Birmingham 2 - 1 Sunderland
Rodgewell and McFadden secure Blues win

| Scoring Summary | |
| Birmingham | Sunderland |
| Liam Ridgewell (37) | Scott Dann (og 82) |
| James McFadden (48) | |
| Match Stats | ||
| Birmingham | Sunderland | |
| Shots (on Goal) | 21(7) | 17(2) |
| Fouls | 10 | 15 |
| Corner Kicks | 7 | 7 |
| Offsides | 5 | 1 |
| Time of Possession | 45% | 55% |
| Yellow Cards | 3 | 1 |
| Red Cards | 0 | 0 |
| Saves | 2 | 5 |
| Match Information |
|
Stadium:
St Andrews Stadium, England
Attendance: 21,723 Match Time: 15:00 UK Official(s): Martin Atkinson (Referee) |
| Teams | |
| Birmingham | Sunderland |
| 25 Joe Hart | 1 Craig Gordon |
| 15 Scott Dann | 4 Michael Turner |
| 14 Roger Johnson | 5 Anton Ferdinand |
| 6 Liam Ridgewell | 10 Kieran Richardson |
| 2 Stephen Carr | 2 Phillip Bardsley |
| 12 Barry Ferguson | 16 Jordan Henderson |
| 4 Lee Bowyer | 19 Lorik Cana |
| 16 James McFadden | 20 Andy Reid |
| 7 Sebastian Larsson | 8 Steed Malbranque |
| 10 Cameron Jerome | 11 Darren Bent |
| 11 Cristian Benitez | 17 Kenwyne Jones |
| Substitutes | |
| 8 Garry O'Connor | Nyron Nosworthy 6 |
| 21 Stuart Parnaby | David Healy 23 |
| 9 Kevin Phillips | George McCartney 3 |
| 1 Maik Taylor | Boudewijn Zenden 7 |
| 20 Franck Queudrue | Fraizer Campbell 9 |
| 19 Gary McSheffrey | Marton Fulop 32 |
| 26 Lee Carsley | Paulo Da Silva 22 |
| Substitutions | |
| Garry O'Connor for James McFadden (76) | Fraizer Campbell for Steed Malbranque (68) |
| Gary McSheffrey for Cameron Jerome (77) | George McCartney for Jordan Henderson (68) |
| Lee Carsley for Sebastian Larsson (83) | Boudewijn Zenden for Lorik Cana (68) |
| Yellow Cards | |
| Roger Johnson (24) | Craig Gordon (90) |
| Barry Ferguson (81) | |
| Gary McSheffrey (90) | |
| · Club Squads: Birmingham | Sunderland | |
Updated: October 24, 2009, 8:14 AM UK
Sunderland boss Steve Bruce collected a few more bitter memories from St Andrews as his old club Birmingham claimed a third Barclays Premier League victory of the season.Bruce, whose first return to City since his acrimonious departure almost two years ago came on the day Carson Yeung's new regime was launched in earnest, could only look on as his side fell 2-0 behind with 48 minutes gone.
Strikes by defender Liam Ridgewell and midfielder James McFadden doubled City's league tally at home this season and were ultimately enough to clinch the points, although only just.
Sunderland gave themselves a lifeline when Scott Dann put through his own goal with eight minutes remaining, but substitute Fraizer Campbell and leading scorer Darren Bent passed up late opportunities to wrestle back a point.
But that would have been harsh on the home side, who dominated much of what had gone before in front of a delighted crowd of 21,723 - following a rallying call from new chairman Vico Hui on the pitch before kick-off.
Bruce insisted in the run-up to his return that Sunderland's heroics against Manchester United and Liverpool in their last two matches, which yielded four excellent points, would count for nothing if they left St Andrews empty-handed - and his caution proved well-founded.
His fears of an 'after the Lord Mayor's show' performance became depressing reality before the break as his side struggled to get out of their own half, let alone exert any real pressure on Joe Hart's goal.
It took the visitors 40 minutes to muster their first effort of note, and even then Andy Reid's left-foot effort flew well wide.
By contrast, Birmingham - who went into the game having won only twice in the league and with just six goals to their name to date - were by far the more enterprising and were well worth their half-time lead.
They created several opportunities, with McFadden and Cameron Jerome forcing regulation saves from goalkeeper Craig Gordon.
It took a last-ditch block from defender Michael Turner to stop McFadden converting Christian Benitez's 27th-minute return pass.
