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Brighton and Hove Albion vs Leicester City. Premier League.

Amex StadiumAttendance31,078.

Brighton and Hove Albion 2

  • N Maupay (35th minute pen)
  • D Welbeck (50th minute)

Leicester City 1

  • J Vardy (61st minute)

Brighton 2-1 Leicester: Neal Maupay, Danny Welbeck send Seagulls third after VAR thwarts Foxes

Match report and free highlights as Brighton beat Leicester through disputed Neal Maupay penalty and Danny Welbeck header; Jamie Vardy hits back on 250th Premier League appearance for Foxes but VAR rules out Ademola Lookman and Wilfred Ndidi goals for offside

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FREE TO WATCH: Highlights from Brighton's win over Leicester

Brighton moved up to fourth in the fledgling Premier League table after Neal Maupay's disputed penalty and Danny Welbeck's header sealed a 2-1 win over Leicester in an incident-packed encounter.

Maupay's 35th-minute spot-kick was controversially awarded with Jannik Vestergaard punished for handball yet seemingly held back by the Seagulls striker, but Welbeck's second-half header (50) was legitimate reward for their dominance.

Jamie Vardy finished a slick move on his 250th Premier League appearance to give the visitors a lifeline (61) but, having surrendered a two-goal lead in the Europa League in midweek, the Foxes were left to rue further decisions as a comeback of their own was scuppered at a sodden Amex Stadium.

Ademola Lookman was denied after a VAR check in the 67th minute, with Harvey Barnes ruled offside, and Barnes was dubiously deemed culpable of another infringement when Wilfred Ndidi nodded past Robert Sanchez with just five minutes remaining.

Brendan Rodgers declared Brighton's opener "never a penalty" and felt Ndidi's header should have stood, while his counterpart Graham Potter admitted his team had enjoyed "a little bit of luck".

Potter's side sit just a point off the summit and extend their best start to a top-flight season with four wins from five, while Leicester, who toiled until Lookman's second-half introduction, are 12th with just two wins from their opening fixtures.

Player ratings

Brighton: Sanchez (7), Cucurella (8), Dunk (7), Duffy (8), Veltman (7), March (7), Bissouma (7), Trossard (7), Lallana (6), Maupay (7), Welbeck (7).

Subs: Mwepu (6), Burn (6), Moder (n/a).

Leicester: Schmeichel (6), Pereira (7), Soyuncu (5), Vestergaard (5), Bertrand (5), Ndidi (6), Tielemans (6), Soumare (6), Maddison (4), Barnes (5), Vardy (6).

Subs: Lookman (8), Castagne (6), Iheanacho (6).

Man of the Match: Marc Cucurella

Neal Maupay celebrates scoring a penalty for Brighton vs Leicester
Image: Neal Maupay celebrates scoring a penalty for Brighton against Leicester

How Brighton dug in and VAR denied Leicester

After generous applause in tribute to the late Jimmy Greaves, the teams set a brisk tempo on a slick surface, Youri Tielemans shooting just wide after a neat one-touch move involving Barnes and Vardy.

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Team news

  • Brighton made one change, with Solly March coming in for Adam Webster. Tariq Lamptey was named on the bench after a long injury lay-off.
  • Leicester handed a debut start to Boubakary Soumare, while Ricardo Pereira returned, along with three players rested in Europe in midweek - Jamie Vardy, Youri Tielemans and James Maddison.

Brighton had not beaten Leicester in eight Premier League attempts but the Foxes, frustrated by Napoli on Thursday, would not muster a first-half shot on target and Graham Potter's side grew in confidence.

The impressive Marc Cucurella teed up Maupay after a nutmeg and slide-rule pass, before a scooped cross found its way to Adam Lallana, who crafted a yard with a dummy but shot well over the bar.

Kasper Schmeichel talks to referee Stuart Attwell after he awards Brighton a penalty
Image: Kasper Schmeichel talks to referee Stuart Attwell after he awarded Brighton a penalty

Leandro Trossard tested Kasper Schmeichel from an angle but the breakthrough Brighton had threatened came in controversial circumstances, Shane Duffy heading onto Vestergaard's outstretched arm, though the defender appeared to have been held and hindered by Maupay himself.

Referee Stuart Attwell consulted only his assistant rather than the touchline monitor but the VAR upheld his decision and Maupay sent Schmeichel the wrong way for his third goal of the season.

