Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink to make swift return after head injury

• Hull striker fit to return for Wigan match
• Duffen responds to criticism from Pearson

Hull City’s battle to avoid relegation received a welcome boost when Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink being told that he could return to full training next week after a CT scan showed he suffered no damage during a clash of heads with Aston Villa’s Richard Dunne on Tuesday night.

Iain Dowie, the Hull manager, had feared Vennegoor of Hesselink would not play again this season after the Dutchman was knocked unconscious during the 2-0 defeat to Villa that left the club effectively four points adrift of safety.

However, Vennegoor of Hesselink was today released after spending the night in Hull Royal Infirmary and, although Saturday’s crucial home match against Sunderland will come too soon for him, he will be available for the trip to Wigan Athletic on Monday week.

Meanwhile Paul Duffen, the former Hull chairman, has responded to fierce criticism of his two-year reign at the KC

Birmingham City 0-0 Hull City | Premier League report

What a good day to be a Premier League manager on gardening leave. Whatever Phil Brown was doing yesterday it seems fair to assume that Hull City’s departing manager had a much more enjoyable afternoon counting his wages in the sunshine than the 26,669 spectators who had the misfortune of paying to watch this soporific match.

Aesthetics will matter little to Iain Dowie at this stage of the season, and in particular in the wake of a 4-1 drubbing at home by Burnley last Saturday, but the man with the grand title of Temporary Football Management Consultant must surely realise that Hull will have to be much more ambitious in their final three home fixtures if they are to secure Premier League survival.

In most circumstances a draw at St Andrew’s, where Birmingham are unbeaten since September and have taken points off the Premier League’s top six clubs, would be a result to celebrate. But Hull’s parlous league position – they are in effect four points adrift of safety because of their vastly inferior goal difference and have only four matches remaining – means this could well be viewed as a missed opportunity come the end of the season.

That feeling was reinforced in the closing stages, when Hull appeared belatedly to realise that a mid-table Birmingham side, whose minds seem to be on their summer holidays, were actually there for the taking. Having forced only one save from Joe Hart in the previous 85 minutes, when the Birmingham goalkeeper brilliantly repelled a glancing header from Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink just before the interval, Hull threatened three times late on and came within inches of grabbing a winner in injury time when Craig Fagan’s vicious volley from the edge of the area fizzed past Hart’s near upright.

How the travelling supporters must have wished that Hull had broken free from the shackles that a 4-1-4-1 system imposed and attacked with more menace earlier on in the game. Dowie defended his tactics afterwards but it seemed curious that, given their predicament, he decided to replace one striker, Vennegoor of Hesselink, with another, Jozy Altidore, rather than play the two together for the final 15 minutes. “I just think we are not set up to go gung-ho,” said Dowie. “Look at our record and we often concede goals.”

There was little danger yesterday. Matt Duke, who replaced the dropped Boaz Myhill, made only one notable stop, when he beat away a sweeping shot from Lee Bowyer in the first half. Otherwise Birmingham were disappointing, with this result stretching their run of matches without a win to seven. “We didn’t quite have the imagination and creativity in the final third today but I am proud of the guys and the way they bounced back [from the 5-1 defeat at Manchester City last Sunday],” said their manager Alex McLeish.

Dowie had also demanded a response from his players following a poor result, although he had adopted a more forthright approach to get it. “I had a conversation this week with the boys, ramming home exactly what Premier League survival means to the area, the people that work at the club and the fans,” said Dowie, who described the midweek home game against Aston Villa as “pivotal”.

“Hull’s a working-class area and they demand to see the lads put a shift in. It’s a response today and we’ll see how good a point that is at the end of the year. But I thought, given Birmingham’s good home record, it was a display to be proud of. What we now need to do is respond to a really good away point with some points at home.”

Premier LeagueBirmingham CityHull CityStuart Jamesguardian.co.uk

Squad sheets: Portsmouth v Hull City

For Hull this match marks the start of life without Phil Brown. He has been replaced by Iain Dowie, who knows all about life at the bottom end of the Premier League following spells as manager at Crystal Palace and Charlton, as well as assistant to Alan Shearer at Newcastle last season. On each occasion, his side have been relegated. Defeat today would make it more likely that Hull will go down alongside Portsmouth, who have just been docked nine points and now have only the FA Cup to look forward to this season. Tim Wigmore

Venue Fratton Park, Saturday 3pm

Tickets £20-38 (0844 847 1898)

Last season Portsmouth 2 Hull 2

Referee P Dowd

This season’s matches 22 Y69, R4, 3.32 cards per game

Odds Portsmouth 6-5 Hull 13-5 Draw 12-5

Portsmouth

Subs from Ashdown, Vanden Borre, Mokoena, Webber, Dindane, Mullins, Kanu, Yebda, Smith, Boateng, Ritchie, Hughes, Basinas, Utaka

Doubtful Boateng (ankle), James (calf), Smith (groin), Utaka (groin), Yebda (knee)

Injured Vanden Borre (hamstring, 27 Mar), Ben Haim (groin, 27 Mar)

Suspended None

Form guide LLWLDL

Disciplinary record Y62 R4

Leading scorers Dindane, Piquionne 5

Hull

Subs from Duke, McShane, Kilbane, Cairney, Altidore, Ghilas, Barmby, Cooper, Garcia, Fagan, Marney, Folan

Doubtful Geovanni (knee), Hunt (foot)

Injured Ashbee (knee, unknown), Gardner (ankle, unknown)

Suspended Boateng (one match)

Form guide LLLLWD

Disciplinary record Y53 R5

Leading scorer Hunt 6

Match pointers

• Portsmouth are unbeaten in their last eight league meetings with Hull

• Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink has committed more fouls without being booked (38) than any other player in the top flight this season

• Portsmouth have conceded the first goal in 21 of their 29 league games this season

• Hull have had a player sent off in three of their last four Premier League matches

• Jamie O’Hara has had more shots at goal than any other Portsmouth player (63) but has only found the net once in the league in 2009-10

Premier LeaguePortsmouthHull Cityguardian.co.uk