West Ham United crashed out of the FA Cup on Saturday as their former manager Slaven Bilic led West Bromwich Albion to a surprise 1-0 win, while Tottenham Hotspur were held to a 1-1 draw by Southampton in the fourth round.
Albion boss Bilic, sacked by the Hammers in 2017, made eight changes as he made a priority of the Championship leaders’ push to return to the English Premier League.
Albion took a shock lead at the London Stadium when Conor Townsend drilled in his first goal for the club after nine minutes.
Photo: AP
West Ham, struggling under new manager David Moyes and now without a win in four games, were given a lifeline when West Brom’s Semi Ajayi was sent off in the 72nd minute after his push earned a second yellow card.
Sebastien Haller should have equalized with a headed chance and Manuel Lanzini then dragged a shot wide as Albion held on.
West Ham were jeered off by their furious fans, while Bilic, who also played for the Irons, celebrated a sweet victory with his Albion players.
“We put a strong team out. I was well aware it was a home tie, so I wanted to try to make it work, but on the day we did not play well enough,” Moyes said. “We gave up opportunities in the early part of the game and they got their goal. Too many poor passes and not enough good play.”
At St Mary’s, Christian Eriksen was left out amid reports in Italy suggesting the Spurs midfielder has agreed a move to Inter, while Gedson Fernandes made his full debut for Jose Mourinho’s side.
Tottenham’s last visit to Southampton was a painful one, with Harry Kane suffering a torn hamstring in a Premier League defeat on New Year’s Day, a clash that saw Mourinho embroiled in a touchline row with a member of the Saints coaching staff.
Mourinho’s side struck in the 58th minute on their return to the south coast.
South Korea forward Son Heung-min fired home from Erik Lamela’s pass for his 12th goal of the season, but Southampton equalized through Sofiane Boufal’s powerful strike from Danny Ings’ cross in the 87th minute.
“They are a good team. They put some pressure on us in the last minutes and scored, but we are alive,” Mourinho said. “We don’t need one more match, but we have it, so we are going to fix it. It’s better to draw than to be out.”
Chelsea’s understudies clinched a 2-1 win at second-tier Hull City as Blues coach Frank Lampard made eight changes.
Michy Batshuayi, one of those drafted in, made the most of his opportunity, scoring in the sixth minute when his shot took a hefty deflection off Hull’s Ryan Tafazollia for his fifth goal of the season.
Fikayo Tomori doubled the Blues’ lead when the centerback headed in Ross Barkley’s free-kick in the 64th minute.
Lampard had bemoaned Chelsea’s failure to kill off opponents when they were on top after a frustrating loss at Newcastle United and a draw with Arsenal over the previous week, and they were forced to endure another nervous finish after Kamil Grosicki’s 78th-minute strike deflected in off Mateo Kovacic.
Newcastle had to settle for an embarrassing 0-0 draw with third-tier Oxford United at St James’ Park as their wretched FA Cup form continued.
Steve Bruce’s side are looking to make the fifth round for the first time since 2005-2006, but they needed a replay to beat minnows Rochdale in the previous round and they will have to go the distance again after a limp display.
Burnley and Norwich City made a combined 12 changes at Turf Moor, with the Canaries running out 2-1 winners.
Cardiff City fans were warned not to sing “racist or homophobic songs” as two incidents were reported during their 1-1 draw at fellow Championship side Reading.
Sheffield United triumphed 2-0 at second-tier Millwall through Muhamed Besic’s 62nd-minute goal and Oliver Norwood’s 84th-minute strike.
Kelechi Iheanacho’s early goal sealed a 1-0 win for Leicester City at Championship side Brentford.
Third-tier Portsmouth defeated second-tier Barnsley 4-2, while third-tier Coventry City drew 0-0 with second-tier landlords Birmingham City at St Andrew’s.
Additional reporting by staff writer
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