Newcastle 0 Manchester City 2 (AET): Negredo and Dzeko set up Leicester tie as Hart watches on from bench
After their recent problems away from home, Manchester City perhaps need to learn to win ugly. On Wednesday in the North East they won so ugly they should have been wearing Halloween masks.
For an hour, Manuel Pellegrini’s team were wretched, about as ugly, in fact, as the weather.Had Newcastle been remotely proficient in front of goal, City would be adding another bad experience to their list of horror shows on the road.
Scroll down for video of Pellegrini on Hart and Pardew on Newcastle's performance
Game over: Edin Dzeko slots home Manchester City's second goal at St James Park
Late lead: Alvaro Negredo (right) finally breaks the deadlock by slipping the ball underneath Newcastle keeper Tim Krul
Matchwinner: Negredo reacts after finally giving City the lead in the 99th minute
All smiles: Goalscorers Negredo and Dzeko hug after the Spaniard's opening goal
Match facts
Subs not used: Remy, Elliot, Obertan, Sa Ameobi
Booked: Tiote
Subs not used: Hart, Nasri, Fernandinho, Demichelis
Booked: Garcia, Silva
Scorers: Negredo 99, Dzeko 105
Referee: Neil Swarbrick
Attendance: 33,846
In a strange way, Pellegrini will be pleased on Thursday morning. Any team who are going to make it through the slog of the English season and win something need to come through difficult nights like this and go home with a result.
At times this season, City haven’t managed that. On the balance of play, Pellegrini’s team shouldn’t have lost at Cardiff, Aston Villa or indeed Chelsea in the Premier League. They did, though, and if this proves to be the night when that particular habit was broken then it will have been worth all the effort.
As is often the case in these extra-time games, the goals that eventually sealed the tie were so effortlessly simple they left you wondering why they had taken so long to arrive. Maybe Newcastle were tired, not only from their efforts in dominating the first hour but also their gut-wrenching trip to the Stadium of Light.
Whatever the case, both goals were easy on the eye. The first came in the 99th minute and was well constructed by Edin Dzeko. The Bosnian has looked a better player under Pellegrini this season and showed both dexterity and intelligence to make progress down the left and cross for Alvaro Negredo.
Going down: Manchester City's Javi Garcia climbs on top of Newcastle defender Massadio Haidara
Under pressure: England goalkeeper Joe Hart watches his City team-mates from the bench
Safe hands: Manchester City goalkeeper Costel Pantilimon clears the ball from a Newcastle cross
Full stretch: Newcastle forward Shola Ameobi (right) prods the ball at goal during the first half
It’s tempting to say Negredo couldn’t miss but, given the dross both sides had produced earlier, it was always possible. This time, the Spaniard simply side-footed the ball past Tim Krul and into the goal at the Gallowgate End.
QUARTER FINAL DRAW
Leicester City v Manchester City
Stoke City v Manchester United
Sunderland or Southampton v Chelsea
Tottenham v West Ham
Ties to be played w/c December 16
Stoke City v Manchester United
Sunderland or Southampton v Chelsea
Tottenham v West Ham
Ties to be played w/c December 16
Worse was to come, too. Only six minutes more had passed when James Milner, who had a rather mixed night, tip-toed his way through a midfield morass and slipped the ball through to Dzeko. No doubt buoyed by his part in the opening goal, the City forward advanced to skip past Krul and roll the ball into the goal.
So that was that. Newcastle did give it another go in the second period of extra time and they deserve credit for that. One thing this team do not do under Pardew is give up and, had Hatem Ben Arfa’s shot not been cleared from the line by Joleon Lescott with more than 10 minutes left, then who knows what might have happened?
Over and out: City striker Alvaro Negredo blasts the ball over the bar as Mathieu Debuchy attempts to block
Warm welcome: Alan Pardew (left) greets City boss Manuel Pellegrini for the second time this season
As it was, City advanced to the last eight of the competition and, for the second game running, Pardew and his players were left to wonder what might have been.
Certainly they should have won on Wearside on Sunday and certainly they had their chances here. Pardew may take many things from last night’s performance but he will also know that he needs to find a way to make his team more clinical.
A dreadful game for the opening half an hour finally began to come to life in the latter stages of the first half and it was Newcastle who made the running. Had they gone in at half-time with a goal or two to their name then City might have struggled to raise themselves.
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As it was, Newcastle couldn’t take any of the three chances that came their way in quick succession.
Show stopper: Newcastle keeper Tim Krul (second from left) thwarts substitute Negredo
No way through: Jack Rodwell (right) goes down under pressure from Newcastle defender Mike Williamson
First
Shola Ameobi was denied by the fingertips of City reserve goalkeeper
Costel Pantilimon as the Romanian dived to his left. Pantilimon had a
good night on the whole and this was one of his highlights.Then Ameobi was ruled offside when he nudged in Cisse’s cross shot — Cisse really should have scored himself — before the impressive Vurnon Anita volleyed wide after a weak Micah Richards header dropped to him on the edge of the penalty area.
The last of that trio of chances left Pardew with his hands on his head. Maybe he knew what would come later.
Strong tackle: Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa (right) slides in to deny City forward Negredo
Milner curled the ball just over an empty goal from wide on the right after Krul had been hustled into a mistake, while Negredo could have saved his team-mates the punishment of extra time had he chosen power over precision at the end of a lovely City passing move 12 minutes from the end. Krul saved his dinked chip well but shouldn’t really have been given a chance.
Once extra time began, he wasn’t.
ST JAMES' PARK MATCH ZONE
Newcastle
have reached the League Cup final only once since the tournament began
in 1960 — against Wednesday's opponents Manchester City. They faced them
at Wembley in 1976, eventually losing 2-1.\
It was a nice touch that the club printed a souvenir edition of the match programme, with a flashback to the 1976 edition as well as interviews with some of the stars of that cup run — including club legend Malcolm Macdonald.
Hero: Malcolm Macdonald was a key player for Newcastle during the 1970s
Manchester City have become somewhat
of a bogey side for Newcastle in recent years. Before the game the away
side had won all of their last eight matches against their opponents and
had scored 23 goals, an average of almost three a game. In their
previous two meetings, both at the Etihad Stadium, City knocked four
past the North East club.
If the Manchester City players
thought they were in for a rough reception at St James’ Park, their
fears were confirmed as they had to run the gauntlet as soon as they
stepped off the team coach.
A large group of Newcastle supporters lined each side of the walkway sectioned off for them to enter the stadium and proceeded to boo and hurl abuse at them. Quite the welcome.
Shola Ameobi was handed a rare start
last night, beating his younger brother Sammy, 21, into Alan Pardew’s
first XI. Sammy was inspired by Shola, 32, but is now competing with him
for a place. ‘When I was in Year 4 at school he made his debut against
Chelsea and from that day on there was nothing else I wanted to do but
play for Newcastle,’ Sammy said. ‘Now I am trying to rival him. He’s
still a top-class professional and I would love to achieve as much as
Shola has.’
It was a nice touch that the club printed a souvenir edition of the match programme, with a flashback to the 1976 edition as well as interviews with some of the stars of that cup run — including club legend Malcolm Macdonald.
Hero: Malcolm Macdonald was a key player for Newcastle during the 1970s
A large group of Newcastle supporters lined each side of the walkway sectioned off for them to enter the stadium and proceeded to boo and hurl abuse at them. Quite the welcome.
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