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Date: Saturday
7th February 2026, 5.30pm
Live on Sky Sports
Venue: St.James' Park
Conditions: Porous
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Newcastle |
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Brentford |
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2 - 3 |
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Teams |
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24 mins A Bruno
Guimaraes corner from the left was headed in by Sven Botman.
1-0

37 mins
Dango Ouattara sent
over a cross from the left flank that Vitaly Janelt expertly
headed into the Leazes End net, Botman unable to intervene.
1-1
45+2 mins
Jacob Murphy illegally stopped Mathias Jensen's goalbound
shot with his hand and Igor Thiago obliged from the penalty spot.
1-2
Half time: Magpies 1 Bees 2

79 mins
Substitute Will Osula
charged upfield in possession before finding Anthony Elanga on the overlap
to his left. The Swede laid an excellent loss centre across the box that
Osula wasn't quit fast enough to reach, but Bruno Guimaraes looked to
set to connect with.
He tangled with Michael Kayode and went to ground spectacularly. A pitchside
VAR review confirmed the penalty and after some discussion, the Brazilian
over-ruled Nick Woltemade and struck successfully from 12 yards.
2-2

85 mins
Mathias Jensen's first
time ball bisected Trippier and Thiaw, allowing Ouattara to shoot powerfully
through Nick Pope's legs.
2-3
Full time: Magpies 2 Bees 3
Eddie Howe said:
"A
strange game because I think at 2-2 you think you're going
to go on and win it.
"The game got away from us with a really poor third goal,
the construction of it we're all out attack, which is fine
in that moment of course. But we need to do it in control,
and we weren't in control of the transition well enough."
On conceding soft goals:
"It's been a massive problem in this last group of games, we all
know if you defend well you've got a chance with our attacking
players of scoring.
"We scored two today and we lost the game and got nothing from it
which is hugely frustrating from our view point.
On feeling under pressure:
"I always feel under pressure. It's irrelevant to me, the type of
pressure.
"When you're in this job, you're
always in that moment: whether it's pressure to win, or to turn
around results. We're very much in that (second) feeling.
"I always say the pressure I put
on myself could not be more extreme. I demand really high standards
from what I am doing and how I work, and what I ask the players to
do.
"I'm obviously not doing my job well enough at the moment.
"I'm annoyed with myself, angry
with myself, blaming myself, taking full accountability on my
shoulders. No one else.
"There's a harsh reality for me. I think I have to think long and
hard about - not my effort, because I can't question that - but I
have to work better, do more. I have to take responsibility for
everything you see on the pitch. I have got to work out solutions.
"I also of course have to ask
the same of the players. I have to ask them to be really honest and
look at their best levels, and judge them against that now in this
current moment.
"I don't think there are too
many who can say they are playing their best. That then gives us
growth to improve.
On negative reaction from home
fans:
"If we perform, the crowd will back us. They will be with us every
step of the way.
"I have no issue with their reaction today. They are
reacting to what we deliver. I don't see that being a problem. Of
course we have to turn that around with our performances."
On Bruno Guimaraes:
"A big pressure moment and he responded with a really cool penalty.
I thought he did well to get through the game considering he's
missed quite a chunk of training."
Keith Andrews
said:
"I don’t really know where to start, to be honest!
I have immense pride.
"We had to overcome a lot within the game and had to react to setbacks.
After the equaliser, I wasn’t happy with settling for that. The group aren’t
wired like that, so for us to show the confidence and conviction to push on
and want to go for the victory was so pleasing.
"Difficult to put it all into perspective I suppose. A lot of drama, a lot
of decisions going one way or another. I have immense pride in the
performance levels, character - whatever was thrown at us, we dealt with it.
It was needed coming into a place like this.
"When you come here, you know what type of game it's
going to be when the crowd get going. You have to be on your game, you have
to show personality and bravery with the ball, and without the ball in the
way you get after them. They did that so well.
"Going a goal down, getting ahead, getting the penalty
decision to go to 2-2. To then go again - which I wanted us to do, I wanted
us to push - and thankfully we were able to get the winner.
"I felt we were really calm throughout the games, which
is a really pleasing thing."
On the away fans:
"It means everything. It’s about players and fans, that’s what the game has
always been about. It’s important to take these
kinds of occasions in as they are pretty significant in our history.”
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Sven Botman
made his 100th league and cup appearance for
Newcastle, collecting his third Premier League goal. The
other two were both scored in away games - at Sheffield United in
September 2023 and Liverpool in January 2024.
Bruno Guimaraes scored his 30th PL goal, moving one
ahead of both Demba Ba and Gary Speed in the club's scoring charts.
Bees in Toon - all-time:
2025/26 lost 2-3 Botman, Guimaraes(pen) (PL)
2024/25 won 2-1 Isak, Tonali (PL)
2024/25 won 3-1 Tonali 2, Schar (LC)
2023/24 won 1-0 Wilson (PL)
2022/23 won 5-1 Bruno 2, Murphy, Almiron, og (PL)
2021/22 drew 3-3 Lascelles, Joelinton, ASM (PL)
2016/17 won 3-1 Clark, Gayle 2 (Ch)
2001/02 won 4-1 Ameobi, Bellamy 3 (LC)
1992/93 won 5-1 Kelly, Bracewell, Clark 2, Lee (D1)
1954/55 won 3-2 Curry, Hannah, Mitchell (FA)
1947/48 won 1-0 Woodburn (D2)
1934/35 lost 2-5 Gallantree, Kelly (D2)
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Waffle |

