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Lennon's Late Heroics Save Reds from Crushing Wigan Defeat at Oakwell

Barnsley 1-1 Wigan Athletic
League One - Tuesday 17th March

A point salvaged in the dying embers, but let’s be honest — this one should have been more than a dramatic draw and less than a rescue act. Barnsley did enough across the night to suggest they ought to have taken all three points, yet still found themselves staring at defeat until Charlie Lennon arrived deep into added time to spare Oakwell a long, muttering walk home.

Wigan had spells of control, yes, but this was not some one-sided exercise in damage limitation. Barnsley created the better openings, struck the woodwork, and forced the sort of saves that usually come with the expectation of reward. Instead, a familiar defensive lapse left them chasing the game, and only a final burst of persistence kept the evening from becoming another self-inflicted wound.

Early Warning Signs Go Unheeded

If we’re being fair, Barnsley started brightly enough. There was intent in the pressing, movement in the final third, and a sense that Wigan’s back line could be got at if the Reds were patient enough to work the openings. The problem, as ever, was turning those encouraging passages into the sort of ruthless edge that settles a match before it drifts into anxiety.

Wigan saw plenty of the ball in the early stages, but it was far from one-way traffic. Barnsley looked the more dangerous when they broke with purpose, and there were enough warning signs for the visitors to know this was not going to be a quiet evening. Oakwell sensed it too. The frustration had not yet arrived; for once, there was at least the faint outline of a football match we might actually enjoy.

Taylor’s Moment of Class Punishes Poor Positioning

The goal, when it arrived, felt less like the inevitable outcome of pressure and more like the sort of defensive slip that has stalked Barnsley all season. One moment of looseness, one passage where the structure softened, and suddenly Taylor had the space to pick his spot and punish it.

That was the irritation of it. Barnsley had not been suffocated. They had not been camped on the edge of their own area, hanging on for breath. They had simply switched off at the wrong moment and paid for it. The finish was sharp, clinical, and exactly the sort of thing that turns a decent enough half into another chase.

Frustration Mounts as Chances Go Begging

If there was encouragement for the Reds, it lay in the fact that the response was immediate and substantial. Barnsley created enough chances across the evening to win the match outright. One effort clipped the woodwork. Another forced a proper save. A third brought the kind of collective intake of breath that tells you everyone in the ground thought the net was about to ripple.

That, more than anything, defined the mood. Barnsley were not absent from the game. They were in it, pushing, probing, and creating. But the final action remained just loose enough, just rushed enough, or just unlucky enough to keep the scoreboard leaning the wrong way.

Lennon’s Last-Gasp Heroics Save the Day

As the clock wound down, the possibility of leaving empty-handed became more ridiculous and more believable in equal measure. Ridiculous because Barnsley had created too much to get nothing. Believable because this season has had a nasty habit of punishing every wasted moment with interest.

Then came Lennon. Deep into added time, with the ground somewhere between resignation and one last desperate appeal to fate, the defender arrived to force home the equaliser and rescue a point that had felt both deserved and maddeningly overdue. The finish was scruffy in the way late goals often are, but nobody in red was asking for style points by then.

The release around Oakwell was instant. Not jubilation exactly. More relief. The sort that comes when a game you should never really have been losing is dragged back from the brink before it can ruin your week.

Team Line-ups:

Barnsley (4 - 2 - 3 - 1):
O. Goodman, J. Shepherd, E. O'Connell, M. de Gevigney, C. O'Keeffe, P. Kelly, L. Connell, R. Cleary, V. Yoganathan, S. Banks, D. McGoldrick
Subs: J. Bland, T. Bradshaw, K. Flavell, C. Lennon, N. Ogbeta, A. Phillips, T. Watson
Goals: C. Lennon (90+6')
Yellow Cards: V. Yoganathan (50'), L. Connell (75'), M. de Gevigney (45+1')

Wigan Athletic (3 - 4 - 1 - 2):
S. Tickle, L. Chapman, J. Kerr, W. Aimson, F. Murray, C. Wright, J. Weir, R. Borges Rodrigues, O. Moxon, C. Saydee, J. Taylor
Subs: H. Bettoni, D. Costelloe, C. McManaman, L. Robinson, T. Savin, M. Smith, C. Vickers
Goals: J. Taylor (29')
Yellow Cards: O. Moxon (57'), C. Wright (88')

Match Stats:

Statistic Barnsley Wigan Athletic
Possession 64.1% 35.9%
Shots 14 16
Shots on target 6 4
Goalkeeper saves 3 5
Aerial duels won 28 10
Fouls committed 11 9
Corners 11 5

Final Whistle

Here’s the problem with this being framed as a dramatic rescue: it lets Barnsley off too easily. The equaliser was deserved, but so too was the frustration that came before it. This was a game in which the Reds created enough to win, showed enough attacking intent to feel encouraged, and still needed the final seconds to salvage what should really have been a more routine outcome.

Wigan will point to their organisation and the moments where they kept Barnsley at arm’s length. Fair enough. But the better openings fell to the home side, and the balance of the evening suggested Barnsley had more than enough in them to take three points if the details had been handled with greater care.

So it finishes as one of those nights that leaves everybody half-satisfied and fully irritated. A point is better than none. Lennon’s intervention matters. The pressure was real, the response was genuine, and there is at least something to be said for refusing to let the game die.

But this was not a smash-and-grab draw. It was a match Barnsley had enough chances to win and enough lapses to nearly throw away entirely. Same old tension. Slightly different ending.

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