Palace 1 Brighton 1
- Lerma’s festive well-wishes to fans
- Ayew pleased with ‘fair point’ against Brighton
- Ayew voted your Grilla Man of the Match against Brighton
- Richards on 'interesting' first Palace v Brighton experience
- 13:34Extended Highlights Crystal Palace 1-1 Brighton & Hove Albion | PalaceTV+
- 02:222 minute highlights: Crystal Palace 1-1 Brighton & Hove Albion
Latest videos
View all videosMatch Summary
Summary:
- Three changes for Palace; Hughes, Lerma & Ayew all return to starting XI
- Nervy opening sees visitors enjoy majority of possession
- Henderson keeps out Adingra’s rising drive across goal
- Mateta tests Verbruggen’s handling from distance after 25 minutes
- Forward sees first-time effort blocked as Palace finish the half strongly
- Richards, Mateta and Olise all denied by last-ditch Brighton defending
- Ayew stoops to head home Olise cross in closing moments of the half
- HT: Palace 1-0 Brighton
- Verbruggen smothers Mateta’s poked shot as match picks up tempo
- Dunk heads wide of the far post as visitors push back
- Henderson denies Gilmour's drive and Hinshelwood blazes over as Brighton up the pressure
- Goalkeeper involved in goalmouth scramble as Guéhi blocks from Van Hecke
- Eze sees effort on the breakaway blocked by Brighton defender
- Welbeck’s impressive looping header draws Brighton level
- Brighton striker comes close to scoring fortunate late winner
- FT: Palace 1-1 Brighton
Palace had clinched a superb result at Manchester City the Saturday prior – particularly given, as manager Roy Hodgson had pointed out, the number of absences from his regular starting XI at the Etihad Stadium.
Three stalwarts of the team were once again fit and eligible for the visit of arch-rivals Brighton to Selhurst Park, with midfielders Jefferson Lerma and Will Hughes restored to the side following injury and illness respectively, and Ayew returning from suspension.
Setting out to give their supporters a lead-up to Christmas to remember, Palace’s raucous support – all four sides of the stadium bouncing – set the tone for a thunderous atmosphere in SE25.
Yet despite its setting, the match began slowly, Brighton – as you might expect – enjoying the majority of possession without really threatening the Palace goal.
Their first real chance arrived after 18 minutes from a raking pass from left-back Igor Julio, which drifted across the box for Simon Adingra to touch and hit. Palace home debutant Dean Henderson did well to beat the strike away, before Carlos Baleba – under pressure from Hughes – skewed the rebound wide.
It was to prove Brighton’s best chance of the half – and paved the way for a spell of Palace domination.
Jean-Philippe Mateta, scorer of goals against both Liverpool and Manchester City in his last two appearances, was heavily involved throughout, testing goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen’s handling with a dipping effort from 30 yards following good work from Tyrick Mitchell.
Then, on the half-hour mark, Palace took hold of proceedings, a pair of teasing Olise deliveries – the first requiring Brighton defender Paul Van Hecke to head just wide of his own goal on the stretch, the second rebounding off an unsighted Ayew six yards out – setting the tone.
The crowd was roaring and the chances kept flowing, Olise feeding Mateta inside the box; the forward’s first-time shot on the spin was blocked by the covering Lewis Dunk.
Moments later and three Palace players all saw themselves denied by last-ditch blocks in quick succession: Chris Richards, Mateta and Olise were all denied clean strikes at goal.
It was one-way traffic as half-time approached and – as the clocked ticked into injury-time – Palace were finally able to profit from their dominance.
The goal owed much to the perseverance of Richards, who came close to nicking the ball off Verbruggen on the Brighton goal-line – but instead forced the ‘keeper to play the ball straight to Olise.
The winger did well to exchange passes with Hughes and curl in a delightful, dipping cross which Ayew – inside the six-yard box – stooped to head home with south London’s glee.
It was the last action of note in a half Palace had grown to dominate – and they resumed that tempo immediately after the restart. A hopeful ball forwards invited Mateta to show his strength, wrestling past Dunk and stretching out a long leg to prod it goalwards – but Verbruggen, racing from his line, was able to smother.
Buoyed by the fresh energy of two half-time substitutes, Brighton admittedly then went up the gears, Dunk’s header from a deep free-kick drifting back across goal, but thankfully wide of the far post.
A flurry of bookings followed for both sides and 18-year-old David Ozoh – so impressive off the bench against Manchester City – was introduced as Palace looked to reassert themselves in the contest.
