Business Day

City, Chelsea in key semifinal

- STEVE DOUGLAS Manchester

MANCHESTER City and Chelsea can make up for unfulfilli­ng campaigns by winning their FA Cup semifinal and installing themselves as favourites to lift the old trophy next month.

MANCHESTER City and Chelsea can make up for unfulfilli­ng campaigns in the Premier League by winning their FA Cup semifinal on Sunday and installing themselves as heavy favourites to lift the old trophy next month.

City’s 2-1 league win at Old Trafford on Monday is unlikely to trigger a meltdown by United, who hold a commanding 12-point lead over their neighbour with just seven games left. In fact, City and third-placed Chelsea have already conceded the title.

It makes their meeting at Wembley Stadium all the more pivotal, especially since the winner will take on Premier League struggler Wigan or second-tier Millwall in the final. Some are even describing the City-Chelsea fixture as the “unofficial final.”

“We are aware people are saying our semifinal is going to be ‘The Final,’” City defender Pablo Zabaleta said, “but that is disrespect­ful to Millwall and Wigan.

“Nobody wins a trophy for winning a semi.

“The same thing happened when we played United in 2011 because Bolton and Stoke were in the other game. We need to beat Chelsea and then we can think about who we will play.”

Buoyed by their derby win, City should also be the fresher team for the game as Chelsea face a gruelling return trip from Russia after taking on Rubin Kazan in the Europa League quarterfin­als yesterday.

Millwall, who reached the FA Cup final in 2004 when in the second tier, only to lose 3-0 to United, play Wigan in the other semifinal tomorrow.

It will be a bitterswee­t moment for Wigan chairman Dave Whelan, whose career was ruined at the age of 23 when he broke his leg at Wembley in the FA Cup final in 1960. Whelan, now a successful businessma­n running his own sports clothing and equipment chain, will lead his team out onto the pitch this weekend.

“The chairman’s put so much into the club and for him to lead us out is going to be a great day for the club,” Wigan defender Emmerson Boyce said.

“I don’t think anyone around here has got a bad word to say about him — he comes into the changing room, he’s always positive, always tries to encourage you, and he always tells us to enjoy football because of what happened to his career.

“I know it’s going to be a proud moment for him.”

The winner of the first semifinal will likely book a place in the Europa League next season, with City and Chelsea expected to qualify for the Champions League courtesy of their league placings. The final is on May 11. Away from Wembley, United will look to bury the memory of their sobering loss to City and get back on course for an early wrapup of the Premier League title by beating relegation-haunted Stoke on Sunday. A win at Britannia Stadium will restore the 15-point gap between City and United.

Stoke have been dragged into the relegation dogfight this season with opponents appearing to have found a way to combat the direct, long-ball tactics of Tony Pulis’s powerful side.

Stoke are 15th, three points and three places above the relegation zone. The bottom two of Reading, who host Liverpool, and Queens Park Rangers, who visit Everton, look doomed, so there appears to be one relegation place remaining.

Sunderland are level on points with third-to-last Wigan ahead of Sunday’s derby against Newcastle, who require one more win to virtually ensure their safety.

The other sides fighting the drop are Aston Villa, who are home to Fulham, and Norwich, who visit Arsenal. Sapa-AP

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