Hull remains in trouble; Bournemouth secures top flight status

At the KCOM Stadium, already relegated Sunderland won for the first time in 11 games to leave fourth bottom Hull just two points above the relegation zone.

Published : May 06, 2017 21:59 IST , LONDON

Hull City remains two points above the relegation zone but has played a game more than Swansea.
Hull City remains two points above the relegation zone but has played a game more than Swansea.
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Hull City remains two points above the relegation zone but has played a game more than Swansea.

At the KCOM Stadium, already relegated Sunderland won for the first time in 11 games to leave fourth bottom Hull just two points above the relegation zone.

Hull boss Marco Silva had been unbeaten in his previous 41 home league games, a record dating back to his time in charge of Portuguese side Estoril in 2014 and encompassing spells with Sporting Lisbon and Olympiakos.

Having taken 19 points from a possible 21 at home during his four months as Hull boss, it was a shock to the Portuguese coach when his side fell behind in the 69th minute.

John O'Shea flicked on a corner and Billy Jones launched into a diving header that flashed past Eldin Jakupovic.

Abel Hernandez was denied an equaliser by Jordan Pickford's superb save and Jermain Defoe steered in from an offside position to add to Hull's misery two minutes into stoppage-time.

If third bottom Swansea beat Everton later on Saturday, then Hull will drop into the bottom three with only two games remaining.

Priceless point

Bournemouth secured its top-flight status for another year after a 2-2 draw against Stoke at Dean Court.

When a Stoke corner curled into the penalty area in the 33rd minute, Bournemouth's France Under-20 international Lys Mousset, making his first Premier League start, glanced the ball into his own net, giving the visitors its first away league goal in more than 10 hours.

Junior Stanislas equalised for Bournemouth in the 62nd minute before Stoke's Mame Biram Diouf bundled in his first goal for 12 months in the 73rd minute.

Eddie Howe's side rescued their priceless point thanks to an 81st minute own goal from Stoke defender Ryan Shawcross.

Burnley was made to wait to confirm its survival after being held to a 2-2 draw by West Bromwich Albion at Turf Moor.

The host, seven points above the bottom three, went ahead after 56 minutes when Wales forward Sam Vokes swept home.

Albion striker Salomon Rondon equalised 10 minutes later and Craig Dawson, on his 27th birthday, headed the visitors in front in the 78th minute.

Vokes struck again with just four minutes left, heading in after Albion goalkeeper Ben Foster misjudged Robbie Brady's cross.

Leicester piled pressure on under-fire Watford manager Walter Mazzarri with a 3-0 win at the King Power Stadium.

Mazzarri is reportedly fighting to save his job after a disappointing first season in charge and Leicester took the lead in the 38th minute through Nigeria midfielder Wilfred Ndidi.

Riyad Mahrez doubled Leicester's advantage in the 58th minute and Marc Albrighton's stoppage-time strike condemned 15th placed Watford to a third defeat in their last four games.

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