Chelsea reached the quarter-finals of the FA Cup with a 5-1 victory against an understrength Manchester City on Sunday, while London rivals Crystal Palace and West Ham United also advanced.
Palace defeated Tottenham Hotspur 1-0 and West Ham came from behind to thrash second-tier Blackburn Rovers 5-1.
At Stamford Bridge, City manager Manuel Pellegrini showed that the focus was on his side’s UEFA Champions League round-of-16 first leg against Dynamo Kiev tomorrow — handing five players their debut.
Photo: Reuters
“I have 13 players [fit], I cannot take the risk to have one player more injured” Pellegrini said when asked if he had devalued the FA Cup by fielding a weakened team. “I think we did the correct thing.”
The defeat ended City’s chance of an unlikely quadruple, while Chelsea head for a quarter-final against Everton — the team they beat in the 2008-2009 FA Cup final during Chelsea manager Guus Hiddink’s first spell in charge.
When Chelsea took the lead after 35 minutes it was two of Pellegrini’s senior players — rather than the youngsters — who were at fault.
Diego Costa was allowed space on the six-yard box between Aleksandar Kolarov and Martin Demichelis, and when Eden Hazard hooked the ball across goal Costa had as much time as he liked to stoop and head powerfully past Willy Caballero.
However, the lead only lasted two minutes.
City forward Kelechi Iheanacho received a pass on the right and spread the ball into Chelsea’s six-yard box. Cesar Azpilicueta tried to clear, but David Faupala stretched out a leg in anticipation and scored a debut goal.
As he celebrated with his teammates in the corner of the pitch, coins were thrown at the City players from the stand where Chelsea fans were sat.
“There were coins thrown to the Man City players in their celebration,” Hiddink said. “We condemn it, I condemn it strongly. Those people, they should not come into stadiums.”
Faupala’s goal marked an encouraging first half for City’s youngsters, but Chelsea’s experience proved too much after the break.
Hazard, whose movement and passing resembled the player who propelled Chelsea to the English Premier League title last season, threaded in Willian in the 48th minute and he finished ruthlessly, lashing the ball fiercely past Caballero and into the far corner.
Five minutes later, Chelsea added a third when Fernandinho made a feeble attempt to clear Willian’s corner and Gary Cahill fired in from the edge of the penalty area.
Hazard then marked his impressive display with a goal, whipping a free-kick low past Caballero in the 67th minute, before substitute Bertrand Traore scored with a header in the 89th.
It could have been a heavier defeat for City, but Caballero saved a 75th-minute penalty by Oscar.
“It is a boost in the confidence for the players. We are making steps [forward],” Hiddink said. “There is not much left in the league for Chelsea, to be honest, so we focus on the games in the FA Cup.”
Elsewhere, Crystal Palace dumped London rivals Spurs out of the competition.
Martin Kelly hit the decisive goal for Palace at White Hart Lane just before halftime, controlling a pass from Wilfried Zaha before firing past Michel Vorm.
Tottenham came close to equalizing in the second half through Christian Eriksen, who was denied by a smart save by Palace goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey, and Alan Pardew’s side held on for a narrow victory.
“It wasn’t our day,” Tottenham midfielder Dele Alli said. “There are a lot of disappointed lads in the dressing room, but we will move on.”
West Ham avoided a fifth-round upset with a 5-1 comeback victory at Blackburn.
Ben Marshall put the hosts ahead with a low, left-footed strike after 20 minutes, but Victor Moses equalized six minutes later.
Dimitri Payet then put West Ham ahead with a free-kick and Emmanuel Emenike struck twice in the second half, before Payet got his second in stoppage-time.
Chris Taylor was sent off for Blackburn and Cheikhou Kouyate for West Ham, both in the second half.
“After the first 20 minutes we played fantastic,” West Ham manager Slaven Bilic said. “We played really great football and it looked easy.”
Palace are away to Reading in the quarter-finals, while West Ham play the winners of yesterday’s tie between Manchester United and third-tier Shrewsbury Town.
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