Burnley 1-1 Wolves: Stoppage time penalty from Chris Wood sees points shared at Turf Moor

You don’t always get a second chance in football, particularly when the first one comes and goes deep in injury-time.

Nearly three minutes into the five added on by referee Mike Dean when Mataj Vydra headed back across goal at a chilly Turf Moor on Wednesday night. The ball reached Chris Wood a few yards out. The Wolves defence froze and their captain Conor Coady, standing on the line, was the only man between Wood and what seemed a certain goal. 

Amazingly, the New Zealand striker somehow contrived to nod wide. 

Chris Wood scored a stoppage time penalty for Burnley as they drew 1-1 with Wolves

Chris Wood scored a stoppage time penalty for Burnley as they drew 1-1 with Wolves

VAR reviewed the decision as it was decided that Matt Doherty had hit the ball with his arm

VAR reviewed the decision as it was decided that Matt Doherty had hit the ball with his arm

Raul Jimenez (right) had given Wolves the lead in the second half with a sensational volley

 Raul Jimenez (right) had given Wolves the lead in the second half with a sensational volley

The Mexican striker connected with the ball on the edge of the box late in the second half

The Mexican striker connected with the ball on the edge of the box late in the second half

MATCH FACTS AND PLAYER RATINGS

Burnley XI: Pope 6.5; Bardsley 6, Long 6.5, Tarkowski 6.5, Taylor 5 (Gudmundsson 30, 6.5); Pieters 6, Westwood 6, Brownhill 6 (Brady 85), McNeil 6.5; Wood 6.5, Rodriguez 6 (Vydra 51, 6.5)

Unused Subs: Peacock-Farrell, Brady, Thompson, Dunne, Benson, Goodridge, Glennon.

Goals: Wood 90+4′. 

Wolves XI: Patricio 6; Boly 6, Coady 7, Saiss 6; Traore 8, Neves 6.5, Moutinho 6.5, Vinagre 6 (Castro Otto 84); Podence 6 (Doherty 70, 5), Jimenez 7 (Dendoncker 84), Jota 6.5 (Neto 78, 6).

Unused Subs: Ruddy, Kilman, Buur, Jordao, Gibbs-White.

Goals: Jimenez 76′. 

Vydra held his head in his hands and so did manager Sean Dyche on the touchline. It felt like Burnley’s last chance had gone and Wolves were off the hook.

Moments later, however, Wood was given an unlikely shot at redemption.

Substitute Robbie Brady swung over another cross, this time Phil Bardsley headed back across and Wood went airborne to meet it with an overhead kick.

You had to sympathise with Matt Doherty because Wood’s boot was high and that must have affected the way he shaped his body to block the shot. 

The ball struck the Wolves substitute halfway down his left arm and Dean pointed to the spot. VAR backed him and a relieved Wood did the rest, crashing a penalty into the top corner in the 96th minute.

‘After he missed that chance, it shows what strength of character he’s got to step up and take the penalty,’ said Burnley boss Sean Dyche.

‘I’ve been talking about the strong mentality we’ve got for weeks, that feeling of them never knowing when they’re quite beaten.

‘I talk to them all the time about playing until the last breath of the game because things can change quickly and we saw that tonight.’

It felt a little harsh on Wolves who had been the better team and came so close to winning the game with an excellent strike from Raul Jimenez.

The Mexican broke the deadlock in the 76th minute when Adama Traore drove at the heart of the Burnley defence and fed Doherty. 

Wolves attacker Diogo Jota jostles for possession whilst under pressure from Phil Bardsley

Wolves attacker Diogo Jota jostles for possession whilst under pressure from Phil Bardsley

Burnley's Dwight McNeil looks to break through whilst being chased by Wolves players

Burnley’s Dwight McNeil looks to break through whilst being chased by Wolves players

His shot was blocked and looped up invitingly for Jimenez who executed a textbook volley with his right foot inside Nick Pope’s left-hand post. The England keeper had no chance.

It was Jimenez’s 26th goal of another excellent season and his 17th in the Premier League. 

No Wolves player has scored that many in the top-flight since John Richards in 1976. Wolves fans dubbed him King John and Jimenez is achieving legendary status of his own at Molineux.

‘Of course it’s hard to take,’ said Wolves manager Nuno Espirito Santo. ‘Every goal you concede is hard to take and if it’s in the final moments, it’s even harder.

‘I think we were well-organised and always in control. But even when you prepare well, justice in the game doesn’t exist, that’s not the point of football.’ 

Burnley striker Wood jumps over the challenge of Wolves defender Conor Coady (bottom)

Burnley striker Wood jumps over the challenge of Wolves defender Conor Coady (bottom)

Burnley goalkeeper Nick Pope watches on as Adama Traore's effort whistles past the post

Burnley goalkeeper Nick Pope watches on as Adama Traore’s effort whistles past the post

A draw suited neither side really. It probably ends Wolves’ outside hopes of qualifying for the Champions League and Burnley’s of making the Europa League.

Pope was by far the busier goalkeeper and Wolves went close through Willy Boly and Jimenez before the first water break on a night when hot drinks would have been more appropriate.

Diogo Jota also hit the side-netting before Burnley created their best chance from a breakaway just before half-time.

Substitute Johann Berg Gudmundsson swung a first-time pass into the path of Jay Rodriguez in the box. The striker’s first touch was a little heavy but it was still an excellent effort by Coady to get across and block his shot.

Wolves midfielder Ruben Neves (right) tries a signature volley from range but cannot convert

Wolves midfielder Ruben Neves (right) tries a signature volley from range but cannot convert

Normal service was resumed after the break as Ruben Neves volleyed straight at Pope from the edge of the area and Daniel Podence dragged another effort just wide before Jimenez struck.

It was a goal worthy of winning any game but Wood had the last word.

‘I didn’t really see it, but the boys said it was a penalty, so I just needed to tuck it away,’ said the Burnley striker.

‘I went all game with one chance I didn’t put away so it’s nice to get another chance and get a point. We fight until the end, that’s what we’re so good at.’ 

source: dailymail.co.uk