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Steve Cooper Praises Rhian Brewster But Draw Leaves Swans Losing Ground

Rhian Brewster is living up to his billing as a striker other Championship clubs should be wary of, according to his Swansea City manager Steve Cooper.

Brewster scored his second goal since joining in a loan move from Liverpool as the Swans came from behind to draw 1-1 at Preston.

It as a result that forced both clubs to lose ground in the race for promotion after former Swans striker Scott Sinclair had opened the scoring for his new club.

Sinclair’s hat-trick in the 2011 Championship play-off final sent Brendan Rodgers’ side to the Premier League for the first time and he briefly appeared to have dented the Swans’ latest bid to return to the top flight before Brewster’s leveller.

Cooper said: “Rhian worked hard, looked a threat – I’m sure he was hard to mark for the Preston centre-backs.

“He got into the place we wanted him to be. We knew we had to be on the front foot and competitive and in the large, apart from the goal, we defended quite well.

“We go 1-0 down, completely against the run of play and you’ve got to stand up and be counted.

“The second half wasn’t quite like the first half, it was a little but end-to-end and we turned the ball over a bit too much for my liking, but at the same time we got into some good positions.

The draw leaves Swansea four points off the final Championship play-off spot as they bounced back from defeat at Stoke but failed to win at Deepdale for the first time since 2008.

Preston manager Alex Neil said: “It’s a great goal for us and that’s why he [Scott] is in the team. All the top teams have got somebody who can do something out of nothing.

“It’s always important for a forward to get his goal, especially when you sign a high-profile signing like Scott who has played at a high level, played at certain clubs and won things.

“You need to fight and earn the right to play. We did all that in the second half. We risked the ball in certain areas, made it stay alive and everything about us was better.

“I’m sure all the Preston fans are greedy, so they want their team to play well, win games and dominate opposition, regardless of who you’re playing. That’s what I’m like.”

In a cagey start to the game, George Byers forced Declan Rudd into the first save with a volley and Andre Ayew went close with a header at a corner.

But Sinclair opened his Preston account in the 28th minute slightly against the run of play in the game’s first moment of real quality.

The visitors’ defence backed off and allowed the former Swansea player to advance and find the far corner with a delightful curling effort.

The ex-Manchester City striker celebrated the goal – his first in English football since October 2015 – with gusto after joining North End last month from Celtic.

The contest burst into life following the goal as the Swans hit back less than five minutes later.

Conor Gallagher slipped in Ayew on the right and the Ghana international presented Brewster with a simple finish from close range, amid vociferous Preston claims for offside.

The away side finished the first half strongly as Gallagher fired over from the edge of the area while Bersant Celina stung the palms of Rudd with a long-range effort.

Celina had a good chance to give Swansea the lead after being played in by Ayew, but his touch deserted him at the wrong moment and Rudd collected.

Cooper’s side thought they had a strong penalty shout when Brewster tumbled over Patrick Bauer’s outstretched leg, but referee Geoff Eltringham remained unmoved.

Preston pressed for the winner in an end-to-end and error-strewn finish to the game, but Freddie Woodman held firm for the visitors to parry Bauer’s header as the Swans held on for a point.

 

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