorious return to the Priestfield Stadium as Stoke hit back from a goal down to open their FA Cup campaign with a comfortable win against Gillingham.

Last season's runners-up, Stoke responded to Danny Kedwell's 16th-minute strike with goals from Jon Walters, Cameron Jerome and Robert Huth to reach the fourth round.

Pulis managed Gillingham between 1995 and 1999, guiding the club to the brink of the Championship before leaving in acrimonious circumstances, which ended in a court case.

On top: Cameron Jerome (left) celebrates with fellow scorers Robert Huth and Jonathan Walters after putting Stoke into the lead

On top: Cameron Jerome (left) celebrates with fellow scorers Robert Huth and Jonathan Walters after putting Stoke into the lead

MATCH FACTS

Gillingham: Flitney, Lee, Richards, Lawrence (Rooney 65), Frampton, Jack Payne, Whelpdale, Weston, Montrose (Stefan Payne 75), Jackman, Kedwell (Oli 63). Subs not used: Gazzaniga, Fish, Davies, Rance.

Booked: Lee.

Scorer: Kedwell 16.

Stoke: Begovic, Woodgate, Shawcross, Huth, Upson, Shotton (Whelan 52), Palacios (Whitehead 60), Delap, Jerome, Jones (Fuller 73), Walters. Subs not used: Nash, Higginbotham, Diao, Pennant.

Booked: Delap.

Scorers: Walters 34, Jerome 43, Huth 49.

Referee: Mark Halsey.

Attendance: 9,872.

Gillingham owner Paul Scally banned
Pulis from all areas of the ground except the dug-out and the changing
room and wrote in the match programme that he could never forgive the
Stoke boss.

But the Gillingham support gave Pulis
a standing ovation, which he returned with a wave and applause to all
corners of the ground before taking his place in the technical area.

On the field, Stoke arrived with six
changes from their victory over Blackburn and last year's FA Cup
finalists took time to assert their control.

Gillingham took advantage and earned
their reward for a bright start when Kedwell latched on to a loose ball
in the box and lashed his shot past Stoke goalkeeper Asmir Begovic.

After a suspicion of handball, Danny
Jackman cut inside from the left, Stoke failed to deal with the cross
towards Lewis Montrose and Kedwell pounced to score his 11th of the
season.

Heading through: Robert Huth nods Stoke's third

Heading through: Robert Huth nods Stoke's third

Stoke were standing off Gillingham.
Matthew Upson left Jackman clear to swing in another cross and Kedwell
just strayed offside before rifling a shot into the side netting.

Rory Delap was booked after hacking
Curtis Weston down from behind, having been beaten to the ball in
midfield as Gillingham continued to show the greater urgency.

But Stoke turned things around with two goals in quick succession to reach half-time ahead.

Perfect start: Gillingham's Danny Kedwell prods home to put the home side up in the 16th minute

Perfect start: Gillingham's Danny Kedwell prods home to put the home side up in the 16th minute

Walters played the ball up to Jerome
and then continued his run before scuffing a low finish under Ross
Flitney, who should have done better in the Gillingham goal.

With Stoke back on level terms, Huth
flighted a long ball over Jerome to Walters who picked out Kenwyne Jones
at the far post but the striker somehow guided the ball over the bar
from point-blank range.

But two minutes before the interval,
Ryan Shawcross' near-post flick to Ryan Shotton's long throw deflected
off the bar and Jerome was on hand at the far post to tap into an open
net.

Celebration time: The Priestfield rocks after Kedwell's strike

Celebration time: The Priestfield rocks after Kedwell's strike

Stoke came out of the blocks quickly
after the interval, with Jones and Shotton combining down the right
before Jonathan Woodgate's cross forced Flitney into action.

Jones held the ball up well to feed Shotton, whose strike was turned behind for a corner.

Wilson Palacios picked out Huth in
the box and the centre-back rose to plant a commanding header past
Flitney to extend Stoke's lead.

Feud: Paul Scally

Feud: Tony Pulis

Feud: Relations between Gillingham chairman Paul Scally (left) and Tony Pulis are still frosty

Stoke were in control now and almost
worked a fourth after a goal-mouth scramble but Flitney produced a
brilliant reaction save at the near post to deny Jerome.

Ricardo Fuller was sent on for Jones
and lifted the pace, working his way into the Gillingham box but, with
Jerome and Walters waiting in the middle, his cross was blocked at the
near post.

