Chelsea  were left frustrated once more as a goalkeeping masterclass prevented  them grabbing a point at Birmingham in a game that the Premier League  leaders comprehensively controlled.
The winning goal came from  Lee Bowyer, who was cleared through by Cameron Jerome, but the team from  the capital totally dominated proceedings, only to go down to a third  defeat in four games after Ben Foster made a string of superb saves. 
Both  sides were hampered with injuries heading into the game, with Alex  McLeish unable to call upon top scorer Craig Gardner, who was replaced  by veteran midfielder Bowyer, while Carlo Ancelotti was without captain  John Terry, forcing a reshuffle at the back that saw Jose Bosingwa  dropped to the bench with Paolo Ferreira shifting from the centre to  right-back.
And the champions were able to call upon talismanic  Didier Drogba to lead the line, with the Ivorian a significant injury  doubt heading into the game after being forced to sit out his nation's  friendly in Poland in midweek, while defender Alex made a surprise  recovery.
And it was the visitors, through the influential  Drogba, who made the brighter opening, with the striker first teeing up  Nicolas Anelka, who was denied by a clever Scott Dann header, before  chesting a ball in the direction of Salomon Kalou, who was denied at the  near post by the quick thinking Ben Foster.
Florent Malouda, the  Premier League's joint top scorer heading into the game, then found  Ramires storming in unmarked at the far post, but the Brazilian could  only meekly nod wide.
Drogba should have done much better with an  even better chance moments later as Branislav Ivanovic instigated a  slick move from the back involving Malouda and Kalou, who threaded a  pass in between Stephen Carr and Roger Johnson and into the path of his  international team-mate, only to once more find England 'keeper Foster  alert as he closed down the angle and pounded away the shot.
It  was all the away side in the opening 15 minutes, with the champions  taking little time to settle into things as Birmingham failed to build  any momentum, and a broken home attack gave Drogba another opportunity,  this time as Anelka was allowed the time to stand up a cross only for  his team-mate to head over under pressure from Dann.
But  Birmingham were the team to take the lead against the run of play as  ex-Arsenal prospect Sebastian Larsson swung in a cross to Cameron  Jerome, with the burly forward nodding the ball into the path of Bowyer - who had been allowed free reign by John Obi Mikel - to serenely slot beyond Petr Cech.
It  was turning into an afternoon to remember for Foster as he was on hand  to pull off an incredible reflex save to deny Drogba once more as the  powerful striker leapt over Liam Ridgewell and slammed down a header  that was destined for the net, only to see the England international  make a Gordon Banks-esque block by stooping low and flicking the ball  away from goal. 
And the former Stoke City and Manchester United  prospect was at it again just moments later to deny Ashley Cole as the  left-back arrowed in from an acute angle.
But Chelsea should have  been level as Alex rose unmarked to meet a Malouda corner only to head  it wildly wide before Drogba was yet again denied by Foster, this time  as the Ivorian's whipped free-kick was pipped round the post.
The  former Marseille man was then denied by the crossbar with another  header while Ramires slammed the rebound wide as the capital side  continued ploughed men forward in wave after wave of attacks.
Foster,  who had been having a first half to remember, was then sold short by a  sloppy backpass and did just enough to deny Anelka from pinching an easy  equaliser minutes before referee Mark Halsey brought a halt to the  onslaught by calling for half-time.
Neither manager saw fit to  make a change at the break, and rightly so as the home side had held on  staunchly in the first while Chelsea looked like creating with every  forward foray.
And the second period continued the pattern of  attack versus defence as the champions continued to pile men forward,  with Mikel getting involved in the action with an early jinking dribble  down the left that drew a foul.
But the Nigerian midfielder was  then fortunate not to go into the book for what looked like a forearm  smash to the head of goalscorer Bowyer, an offence that Halsey deemed  not even worthy of a foul.
Chelsea were then screaming for a  decision to go in their favour as Ramires was downed in the box after  racing onto a through ball, but Halsey again refused to blow, and  correctly as Roger Johnson made a terrific recovery tackle that nipped  ball before player.
That frustration urged Ancelotti into making a change, with Bosingwa coming on for the ineffective Ferreira.
And  the visitors continued to fling men forward with Drogba again being  denied by Foster from a free-kick before Kalou's diving header from an  Anelka cross flew wide of the far post.
With just under 20  minutes remaining, McLeish made his first change of the game with Zigic,  who had dropped deep to mark Mikel, coming off for Alex Hleb, as  Ancelotti threw on Daniel Sturridge for Ramires.
But Foster  continued to steal the show with a fine tackle and brave fist on the  ground as Kalou broke clear before pawing away a powerful Ivanovic  header.
His opposite number spent most of the second half playing  as a spare centreback with Chelsea simply dominating possession, and it  was after a lengthy spell of control and a jinking Malouda run that  Alex was set-up for a chance on the edge of the six-yard area, only for  the Brazilian to spoon his effort well clear of the bar.
And the  visitors failed to prise open a team that went into the game in the  bottom three of the table in the final minutes, leaving Birmingham with a  victory to remember and Ancelotti with a fortnight to forget.
 
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