Liverpool beat Chelsea on pens again to win FA Cup

Liverpool completed a clean sweep of the domestic cups with another penalty shoot-out win over Chelsea at Wembley in the FA Cup final, as Kostas Tsimikas struck the decisive spot-kick after Mason Mount’s effort was saved by Alisson.

It had taken 22 penalties to separate the sides in February’s Carabao Cup final and while there were only 14 taken after another goalless 120 minutes on this occasion, it was once again Jurgen Klopp’s side who clinched the silverware by the narrowest of margins, handing Chelsea a third straight FA Cup final defeat in the process.

Mount dropped to his haunches as Liverpool’s players and staff ran off to celebrate with their fans amid a fog of red flares – he has now lost six major finals at Wembley.

Earlier in the shoot-out, Sadio Mane – who scored a winning penalty for Senegal at the Africa Cup of Nations and another to send them to the World Cup earlier this year – had missed the opportunity to clinch it for Liverpool following Cesar Azpilicueta’s strike against the post, but Tsimikas kept his cool to become the unlikely hero.

Liverpool's Kostas Tsimikas celebrates scoring the winning penalty at Wembley
Image:
Liverpool’s Kostas Tsimikas celebrates scoring the winning penalty at Wembley

Liverpool’s success was tempered by injuries to Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk, which could potentially damage their hopes of an unprecedented quadruple, with their Premier League pursuit set to continue on Tuesday at Southampton on Sky Sports and their Champions League final with Real Madrid on May 28.

But the scenes of wild celebration at the end on the pitch and in the stands suggested Liverpool were only focused on this moment. They last won both domestic cups in 2000/01 and this was their first FA Cup triumph since Steven Gerrard’s heroics against West Ham in 2006.

The 141st FA Cup final, 150 years on from the first, had seemed unlikely to go all the way in the opening 15 minutes, as livewire Luis Diaz gave Trevoh Chalobah real problems during an electric start from Liverpool, but Chelsea gained a foothold and hit the bar through a Marcos Alonso free-kick during their own fast start to the second half.

The woodwork was then struck twice in quick succession by Liverpool at the other end inside the final 10 minutes of normal time, with Diaz denied before Andy Robertson miscued a close-range volley.

With fatigue setting in through extra-time on a warm Wembley afternoon, extra-time saw the tempo drop, but the drama cranked up again in the shoot-out – and it was once again the red end celebrating.

How the penalty shoot-out went

  • Alonso scores, Milner scores
  • Azpilicueta hits post, Thiago scores
  • James scores, Firmino scores
  • Barkley scores, Alexander-Arnold scores
  • Jorginho scores, Mane penalty saved
  • Ziyech scores, Jota scores
  • Mount penalty saved, Tsimikas scores

Those Liverpool supporters had booed both the national anthem and Abide With Me before kick-off, but were cheering a sensational start from Diaz when play got underway.

The winger had been a standout performer in Liverpool’s Carabao Cup success over Chelsea and was immediately tormenting Chalobah, getting the better of the 22-year-old centre-back four times inside the first quarter of an hour.

It seemed at that stage only a matter of time before a Diaz move delivered the opener for Liverpool but, with wing-back Reece James tucking in to help out his team-mate Chalobah, Chelsea came through the early storm and created good moments of their own for Christian Pulisic and Marcos Alonso.

Mo Salah went down injured for Liverpool in the FA Cup final with Chelsea
Image:
Mo Salah went down injured for Liverpool in the FA Cup final with Chelsea

The match – and potentially Liverpool’s season – took another twist on 33 minutes, when Salah was forced off. He looked relatively comfortable as he walked down the tunnel but there will now inevitably be concerns about the part he can play in Liverpool’s remaining matches.

His replacement Diogo Jota passed up a fine chance just before half-time, volleying Andy Robertson’s cross over from eight yards before Romelu Lukaku – starting with Kai Havertz out injured – followed suit with a trickier chance moments later.

