Yoane Wissa achieves the latest victory in Brentford amid the masked chaos in Bournemouth | first division
Yoane Wissa's spectacular goal in added time gave Brentford their first goal in history first division Victory over Bournemouth after an eventful 2-1 victory at the Vitality Stadium.
Dominic Solanke's 19th goal of the season looked to have been worth it Bournemouth a deserved point moments after Bryan Mbuemo put the visitors ahead with his 50th Bees goal.
But Wissa, who had set up Mbeumo's opener, had the final say in the fifth minute of stoppage time to add to the Cherries' frustration after Andoni Iraola's side saw two controversial goals disallowed in the first half.
Brentford started brightly and Bournemouth goalkeeper Mark Travers was first into action, ducking well to keep out Keane Lewis-Potter's low shot.
Antoine Semenyo then saw his long-range effort denied by Brentford number one Mark Flekken, who was also equal to a Dango Outtara effort as the hosts began to take control of the game. Solanke thought he had broken the deadlock in the 26th minute when he calmly beat Flekken after Semenyo had passed to him.
Bournemouth's joy was short-lived as the goal was disallowed following a VAR review when the referees decided that Semenyo had controlled the ball with his hand in the build-up, despite replays suggesting it was not a deliberate act. It was an awkward moment for Solanke, who celebrated by putting on a mask, but the goal was disallowed.
Rookie referee Matt Donohue, refereeing his first Premier League match, felt the wrath of Iraola's fury and the Bournemouth manager was shown a yellow card for protesting the awarding of a free kick shortly after the incident. Iraola became furious again when Solanke had a second attempt disallowed for a soft foul on Brentford defender Nathan Collins.
The main talking point of the second half before the final flurry of goals was Brentford being awarded a penalty after Ivan Toney fell under the challenge of Illia Zabarnyi. Just as Toney had grabbed the ball ready to kick, Donohue was called to the on-field review screen and reversed the call after deciding that Toney went to the ground too easily.
Mbeumo finally opened the scoring with four minutes left in regulation with a simple finish after taking advantage of a pass from Wissa after a long clearance by Flekken. The away fans were still celebrating when Bournemouth went ahead at the other end to equalize three minutes later when top scorer Solanke sent a header past Flekken from Marcos Senesi's cross.
This time Solanke's masked celebration was not interrupted but there was still time for more drama when Mbeumo brought down Wissa and the substitute fired in the winner from an acute angle.