Chelsea 2-1 Liverpool: Drogba fires Blues to FA Cup glory despite dramatic late Reds fightback
Ramires put Di Matteo's men ahead in the first half and they seemed
to be cruising to victory before Andy Carroll scored one and almost
grabbed a second in a late rally
Didier Drogba scored a record-breaking fourth FA Cup final goal to seal glory for Chelsea who won 2-1 at Wembley despite an Andy Carroll-inspired Liverpool coming within millimetres of a dramatic comeback.
A quality-starved first half was punctured
after only 11 minutes when Ramires capitalised on a series of Liverpool
errors to burst down the right and slot into the net.
Drogba’s
historic finish soon after half-time looked to have Chelsea comfortable,
but Carroll came off the bench to slam home an emphatic finish shortly
past the hour.
The striker thought he had pulled off an
astonishing comeback in the 82nd minute when he powered a header at the
far post, but somehow Petr Cech was able to claw it back before crossing
the whole of the line, those few millimetres securing the Blues'
triumph as they held off a furious final assault.
Kenny Dalglish
opted to leave Carroll on the bench, Luis Suarez playing alone up front
with the likes of Steven Gerrard and Craig Bellamy forward in support,
while there was no place for stalwart defender Jamie Carragher.
Former
Reds star Fernando Torres was named as a substitute for Chelsea, with
Drogba chosen to lead the line, while Branislav Ivanovic partnered John
Terry at the back and veteran Frank Lampard started.
After both
sides spent the first 10 minutes acclimatising, an array of Liverpool
errors allowed Chelsea through. Jay Spearing lost the ball in the
centre, allowing Juan Mata into possession, who fed Ramireson
the right. The Brazilian easily powered outside Jose Enrique before
finishing calmly past Pepe Reina, who had committed to his dive far too
early.
The Reds sought a quick response, some
flowing football resulting in the ball falling for Bellamy just inside
the Chelsea box. The Welshman hammered a fearsome snapshot but Ivanovic
was on hand with a crucial block.
Both sides looked to attack as
the halfway point of the first period passed, Salomon Kalou embarking on
a mazy, unchallenged run into the Liverpool area before being caught
out by Daniel Agger at the last minute.
The Dane himself then
surged forward himself, but as he pushed on into the box, Enrique’s pass
was hit slightly too hard, and the spark was snuffed out.
There
was little more joy for either side, Suarez only able to stretch enough
to tamely make headed contact with an inviting cross from Jordan
Henderson five minutes before the break.
Chelsea opened the
second period with a testing corner from Lampard, Glen Johnson
displaying plenty of muscle to hold off Terry, though the Blues captain
still got a desperate touch that flopped onto the top of the net.
They
were on target five minutes later, though. Lampard had space to pick
his pass with the Liverpool back line ahead of him, electing not to
shoot but to play it in for Drogba on the edge of the
area. The Ivorian took a touch and aimed through the legs of Martin
Skrtel to roll his record fourth FA Cup final goal into the corner.
Dalglish
threw caution to the wind by replacing the struggling Spearing with
Carroll and the target man made an immediate difference.
Found by Enrique in the box, Carroll
juggled and stepped over and seemed to have missed his moment to strike
but instead whipped around the beaten Terry and slammed home
left-footed to put Liverpool back in it.
The breakthrough woke
the Reds up and they streamed forward, the substitute striker at the
heart of it. His header down teed up Henderson to shoot wide from 20
yards as the crowd came alive.
Gerrard tried his luck next,
attempting to meet a knock-down from over 30 yards out with a trademark
howitzer, but he miscontrolled and fired wildly over the top. Carroll
then came back into play as he met Enrique’s left-sided cross with a
header not far off-target.
Liverpool thought the £35 million man
had struck again in the 82nd minute, arriving superbly to blast a
thumping header at the far post. Reds players and fans alike celebrated a
goal but the referee's assistant made a superb call to point out that
Cech had in fact jumped quickly enough with incredible reflex to keep
the whole of the ball from crossing the whole of the line.
Dalglish's
men hammered away in the final minutes with Chelsea clinging on
desperately - although Skrtel had to cover for an exposed Reina at the
death - but the final breakthrough just would not come and the Blues
celebrated their fourth FA Cup triumph in six years.
Source : Goal.com