Danny Welbeck celebrates scoring for Brighton against Leicester
Image: Danny Welbeck celebrates scoring for Brighton against Leicester

Rodgers swapped the ineffective James Maddison for Lookman at half-time but Brighton doubled their lead shortly after the restart. Welbeck beat Vardy at the near post with a glancing header from Trossard's free-kick, but the evergreen striker was not ready to let the game go.

Lookman was involved in the build-up with a smart back-flick as Leicester hit back stylishly, Vardy meeting Tielemans' fine clipped cross from close range for his 150th Foxes goal.

Barnes' double infringement?

Law 11 from the IFAB Laws of the Game 2021/22 says that a player in an offside position at the moment the ball is played or touched by a team-mate is penalised on becoming involved in active play by - among other things - "preventing an opponent from playing or being able to play the ball by clearly obstructing the opponent’s line of vision".

Momentum looked firmly with Leicester but though the visitors appeared to have secured an equaliser when Lookman scuffed into the back of the net, it was ruled out after the VAR again upheld the onfield decision of an offside flag, with Barnes judged to be in Sanchez's line of sight.

Caglar Soyuncu headed wide inside the box with just over 10 minutes remaining as Leicester kept the pressure on in search of a leveller, while Barnes saw his shot deflected onto the bar.

Leicester finally looked to have equalised through Ndidi's header but Barnes was ruled to have obstructed Sanchez for a second time and Brighton held on, Duffy and Lewis Dunk typically dogged as the Foxes' late charge proved in vain.

Neal Maupay celebrates after scoring for Brighton vs Leicester
Image: Brighton's Neal Maupay opened the scoring from the penalty spot

The three flashpoints - how the managers reacted

On Brighton's penalty:

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Brendan Rodgers talks through the controversial decisions that led to Leicester's 2-1 loss against Brighton

Leicester boss Brendan Rodgers: "It's not a penalty but even more disappointing is the collaboration between the officials; all four of them. [Vestergaard] is being pulled down. One arm is pulled down and the other goes up; he's not seeing [the ball], the header goes straight onto his arm and they've given that as a penalty? It's incredible.

Brighton players appeal for a handball by Jannik Vestergaard of Leicester City
Image: Brighton players appeal for a handball by Jannik Vestergaard

"And it's the process too. The fourth official didn't see it, the referee had given a corner. The linesman who was a way away gave it and for it not to be looked at [by the referee at the monitor] was disappointing."

Brighton boss Graham Potter: "Instinctively, when I watched it live, I thought the hand was up and I thought it was a penalty instinctively."

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Graham Potter says it was a great win for his Brighton side against Leicester this afternoon, making it four wins in five

On Lookman and Ndidi's disallowed goals:

Rodgers: "I can see a little bit on Ade's [Lookman] one where Barnes' run is maybe blocking him a bit - the 'keeper is maybe thinking Jannik is going to head it so it catches him by surprise. I think he can still see the ball but I can understand that one, that Barnes is maybe half-blocking him.

"But for Wilf's goal, 'Barnsey' is moving out; everything's in front of the goalkeeper - he can see it. It's a great leap, a great header and at no time was the 'keeper ever blocked from viewing it. We didn't have the luck on our side and that's ultimately cost us. I don't think there's any doubt that we should have had at least one of those as a goal."

Potter: "I haven't watched them back but the offside ones felt tight to me. That's life sometimes. There were times when margins didn't go our way last season. It's part of football unfortunately but we know we've had a bit of luck to get the three points."

Opta stats

  • Brighton registered their first league victory against Leicester since April 2014 in the Championship (winless in eight against the Foxes prior to today) and their first in the top-flight since April 1981.
  • With 12 points from five games, Brighton have made their best start to a league campaign since 2015-16 in the Championship (13), while this is their best ever points tally after five games in a top-flight season.
  • Leicester have lost six of their last nine Premier League games (W3), as many defeats as in their previous 25 league matches.
  • Only Glenn Murray (26) has netted more Premier League goals for Brighton than Neal Maupay (21, five from the penalty spot).
  • Danny Welbeck has scored five Premier League goals for Brighton in 2021, his best return in a single calendar year since 2017 (5), last netting more in 2014 (7).
  • Jamie Vardy scored his 150th goal for Leicester in all competitions; only Arthur Chandler (273), Arthur Rowley (265) and Ernie Hine (156) have netted more in the club's history.

What's next?

Brighton host Swansea in the third round of the Carabao Cup on Wednesday, before travelling to Crystal Palace for Monday Night Football on September 27.

Leicester face a trip to Millwall in the Carabao Cup on Wednesday and are back in Premier League action at home to Burnley on Saturday September 25.

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