Walters slipped the ball through to
Jerome, who advanced on the keeper but the ball appeared to bobble and
the striker's shot flew high over the bar.

Atmospheric occasion: The Priestfield was brimming with anticipation before Pulis's return

Atmospheric occasion: The Priestfield was brimming with anticipation before Pulis's return

Gillingham kept playing with spirit
and substitute Luke Rooney forced Begovic into a strong reaction save,
with the Stoke keeper turning the ball around the near post.

Referee Mark Halsey waved away
Gillingham's penalty appeals when Rooney went down in the box and
captain Andy Frampton missed a golden chance to score the Gills' second.

Stoke should have made it four
through Fuller, who won his side a corner and was then unmarked in the
box but directed his volley over the top.

Michael Clarke and Ricky Ponting batter India at SCG

Clarke hits double ton and Ponting weighs in with century as Aussies dominate India

A career-high double century from skipper Michael Clarke and a drought-breaking ton for Ricky Ponting left Australia in complete control against India at stumps on day two of the second Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground.

It was a day of total dominance for the hosts who piled on 366 runs for the loss of just one wicket to reach 482 for four, leading by 291 runs with three days still to play.

Clarke (251 not out) and Ponting (134) set the tone with a breathtaking 288-run stand before Michael Hussey (55 not out) joined his captain in an unbeaten century partnership to complete a miserable day for the tourists.

Double trouble: Michael Clarke celebrates reaching 200 against India

Double trouble: Michael Clarke celebrates reaching 200 against India

While former skipper Ponting's first Test century in 721 days kept the 30,077 crowd on the edge of their seats, the day belonged to his successor who pummelled a listless Indian attack to all parts of the ground.

The captain smashed 31 boundaries and a six in his unbeaten 438-minute, 342-ball knock to post the highest ever Test score by an Australian at the SCG.

He surpassed Doug Walters' 242 against the West Indies in 1968/69 with a blistering cover drive off Zaheer Kahn to cap a memorable day on his home ground.

Kyly Boldy

Proud: Michael Clarke's girlfriend Kyly Boldy

That's my boy: Clarke's girlfriend Kyly Boldy enjoyed watching his Sydney heroics

Clarke's only false stroke came on 182 when Ishant Sharma dropped a tough chance off his own bowling.

Having reached his 18th Test century with a cracking cover drive for four off Sharma (one for 106) on the first ball of the final over before lunch, Clarke continued to feast on some lacklustre bowling in ideal batting conditions.

The 30-year-old brought up his double ton with a leg-side flick off Umesh Yadav midway through the evening session.

On fire: Clarke hits a shot on his way to 251 not out as MS Dhoni looks on

On fire: Clarke hits a shot on his way to 251 not out as MS Dhoni looks on

The captain raised his right arm in triumph as he turned for a second run before high-fiving Hussey mid-pitch and saluting the boisterous SCG faithful.

Hussey got in on the act with some lusty late hitting including a straight six off Ravi Ashwin before reaching his half-century.

Earlier, an edgy Ponting survived a near run out to notch up his first century in nearly two years. Ponting, who was forced to endure a nervous wait after heading to lunch on 97, pushed Sharma to Zaheer at mid-on and took off for a suicidal single.

Dream team: Clarke applauds Ricky Ponting as the ex-skipper finds his form

Dream team: Clarke applauds Ricky Ponting as the ex-skipper finds his form

Zaheer's throw missed by centimetres as a desperate Ponting dived for the crease. Replays showed a direct hit would have had the former Australian captain out by at least half a metre.

A relieved Ponting, his shirt covered in dirt, got to his feet and raised his arms in triumph.

It was his first ton since making 209 against Pakistan in Hobart on January 14, 2010 and his first at the SCG in six years.

He went 34 innings between centuries, passing 50 on 10 occasions in that time.

The former captain's chanceless innings ended late in the middle session when he steered a delivery from Sharma straight to Sachin Tendulkar. But it was the only piece of joy on a dark day for the visitors.

What a day: Ponting and Clarke were all smiles after their superb displays

What a day: Ponting and Clarke were all smiles after their superb displays

Blackburn 1 Stoke 2: Peter Crouch double halts Rovers" brief revival

Blackburn 1 Stoke 2: Icy Rovers fans warm slightly to Kean despite defeat

It's taken a while, but those Blackburn fans who wanted to see the fall of Steve Kean got their wish on Monday.

