Premier League

February 6, 2010

Full-time

Motherwell

1 - 0

Hamilton Academical

Premier League

15:00 GMT, February 6, 2010

Fir Park Stadium, Scotland

Referee: M Tumilty

Lukas bags winner

Scoring Summary

Motherwell Hamilton Academical
Lukas Jutkiewicz (68') 

Lukas Jutkiewicz bundled home his 10th goal of the season to give Motherwell a 1-0 win and keep Hamilton bottom of the Premier League.

• Reid: We need a break

The on-loan Everton striker's scrappy goal following a corner midway through the second half epitomised a Lanarkshire derby which lacked finesse but not commitment.

Motherwell survived a late scare when Martin Canning's header drifted wide amid penalty appeals for Stevie Hammell's challenge on Flavio Paixao.

The functional victory - and fifth consecutive clean sheet under manager of the month Craig Brown - consolidated fifth place for Well. There was little chance of good football on a dreadful Fir Park pitch, which arguably is in worse condition than a year ago despite a £350,000 summer overhaul.

The goalmouths have been re-turfed but the majority of the surface is barren and cut-up, other than several small patches which were relaid after being damaged by foxes.

Hamilton handed a debut to deadline-day signing Dougie Imrie, whose Scottish Cup goal for Inverness against Motherwell last month helped ensure this rearranged match went ahead on fifth-round day.

Marco Paixao, John Sullivan and David van Zanten also came in for Hamilton, who had Simon Mensing in a three-man central defence.

Jutkiewicz saw a first-minute shot comfortably held by Tomas Cerny but there was little goalmouth action for the rest of the opening quarter. Hamilton competed well in a midfield battle but it was Motherwell who threatened next when Giles Coke fired just wide from 22 yards.

The hosts gradually got on top without seriously threatening to break the deadlock. Jim O'Brien's low cross caused some concern in the visiting defence but John Sutton could not divert it on target. O'Brien then set up Jutkiewicz with a hopeful lofted ball but the striker's shot under pressure fizzed wide.

Tom Hateley curled a 25-yard free-kick wide and Cerny got down to hold Keith Lasley's drive from similar range.

John Ruddy made his first save in injury-time when he held Marco Paixao's acrobatic volley at his near post.

Flavio Paixao replaced Joel Thomas for the second half, which began with Cerny holding Hateley's free-kick.

O'Brien injected some pace into Motherwell's build-up play and got into a decent position after a one-two with Sutton but Cerny blocked the shot with his legs.

Craig Brown made a tactical switch with Sutton dropping deeper and O'Brien given greater licence to push forward in central areas.

But Hamilton enjoyed a decent spell and Ruddy scooped Mensing's hooked effort away following Brian Easton's corner.

Motherwell took the lead in 68th minute when Jutkiewicz scrambled the ball underneath Cerny after Stephen Craigan had headed Hateley's outswinging corner into the six-yard box.

Hamilton moved Mensing into midfield and brought on former Well winger Stuart Elliott, who was applauded by the home fans, while another substitute, Kyle Wilkie, chipped over from 25 yards.

Brown introduced Chris Humphrey and Marc Fitzpatrick, but he lasted just four minutes before pulling a hamstring and being replaced by Steven Saunders.

The changes created an even more disjointed game before Motherwell dropped deep and survived some late pressure with Mensing heading over from a Wilkie free-kick before being denied by a Craigan block.

With Cerny still forward from a free-kick, Hamilton came close in the dying seconds when Martin Canning's header drifted inches wide of the far post. Mike Tumilty denied Accies a decent penalty claim when Stevie Hammell shrugged Flavio Paixao off the ball as he tried to force the ball home.

  • Reid: We need a break

    Hamilton manager Billy Reid claimed his players were suffering from a run of bad breaks after they were denied a penalty at the end of a 1-0 derby defeat by Motherwell.

    "It was a strong penalty claim,'' Reid said. "I haven't seen it yet but the players certainly thought it was. But we didn't get it and there's no point moaning.

    "That's four games we've lost 1-0, I don't think anyone can deny we deserved a point. Once again we've conceded a scrappy goal. There have been four or five incidents at the other end and for some reason the ball has not gone in for us, which is a concern.

    "I thought we battered them for the last 25 minutes and probably deserved to get something. It's been the same for quite a few weeks, balls crossing about the line and it's just not going in.

    "We just need a break, and we've not had one in recent weeks. The penalty could have been a break.''

    Motherwell moved six points off fourth-placed Dundee United after their fifth consecutive clean sheet in the SPL and fourth win under Craig Brown, but the Fir Park manager was unimpressed.

    "It was a poor performance, hopefully we can play an awful lot better than that,'' Brown said. "Hamilton made it difficult for us, Billy Reid is one of the most astute tacticians in the game and he did well trying to frustrate us.

    "But we played the poorest we have since I came in. There was no sharpness about us, no threat in front of goal. I genuinely believe a nothing-each draw was what the game deserved. It was competitive but it wasn't quality.''

    The dreadful Fir Park pitch appeared totally unsuitable for quality football but Brown refused to use that as a factor.

    He said: "The players don't complain and I don't complain too much about the pitch. Some of the pitches we have played on away from here have been similar. I wouldn't like to use the pitch as an excuse, we're scraping the barrel if we're doing that.''