But Brighton’s opportunities kept coming, and Henderson was called upon to produce a firm low block to deny Billy Gilmour’s fizzing first-time shot, seconds before Jack Hinshelwood blazed over when picked out at the back post by Pascal Gross.
There was a moment of difficulty for the ‘keeper when a deep cross proved too hot to handle at the first attempt, but he did well to improvise and keep the ball away from the onrushing Joao Pedro, before Marc Guéhi blocked from Van Hecke.
Under increasing pressure, Palace were having to choose their moments to break forwards – but only a fine last-ditch challenge from Van Hecke prevented late substitute Ebere Eze from sliding in a second for the hosts after cute approach play from Olise and Mateta.
Then, with eight minutes left, the sucker-punch: an in-swinging cross from Gross was flicked goalwards by substitute Danny Welbeck and looped slowly, highly – and agonisingly – into the top corner of the net.
It could have gotten worse for Palace in the closing seconds as Henderson punched a long ball forwards from Billy Gilmour onto Welbeck's head – but thankfully the ricochet trickled wide of the mark.
Late frustration for Palace, but a battling point for the Eagles ahead of festive fixtures away at Chelsea and home to Brentford.
Palace: Henderson (GK), Clyne, Guéhi, Andersen, Mitchell, Richards, Hughes (Ozoh, 59), Lerma, Olise, Ayew (Eze, 70), Mateta
Subs: Matthews (GK), Tomkins, Riedewald, Schlupp, Ahamada, Ebiowei, França
Brighton: Verbruggen (GK), Igor Julio, Van Hecke, Dunk, Hinshelwood (Lallana, 75), Gross, Gilmour, Adingra (Welbeck, 45), Baleba (Buonanotte, 45), Mitoma (Moder, 83), Pedro
Subs: Steele (GK), Milner, Dahoud, Ferguson, Kavanagh
Match Blog
Full-Time
miss
Yellow Card
attempt blocked
free kick won
Yellow Card
free kick won
Substitution
Brighton and Hove Albion Goal
attempt saved
miss
miss
miss
corner
attempt blocked
free kick won
Substitution
attempt blocked
free kick won
offside
Substitution
attempt blocked
free kick won
miss
attempt saved
attempt blocked
Substitution
attempt saved
Yellow Card
free kick won
miss
miss
Yellow Card
free kick won
free kick won
miss
attempt blocked
corner
Yellow Card
free kick won
free kick won
offside
corner
Substitution
Substitution
First-Half Ends
Crystal Palace Goal!
free kick won
attempt saved
free kick won
attempt blocked
attempt blocked
attempt blocked
attempt saved
corner
Yellow Card
free kick won
free kick won
free kick won
Yellow Card
free kick won
attempt saved
free kick won
attempt blocked
free kick won
miss
attempt saved
free kick won
free kick won
free kick won
free kick won
free kick won
offside
miss
Kick-Off
lineup
Starting lineup
Substitutes
No scores found
- Lerma’s festive well-wishes to fans
- Ayew pleased with ‘fair point’ against Brighton
- Ayew voted your Grilla Man of the Match against Brighton
- Richards on 'interesting' first Palace v Brighton experience
- 13:34Extended Highlights Crystal Palace 1-1 Brighton & Hove Albion | PalaceTV+
- 02:222 minute highlights: Crystal Palace 1-1 Brighton & Hove Albion
Latest videos
View all videosStarting lineup
Substitutes
No scores found
Match Summary
Summary:
- Three changes for Palace; Hughes, Lerma & Ayew all return to starting XI
- Nervy opening sees visitors enjoy majority of possession
- Henderson keeps out Adingra’s rising drive across goal
- Mateta tests Verbruggen’s handling from distance after 25 minutes
- Forward sees first-time effort blocked as Palace finish the half strongly
- Richards, Mateta and Olise all denied by last-ditch Brighton defending
- Ayew stoops to head home Olise cross in closing moments of the half
- HT: Palace 1-0 Brighton
- Verbruggen smothers Mateta’s poked shot as match picks up tempo
- Dunk heads wide of the far post as visitors push back
- Henderson denies Gilmour's drive and Hinshelwood blazes over as Brighton up the pressure
- Goalkeeper involved in goalmouth scramble as Guéhi blocks from Van Hecke
- Eze sees effort on the breakaway blocked by Brighton defender
- Welbeck’s impressive looping header draws Brighton level
- Brighton striker comes close to scoring fortunate late winner
- FT: Palace 1-1 Brighton
Palace had clinched a superb result at Manchester City the Saturday prior – particularly given, as manager Roy Hodgson had pointed out, the number of absences from his regular starting XI at the Etihad Stadium.