There were 83 minutes on the clock when Morten Gamst Pedersen threw himself into a sliding tackle, skidded off the pitch and sent his manager sprawling.

Peter the great: Crouch (left) celebrates with Jonathan Walters (right)

Peter the great: Crouch (left) celebrates with Jonathan Walters (right)

MATCH FACTS

Blackburn: Bunn, Lowe, Samba, Hanley, Henley (Givet 71), Nzonzi, Formica, Dunn (Rochina 73), Petrovic (Goodwillie 59), Pedersen, Yakubu.

Subs not used: Kean, Morris, Vukcevic, Blackman.

Booked: Hanley, Rochina

Goals: Goodwillie 69.

Stoke: Sorensen, Woodgate, Shawcross, Huth, Wilson, Shotton, Whitehead (Diao 87), Whelan (Delap 82), Etherington (Jerome 80), Crouch, Walters.

Subs not used: Begovic, Jones, Pennant, Upson.

Booked: Huth.

Goals: Crouch 17, 45.

Referee: Lee Mason (Lancashire).

Att: 20,615.

It brought momentary cheers from the Blackburn fans but, promisingly for Kean, no more than that.

Had it happened a week earlier, when the abuse aimed at Kean by his own
supporters was positively poisonous, they would have probably voted
Pedersen man of the match and retired his number there and then.

An unlikely return of four points from successive trips to Anfield and
Old Trafford will not transform public opinion overnight. It will not
guarantee Kean keeps his job. But it does seem to have bought him time
with Blackburn’s supporters.

There were still signs of discontent as Stoke left Ewood with their
first win from four attempts over Christmas. Only 20,615 turned up – the
lowest League crowd here for more than three years – and more than
2,000 of those travelled from the Potteries.

There was a muted chorus of boos at the interval after Peter Crouch had
fired the visitors ahead with his 100th and 101st Premier League goals,
and a few grumbles at the final whistle when a solitary banner was also
unfurled declaring ‘Finland Says Kean Out’.

Plundering Potter: Crouch (left) fires home the first goal

Plundering Potter: Crouch (left) fires home the first goal

The Norwegian branch made a similar demand earlier this season.

At least Kean could see the funny side. ‘I tried to ride the tackle,’ he said. ‘I thought I took it well!
‘The crowd made a massive difference. It would have been easy to have a
go at 2-0 but they stayed with us. We’re kicking ourselves because it
was a massive opportunity to send them home happy.’

Crouch, meanwhile, was delighted to pass a milestone. ‘I’m proud to get
100 goals,’ he said. ‘I’m more pleased to get it out of the way, to be
honest, because the longer you are on 99 the harder it is to get to
100.’

Blackburn dominated the second half and David Goodwillie pulled a goal back in the 69th minute.

Towering talent: Crouch congratulated by Matthew Etherington (left) and Walters

Towering talent: Crouch congratulated by Matthew Etherington (left) and Walters

Disallowed: Rovers' Chris Samba heads home but the effort was ruled out

Disallowed: Rovers' Chris Samba heads home but the effort was ruled out

Out for the count: Crouch reminds Rovers of the score with a crass celebration

Out for the count: Crouch reminds Rovers of the score with a crass celebration

Friends again: Yakubu shakes hands with City keeper Sorensen

Friends again: Yakubu shakes hands with City keeper Sorensen

Stoke 2 Wigan 2: Drama at the Britannia as Watson denies Potters with late penalty

Stoke 2 Wigan 2: Drama at the Britannia as Watson denies Potters with late penalty

Ben Watson came off the bench to rescue a valuable point for 10-man Wigan in a thrilling finale to their match with Stoke at the Britannia Stadium.

Victor Moses put the struggling Latics ahead on the stroke of half-time, but Gary Caldwell was then sent off for deliberate handball in the 76th minute and Jonathan Walters converted the resulting penalty to draw eighth-placed Stoke level.

When substitute Cameron Jerome – whose header had led to Caldwell”s dismissal – subsequently put the hosts ahead, things looked bleak for Wigan, but Watson then scored an 87th-minute penalty of his own – with his first touch – after Ryan Shotton had been penalised for a tug on Hugo Rodallega”s shirt.

