- Preston forward Tom Barkhuizen netted the opener for the visitors on 37 minutes
- Lewis Grabban levelled the scores for the home side with 24 minutes to play
- Villa were awarded a spot kick after Keinan Davis drew a foul in the penalty box
- The challenge looked innocuous and the decision was fiercely protested
- The result means Villa remain in third, while the visitors have dropped to ninth
By Laurie Whitwell for the Daily Mail
Published: 21:43 GMT, 20 February 2018 | Updated: 21:59 GMT, 20 February 2018
Staring at the prospect of a second successive defeat, Aston Villa were rescued by an assistant referee’s eager flag.
Steve Bruce’s side laboured through much of this contest against a Preston team with promotion ambitions of their own, and only a fiercely protested penalty enabled the hosts to score.
Keinan Davis ran to retrieve the ball on the periphery of the area and fell down when passing through Greg Cunningham and Ben Davies. It looked innocuous but Nick Greenhalgh waved to signal a foul and referee Darren England had no choice but to point to the spot.

Lewis Grabban (L) secured a point for Aston Villa as they drew 1-1 with Preston on Tuesday


The forward netted a second-half equaliser for Steve Bruce's side in the Championship clash


Eight minutes before the end of the first half, Tom Barkhuizen opened the scoring for Preston


The visitors celebrate with Barkhuizen but Alex Neil's side were unable to hold on to the lead
Preston were furious and Ben Pearson earned a booking for his remonstrations. Lewis Grabban kept his cool however, and with 66 minutes on the clock rolled his penalty down the middle as Declan Rudd dived out of the way.
Late on Alan Hutton flashed a wicked shot narrowly over and Davis sent a volley wide from Grabban’s cross but defeat would have been harsh in the extreme on Preston.
Villa just about deserved the point on effort. It was not enough to lift them back into second but it at least avoided a second damaging defeat in the space of four days.
For Preston, the manner of the result left a bitter taste and frustrated their attempts to climb into the play-off places.
The continued absence of Jack Grealish through a calf injury indisputably affected Villa’s creativity again. Grealish makes football look effortless and without him it feels like hard work for Villa.
MATCH RATINGS AND TABLE
Aston Villa (4-1-4-1):
Johnstone 6.5; Tuanzebe 6 (Elmohamady 85), Chester 7, Terry 6, Hutton 7.5; Jedinak 6; Snodgrass 6 (Grabban 46, 7), Hourihane 6 (Davis 46. 6.5), Onomah 6.5, Bjarnason 6.5; Hogan 6.5
Subs not used: Bunn, Taylor, Whelan, Lansbury
Booked: Bjarnason 22, Jedinak 51, Terry 79
Manager: Steve Bruce 6.5
Preston (4-4-2):
Rudd 7; Fisher 6.5, Huntington 7, Davies 7, Cunningham 6.5; Bodin 6.5 (Harrop 90), Pearson 7, Browne 7, Barkhuizen 7 (Simpson 90); Robinson 7, Moult 6.5 (Horgan 83)
Subs not used: Maxwell, Woods, Spurr, Earl
Booked: Fisher 34, Pearson 65, Rudd 90
Manager: Alex Neil 7
Referee: Darren England 5
MOM: Hutton
Att: 30,894
Season at a glance
- Championship
- Premier League
- Championship
- League One
- League Two
- Scottish Premiership
- Scottish Div 1
- Scottish Div 2
- Scottish Div 3
- Ligue 1
- Serie A
- La Liga
- Bundesliga


Aston Villa manager Bruce holds his arms out in bemusement during Tuesday's stalemate


Mile Jedinak and Preston's Callum Robinson battle for possession during the first half
That had been the sense during Saturday’s loss to Fulham that ended Villa’s seven-game winning sequence and Bruce’s problems were compounded for this game with Albert Adomah once more ruled out through a hamstring issue.
So the first-half chances against a well-drilled Preston team were sparse.
Bikir Bjarnason found space for a good shot from range in the eighth minute, drawing a sprawling save from Rudd. From Robert Snodgrass’s corner John Terry won the header but again Rudd dived through the air to hold.
The Preston goalkeeper then stood firm when Scott Hogan turned neatly after winning a loose ball at a free-kick and shot from a tight angle.
Rudd tipped round the post when Hutton cut in from the left and let rip from range. That Hutton was Villa’s best attacking outlet in the opening period said much.


Villa full back Alan Hutton puts a left-footed cross into the Preston penalty area at Villa Park
Neil has built a highly-capable Championship team on a slender budget and their threat was intermittent but potent. Callum Robinson seized onto a misplaced pass from Terry to charge ahead and fire a shot that flew narrowly past the post.
Then the visitors went ahead in the 37th minute. Sam Johnstone produced a poor punch from Robinson’s corner and Tom Barkhuizen hooked an improvised bicycle kick towards goal. Terry and James Chester appeared ready to clear on the line but Johnstone, trying to make amends, jumped to palm over, only succeeding however in diverting the ball into the corner of the net.
Boos greeted the half-time whistle, rather harsh considering Villa’s position in the table.


Birkir Bjarnason tries to hold on to the ball for the hosts under pressure from Darnell Fisher


Grabban looks to skip past the night's other goalscorer Barkhuizen but the game ended level
Bruce reacted to trailing by sending on both Davis and Grabban at the interval.
But it was Preston who went close to scoring. Paul Huntington connected sweetly to another corner but this time Johnstone produced a fine reaction save.
A Terry mishap then gave Neil’s team a glorious chance. Robinson, the former Villa player, was through eight yards out but Johnstone spread his body superbly and blocked.
Villa were in need of assistance, and it came from the officials.
Original Article