The Guardian (USA)

Hayden Hackney gives Middlesbro­ugh Carabao Cup advantage over Chelsea

- Louise Taylor at the Riverside Stadium

Chelsea fans probably did not expect their expensivel­y assembled team to be tortured by a right-winger who cost Middlesbro­ugh a nominal fee when he made the step up from Tooting and Mitcham five years ago.

Yet Isaiah Jones is a special talent who, quite apart from destabilis­ing Levi Colwill, created the goal scored by the impressive Hayden Hackney that left the Riverside celebratin­g like it was 2004.

That winner on the night means Michael Carrick’s mid-table Championsh­ip side will arrive at Stamford Bridge for the second leg of this semi-final in a fortnight’s time protecting a potentiall­y vital lead.

Although Mauricio Pochettino’s Premier League underachie­vers remain favourites to progress, Boro’s hopes of repeating their feat of 20 years ago and emulating Steve McClaren’s class of 2004 by winning the League Cup are far from extinguish­ed. Chelsea will certainly be unwise to underestim­ate Jones, not to mention Hackney’s fellow midfielder Dan Barlaser and company for a second time.

“It’s difficult to talk about our performanc­e,” said Pochettino, whose £200m-plus midfield were often second-guessed on a night when Cole Palmer missed a hat-trick of chances and the veteran defender Thiago Silva was spotted apparently arguing with angry Chelsea supporters who booed his team off at the final whistle.

“We made some mistakes and were punished. We created some big chances but Middlesbro­ugh play on the counteratt­ack with a deep block and were difficult to break down; we weren’t clinical enough. But it’s only half-time of the tie. We need to be positive and go to the final. Of course I’m disappoint­ed but we are a young team and need to learn.”

Chelsea arrived without 10 injured senior players, while their hosts had 12 absentees, and that Teesside casualty list increased when Emmanuel Latte Lath was helped off after only five minutes.

Carrick’s main striker had been hurt by a contentiou­s, potentiall­y penalty conceding, late challenge from Axel Disasi after intercepti­ng Colwill’s slapdash header and threatenin­g to score within the first minute.

When the home left-wing back Alex Bangura then hobbled off in the 20th minute, fortune seemed to be frowning on Boro. Yet in an unexpected silver lining Carrick switched from a back three to a back four and, albeit inadverten­tly, that revamp proved pivotal.

The main beneficiar­y was Jones who, to Colwill’s considerab­le discomfitu­re, morphed from wing-back to right-winger from where he frequently unnerved his marker. Once Chelsea’s left-back needed to watch his step after collecting a booking for sending Jones crashing in the 30th minute, the Teessiders sensed hope.

With Barlaser delivering some decent through passes, Boro held their own but lived dangerousl­y when Tom Glover, Carrick’s second-choice goalkeeper, punched nervously before

Conor Gallagher volleyed over the bar.

Pochettino had opted not to field a convention­al central striker, instead handing that role to Palmer, supported by Gallagher’s on-rushing presence behind him.

Palmer should have opened the scoring following a dreadful mistake by Jonny Howson when the ball fell to his left foot, but instead shot wide.

Not to be outdone, Hackney almost immediatel­y dragged an effort slightly off target. Little did Chelsea know he was merely warming up before propelling Boro into the lead.

Colwill had no answer to Jones’s rapid change of pace after meeting a glorious pass from Barlaser and, having outmanoeuv­red his marker with ease, crossed low for Hackney to side-foot Boro into a 37th-minute lead from the edge of the six-yard box.

If Jones had relished reminding everyone that Colwill is really a central defender, it represente­d quite a moment for the Redcar-born Hackney, who joined Boro’s academy at the age of nine.

Palmer should have restored parity before half-time but, when Glover could not hold Enzo Fernández’s 25-yard shot, he instead volleyed over the bar from close range.

Chelsea attempted to increase the second-half pressure but Carrick looked delighted by the number of intercepti­ons won by a Championsh­ip side playing with just the right balance between measured intelligen­ce and high adrenaline commitment.

Even so, Boro lived dangerousl­y at times and when Malo Gusto crossed and Gallagher’s swivel wrong-footed Dael Fry an equaliser beckoned, but Gallagher directed his ensuing shot wide and Pochettino decided it was time to introduce the attacking cavalry.

On came Mykhailo Mudryk and Armando Broja for Fernández and the often threatenin­g Noni Madueke, with Pochettino’s decision to withdraw the latter rather than the less effective Raheem Sterling provoking puzzlement.

The newcomers helped Chelsea to push hard for an equaliser but a Boro side only four points off a second-tier playoff place defended magnificen­tly and even had their moments on the break.

“It’s as proud as I’ve been,” Carrick said. “It’s very special. We had to suffer to find a way to win. It’s not easy to beat a quality team like Chelsea and it was such a good night for us. The boys were immense. We have to enjoy it but the second leg is a whole new ball game; we know the challenge we are walking into.”

 ?? Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images/Reuters ?? Hayden Hackney scores Middlesbro­ugh’s goal against Chelsea in the Carabao Cup semifinal first leg.
Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images/Reuters Hayden Hackney scores Middlesbro­ugh’s goal against Chelsea in the Carabao Cup semifinal first leg.
 ?? Smith/Action Images/Reuters ?? Conor Gallagher goes close for Chelsea at the Riverside Stadium. Photograph: Lee
Smith/Action Images/Reuters Conor Gallagher goes close for Chelsea at the Riverside Stadium. Photograph: Lee

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