Team news

  • Kai Havertz was a surprise omission from the Chelsea squad due to injury, with Romelu Lukaku starting up front, while Timo Werner was injured in the warm up. However Mateo Kovacic won his race to be fit. The Blues were otherwise unchanged from their 3-0 win over Leeds on Wednesday.
  • Liverpool made five changes from Tuesday’s win at Aston Villa, with Mohamed Salah back in ahead of Diogo Jota, Thiago Alcantarain place of Curtis Jones, Jordan Henderson covering for the injured Fabinho, Ibrahima Konate preferred to Joel Matip and Andy Robertson replacing Kostas Tsimikas.

The second half also began with a flurry of chances – although this time they were for Chelsea, with Alonso dragging a shot wide, Alisson saving sharply from Pulisic, and Alonso then smacking a free-kick against the bar from out-wide.

Liverpool struck back with Robertson unable to bundle in at the back post, Diaz shooting over from the edge of the box, Jota arrowing just off target and Naby Keita making Edouard Mendy work. But still there was no breakthrough.

The teams continued to trade blows, with Pulisic shooting wide and Diaz bending a fine shot over before James stopped a swift Liverpool counter-attack with a combination of good defending and then a foul on Thiago to earn the first booking of the match.

Chelsea's Christian Pulisic (centre) gets past Liverpool's Sadio Mane (left) and Naby Keita
Image:
Chelsea’s Christian Pulisic (centre) gets past Liverpool’s Jordan Henderson (left) and Naby Keita

But Liverpool kept on coming and hit both posts in quick succession as the clock ticked down, with Diaz denied after a shuffle and shot from eight yards before Robertson miscued his volley from the other side when he seemed certain to convert. There was still time for Diaz to curl just off target but, for the fourth time this season, 90 minutes wasn’t enough to separate these sides.

There was another blow for Liverpool at the turn around, with Van Dijk subbed off and looking frustrated in the dugout. On the pitch, his centre-back partner Ibrahima Konate took a risk when he floored Hakim Ziyech in the box, although ref Craig Pawson waved play on.

A series of Chelsea set-pieces came to nothing and in the second period of extra-time, with fatigue setting in, chances were again in short supply as penalties loomed.

Player Ratings

Chelsea: Mendy (8), Chalobah (7), Silva (8), Rudiger (7), James (8), Jorginho (8), Kovacic (7), Alonso (8), Mount (7), Pulisic (6), Lukaku (5).

Subs: Kante (6), Ziyech (7), Azpilicueta (5), Loftus-Cheek (6), Barkley (7)

Liverpool: Alisson (9), Alexander-Arnold (8), Konate (8), Van Dijk (7), Robertson (7), Thiago (8), Henderson (7), Keita (7), Salah (6), Mane (7), Diaz (9).

Subs: Jota (7), Milner (7), Matip (7), Tsimikas (7), Firmino (7)

Man of the Match: Luis Diaz (Liverpool)

Tuchel’s decision to sub off sub Ruben Loftus-Cheek for Ross Barkley in the final seconds was intriguing move, given how his Kepa Arrizabalaga switch in February back-fired.

Barkley did score his penalty but the tale had an unhappily familiar ending for Chelsea, who, through the finest of margins, missed out on another trophy, with this loss adding to their FA Cup final defeats to Arsenal and Leicester City in recent years.

As for Liverpool – who have drawn level with Chelsea on eight FA Cups – it’s now a question of how much more silverware they can finish the season with…

Klopp: Liverpool and Chelsea both mentality monsters

Jurgen Klopp celebrates Liverpool's win
Image:
Jurgen Klopp celebrates Liverpool’s win

Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp to the BBC: “Outstanding, it was an incredible, intense game against Chelsea – they would have deserved it exactly the same way, like in the Carabao Cup. That’s how small the margins are.

“I couldn’t be more proud of my boys, the shift they put in, how hard they fought, the early changes. I think Virgil is fine, but his muscle was hurt.

“All of these things, missing good chances, overcoming good moments from Chelsea, then having really good moments ourselves…

“Then in the penalty shoot-out, it was nerve-racking, my nails are gone but I really feel for Chelsea. For the second time, 120 minutes and you get nothing, that’s too hard. But for us I’m pretty happy.

“We are mentality monsters but there were mentality monsters in blue as well – it was one penalty. Chelsea played outstanding but in the end there must be one winner and that was us today.”

