Fourth-tier Bradford City continued their League Cup fairytale by completing a sensational 4-3 aggregate semi-final win over Aston Villa on Tuesday that sent them into the final.
James Hanson canceled out Christian Benteke’s opener for Villa and although Andreas Weimann’s 89th-minute goal gave the hosts a 2-1 win, it could not stop Bradford from qualifying for a first major final since they won the 1911 FA Cup.
League Two side Bradford, who had previously accounted for Arsenal and Wigan Athletic in the competition, become the first team from England’s fourth tier to reach the League Cup final since Rochdale in 1962.
Photo: AFP
“It’s dreamland,” Bradford manager Phil Parkinson told Sky Sports.
“We said we had a chance to make history and we’ve done it. The lads were absolutely fantastic, and what it means for the club and the city is absolutely tremendous,” he said.
“I think we could fill Wembley [Stadium] on our own. To win it might be going too far, but to get to Wembley is great for us,” he added.
The biggest game in the Yorkshire club’s modern history will occur at Wembley Stadium on Feb. 24, when they will face either Chelsea or Swansea City, who resumed hostilities yesterday with Swansea 2-0 up from the first leg.
For Paul Lambert’s Villa, it was the latest embarrassment in a disappointing season that has seen them thrashed 8-0 by Chelsea and slip to within one place of the Premier League relegation zone.
“That is the worst day of the season. We had two chances to do it and haven’t done it,” the Villa manager said.
“We’ve lost four goals from set-pieces over two games, which is not good enough. I am embarrassed. We will never have a better chance to reach the final,” he added.
Lambert had hailed Charles N’Zogbia’s performance in Saturday’s 2-2 draw at West Bromwich Albion and the French winger was at the fore as the hosts made a storming start on a freezing night in Birmingham.
Three times within the opening 16 minutes he found Benteke’s head from the right flank.
Matthew Lowton headed a knock-down from the Belgian over the crossbar in the sixth minute, while Benteke directed a header straight at Bradford goalkeeper Matt Duke 10 minutes later.
Villa took the lead in the 24th minute and this time the chance came from the left, with Joe Bennett shaping an inviting cross into the area that Benteke leapt to volley past Duke at the near post.
It was one-way traffic, and after Stephen Ireland had seen a goal ruled out for offside, Duke produced a superb one-handed save to tip an N’Zogbia drive over the bar before dealing with a chipped Ireland shot in the same fashion.
The halftime whistle will have come as some relief to the visitors, but within 10 minutes of the restart, they had reasserted their control over the tie.
As on several occasions in the first leg at Valley Parade, Villa were undone from a set-piece, with Hanson slipping past Ron Vlaar to meet Gary Jones’ corner with a header that rocketed into the roof of the net.
The goal sparked delirium on the visiting bench, but Hanson spurned a glorious chance to put Bradford three goals up on aggregate moments later, when he completely miscued his header from a right-wing cross.
Initially stunned, Villa gradually roused themselves and Ireland shot wide at the near post from a lay-off by substitute Darren Bent.
However, Bradford were soon back on the front foot and Garry Thompson came close to settling the tie definitively when he clipped a shot against the crossbar.
Weimann revived the tie in the penultimate minute after skipping past Duke on the edge of the Bradford area and rolling the ball home, but thanks to some desperate defending, the underdogs held on for an unforgettable victory.
After letting another big lead slip with an error-strewn performance at the French Open on Wednesday, top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka felt like getting as far away from the courts as possible. “Just want to quit tennis right now,” Sabalenka said after wasting a lead of a set and two breaks in a 3-6, 7-5, 6-0 loss to Diana Shnaider in the women’s singles quarter-finals. “We’ll see in few days. Hopefully I’ll get back on track mentally.” Sabalenka’s wait for a first French Open title continues despite the four-time major winner leading 4-1 in the second set and being two points from victory while
BIG NAMES GONE: Zverev is the clear favorite for a maiden Grand Slam title, reaching semi-finals for the fifth time in six years and finishing second on three occasions Alexander Zverev on Tuesday breezed past Rafael Jodar to stay on course for an elusive Grand Slam title at the French Open, while Jakub Mensik halted Joao Fonseca’s scintillating run in the quarter-finals. Zverev, the highest-ranked player left in the men’s draw, put an end to Spanish teenager Jodar’s impressive Roland Garros debut, easing into the semi-finals with a 7-6, (7/3), 6-1, 6-3 win. The 29-year-old Zverev is the clear favorite for a maiden Grand Slam title. He has finished runner-up on three occasions, including at the 2024 French Open. “I want to win the matches that are ahead of
Liverpool are in advanced talks with former AFC Bournemouth manager Andoni Iraola as they seek a replacement for Arne Slot, reports said on Tuesday. Iraola has emerged as Liverpool’s top target to replace Slot, who was sacked on Saturday last week after a turbulent second season in charge. Liverpool have reportedly agreed a deal in principle to bring the Spaniard, who left Bournemouth at the end of this season, to Anfield. Sporting director Richard Hughes was heavily involved in hiring Iraola during his time at Bournemouth and is again spearheading the recruitment of the highly rated coach. The Reds are
KNICKS TAKE LEAD: San Antonio put on a 9-0 run to be up 95-94 with just over 2 minutes to play, but the rest of the game belonged to the New York Knicks It was past five minutes through the third quarter of Game 1 of the NBA Finals on Wednesday and the New York Knicks’ 11-game winning streak was in major jeopardy. The Knicks missed nine of their first 10 shots in the early part of the period and trailed the San Antonio Spurs by 14 points. They were floundering. Then something crazy happened. The Knicks found new life from an unlikely source: The Spurs. New York rallied to tie the game by the end of the period, gave up the lead briefly late in the fourth quarter, and pulled away late for a 105-95