Three stalwarts of the team were once again fit and eligible for the visit of arch-rivals Brighton to Selhurst Park, with midfielders Jefferson Lerma and Will Hughes restored to the side following injury and illness respectively, and Ayew returning from suspension.
Setting out to give their supporters a lead-up to Christmas to remember, Palace’s raucous support – all four sides of the stadium bouncing – set the tone for a thunderous atmosphere in SE25.
Yet despite its setting, the match began slowly, Brighton – as you might expect – enjoying the majority of possession without really threatening the Palace goal.
Their first real chance arrived after 18 minutes from a raking pass from left-back Igor Julio, which drifted across the box for Simon Adingra to touch and hit. Palace home debutant Dean Henderson did well to beat the strike away, before Carlos Baleba – under pressure from Hughes – skewed the rebound wide.
It was to prove Brighton’s best chance of the half – and paved the way for a spell of Palace domination.
Jean-Philippe Mateta, scorer of goals against both Liverpool and Manchester City in his last two appearances, was heavily involved throughout, testing goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen’s handling with a dipping effort from 30 yards following good work from Tyrick Mitchell.
Then, on the half-hour mark, Palace took hold of proceedings, a pair of teasing Olise deliveries – the first requiring Brighton defender Paul Van Hecke to head just wide of his own goal on the stretch, the second rebounding off an unsighted Ayew six yards out – setting the tone.
The crowd was roaring and the chances kept flowing, Olise feeding Mateta inside the box; the forward’s first-time shot on the spin was blocked by the covering Lewis Dunk.
Moments later and three Palace players all saw themselves denied by last-ditch blocks in quick succession: Chris Richards, Mateta and Olise were all denied clean strikes at goal.
It was one-way traffic as half-time approached and – as the clocked ticked into injury-time – Palace were finally able to profit from their dominance.
The goal owed much to the perseverance of Richards, who came close to nicking the ball off Verbruggen on the Brighton goal-line – but instead forced the ‘keeper to play the ball straight to Olise.
The winger did well to exchange passes with Hughes and curl in a delightful, dipping cross which Ayew – inside the six-yard box – stooped to head home with south London’s glee.
It was the last action of note in a half Palace had grown to dominate – and they resumed that tempo immediately after the restart. A hopeful ball forwards invited Mateta to show his strength, wrestling past Dunk and stretching out a long leg to prod it goalwards – but Verbruggen, racing from his line, was able to smother.
Buoyed by the fresh energy of two half-time substitutes, Brighton admittedly then went up the gears, Dunk’s header from a deep free-kick drifting back across goal, but thankfully wide of the far post.
A flurry of bookings followed for both sides and 18-year-old David Ozoh – so impressive off the bench against Manchester City – was introduced as Palace looked to reassert themselves in the contest.
But Brighton’s opportunities kept coming, and Henderson was called upon to produce a firm low block to deny Billy Gilmour’s fizzing first-time shot, seconds before Jack Hinshelwood blazed over when picked out at the back post by Pascal Gross.
There was a moment of difficulty for the ‘keeper when a deep cross proved too hot to handle at the first attempt, but he did well to improvise and keep the ball away from the onrushing Joao Pedro, before Marc Guéhi blocked from Van Hecke.
Under increasing pressure, Palace were having to choose their moments to break forwards – but only a fine last-ditch challenge from Van Hecke prevented late substitute Ebere Eze from sliding in a second for the hosts after cute approach play from Olise and Mateta.
Then, with eight minutes left, the sucker-punch: an in-swinging cross from Gross was flicked goalwards by substitute Danny Welbeck and looped slowly, highly – and agonisingly – into the top corner of the net.
It could have gotten worse for Palace in the closing seconds as Henderson punched a long ball forwards from Billy Gilmour onto Welbeck's head – but thankfully the ricochet trickled wide of the mark.
Late frustration for Palace, but a battling point for the Eagles ahead of festive fixtures away at Chelsea and home to Brentford.
Palace: Henderson (GK), Clyne, Guéhi, Andersen, Mitchell, Richards, Hughes (Ozoh, 59), Lerma, Olise, Ayew (Eze, 70), Mateta
Subs: Matthews (GK), Tomkins, Riedewald, Schlupp, Ahamada, Ebiowei, França
Brighton: Verbruggen (GK), Igor Julio, Van Hecke, Dunk, Hinshelwood (Lallana, 75), Gross, Gilmour, Adingra (Welbeck, 45), Baleba (Buonanotte, 45), Mitoma (Moder, 83), Pedro
Subs: Steele (GK), Milner, Dahoud, Ferguson, Kavanagh