[ad_1]
Holders Manchester City will face Aston Villa in the Carabao Cup final, advancing 3-2 on aggregate despite losing a tense second leg to neighbours Manchester United.
Leading 3-1 from the first leg at Old Trafford, City pushed forward in search of a goal to put the tie to bed but could find no way past an inspired David de Gea.
Instead, United put things back in the balance before half-time when Nemanja Matic put them ahead on the night with their first effort at goal.
United had created nothing in open play but City could only half-clear Fred’s free-kick and Matic swept a powerful first-time strike past Claudio Bravo.
De Gea, who had brilliantly denied Sergio Aguero and Riyad Mahrez in the opening minutes, was finally beaten when Raheem Sterling turned in Kevin de Bruyne’s cross, but the flag was already up for offside.
The scoreline made for an anxious atmosphere at Etihad Stadium at the break and more United chances followed in the second half, with Harry Maguire heading over and Anthony Martial bringing a low save from Bravo.
Sterling, still without a goal in 2020, had a chance to settle his side’s nerves and restore their two-goal cushion when he ran clear but dallied and eventually skied his shot.
More wastefulness from the home side followed, notably when the ball broke to substitute David Silva in front of goal but he chose to square to Ilkay Gundogan rather than shoot.
It was only when Matic was sent off for his second booking with 14 minutes remaining that City regained any sort of control of the game, and they were able to see out the remainder without any further scares to ensure their progress.
Pep Guardiola’s side are into the final for a third successive year and will go for their seventh EFL Cup win when they face Villa in the final at Wembley on 1 March.
Only Liverpool, who have won it eight times, have a better record in the competition.
Room for improvement for careless City
Guardiola wants his side to use their domestic cup games as preparation for next month’s Champions League tie with Real Madrid and, on this evidence, there is plenty of room for improvement.
It was not just in front of goal where City were careless – after falling behind to Matic’s goal, they frequently gave away possession too.
True, they restricted United to only a handful of further chances and never really seemed in danger of overall defeat, but considering they were 3-0 up before half-time in the first leg, this was an underwhelming way to progress.
Guardiola, who went with a strikerless 4-4-2 formation at Old Trafford, used a 3-2-4-1 formation here, and it gave his side the upper hand early on.
But the longer they went without taking their chances, the more hope United had – especially when Matic scored.
Of the opportunities City wasted, Sterling’s was the worst – and the England forward surely needs to find the net soon to boost his faltering confidence in front of goal.
He had time to pick his spot when De Bruyne sent him galloping clear but chose to cut inside past Victor Lindelof and De Gea, and United had several defenders back when he finally blazed his shot over.
Plenty of positives for Man Utd
United kept the tie alive until the very end, when Fred fired a free-kick into the City wall from a dangerous position, but still had the consolation of being able to claim their second win at Etihad Stadium this season.
Their performance on this occasion did not repeat the attacking verve of their Premier League victory here before Christmas, when they repeatedly ripped apart City’s defence on the counter-attack, but there were still plenty of positives for Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, other than the result on the night.
The imminent arrival of Bruno Fernandes will bolster Solskjaer’s midfield options but, before his red card, Matic showed he still has plenty to offer in that department.
As well as his fine finish, the Serb made several timely interceptions and, along with Fred, helped United stem the tide after City’s fast start.
De Gea, too, has received plenty of criticism lately – so deserves to take credit here for helping United become only the second side to stop City scoring at Etihad Stadium this season.
His instinctive stop from Aguero’s header was his best save of the night, but he was equal to whatever City could throw at him.
Man of the match – David de Gea (Manchester United)
‘We have come a long way’ – what they said
Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola: “We played a side with incredible physicality. The goal was from a set-piece. The first time they shot on target. In both games, we were better.
“I am so satisfied with the players, and the way they play with the problems in the back four. Aymeric Laporte and Fernandinho are not completely fit. Benjamin Mendy neither. We’ll see in the next days. I am pretty sure they will be OK for West Ham, I don’t know for Spurs. We don’t want to take risks.”
Manchester City’s Ilkay Gundogan: “We should have scored early in the first half. We should have scored at least one or two goals today but it wasn’t to be.
“The manager said before the game this is now an experience, we have to survive and overcome. I think we can improve. It is a learning process.”
Manchester United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer: “I am so proud of these players. They have beaten City twice at their ground. They have come so far these players. They have given me absolutely everything.
“We have come a long way. Even though we did not create too many clear cut chances, we pressed them back. It pleased me.
“Of course it is hard to come here and score a goal with 11, never mind 10. It was never a sending off. Absolutely for me a joke. How many times did they foul us?”
United end City’s domestic cup run – the stats you may have missed
- Manchester City are just the third side to reach three consecutive League Cup/EFL Cup finals after Liverpool (four in a row between 1981 and 1984) and Nottingham Forest (1978 to 1980).
- Only Liverpool (12), Aston Villa (nine, including this season) and Manchester United (nine) have reached the final on more occasions than Manchester City (eight).
- United have won consecutive away matches against City for the first time since winning four in a row between November 1993 and November 2000, with all wins in that run coming in league games.
- United are the first side to beat Manchester City in any domestic cup competition (EFL Cup or FA Cup) since Wigan did so during the 2017-18 FA Cup, ending City’s 19 game unbeaten run in such fixtures.
- Ole Gunnar Solskjaer is just the third manager to win two away matches against Pep Guardiola in his managerial career, after Jose Mourinho and Jurgen Klopp.
- Nemanja Matic was the first Manchester United player to both score and be sent off in a game since Wayne Rooney against West Ham in the Premier League back in September 2014.
What next?
Both sides return to Premier League matters at the weekend, with United hosting Wolves on Saturday (17:30 GMT kick-off) and City away at Tottenham on Sunday (16:30).
[ad_2]
Source link