FA Cup Third round: Wigan Athletic 4-1 Hull City

For Wigan and Hull, indifference to the FA Cup has rarely been as embarrassing as it was here, where the former’s home was four-fifths empty. The gate of 5,335 was a depressing palindrome for both clubs.

This was not a match for agoraphobics. Supporters had elbow and leg room in abundance, players a backdrop of almost uninhabited stands. What appeared likely to be one of Saturday’s most entertaining ties generated the day’s second-lowest crowd, which exceeded only the attendance at Torquay United.

Other comparisons were equally unflattering for two members of the Premier League. More than 7,000 fans of non-league Barrow made the 260-mile round trip to Sunderland and the match between League One Southampton and non-league Luton attracted more than three times as many people; even the League Two game between Bradford and Cheltenham enticed a crowd double the size of Wigan’s.

manager, Roberto Martínez, cited the cold weather, treacherous conditions and the cost of following a team. Tickets were priced at £15 for adults but Football Association rules prohibited entry for less. Their victory brought Wigan £67,500 in prize money and potential fixture congestion. Survival in the Premier League can be worth anything up to £60m. The mathematics explain why the two managers made a combined total of 13 changes.

If all the world is a stage, a player without an audience is effectively in a dress rehearsal. As Hull’s beleaguered second-string can testify, Charles N’Zogbia is indeed a player – a world-class one, according to Martínez – but too few people were here to appreciate his talents.

That may change. Despite the meagre crowd, there were a dozen scouts on the guest list at the DW Stadium. The question now may be when, not if, the Frenchman is recruited by a larger club. Martínez made a tacit admission that it could happen in the summer.

He said: “I have no doubt Charlie is going to go to the top of world football, but the timing has to be right for Wigan Athletic. This is probably the first campaign in which he has been consistent and a real threat in every game. I think he knows he can carry on developing here over the next four months.”

brought N’Zogbia on at half-time. Within two minutes he had scored and within 21 he had transformed the game with rapid raids into Hull territory, swift distribution and sharp shooting.

N’Zogbia’s two goals were accompanied by a first Wigan goal for the teenaged midfielder James McCarthy and one for the winger Scott Sinclair.

“To concede three and four was unacceptable,” Hull’s manager, Phil Brown, said.

His attempts to dispose of fringe players was not helped by their capitulation. He added: “It is a difficult time financially for the football club. I will be doing everything I can to strengthen in terms of quality coming in as opposed to the numbers going out.” He was contrite towards the travelling fans; at least the lack of them made the apologies easier.

FA CupWigan AthleticHull CityRichard Jollyguardian.co.uk

Premier League: Bolton Wanderers 2-2 Hull City

Bolton have still not kept a clean sheet all season, and even though they held a two-goal lead in the 70th minute here, their efforts to break out of the bottom three were undone by two late goals from Stephen Hunt.

From being reasonably happy with what looked like it would turn out to be a hard-earned victory on a freezing night, the Bolton fans rounded on their manager again when Hull came back into the game, with chants of “Megson out” after Hunt scored his second.

It did not help that with the score at 2-1, Megson had enraged home supporters by withdrawing Ivan Klasnic, goalscorer and current crowd favourite, in order to shore up the midfield with Gavin McCann. The tactic backfired almost immediately, Hunt scoring from a narrow angle after heading in his first from Craig Fagan’s cross, and Bolton were left hanging on.

The game was as numbingly cheerless as the weather until Klasnic fashioned a goal from nowhere in the 20th minute to give Bolton the lead. Prior to that, just two optimistic attempts from Lee Chung-yong and Fabrice Muamba had brought murmurs of approval from the home crowd, even though both had sailed well over Boaz Myhill’s bar. There seemed no particular danger when Lee nodded a ball back to Klasnic on the edge of the D, which made his accurate low drive into Myhill’s bottom left corner all the more impressive. The Croatian looked up, shot early, and beat the goalkeeper’s dive for his fourth goal in four games, and his sixth of the season for Bolton.

