Manchester City pull off comeback win against Southampton to reach FA Cup final
Nico González’s late winner gave Manchester City a 2-1 FA Cup semi-final win over Southampton, who had taken a 79th minute lead
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What a barnstorming finish to this FA Cup semi-final that featured three goals in eight minutes and ended with Nico González as the hero who swept Manchester City to a historic fourth consecutive final.
The Spaniard’s winner came in the 87th-minute. Bernardo Silva, only just introduced by Pep Guardiola, tapped to Jérémy Doku, who fed González. From outside Southampton’s area, to the left, the midfielder let go a rising shot that smacked the net and left Tonda Eckert’s team heartbroken, after taking the lead only moments before.
This was when, on 79 minutes, Finn Azaz appeared to seize a moment of classic Cup glory. The No 10 received the ball to his left foot before, 25 yards out, swivelling, and curling a peach, with his right, that flew beyond the flailing James Trafford to beat City’s goalkeeper high and to his left.
Yet as Eckert’s side hit ecstasy and their fans sang, “when the Saints go marching in”, City do what City do. Doku, also on as replacement, danced from the left to a central zone and hit an equaliser that beat Daniel Peretz, Southampton’s goalkeeper, to his left due to a James Bree deflection.
Cue delirium, now, in the sky blue zone though Kuryu Matsuki nearly grabbed an instantaneous Saints’ second when moving upfield, Trafford tipping the effort over.
The Championship team, unbeaten in 20 before this afternoon, also rallied via two corners but a Doku break then created an opening for Savinho, whose attempt was cleared off the line.
In seven minutes of added time both teams might have scored again as the chaotic close to the tie continued. Yet when Craig Pawson blew for time it was City who were rapturous, and those in the yellow of the club’s famous Cup win of 50 years ago bereft.
Guardiola hugged Eckert and offered a word to the 33-year-old former Barnsley assistant manager but, truly, what could he say to comfort a man six months into a first head coach role who came so close to piloting the south coast club to a famous victory.
The evidence of how near Saints came to knocking out the Premier League leaders is found in City ending the game within Erling Haaland, Nico O’Reilly, Doku, and Silva all on the pitch as all began on the bench.
Eckert’s unit was a force, taking the contest to City and so enjoying more possession and territory than expected. The German operated a five-man defence that frustrated City, who were disjointed due to Guardiola’s wholesale changes.
The manager named “adorable” John Stones as the captain of an XI showing nine changes and which he configured in a 4-3-2-1 that had room for both Rayan Cherki and Phil Foden – as the double pivot behind Marmoush. Yet by the break this was discarded, with Foden moved to a conventional right wing berth to leave Cherki as City’s sole No 10.
Saints had scored early on but after Léo Scienza beat Trafford he was ruled offside to the No 1’s relief.
Here was a flash of the “bravery” Eckert spoke of and there was a pugnaciousness, too, about Saints’ play, as when Caspar Jander mugged Foden, leavinghim on the turf.
Ahead of the second half Eckert could inform his team to keep on as they were: keep looking for Scienza, particularly, whose pace along the left troubled City in the absence of the lightning Abdukodir Khusanov.
In the sparsely filled City section television showed more than one fan napping at the break. If this being the 23rd visit to Wembley under Guardiola might excuse both these occurrences all were awake for the grandstand finish.
Now, City await to see who of Chelsea or Leeds they will face in the final, back here next month.

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