Tuchel sad but proud

Chelsea boss Thomas Tuchel: “Like in the last final, in the Carabao Cup, it’s no regrets. I told the team I’m proud.

“We were sure that we would be competitive and make life very difficult for Liverpool. We did it again. We struggled in the first 15 minutes but then we were excellent for the whole match. We got to 0-0 against maybe the best attacking team in the world and we also created a lot of chances. We deserved it, as they deserved it as well, but again we lose on penalties.

“We are very disappointed of course. We are sad but at the same time proud.

“I was sure we would win today. I was sure before and I was sure during the match that momentum was on our side. I was sure until the very last minute but unfortunately I was not right. I have to digest it and keep on going. That’s life in sports.

“We have everything it takes to win trophies, we proved it. We have a Club World Cup and a European Super Cup and I don’t feel sorry this was at the beginning of the season and in winter.

“We were good in Champions League, strong in both domestic cups, we can produce peak performances and we have the mentality in the club to shape the mentality of the players, but Man City and Liverpool have shown you need this on a consistency.”

What’s next?

Liverpool travel to Southampton on Tuesday at 8pm while Chelsea host Leicester on Thursday at 7.45pm. On the final day of the Premier League season, Liverpool host Wolves and Chelsea host Watford on Sunday at 4pm.

Liverpool’s remaining fixtures

May 17 – Southampton (a) Premier League, live on Sky Sports

May 22 – Wolves (h) Premier League

May 28 – Real Madrid (n) Champions League final

Chelsea’s remaining fixtures

May 19 – Leicester (h) Premier League

May 22 – Watford (h) Premier League

Liverpool beat Chelsea on pens again to win FA Cup

Liverpool completed a clean sweep of the domestic cups with another penalty shoot-out win over Chelsea at Wembley in the FA Cup final, as Kostas Tsimikas struck the decisive spot-kick after Mason Mount’s effort was saved by Alisson.

It had taken 22 penalties to separate the sides in February’s Carabao Cup final and while there were only 14 taken on this occasion, it was once again Jurgen Klopp’s side who clinched the silverware by the narrowest of margins, handing Chelsea a third straight FA Cup final defeat in the process.

Mount dropped to his haunches as Liverpool’s players and staff ran off to celebrate with their fans amid a fog of red flares – he has now lost six major finals at Wembley.

Earlier in the shoot-out, Sadio Mane – who scored a winning penalty for Senegal at the Africa Cup of Nations and another to send them to the World Cup earlier this year – had missed the opportunity to clinch it for Liverpool following Cesar Azpilicueta’s strike against the post, but Tsimikas kept his cool to become the unlikely hero.

Liverpool’s success was tempered by injuries to Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk, which could potentially damage their hopes of an unprecedented quadruple, with their Premier League pursuit set to continue on Tuesday at Southampton on Sky Sports and their Champions League final with Real Madrid on May 28.

But the scenes of wild celebration at the end on the pitch and in the stands suggested Liverpool were only focused on this moment. They last won both domestic cups in 2000/01.

The 141st FA Cup final, 150 years on from the first, had seemed unlikely to go all the way in the opening 15 minutes, as livewire Luis Diaz gave Trevoh Chalobah real problems during an electric start from Liverpool, but Chelsea gained a foothold and hit the bar through a Marcos Alonso free-kick during their own fast start to the second half.

The woodwork was struck twice in quick succession by Liverpool at the other end inside the final 10 minutes of normal time, with Diaz denied before Andy Robertson miscued a close-range volley.

With fatigue setting in through extra-time on a warm Wembley afternoon, extra-time saw the tempo drop, but the drama cranked up again in the shoot-out – and it was once again the red end celebrating.

How the penalty shoot-out went

  • Alonso scores, Milner scores
  • Azpilicueta hits post, Thiago scores
  • James scores, Firmino scores
  • Barkley scores, Alexander-Arnold scores
  • Jorginho scores, Mane penalty saved
  • Ziyech scores, Jota scores
  • Mount penalty saved, Tsimikas scores

Those Liverpool supporters had booed both the national anthem and Abide With Me before kick-off, but were cheering a sensational start from Diaz when play got underway.

