China Daily

Liverpool left stunned by late United surge

FA Cup thriller eases pressure on Ten Hag as Klopp’s quadruple hopes collapse

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There’s still some fight left in Manchester United. With the season hanging in the balance, Erik ten Hag’s team produced one of the most important wins of his tenure, beating Liverpool 4-3 after extra time in a thrilling FA Cup quarterfin­al match on Sunday.

With nearly the last kick of the match, substitute Amad Diallo sent Old Trafford into raptures, ended Liverpool’s bid for a historic title quadruple and fired United into the semifinals.

“Listen to the noise, you can tell what a big game it is,” said Marcus Rashford, who missed a golden chance to win it at the end of regulation time, but leveled for 3-3 in extra time. “I had to score that chance at the end ... but we got the job done and we have to get something out of this season.”

Ten Hag has faced mounting pressure on his position in the face of a troubled campaign and restructur­ing at the club. The FA Cup represents his last chance of silverware this season, while Champions League qualificat­ion is in doubt with United currently sitting sixth in the Premier League.

Defeat against the club’s fiercest rival would likely have seen that pressure on the Dutchman grow. TV cameras focused on new director Dave Brailsford as the clock ticked down with Liverpool leading 2-1 and the game approachin­g 90 minutes.

Brailsford is part of the team overseeing United’s soccer operations following British billionair­e Jim Ratcliffe’s recent investment in the club. He looked stone-faced, with United seemingly heading out of the competitio­n and Liverpool’s away fans making all the noise.

Emotions changed drasticall­y inside Old Trafford, however, when Antony equalized in the 87th to make the score 2-2. That set up a white-knuckle ride through extra time to the first minute of stoppage time, with big chances missed and momentum swinging one way and then another until United’s winner.

Ten Hag hopes it can be a turning point for his team.

“Every team needs its moment in a season, and we never had that moment,” the United manager said.

“This could be that (pivotal) moment where the team can really believe that they can do amazing things,” the delighted Dutchman said.

“And I think when you can beat Liverpool in the way we did, that you can beat any opponent, so it’s up to us to prove the point. I also said this on Friday (in the pre-match press conference) — and today we did.”

Twelve-time FA Cup winner United was later drawn against secondtier Coventry in the semifinals and defending champion Manchester City will play Chelsea, which beat Leicester 4-2 earlier on Sunday.

The game had looked like going to a penalty shootout until Diallo fired low into the bottom corner to beat Caoimhin Kelleher following a late Liverpool corner.

The substitute was so caught up in the moment that he was shown a second yellow card and sent off for taking off his jersey during wild celebratio­ns.

“It’s the best goal of my life, it’s a really important moment,” he said. “I am disappoint­ed to be sent off, but what is important is to win. To beat Liverpool is a big, big moment for me.”

United’s pursuit of a top-four finish was also helped after fourthplac­e Aston Villa drew 1-1 at West Ham in the Premier League earlier in the day. Tottenham, in fifth, lost 3-0 at Fulham on Saturday.

Ten Hag’s team is still nine points adrift of Villa, but has a game in hand, and perhaps momentum after such a morale-boosting win.

He described the opening 35 minutes of Sunday’s match as the best his team had played all season.

Scott McTominay put United ahead in the 10th minute, before goals from Alexis Mac Allister in the 44th and Mohamed Salah in the second minute of first-half stoppage time gave Liverpool the lead at the break.

After Antony leveled, Harvey Elliott hit the post for Liverpool and Rashford fired wide with only the keeper to beat with the final kick in regulation time.

In extra time Elliott restored Liverpool’s lead in the 105th, before Rashford once again pulled United level seven minutes later.

Diallo’s winner killed off Jurgen Klopp’s hopes of winning four trophies before he steps down at the end of the season.

Liverpool has already won the League Cup, is second in the league and through to the quarterfin­als of the Europa League.

“I think my boys showed incredible character again,” Klopp said. “You cannot compare our season to United’s with the amount of games. It’s fine, we deal with it.”

Chelsea’s revenge

Two goals in second-half stoppage time saw Chelsea book its place at Wembley and avenge its defeat to Leicester in the 2021 FA Cup final.

But Mauricio Pochettino’s team was given a scare against Leicester at Stamford Bridge.

Marc Cucurella and Cole Palmer put Chelsea 2-0 up in the first half, which also saw a Raheem Sterling penalty saved by Jakub Stolarczyk. However, Leicester fought back after the break through a spectacula­r own-goal by Axel Disasi — who sent a long-range back pass without checking where his keeper was — and an equalizer from Stephy Mavididi.

With the game looking set to go to extra time, Chelsea struck twice courtesy of its two substitute­s.

Carney Chukwuemek­a restored the Premier League team’s advantage after an assist from Palmer in the second minute of time added on. Then, six minutes later, Noni Madueke scored a brilliant solo effort to ensure the win and Chelsea’s semifinal ticket.

Pochettino, who has suffered criticism for some of his side’s performanc­es in the league this season, said the game had been tougher than it needed to be.

“If we score in the first half all the chances we create, it is finished in 45 minutes,” he said.

He added that fans who have booed Chelsea off the pitch in some recent games should trust him.

“Fans are entitled to show their emotion. For us, we urge our fans not to be too critical. They want the best for our team and players, but we are in a project. We need support and to really believe. We are trying to build something.”

Leicester beat Chelsea 1-0 in the final three years ago to win the trophy for the first time.

Top four fight

Nicolo Zaniolo’s goal in Sunday’s only Premier League game could be crucial in the battle to qualify for the Champions League.

Having been routed 4-0 by Tottenham last week, Aston Villa, in fourth, trailed to a Michail Antonio header at West Ham. But Zaniolo’s secondhalf strike secured a 1-1 draw that moved Villa three points clear of Spurs, having played a game more.

Even then, Unai Emery’s team had to rely on VAR to rule out a stoppage-time goal from Tomas Soucek for handball.

Depending on how English teams perform in Europe this season, the Premier League could be handed an extra Champions League spot, meaning fifth place would be enough to enter next season’s competitio­n.

 ?? AFP ?? Antony (left) celebrates with Amad Diallo after scoring Manchester United's second goal during a 4-3 English FA Cup quarterfin­al victory against Liverpool at Old Trafford in Manchester, England, on Sunday.
AFP Antony (left) celebrates with Amad Diallo after scoring Manchester United's second goal during a 4-3 English FA Cup quarterfin­al victory against Liverpool at Old Trafford in Manchester, England, on Sunday.

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