Scotland international Gordon had to distinguish himself with a fine save from Benitez at his near post seconds later as Birmingham established a real momentum, and they got their noses in front eight minutes before the break.
Ridgewell got the decisive touch to Sebastian Larsson's swinging free-kick to divert the ball into the net, although he looked to do so from an offside position.
Where the visitors got the benefit of the doubt in last weekend's infamous beachball-gate incident, they were on the receiving end this time around.
Benitez went close from long range once again with 44 minutes gone, and the Black Cats headed for the dressing room expecting a forthright assessment of their efforts from the manager.
But whatever he said fell on deaf ears, as City soon extended their lead.
Larsson's cross was slightly behind Jerome, but he cleverly flicked it into McFadden's path.
The Scot stepped inside wrong-footed full-back Phil Bardsley and steadied himself before passing the ball past Gordon and into the net - despite Turner's desperate attempt to clear off the line.
Sunderland's response was laboured in the extreme, with strikers Kenwyne Jones and Bent seeing little of the ball, and their woes might have increased with 64 minutes gone had Benitez's shot crept inside rather than outside the post after clipping Bardsley's heels.
Bruce decided enough was enough and with 68 minutes gone. He sent on Campbell, George McCartney and Bolo Zenden for Steed Malbranque, Jordan Henderson and captain Lorik Cana - but it was too little too late.
Sunderland stirred as the game entered the closing stages and got their reward with eight minutes left when Dann could only help Turner's glancing header into his own net.
Campbell might have snatched a point when he climbed to meet Reid's 84th-minute cross but headed high over, and Bent when even closer with an 89th-minute volley which shaved the post.
There was still time for Gordon to escape with a yellow card for handling outside his box, Benitez chasing down a long ball as the home crowd bayed for red. But the job was done.
A delighted McLeish said: "It was more important for me. The whole Birmingham City ethos, the fans, the players, everybody associated with the club, it was very important for us. It was good. I am pleased for the owners, I am pleased for Carson Yeung today and [vice-chairman (football)] Sammy [Yu]. They are absolutely ecstatic, and so they should be because it was a great home start for them in what was a thoroughly deserved victory.''
However, McLeish's men managed to hang to demonstrate a new-found resilience. The manager said: "We were 2-0 up against Liverpool two seasons ago and there was a bit of deja vu. But the thing about this squad is I believe there's a bit more resilience than we had two years ago.
"We are persevering right to the very end, we are showing that real strength of character when under the cosh. On another day, we should probably have been more goals up than the two, but we gifted them a goal and it put us under a bit of pressure. But we withstood it and credit to the new players who have come to the club.''
The City fans will hope for a major cash investment in the squad as McLeish attempts to secure the club's top-flight status, although the Scot insisted there was no added pressure on them.
He said: "I said to them before the game: 'It's not a dress rehearsal, so enjoy it in the Premier League', and they looked as if they enjoyed their football today. But they have got to prove themselves every week. You can say they have nothing to prove, top players, but for me, you go out every week to prove yourself.
"I didn't put any pressure on them and say they were playing for their places. They know on the horizon, there might be new players to augment the squad because we have had problems injury-wise and the fragility of the squad has been evident.''
Sunderland boss Steve Bruce did not enjoy his return to St Andrew's two years after his acrimonious departure. He said: "We didn't really come to the party until the last half hour, that was the disappointing thing. In the last half hour, we injected a bit of pace into the game and showed a bit of energy for it, but it was too late. In my opinion, you can't play in the Premier League and have six, seven or eight, in the first hour in particular, not at the races or playing poorly or whatever you want to say.
"In the Premier League, you can't get away with it. We nearly did with a couple of wonderful chances, but that's not going to gloss over the first hour where we hit nowhere near the heights. The last half hour yes, but it was disappointing, the first hour because we have set ourselves high standards over the last few weeks and basically, we were poor, it has to be said.''
Saturday, October 24, 2009
| Wolverhampton Wanderers | 1 | |
| Aston Villa | 1 | FT |
| Birmingham | 2 | |
| Sunderland | 1 | FT |
| Burnley | 1 | |
| Wigan Athletic | 3 | FT |
| Hull City | 0 | |
| Portsmouth | 0 | FT |
| Tottenham Hotspur | 0 | |
| Stoke City | 1 | FT |
| Chelsea | 5 | |
| Blackburn Rovers | 0 | FT |