Chelsea FC’s FA Cup Dreams Ended By Lukaku, Everton Into The Semi Finals

Romelu Lukaku scored two superb goals to give Everton a 2-0 FA Cup quarter-final victory on Saturday over his former club Chelsea FC, for whom Diego Costa was sent off.

As a fractious match neared its conclusion, Lukaku took a Tom Cleverley pass in his stride after 77 minutes and powered past four defenders before burying an unstoppable shot into the back of the visitors’ goal.

Just five minutes later, after neat passes from Gareth Barry and Ross Barkley, it was left to Lukaku to deliver the killer blow with another emphatic finish that earned Everton a place in the semi-finals.

“It is a fantastic feeling,” said Everton manager Roberto Martinez. “More than anything, the atmosphere that was created. Every one of us will take it away.

“Romelu Lukaku’s goal was one of the great goals we will see in the FA Cup.”

The controversy was still to come, however, as Costa earned a second yellow card after 84 minutes as he reacted to a Barry foul by motioning his head towards the Everton man and apparently threatening to bite him.

Martinez would not be drawn on the Costa incident and Chelsea interim manager Guus Hiddink claimed not to have seen it.

Barry did not cover himself in glory and after being booked for his part in that flashpoint, he received a second yellow three minutes later for a foul on Cesc Fabregas, which meant that both teams finished with 10 men.

Defeat brought an end to a miserable week for Chelsea, who were eliminated from the Champions League by Paris Saint-Germain on Wednesday and no longer have any chance of winning any silverware this season.

“Everyone knows where Chelsea were,” Hiddink said. “The first task was to get out of the relegation zone and we did that fast. Then there were two cups at stake.

“It is important now that we have the pride to play when there is nothing much at stake.”

Everton’s new co-owner Farhad Moshiri was in attendance at Goodison Park for the first time since paying a reported £200 million ($287.7 million, 258 million euros) to buy 49.9 percent of the club.

There was little for either him or the home fans to cheer in the early stages, apart from a first-minute Cleverley volley into the body of Chelsea goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois.

Costa goes close

Costa was the victim of a crude early foul from Barry and retaliated within seconds, earning a caution as he challenged the Everton midfielder with a leading arm.

Chelsea left-back Kenedy was fortunate not to be booked after two clumsy trips on Aaron Lennon, while Costa made the most of slight contact with Phil Jagielka off the ball, appealing for a penalty that was instantly rejected.

Nor were Everton blameless, with Jagielka booked for a wild kick at Fabregas.

From the ensuing free-kick, Joel Robles made the first meaningful save of the game by tipping over a dipping effort from Willian.

Courtois was also pressed into action before the interval, diving smartly to make a routine stop from another long-range Cleverley shot.

Chelsea’s goal was threatened again soon after the restart, Ramiro Funes Mori rising well to meet a Cleverley corner with a header that just cleared the crossbar.

Chelsea finally showed some attacking intent, after 56 minutes, and almost scored from their first meaningful foray into Everton territory.

Fabregas found Costa, who beat Funes Mori and rounded Robles, only to steer a low shot across goal and wide from a difficult, narrow angle.

Courtois was again pressed into action when he rushed from his line to dispossess Lukaku, but the Belgian striker, sold by Chelsea in 2014, would have the last laugh.

“I think the first goal is the best thing,” Lukaku said of his sensational opener.

“I didn’t know where I was going, but then I was in the box. I saw Gary Cahill not know where he was going so I shifted it onto my left foot (and shot).”

By AFP

Leave Comment

Recommended

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.