Albion's Premier League relegation fears were further eased today as they prepare for tomorrow's FA Cup quarter-final at Millwall.

Burnley lost 2-1 at home to Leicester, despite playing against ten men for 86 minutes.

They remain 17th, three points adrift of Albion in 15th having played two matches more.

It would have been even better for the Seagulls if Matt Ritchie had not grabbed a stoppage time equaliser for Newcastle against former club Bournemouth in a 2-2 draw on the south coast.

The Magpies are two points and two places above Albion in 13th but have also played two games more.

Meanwhile, doomed Huddersfield suffered further heartbreak as they suffered a last-gasp 4-3 defeat at West Ham after leading 3-1.

Leicester were reduced to ten men in just the fourth minute of their clash with Burnley. England defender Harry Maguire brought down Johann Berg Gudmundsson as he broke clean through on goal and was shown a straight red card at Turf Moor.

The ten-man Foxes took the lead through James Maddison's free-kick.

Burnley swiftly equalised through young winger Dwight McNeil, who fired low into the corner to draw the Clarets level after 37 minutes.

Leicester snatched the points in the 90th minute thanks to skipper Wes Morgan, who headed in Youri Tielemans' corner.

Newcastle claimed the lead in first-half stoppage time at Bournemouth. Salomon Rondon's curling free-kick fired the in-form Magpies in front at the Vitality Stadium.

Bournemouth hit straight back immediately after the break as Nathan Ake was pulled down by Federico Fernandez at a corner and the Cherries were awarded a penalty by Mike Dean.

Josh King made no mistake from the spot to level.

The Argus: Bournemouth turned the game around as King (above) grabbed his second of the match, sweeping in from the edge of the box after good play from former Albion transfer target Dominic Solanke.

Newcastle equalised in the third minute of added time, with Ritchie on hand to smash a half-volley in at the back post.

West Ham were in front after 14 minutes from the penalty spot against Huddersfield after Manuel Lanzini was upended in the area by Aaron Rowe.

Mark Noble stepped up and fired his side into the lead.

It took just three minutes for Huddersfield to level the scores. Aaron Mooy's corner found Juninho Bacuna unmarked and his header found the back of the net.

The Terriers stunned West Ham to turn the game around and take the lead on the half hour mark.

Striker Karlan Grant, a January arrival from Charlton, was on hand to guide the ball into the bottom corner from Chris Lowe's delivery.

Huddersfield extended their shock advantage to 3-1 thanks to a second goal of the game from Grant. The striker curled his strike in from 20 yards to put the Terriers in control.

West Ham gave themselves hope 14 minutes from time through Angelo Ogbonna, as the defender rose highest from a corner.

Javier Hernandez then struck to dash Huddersfield hopes as West Ham battled back.

They completed a remarkable turnaround as Hernandez pounced again in added time.