The winger had been a standout performer in Liverpool’s Carabao Cup success over Chelsea and was immediately tormenting Chalobah, getting the better of the 22-year-old centre-back four times inside the first quarter of an hour.

It seemed at that stage only a matter of time before a Diaz move delivered the opener for Liverpool but, with wing-back Reece James tucking in to help out his team-mate Chalobah, Chelsea came through the early storm and created good moments of their own for Christian Pulisic and Marcos Alonso.

Mo Salah went down injured for Liverpool in the FA Cup final with Chelsea
Image:
Mo Salah went down injured for Liverpool in the FA Cup final with Chelsea

The match – and potentially Liverpool’s season – took another twist on 33 minutes, when Salah was forced off. He looked relatively comfortable as he walked down the tunnel but there will now inevitably be concerns about the part he can play in Liverpool’s remaining matches.

His replacement Diogo Jota passed up a fine chance just before half-time, volleying Andy Robertson’s cross over from eight yards before Romelu Lukaku – starting with Kai Havertz out injured – followed suit with a trickier chance moments later.

Team news

  • Kai Havertz was a surprise omission from the Chelsea squad due to injury, with Romelu Lukaku starting up front, however Mateo Kovacic won his race to be fit. The Blues were otherwise unchanged from their 3-0 win over Leeds on Wednesday.
  • Liverpool made five changes from Tuesday’s win at Aston Villa, with Mohamed Salah back in ahead of Diogo Jota, Thiago Alcantarain place of Curtis Jones, Jordan Henderson covering for the injured Fabinho, Ibrahima Konate preferred to Joel Matip and Andy Robertson replacing Kostas Tsimikas.

The second half also began with a flurry of chances – although this time they were for Chelsea, with Alonso dragging a shot wide, Alisson saving sharply from Pulisic, and Alonso then smacking a free-kick against the bar from out-wide.

Liverpool struck back with Robertson unable to bundle in at the back post, Diaz shooting over from the edge of the box, Jota arrowing just off target and Naby Keita making Edouard Mendy work. But still there was no breakthrough.

The teams continued to trade blows, with Pulisic shooting wide and Diaz bending a fine shot over before James stopped a swift Liverpool counter-attack with a combination of good defending and then a foul on Thiago to earn the first booking of the match.

Chelsea's Christian Pulisic (centre) gets past Liverpool's Sadio Mane (left) and Naby Keita
Image:
Chelsea’s Christian Pulisic (centre) gets past Liverpool’s Jordan Henderson (left) and Naby Keita

But Liverpool kept on coming and hit both posts in quick succession as the clock ticked down, with Diaz denied after a shuffle and shot from eight yards before Robertson miscued his volley from the other side when he seemed certain to convert. There was still time for Diaz to curl just off target but, for the fourth time this season, 90 minutes wasn’t enough to separate these sides.

There was another blow for Liverpool at the turn around, with Van Dijk subbed off and looking frustrated in the dugout. On the pitch, his centre-back partner Ibrahima Konate took a risk when he floored Hakim Ziyech in the box, although ref Craig Pawson waved play on.

A series of Chelsea set-pieces came to nothing and in the second period of extra-time, with fatigue setting in, chances were again in short supply as penalties loomed.

Tuchel’s decision to sub off sub Ruben Loftus-Cheek for Ross Barkley in the final seconds was intriguing move, given how his Kepa Arrizabalaga switch in February back-fired.

Barkley did score his penalty but the tale had an unhappily familiar ending for Chelsea, who – through the finest of margins – missed out on another trophy. As for Liverpool, it’s now a question of how many…

What’s next?

Liverpool travel to Southampton on Tuesday at 8pm while Chelsea host Leicester on Thursday at 7.45pm. On the final day of the Premier League season, Liverpool host Wolves and Chelsea host Watford on Sunday at 4pm.

