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Moussa Djenepo celebrates scoring Southampton’s opening goal against Brighton.
Moussa Djenepo celebrates scoring Southampton’s opening goal against Brighton. Photograph: Matt Watson/Southampton FC via Getty Images
Moussa Djenepo celebrates scoring Southampton’s opening goal against Brighton. Photograph: Matt Watson/Southampton FC via Getty Images

Moussa Djenepo hits cracker as Southampton beat 10-man Brighton

This article is more than 4 years old

Moussa Djenepo’s stunning first Premier League goal set Southampton on course for their first points of the season as they won 2-0 at 10-man Brighton. Djenepo, a substitute and £14m summer signing from Standard Liège, had been on the pitch for 78 seconds when he cut in from the left to bury the ball into the top-right corner from the edge of the box.

Nathan Redmond tapped home a cross from Sofiane Boufal to seal the points in injury-time. Albion played with 10 men for an hour after Florin Andone was sent off for a reckless tackle on Yan Valery, while Lewis Dunk had a first-half header ruled out by VAR.

Prior to Redmond’s strike Brighton pushed hard for an equaliser and struck the woodwork through the substitute Jürgen Locadia before falling to a first defeat under Graham Potter. The new Brighton manager had begun his tenure in impressive fashion with four points from a possible six but had predicted this would be his team’s toughest fixture to date.

They had the better of the limited early chances, with Neal Maupay and Martín Montoya each going close with headers. But their task became more difficult after half an hour when the Romanian forward Andone raked his studs down the leg of Valery. The referee, Kevin Friend, had no hesitation in pulling out the red card.

Seven minutes before the break VAR disallowed a Brighton “goal” for the second successive week. The captain Dunk powered home a header following a corner from the right but the celebrations were cut short by a review which ruled that his fellow defender Dan Burn was in an offside position as he challenged the Southampton goalkeeper, Angus Gunn.

Most of those in the stadium, who last week saw Leandro Trossard denied a goal against West Ham in similar circumstances, were left baffled by the decision, with a tweet from the Premier League finally clearing up the confusion. The away side made their numerical advantage count in fine style 10 minutes after the restart. The Malian winger Djenepo, who had just replaced Valery,, newly on for Valery, collected the ball wide on the left during a Southampton counterattack and advanced to whip his shot home in front of a sold-out away end bathed in sunshine.

Florin Andone flies in on Yan Valery before being sent off by referee Kevin Friend. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters

Potter, whose only Premier League experience as a player came with Southampton under Graeme Souness in 1996, introduced Locadia and Glenn Murray from the bench in the hope of prolonging his unbeaten start. The Dutch forward Locadia had a golden chance to snatch a point with five minutes remaining but he smashed against the outside of the right post from six yards after Murray nodded down a corner.

Southampton dug in resolutely and doubled their advantage with Redmond’s late second. Boufal worked some space on the left before squaring for Redmond to tap home and secure Southampton’s victory.

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