Bristol City vs Luton Town. Sky Bet Championship.
Ashton Gate.
Report and highlights from the Sky Bet Championship clash between Bristol City and Luton Town at Ashton Gate as the Hatters came from two goals down to rally and win on Sunday with goals from James Collins, Elijah Adebayo and Harry Cornick
Sunday 25 April 2021 16:51, UK
Half-time substitutes James Collins and Harry Cornick were on target as Luton came from two goals down to inflict more Championship misery on Bristol City with a 3-2 win at Ashton Gate
The hosts took a 31st-minute lead when Adam Nagy broke from midfield and fed Nahki Wells, who struck a low right-footed shot past Simon Sluga from inside the box.
Nagy made it 2-0 on 38 minutes, firing in from a narrow angle after Sluga had palmed aside a Wells header.
Luton hit back on 49 minutes, Collins netting with a near-post header from Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall's corner.
Nine minutes later Elijah Adebayo equalised with a clever first-time shot from 12 yards and on 74 minutes Cornick completed a remarkable turnaround, firing home the winner with a left-footed finish from inside the box.
The result left City without a home win since January and a victory of any sort in eight games.
Striker Famara Diedhiou was missing from the Robins' line-up with a knee problem, which meant a first start for 18-year-old Academy product Tommy Conway.
Luton boss Nathan Jones named an unchanged team and saw his team make a bright start.
Adebayo sent a shot from a narrow angle just over and, from a disputed corner, the ball ended up in the net, only for referee John Busby to blow up for a free-kick.
City looked bright going forward, but took 19 minutes to register a shot. Then Wells' low effort from 25 yards passed harmlessly wide.
Three minutes later Wells ran onto a chipped ball behind the Luton defence, but goalkeeper Sluga advanced to save.
A Jordan Clark shot for Luton flashed across goal wide of the far post, but soon afterwards the Hatters found themselves behind as Wells made the most of Nagy's pass to finish smartly.
Wells had another chance, which he totally mishit from a Tommy Rowe cross, before Nagy doubled City's advantage.
Dan Bentley did well to protect the lead with a reaction save from a Clark header, but Luton had nothing to show for their first-half efforts.
Jones reacted by sending on Collins and Cornick for Ryan Tunnicliffe and Kazenga Lua Lua at the start of the second half.
The changes almost paid dividends straight away as Collins had a header blocked by Zak Vyner and City managed to clear the resulting goalmouth scramble.
Conway was showing up well for the home side and had a low shot from a narrow angle tipped wide by Sluga on 58 minutes.
But Collins would not be denied and his goal gave Luton renewed hope.
Adebayo's clever finish levelled the scores and City boss Nigel Pearson responded with a quadruple substitution on 71 minutes.
But Luton had the momentum now and Cornick's strike after a Dewsbury-Hall shot had been blocked sealed their fightback.
Conway had the ball in the net for City late on but was denied by a flag for offside.
Bristol City's Nigel Pearson: "I have had some positive talks with the owners and hopefully there will be some firm news for our fans soon. I want the job, but this game showed exactly where we are as a club and how much work there is to be done. Our young players are doing well, but some of the others seem to want the season to end as soon as possible.
"It concerns me that the youngsters could be damaged by being in a side performing so poorly. But we have so many players unavailable that I have to go with them. They are not getting the help from the senior professionals that they need. We can't even win a game from two goals up. That demonstrates a soft mentality, which has nothing to do with tactics or formations. The goals we gave away were very poor and there is a huge job ahead to get things right."
Luton's Nathan Jones: "The substitutions worked well, but the biggest difference in the second half was our mentality. We can't spend big money, but we beat teams in the Championship by doing the basics better than them. The players forgot that in the first half. We reminded them of it at the break and they took the message on board.
"I'm delighted for Harry Cornick because it was his first League goal of the season, even though he has been a threat wherever we have played him. He and James Collins helped turn the game and in the end I thought we deserved all three points because we were the better team. Even in the first half, we created good chances. Credit City for their first goal, but the second was a gift from us. It wasn't a case of being angry at half time. I just reinforced what we do best."