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Lewis and Gvardiol guide Manchester City past Forest and into FA Cup final | FA Cup


It was a day when the FA Cup romantics could see the script for Nuno Espírito Santo and Nottingham ­Forest, something to further embellish the manager’s hero status and the club’s finest season in at least 30 years. It was one when Pep ­Guardiola and Manchester City refused to entertain it.

City led from the second ­minute through Rico Lewis’s second goal of the season and when Josko Gvardiol thumped home a header on 51 minutes shortly after a glaring miss by Anthony Elanga, on as a ­Forest substitute, it felt over. That Forest were repeatedly on the wrong side of the finest of margins thereafter only deepened their pain.

Three times they rattled the woodwork and when Taiwo Awoniyi, also on as a substitute, completed the unhappy hat-trick towards the end, Forest knew it was not to be their day. Morgan Gibbs-White was denied twice by the frame of the goal – the first after a blockbuster of a volley with his weaker left foot; the second from a tight angle when he looked to have enough of an empty net to aim for.

It meant that City advanced from their seventh FA Cup semi-final in a row into a third successive final; they will play Crystal Palace on 17 May. Like Forest, their attention will turn towards securing a top-five Premier League finish and Champions League qualification. Guardiola, though, is close to his 19th trophy at City. It would not make up for a deeply underwhelming season. But it would certainly be something.

Forest won at Wembley in the 2022 Championship playoff final but you needed to go back to 1992 to find an appearance from them at the national stadium before that – the League Cup final defeat against Manchester United. The contrast to City was vivid. This was their 11th ­Wembley game under ­Guardiola in the FA Cup alone, taking in semi‑finals and finals.

Manchester City’s Rico Lewis scored early on from just outside the box. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

It was easy to believe that it was a grander adventure for the Forest fans, who packed out one half of the ground well before kick-off. How they bellowed their pre-match song, red-and-white scarves everywhere. But if the City seats featured a significant number of empties, those present and correct could luxuriate in what followed, starting with Lewis’s opener and running through a first half in which they exerted a vice-like grip.

Guardiola’s approach at the outset flummoxed Nuno. The City manager set up with Savinho and Omar Marmoush as wide forwards; Lewis and Jack Grealish in central attacking midfield roles. Behind them, Bernardo Silva and Mateo Kovacic called the tune. Nico O’Reilly strode forward in eye-catching style from left-back.

City were always going to dominate possession and Forest gasped after the Lewis goal, chasing ­shadows. One of Guardiola’s moves was to have his players break on to the ball at pace from deeper areas, looking to slice through Forest’s lines.

Forest struggled to contain the outstanding Kovacic and he was the architect of the breakthrough, stepping away from Gibbs-White and drilling a pass up to Lewis that went through the legs of the defensive midfielder, Danilo. The covering red shirts could not get close enough to Lewis, who fired low across Matz Sels into the corner.

City were in the mood to suffocate; to pass, pass and pass; to showcase their comfort in possession. It was the little feints, the sharpness of their movement and the half-time statistics were grisly from a Forest point of view. Nuno’s team had just 24% of the ball and zero shots. It was hard to remember Forest making a serious incursion into City territory.

Nuno’s answer to his selection problems at right-back was to start the academy product, Zach Abbott. It was only the 18-year-old’s second senior game. At left-back, Harry Toffolo made only his eighth appearance of the season. Neither let anybody down.

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Forest’s issues in the first half were further forward; they largely restricted City in terms of chances and Nuno rolled the dice for the ­second period, introducing Elanga on the right-wing and withdrawing Danilo. It almost brought an instant reward, Forest finally breaking through Callum Hudson-Odoi, whose low cross was made to measure for Elanga. He side-footed wide from close range.

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If that hurt Forest, then worse was to follow. Kovacic thought he had scored or maybe won a penalty when his shot hit Abbott and bobbled goalwards. Sels, who had pushed out a Matheus Nunes effort on the preceding phase of the move, scrambled the ball behind with his legs as he was down on the turf. Had Abbott handled? The officials said no. City were not annoyed for long, Gvardiol rising imperiously to head home ­Marmoush’s corner.

Forest showed the unquenchable spirit that has characterised their football this season. They could leave with their heads held high and yet the regrets pounded. After Marmoush drew a smart save out of Sels, Gibbs-White unloaded a ferocious side-on volley from Elanga’s centre on to the crossbar. What if it had been six inches lower?

Gibbs-White’s next opportunity was easier as he rounded Stefan Ortega after Nicolás Domínguez had forced Gvardiol into an error. Yet he dragged the finish across goal and against the far post. Awoniyi hit the same upright and, on the follow-up, Gibbs-White saw Ortega repel his acrobatic header. Only the hardest of hearts did not feel for Gibbs-White. Or Forest.



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