Liverpool’s remaining fixtures

May 17 – Southampton (a) Premier League, live on Sky Sports

May 22 – Wolves (h) Premier League

May 28 – Real Madrid (n) Champions League final

Chelsea’s remaining fixtures

May 19 – Leicester (h) Premier League

May 22 – Watford (h) Premier League

Liverpool beat Chelsea on pens again to win FA Cup

Liverpool completed a clean sweep of the domestic cups with another penalty shoot-out win over Chelsea at Wembley in the FA Cup final, as Kostas Tsimikas struck the decisive spot-kick after Mason Mount’s effort was saved by Alisson.

It had taken 22 penalties to separate the sides in February’s Carabao Cup final and while there were only 14 taken after another goalless 120 minutes on this occasion, it was once again Jurgen Klopp’s side who clinched the silverware by the narrowest of margins, handing Chelsea a third straight FA Cup final defeat in the process.

Mount dropped to his haunches as Liverpool’s players and staff ran off to celebrate with their fans amid a fog of red flares – he has now lost six major finals at Wembley.

Earlier in the shoot-out, Sadio Mane – who scored a winning penalty for Senegal at the Africa Cup of Nations and another to send them to the World Cup earlier this year – had missed the opportunity to clinch it for Liverpool following Cesar Azpilicueta’s strike against the post, but Tsimikas kept his cool to become the unlikely hero.

Liverpool's Kostas Tsimikas celebrates scoring the winning penalty at Wembley
Image:
Liverpool’s Kostas Tsimikas celebrates scoring the winning penalty at Wembley

Liverpool’s success was tempered by injuries to Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk, which could potentially damage their hopes of an unprecedented quadruple, with their Premier League pursuit set to continue on Tuesday at Southampton on Sky Sports and their Champions League final with Real Madrid on May 28.

But the scenes of wild celebration at the end on the pitch and in the stands suggested Liverpool were only focused on this moment. They last won both domestic cups in 2000/01 and this was their first FA Cup triumph since Steven Gerrard’s heroics against West Ham in 2006.

The 141st FA Cup final, 150 years on from the first, had seemed unlikely to go all the way in the opening 15 minutes, as livewire Luis Diaz gave Trevoh Chalobah real problems during an electric start from Liverpool, but Chelsea gained a foothold and hit the bar through a Marcos Alonso free-kick during their own fast start to the second half.

The woodwork was then struck twice in quick succession by Liverpool at the other end inside the final 10 minutes of normal time, with Diaz denied before Andy Robertson miscued a close-range volley.

With fatigue setting in through extra-time on a warm Wembley afternoon, extra-time saw the tempo drop, but the drama cranked up again in the shoot-out – and it was once again the red end celebrating.

How the penalty shoot-out went

  • Alonso scores, Milner scores
  • Azpilicueta hits post, Thiago scores
  • James scores, Firmino scores
  • Barkley scores, Alexander-Arnold scores
  • Jorginho scores, Mane penalty saved
  • Ziyech scores, Jota scores
  • Mount penalty saved, Tsimikas scores

Those Liverpool supporters had booed both the national anthem and Abide With Me before kick-off, but were cheering a sensational start from Diaz when play got underway.

The winger had been a standout performer in Liverpool’s Carabao Cup success over Chelsea and was immediately tormenting Chalobah, getting the better of the 22-year-old centre-back four times inside the first quarter of an hour.

It seemed at that stage only a matter of time before a Diaz move delivered the opener for Liverpool but, with wing-back Reece James tucking in to help out his team-mate Chalobah, Chelsea came through the early storm and created good moments of their own for Christian Pulisic and Marcos Alonso.

Mo Salah went down injured for Liverpool in the FA Cup final with Chelsea
Image:
Mo Salah went down injured for Liverpool in the FA Cup final with Chelsea

The match – and potentially Liverpool’s season – took another twist on 33 minutes, when Salah was forced off. He looked relatively comfortable as he walked down the tunnel but there will now inevitably be concerns about the part he can play in Liverpool’s remaining matches.

His replacement Diogo Jota passed up a fine chance just before half-time, volleying Andy Robertson’s cross over from eight yards before Romelu Lukaku – starting with Kai Havertz out injured – followed suit with a trickier chance moments later.

