The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Howe takes heart after Newcastle win at last

- By Craig Hope

IT felt like Newcastle United had won a trophy, not a football match. But after 15 games, seven months and four managers, a Premier League victory was always going to be savoured. In Eddie Howe, they might just have found their saviour.

The new boss looked even more drained than his players as he exited down the tunnel, a glaze in his eyes after an emotional lap of appreciati­on.

Seconds earlier, Howe had clenched his fists and shook them in the direction of the East Stand. He perhaps did not anticipate that the entire crowd would ape his celebratio­n. ‘F ****** love it’ he appeared to scream back at them.

He soon hugged Callum Wilson, and too right that he should. The No9 was the match-winner here with a quality first-half strike.

For now, though, Wilson is fighting to keep his club in the top flight. Reunited with Howe — his old boss at Bournemout­h — the pair represent Newcastle’s best chance of beating the drop, a feat that seemed unlikely after stumbling through to December without a win.

Howe said: ‘The relationsh­ip we have quickly built with the fans is special. They were magnificen­t with the players today. It was an amazing feeling to get that first win for them. It was a thank-you for everything they have given me and the team. Those scenes at the end can only galvanise us to move forward positively.’

It has been a good week for Howe. A 1-1 draw at home to relegation rivals Norwich should not feel uplifting. But on Tuesday night, for all associated with Newcastle, it did, strangely.

The toxicity that had long polluted St James’ under the previous owner and manager had evaporated. There was a sense of all pulling in the same direction, a feeling strengthen­ed in adversity when Ciaran Clark was sent off early in the game. Supporters spoke afterwards of their pride in finally ‘having our club back’.

But such evenings of positivity are a one-off to the backdrop of what was, in reality, a negative result. You cannot continue to celebrate togetherne­ss while your season is falling apart. To that end, only victory would do against Burnley, pretty or otherwise.

It did not start well. Newcastle were better with 10 men for 80 minutes in midweek than they were with 11 for the opening 40 minutes here.

But in Wilson they have a striker who can render team performanc­e academic. Give him a chance and he will likely come very close to scoring. He has learnt to become economical in this team.

And so it was the case five minutes before the break when, from 14 yards, he squeezed the ball between the crossbar and the crown of Burnley striker Chris Wood, who at 6ft 3in was no insignific­ant barrier.

Wilson had done so after snaffling the scraps when Nick Pope fumbled a high delivery. The goalkeeper wanted a free-kick after contact with Newcastle’s Fabian Schar. But Pope had only himself to blame for landing on top of the defender.

With referees slower to whistle given the comfort of a VAR review, it is to the betterment of the game that the sight of a goalkeeper going to ground no longer equates to an automatic free-kick. Just ask David de Gea. Burnley boss Sean Dyche said: ‘It’s a coming-together and on another day you might get it. But there was nothing malicious in the challenge (from Schar), it was just clumsy. The goal changed the game and the atmosphere. We were in control.’

Dyche was right. His side had hit the post through Johan Gudmundsso­n and Max Cornet was denied by a flying Martin Dubravka when heading on goal.

The visitors were organised and composed, the hosts were not. Newcastle improved in the second half but, amid a nervy close, retreated to the trenches.

Wilson revealed this week that the players were not fit enough under Bruce at the start of the season, evidenced by the ragged manner in which they would finish matches. Not this time. They resisted a late Burnley rally and the crowd responded to each and every block, tackle and clearance.

 ?? ?? WINNER: Callum Wilson (left) celebrates with Newcastle team-mate Joelinton
WINNER: Callum Wilson (left) celebrates with Newcastle team-mate Joelinton

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