The Guardian (USA)

Hasenhüttl hopes motivation­al videos will inspire Southampto­n at Wembley

- Ben Fisher

Ralph Hasenhüttl has been showing Southampto­n’s players motivation­al videos to inspire them to bring their A-game to Wembley for Sunday’s FA Cup semi-final against Leicester. Southampto­n have not conceded a goal in the Cup this season and have eliminated the holders, Arsenal, but an alarming dip in Premier League form has dropped them to 14th.

Southampto­n lost 3-0 to West Brom last Monday and Hasenhüttl insists his players must take advantage of the Cup having “its own rules”. He said: “I hope we see the ‘Cup team’. This is a team that hasn’t conceded one goal in the competitio­n so far. This is the basics, the fundamenta­l of being successful and having a chance to go to the next round.

“We, very early, started speaking about how important the Cup is for us. For smaller clubs like we are it is always good to have this target in your mind. When we are hungry and we know what we have to hunt for, then we are strong. This is what we expect on the weekend. The face we have shown in the FA Cup so far is a very good one. A Cup final definitely can turn things 100%, around 360 degrees and then it would be a super-successful season, definitely.”

Hasenhüttl hopes showing players footage of some of their finest moments this season will smooth a path to a first Cup final victory since 1976, when Bobby Stokes scored the only goal. “I don’t know yet what the last thing I will tell them before they go out onto the pitch will be but we are working on some videos, motivation­al videos,” he said.

“I think we did it before the Portsmouth game [which Southampto­n won 4-0 in 2019],” he said. “This year we have done looking at our games and what we have done right over the last weeks and months. It is always helpful for a player to see some good moves from him, some good goals, some good tackles to get motivated.”

Southampto­n reached the Carabao Cup final four years ago, when Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c helped Manchester United to victory, and last reached the FA Cup final in 2003. Hasenhüttl is aiming to overturn a wretched personal record in cups, dating back to his time in Germany. “My stats are horrible,” the Austrian said. “Maybe this is the year when everything comes together because I lost so often in penalty shootouts, or there were horrible games where we were 2-0 up and lost it. My cup record is completely opposite what I have done in the leagues.”

Southampto­n have been lauded for their all-action performanc­es at times this season but Hasenhüttl acknowledg­ed victory is all that matters at Wembley. “In this game, there is nothing about beautiful play or beautiful

football players,” he said. “It is more about taking the win. It is about doing everything to have one goal more than the opponent. For this, you cannot look to have some beautiful moves or something like that.

“We need to be successful on

Sunday. To be successful you have to be very committed, work very hard against the ball to not concede a goal.”

 ??  ?? Moussa Djenepo celebrates with Nathan Redmond after scoring in Southampto­n’s quarter-final win at Bournemout­h. Photograph: Matt Watson/Southampto­n FC/Getty Images
Moussa Djenepo celebrates with Nathan Redmond after scoring in Southampto­n’s quarter-final win at Bournemout­h. Photograph: Matt Watson/Southampto­n FC/Getty Images

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