Andy Dawson saw a free-kick turned around a post by Jussi Jaaskelainen shortly afterwards, though the Bolton goalkeeper survived a scare when he came for a cross and failed to collect, leaving Stephen Hunt a free header that Gretar Steinson managed to deflect awat from goal for a corner. Hunt was a lively presence on the Hull left wing, even if his crossing was erratic. He dispossessed Lee in the closing minutes of the first half to set up an attack from which Jozy Altidore won a free-kick, only to put a shot well wide of Jaaskelainen’s goal after a laborious dummy routine had successfully fooled the Bolton wall.

Matt Taylor put a free-kick wide at the start of the second half, then put an even better opportunity into the crowd from one of Kevin Davies’s knock-downs. At the other end Kamil Zayatte went close with a header from a corner. Not that close, actually, but just being in the Bolton six yard area was nosebleed territory for Hull. It was significant that Hull’s chance should fall to a defender, and more significant still that when Brown tried to beef up his attack he could only turn to a pair of veterans in Nick Barmby and Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink.

By the time the latter arrived Bolton thought they had made the game safe through a Kevin Davies goal. Considering Bolton have a reputation for scoring from set pieces, and this wasn’t even a slick routine but a route one, straight down the middle free-kick, Hull’s defending was slack. It was obvious Paul Robinson would aim for Davies, yet everyone including Myhill stood off him, and by the time the goalkeeper tried to reach the ball the striker had stretched to nod it past him.

Premier LeagueBolton WanderersHull CityPaul Wilsonguardian.co.uk

Premier League: Aston Villa 3-0 Hull City

A week is a long time in football. Last Saturday Jimmy Bullard was a picture of fun as he orchestrated a goal celebration that caused amusement among managers, players and supporters up and down the country. What a contrast with this afternoon when, during Aston Villa’s 3-0 victory, the Hull City midfielder looked a broken man as left the pitch in tears and wearing the expression of a player who was wondering whether he would make it back on to a football pitch again.

How serious Bullard’s injury is remains unclear at the moment but the pain etched on his face as he beat the ground in frustration following an aborted attempt to continue told its own story. The 31-year-old was clutching his knee. Bullard has been operated on twice after sustaining cruciate ligament damage while at Fulham in 2006 and again at Hull at the start of this year, when he broke down on his debut.

Indeed this was only his sixth appearance since moving to the KC Stadium in a £5m move in January. The injury, which occurred after Bullard fell awkwardly, cast a shadow over a match that Aston Villa comfortably won to complete a productive week after securing a place in the Carling Cup semi-final. Two goals to the good at the break, it was left to the substitute John Carew to applying the finishing touch with a penalty-kick two minutes from time after the hapless Matt Duke brought down Ashley Young in full flight.

Villa had taken the lead in the 14th minute and the only surprise was that it had taken that long for the breakthrough to arrive. Luke Young squandered an excellent chance inside 22 seconds, when he adroitly nicked the ball past Kami Zayatte but dragged his shot wide with only Duke to beat, and Emile Heskey was guilty of wasting another glorious opportunity in the seventh minute when he bore down on the Hull goal only to take a wayward first-touch before horribly scuffing his effort beyond the far post.

Villa’s dominance was bound to yield a goal sooner or later, however, and it was left to a central defender to get them on their way. The ubiquitous James Milner was the architect, sliding a measured pass into the path of Richard Dunne who surely could not have believed the space that the Hull defence granted him. With no one within 10 yards, Dunne took one touch before hammering the ball with such power that Duke was well advised to keep out the way as it thundered in off the crossbar. Heskey should have taken note.

Shortly before the half-hour mark Villa had doubled their advantage and once again Hull contributed to their own downfall. With Duke having raced out of his penalty area to head the ball out of play, Agbonlahor took a quick throw-in to release Milner as the Hull goalkeeper desperately tried to recover. There was still much to do but Milner, showing wonderful technique and composure, lifted the ball over the back-pedalling Hull defenders and into the unguarded net from just outside the area.

Downing, with a vicious 25-yard shot that flicked the top of the net, came close to adding a third before the interval and Duke also produced a smart save to tip Zayatte’s deflection over the bar in first-half injury time. Hull improved for a period after the restart and Craig Fagan, who replaced Bullard, threatened to punish the complacency that had seeped into Villa’s performance when he struck a left-footed shot against the angle of crossbar and post in the 61st minute. The result, however, was never in doubt and Carew made the scoreline emphatic.

Premier LeagueAston VillaHull CityStuart Jamesguardian.co.uk