Irish Daily Mirror

LACK OF THE NET

Replay beckons after stalemate at Bridge

- BY MIKE WALTERS @Mikewalter­smgm

ABOLITIONI­STS lobbying for the end of FA Cup replays found compelling evidence to support their cause in a Stamford Bridge stalemate.

Despite an abundance of good intentions, composure in the final third was as common as rocking horse droppings.

Scrapping replays is a virtuous concept if it helps to uncluttere­d the fixture list, but it does not solve profligacy on its own.

Mauricio Pochettino and Unai Emery could have detained their players until midnight, but in the absence of anyone who could locate the back of the net, a sequel by Spaghetti Junction was always the likeliest outcome.

If Chelsea are to fulfil Poch Spice’s ambition of two Wembley finals this season, they will have to take the scenic route.

And for 6,000 travelling Villa disciples, at least their traipse through Friday night traffic was not entirely in vain.

Fortified by their six-goal blitz of Middlesbro­ugh to reach the Carabao Cup final 72 hours earlier, Chelsea could be forgiven for setting about their second floodlit cup tie at Stamford Bridge this week with trepidatio­n.

They lost defender Levi Colwill to injury in the warm-up and within 12 minutes they were lucky not to fall behind when Douglas Luiz was penalised for handball after bundling in Moussa Diaby’s deflected shot.

Good old VAR – you can always count on interferin­g jobsworths to spoil a game of football.

Without it, Chelsea had no problem in putting Boro to the sword, but now they were grateful to see a review come to the rescue.

According to the letter of the law, on this occasion they were probably right, but only Blues keeper Djordje Petrovic was appealing for handball until the Stockley Park prefects intervened.

Chelsea failed to capitalise on their reprieve as Cole Palmer intercepte­d Clement Lenglet’s pass and Emi Martinez smothered the England winger’s shot.

Dominating the wide areas, Chelsea made frequent excursions into the Villa box.

For 45 minutes, Raheem Sterling had Matty Cash on toast – but Chelsea had little to show for their territoria­l supremacy.

Martinez made an instinctiv­e, reflex save to prevent Alex Moreno diverting Palmer’s low cross into his own net and then the Argentina World Cup winner plunged low to keep out Benoit Badiashile’s header.

Villa didn’t just ride out the firsthalf storm – they should have gone in front when Youri Tielemans lifted Diaby’s cut-back over the top.

But in this masterclas­s of wasted energy, there was no better example than Palmer intercepti­ng Martinez’s clearance and scuffing his shot in the second half.

The Blues were nearly made to pay dearly as Petrovic went full-length to deny Cash when Villa decided to throw off the shackles instead of soaking up the pressure.

 ?? ?? DRAWING A BLANK Aston Villa’s Douglas Luiz had a goal ruled out by VAR for handball
DRAWING A BLANK Aston Villa’s Douglas Luiz had a goal ruled out by VAR for handball

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