West Bromwich Albion vs Rotherham United. Sky Bet Championship.
The HawthornsAttendance22,331.
Report and free match highlights from the Sky Bet Championship match between West Bromwich Albion Rotherham United at The Hawthorns on Wednesday night | Brandon Thomas-Asante and John Swift's penalty seal Baggies win.
Wednesday 10 April 2024 23:24, UK
West Brom beat already-relegated Rotherham 2-0 at The Hawthorns to consolidate their place in the Championship play-offs.
Brandon Thomas-Asante and John Swift secured the win as the Baggies took full advantage of slip-ups by the chasing pack.
The major talking point came in the lead up to Swift's goal from the penalty spot. Referee Geoff Eltringham adjudged defender Lee Peltier to have handled the ball despite clearly being outside of the penalty area.
Rotherham initially negated Albion's efforts to make an early breakthrough. Swift had an opportunity when he met Tom Fellows' low centre from the right but he guided his effort over the bar.
Thomas-Asante then was played in, over the top, by Swift, but the striker forced his shot wide from a tight angle.
West Brom went ahead midway through the first half. Celtic loanee Mikey Johnston sent Adam Reach racing down the left and he delivered a sharp low ball for Thomas-Asante, who could not miss from a couple of yards out.
Rotherham, having fallen behind, might have allowed the floodgates to open but they themselves began to play with more purpose.
Hakeem Odoffin sent a deep cross from the right which Cafu ambitiously met on the volley but ultimately hammered his half chance well over the bar.
West Brom doubled their lead in first-half stoppage time, however, in the most controversial of circumstances. Thomas-Asante leathered a shot from around 25 yards out which appeared goalbound, only for the ball to strike Peltier.
Referee Eltringham paused for a moment before pointing to the spot - despite Peltier appearing to be a number of yards outside of the penalty area.
The decision was greeted with disbelief by The Hawthorns and understandable bemusement by Rotherham, who had assistant head coach Rob Kelly booked for his protests. Swift duly converted to hand the hosts a half-time cushion.
Rotherham returned to the field undeterred and so easily could have pulled one back immediately when Sebastian Revan burst into the penalty area and laid the ball off for his captain Oliver Rathbone, who fizzed a shot just wide of Alex Palmer's post.
Revan himself then tested Palmer but the Millers were grateful to their own keeper Viktor Johansson, who stopped Thomas-Asante adding to West Brom's tally after he was superbly played in by Johnston.
The hosts' top scorer then blazed an effort over the bar from six yards out in what was his final act before he made way for the returning Josh Maja in the closing stages.
West Brom's Carlos Corberan:
"I didn't see the action back. I knew from the level of the protests from the players and the staff, I understood that there was no doubt that it was the wrong decision. In these situations, you always want fair decisions.
"Later in the game there was another decision, maybe a foul on Asante inside the box, that the referee didn't whistle.
"If the referee did something wrong, he can, let's say, compensate for this, but during the year, unfortunately the referees haven't had the support to guarantee the right or wrong decisions. Live, they need to make quick decisions.
"Sometimes they make mistakes because everyone does. It happens in your favour sometimes, sometimes not. We have, this year, received a lot of wrong decisions against us, which we don't want in the same way we don't want any type of advantage in the decision.
"If the action wasn't a penalty, it's a pity, but hopefully it's a compensation of something that we have suffered from before."
Rotherham's Leam Richardson:
"I've not seen that before. The assistant was maybe 10 yards away looking down the line of it. Then he goes and books my assistant manager (Rob Kelly) for telling him 'the linesman can help'. It was a wrong decision, and a poor one in my opinion. It changed the full outcome of the game.
"The first goal we gave away was poor, but then I thought the second one changed the whole complex.
"Someone said in another interview that those decisions go against you when you're down there, but that's a disgusting way of looking at it. You should have a consistency of professionalism regardless.
"I never question anyone's integrity, but I can't explain that decision.
"We've had a number of similar decisions and apology letters, but I have no interest in that. You can't get those decisions wrong."