Following a quick-fire trio of daunting away tests, a return to
familiar surroundings brought no relief for Newcastle on
Saturday night as their winless run was extended to five
matches.
Despite taking the lead through a Sven Botman header on his
100th game for the club, the black and whites fell short at
both ends of the pitch and left empty-handed once again.
That lead last just 13 minutes before Dango Ouattara sent
over a cross from the left flank that Vitaly Janelt expertly
headed into the Leazes End net.
Worse then followed in the closing moments of the half;
Jacob Murphy illegally stopping Mathias Jensen's shot with
his hand and Igor Thiago rolling home his 18th goal of the
season from 12 yards.
Brentford had claimed a spot kick within the opening two
minutes when Keane Lewis-Potter went to ground as he
contested a loose ball in the box with Kieran Trippier.
Thankfully that wasn't given.
A VAR-inspired penalty won and converted by the returning
Bruno Guimaraes with just over 10 minutes of normal time
left seemed to have given Eddie Howe's side the platform to
go on clinch a massive three points.
Instead it was the Bees who ended a 91-year wait for their
second-ever victory at Gallowgate, Ouattara shooting
powerfully through Nick Pope's legs; the tenth goal United
have conceded in three games.
A Brentford side who have played five times in as many weeks
looked sharper, better organised and more potent in attack
than an ailing Toon line-up, badly lacking a cutting edge in
what was their ninth game during that same period.
Even the return of Bruno after a three game absence couldn't
inspire the hosts, although he contributed a goal and an
assist. Murphy was selected on the right over Anthony Elanga
but ineffectual to the point of anonymity, while Joe Willock
and Harvey Barnes got some early joy on the left, but had
nothing to aim at up front in open play.
Facing his old side for the first time, Yoane Wissa missed a
crucial opportunity to double United's lead but otherwise
contributed nothing in another lack-lustre outing, to the delight of his
former supporters clustered up in Level 7.
Nick Woltemade was no better after his half-time arrival,
reaching the box but failing to test Caoimhim Kelleher with
a shot and making several embarrassing attempts at heading
the ball.
£100m+ spent on two alleged strikers, but nothing to show
for it. Malick Thiaw's second
half strike was rather better than anything that our German
or DR Congo internationals could muster.
Discontented home followers booed their side off at both
half and full time, as the Magpies extended their losing Premier League run
to three games for the first time in two years and the future of the manager
became a hot topic across Tyneside and beyond.
Exiting to the strains of Sam Fender once again - the SJP
post-match soundtrack of failure - the line, "do it all again next week"
stood out. It's difficult at this point to see what can be changed, but
defeat in the FA Cup would at least insert a ten day reset into our March
schedule and a rare opportunity to get the whole squad out of Tyneside,
rather than just the non-internationals.
Collectively out of form, a side crying out for
fresh legs and ideas has neither: a club unwilling or unable
to enter the transfer market bulking out their bench with
development squad players for no discernible purpose. The
effects of our punishing schedule are exemplified by the ailing Trippier -
the cliche about form being temporary and class permanent over-ridden by an
unsustainable workload.
We'll plough on in similar fashion to Spurs this Tuesday,
Villa on Saturday and Baku the Wednesday after that before
returning to the good old Etihad in a fortnight - a schedule
that now stretches before us like a prison sentence.
This was a chance to stop the rot - a chance that was
missed.
Sitting twelfth with 13 games to go, Eddie Howe's side are
ten points off the top five and ten points off the
bottom three. Neither look likely, at the moment.
Biffa
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