Late show: Wigan Athletic

Late show: Wigan Athletic”s Ben Watson scores from the spot to earn his side a point against Stoke

MATCH FACTS

Stoke: Sorensen, Wilkinson (Shotton 50), Shawcross, Huth, Wilson, Pennant, Delap, Palacios, Etherington (Jerome 73), Walters (Jones 90),Crouch.

Subs Not Used: Begovic, Diao, Whitehead, Upson.

Booked: Delap, Shotton.

Goals: Walters 77 pen,Jerome 84.

Wigan: Al Habsi, Stam, Alcaraz, Caldwell, Figueroa, Jones (Watson 86), Gomez (Gohouri 78), Diame, McCarthy, Moses, Rodallega.

Subs Not Used: Pollitt, Crusat, Di Santo, McArthur, Sammon.

Sent Off: Caldwell (76).

Booked: Moses, Stam, Rodallega.

Goals: Moses 45,Watson 87 pen.

Att: 26,595

Ref: Michael Oliver (Northumberland).

Roberto Martinez”s side remain in the Barclays Premier League relegation zone, but the Spaniard will surely take heart from the fight his side showed in salvaging something from the game.

The visitors had slipped a place to 19th by kick-off following Blackburn”s sensational 3-2 victory at Old Trafford, and they were forced onto the back foot early on.

Jordi Gomez and Rodallega each warmed the palms of home goalkeeper Thomas Sorensen as Wigan settled, yet Stoke remained on top and Robert Huth headed narrowly wide from a Rory Delap throw-in.

Latics stopper Ali Al Habsi was soon inconvenienced by another Delap missile, before the veteran midfielder fired narrowly wide from 20 yards.

At the other end, Ronnie Stam was given the opportunity to shoot from distance and Sorensen had to be alert to tip away his dipping effort.

After the fit-again Andy Wilkinson had gone close for Stoke in an increasingly open game, Rodallega then latched onto a long ball and found himself through on goal, but Ryan Shawcross intervened with a crucial clearing header after the striker had lifted the ball over the onrushing Sorensen.

Huth then headed over from another set-piece and Marc Wilson tried his luck for the hosts with a long-range effort that sailed wide.

If that was ambitious, then Maynor Figueroa”s subsequent shot from inside his own half represented the most optimistic of attempts, although the same player had scored from a similar distance at this ground in December 2009.

Off and running: Wigan Athletic

Off and running: Wigan Athletic”s Victor Moses celebrates scoring his sides first goal

Stam prompted fury among the Stoke support – and earned himself a booking – shortly before the interval when he blasted the ball into the crowd after it had gone out of play.

Wigan then moved ahead in the 45th minute as Stam played in Rodallega down the right channel and the Colombian crossed for Moses to slot home with a clinical first-time finish into the roof of the net.

Stoke began the second half with renewed vigour, but were forced into a change in the 49th minute as Wilkinson limped off to be replaced by Shotton.

As had been the case in the opening period, the Latics weathered the early pressure and gradually settled into their stride.

Yet they survived a major let-off just before the hour mark when another long throw from Delap picked out Huth, whose firm header struck a post before bouncing back into the arms of a grateful Al Habsi.

Jumping for joy: Cameron Jerome celebrates putting Stoke in front

Jumping for joy: Cameron Jerome celebrates putting Stoke in front

Although Wigan were content to play largely on the counter, they retained an attacking threat and the impressive Mohamed Diame saw a 30-yard strike deflect narrowly off target before Rodallega nodded wide from a corner.

As the home supporters grew increasingly frustrated, Tony Pulis opted to introduce Jerome in place of Matthew Etherington with 17 minutes remaining and the move reaped immediate rewards.

After Peter Crouch had diverted a deep cross from the right back across the area, Jerome”s goalbound header was blocked by the arm of Wigan skipper Caldwell, who was duly sent off.

Walters drilled the resulting penalty into the bottom-left corner and Stoke were soon pouring forward in search of a second.

Jerome was the man to provide it, the former Birmingham man slotting a cool finish into the far corner after flick-ons from Crouch and Walters had sent him clear.

However, Wigan were then awarded a penalty of their own after Shotton grabbed Rodallega”s shirt in the box.

Watson climbed off the bench to take the spot-kick and the midfielder calmly sent Sorensen the wrong way with his first touch of the game.

Huth saw another header fly wide as the final whistle approached, while appeals for a second Stoke penalty were waved away after Shawcross took a tumble in stoppage-time.