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Aston Villa 1-2 Chelsea: Jores Okore ends Paul Lambert's side's 659-minute wait for a goal

Jores Okore of Aston Villa celebrates with team-mates after scoring his team's first goal during the Premier League match against Chelsea at Villa Park
Image: Jores Okore celebrates ending Aston Villa's goal drought

After 659 minutes without a goal, Aston Villa finally found the net on Saturday – but their drought goes down as the fourth-longest in Premier League history.

Jores Okore’s backpost header, three minutes into the second half against Chelsea, was the first time Villa had scored in 10 hours and 59 minutes of top flight football.

That run stretches back to December 20, when Christian Benteke opened the scoring against Manchester United, 18 minutes into the eventual 1-1 draw at Villa Park.  

Paul Lambert’s side have drawn blanks against Swansea, Sunderland, Crystal Palace, Leicester, Liverpool and Arsenal since then, although Villa did manage to beat the defences of Championship sides Blackpool and Bournemouth in the FA Cup during that time.

Manager Paul Lambert of Aston Villa
Image: Paul Lambert had to wait almost 11 hours to see his side score

Against Chelsea, Villa passed three previous goal-drought milestones set by Everton (2005), Sheffield United (1993/94) and Everton (1993/94) but Okore’s equaliser to Eden Hazard’s opener meant Villa’s lean spell finished 180 minutes shy of Crystal Palace’s 1994/95 839-minute record.

Branislav Ivanovic’s superb strike curtailed celebrations from the home fans, though, and handed Jose Mourinho his first win at Villa Park.

Despite Okore's goal, Lambert’s side remain bottom of the pile in the Premier League in terms of total scored (12, eight fewer than West Brom), shots on target (63) and shooting accuracy (35.59 per cent).

More from Aston Villa V Chelsea

Longest goal droughts in the Premier League

Crystal Palace – 839 minutes to January 14, 1995

Derby County – 777 minutes to December 8, 2007

Ipswich Town – 714 minutes to April 15, 1995

Aston Villa – 659 minutes to February 7, 2015

Everton – 641 minutes to January 3, 1994

Sheffield United – 621 minutes to January 1, 1994

Everton – 615 minutes to October 23, 2005

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