Contrasting victories as Blues, Villa reach semis
HOLDERS Chelsea advanced to the semifinals of the FA Cup with a 2-0 home win over Stoke City while Aston Villa joined them after coming from 2-0 down to win 4-2 at Reading on Sunday.
The two winners will meet in the Wembley semifinals on April 10/11 when Portsmouth, who beat Birmingham City 2-0 on Saturday, will play either Fulham or Tottenham Hotspur, who drew 0-0 at Craven Cottage.
Stoke, seeking its first semifinal since 1972 having previously knocked out Manchester City and Arsenal, went close after 15 minutes when Hilario punched a Rory Delap long throw straight to Dean Whitehead, whose shot was cleared off the line by Jon Obi Mikel.
However, Chelsea, beaten in their last two games, soon took control and went ahead after 35 minutes with a trademark Frank Lampard shot from the edge of the box.
Defender Andy Wilkinson cleared two goal-bound efforts as Chelsea cranked up the pressure in the second half but he could only deflect John Terry's firm header from a corner that made it 2-0 after 67 minutes.
"It's never easy after a defeat like last week, that's not normal for us," Lampard told ITV. "We've come back ready to put it right and in a very difficult game today I thought we handled it very well."
Reading started as the better team against a Villa side who lost the League Cup final to Manchester United last Sunday and deserved the lead earned by Shane Long's goals after 27 and 42 minutes.
Villa looked a different team in the second half though and within 10 minutes turned the game round.
Taken ill
Ashley Young scored after 47 minutes before Carew, a late addition to the starting team after Gabriel Agbonlahor was taken ill in the morning, made it 3-2 with goals after 51 and 57.
Reading rallied well and three times went close to an equalizer before Carew's stoppage-time penalty.
Relieved Villa manager Martin O'Neill said he had been happy to reach halftime only 2-0 down. "After our first-half performance I think most of our players were grateful to get a second chance but just to be back at Wembley is great," he said.
Meanwhile, in the Premier League, Everton climbed to eighth as Mikel Arteta continued his rehabilitation with two goals in a 5-1 home thrashing of Hull City on Sunday.
The Spanish midfielder, getting back to his best having recovered from a serious knee injury, volleyed his first goal in more than a year after 17 minutes and put Everton 2-1 up six minutes before halftime after a clever backheel by Steven Pienaar. In between his goals, 19-year-old Tom Cairney briefly put Hull level with a well-struck 20-meter shot.
The two winners will meet in the Wembley semifinals on April 10/11 when Portsmouth, who beat Birmingham City 2-0 on Saturday, will play either Fulham or Tottenham Hotspur, who drew 0-0 at Craven Cottage.
Stoke, seeking its first semifinal since 1972 having previously knocked out Manchester City and Arsenal, went close after 15 minutes when Hilario punched a Rory Delap long throw straight to Dean Whitehead, whose shot was cleared off the line by Jon Obi Mikel.
However, Chelsea, beaten in their last two games, soon took control and went ahead after 35 minutes with a trademark Frank Lampard shot from the edge of the box.
Defender Andy Wilkinson cleared two goal-bound efforts as Chelsea cranked up the pressure in the second half but he could only deflect John Terry's firm header from a corner that made it 2-0 after 67 minutes.
"It's never easy after a defeat like last week, that's not normal for us," Lampard told ITV. "We've come back ready to put it right and in a very difficult game today I thought we handled it very well."
Reading started as the better team against a Villa side who lost the League Cup final to Manchester United last Sunday and deserved the lead earned by Shane Long's goals after 27 and 42 minutes.
Villa looked a different team in the second half though and within 10 minutes turned the game round.
Taken ill
Ashley Young scored after 47 minutes before Carew, a late addition to the starting team after Gabriel Agbonlahor was taken ill in the morning, made it 3-2 with goals after 51 and 57.
Reading rallied well and three times went close to an equalizer before Carew's stoppage-time penalty.
Relieved Villa manager Martin O'Neill said he had been happy to reach halftime only 2-0 down. "After our first-half performance I think most of our players were grateful to get a second chance but just to be back at Wembley is great," he said.
Meanwhile, in the Premier League, Everton climbed to eighth as Mikel Arteta continued his rehabilitation with two goals in a 5-1 home thrashing of Hull City on Sunday.
The Spanish midfielder, getting back to his best having recovered from a serious knee injury, volleyed his first goal in more than a year after 17 minutes and put Everton 2-1 up six minutes before halftime after a clever backheel by Steven Pienaar. In between his goals, 19-year-old Tom Cairney briefly put Hull level with a well-struck 20-meter shot.
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