Author: Boston 25 News Staff

Keith Andrews had described Brentford’s recent rise up the table as a “natural evolution” resulting from his players “constantly building relationships and understanding” with one another – but the Bees were horribly disjointed once Jean-Philippe Mateta had opened the scoring. The Bees then fell apart completely early in the second half and could have had few complaints had Sarr given Palace a 3-0 lead, moments after Nathan Collins’ own goal had put them 2-0 ahead. Brentford’s first effort on target came six minutes later, but Kristoffer Ajer’s tame, close-range header was easily held by Dean Henderson, who was called into…

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