Team news

  • Kai Havertz was a surprise omission from the Chelsea squad due to injury, with Romelu Lukaku starting up front, while Timo Werner was injured in the warm up. However Mateo Kovacic won his race to be fit. The Blues were otherwise unchanged from their 3-0 win over Leeds on Wednesday.
  • Liverpool made five changes from Tuesday’s win at Aston Villa, with Mohamed Salah back in ahead of Diogo Jota, Thiago Alcantarain place of Curtis Jones, Jordan Henderson covering for the injured Fabinho, Ibrahima Konate preferred to Joel Matip and Andy Robertson replacing Kostas Tsimikas.

The second half also began with a flurry of chances – although this time they were for Chelsea, with Alonso dragging a shot wide, Alisson saving sharply from Pulisic, and Alonso then smacking a free-kick against the bar from out-wide.

Liverpool struck back with Robertson unable to bundle in at the back post, Diaz shooting over from the edge of the box, Jota arrowing just off target and Naby Keita making Edouard Mendy work. But still there was no breakthrough.

The teams continued to trade blows, with Pulisic shooting wide and Diaz bending a fine shot over before James stopped a swift Liverpool counter-attack with a combination of good defending and then a foul on Thiago to earn the first booking of the match.

Chelsea's Christian Pulisic (centre) gets past Liverpool's Sadio Mane (left) and Naby Keita
Image:
Chelsea’s Christian Pulisic (centre) gets past Liverpool’s Jordan Henderson (left) and Naby Keita

But Liverpool kept on coming and hit both posts in quick succession as the clock ticked down, with Diaz denied after a shuffle and shot from eight yards before Robertson miscued his volley from the other side when he seemed certain to convert. There was still time for Diaz to curl just off target but, for the fourth time this season, 90 minutes wasn’t enough to separate these sides.

There was another blow for Liverpool at the turn around, with Van Dijk subbed off and looking frustrated in the dugout. On the pitch, his centre-back partner Ibrahima Konate took a risk when he floored Hakim Ziyech in the box, although ref Craig Pawson waved play on.

A series of Chelsea set-pieces came to nothing and in the second period of extra-time, with fatigue setting in, chances were again in short supply as penalties loomed.

Player Ratings

Chelsea: Mendy (8), Chalobah (7), Silva (8), Rudiger (7), James (8), Jorginho (8), Kovacic (7), Alonso (8), Mount (7), Pulisic (6), Lukaku (5).

Subs: Kante (6), Ziyech (7), Azpilicueta (5), Loftus-Cheek (6), Barkley (7)

Liverpool: Alisson (9), Alexander-Arnold (8), Konate (8), Van Dijk (7), Robertson (7), Thiago (8), Henderson (7), Keita (7), Salah (6), Mane (7), Diaz (9).

Subs: Jota (7), Milner (7), Matip (7), Tsimikas (7), Firmino (7)

Man of the Match: Luis Diaz (Liverpool)

Tuchel’s decision to sub off sub Ruben Loftus-Cheek for Ross Barkley in the final seconds was intriguing move, given how his Kepa Arrizabalaga switch in February back-fired.

Barkley did score his penalty but the tale had an unhappily familiar ending for Chelsea, who, through the finest of margins, missed out on another trophy, with this loss adding to their FA Cup final defeats to Arsenal and Leicester City in recent years.

As for Liverpool – who have drawn level with Chelsea on eight FA Cups – it’s now a question of how much more silverware they can finish the season with…

Klopp: Liverpool and Chelsea both mentality monsters

Jurgen Klopp celebrates Liverpool's win
Image:
Jurgen Klopp celebrates Liverpool’s win

Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp to the BBC: “Outstanding, it was an incredible, intense game against Chelsea – they would have deserved it exactly the same way, like in the Carabao Cup. That’s how small the margins are.

“I couldn’t be more proud of my boys, the shift they put in, how hard they fought, the early changes. I think Virgil is fine, but his muscle was hurt.

“All of these things, missing good chances, overcoming good moments from Chelsea, then having really good moments ourselves…

“Then in the penalty shoot-out, it was nerve-racking, my nails are gone but I really feel for Chelsea. For the second time, 120 minutes and you get nothing, that’s too hard. But for us I’m pretty happy.

“We are mentality monsters but there were mentality monsters in blue as well – it was one penalty. Chelsea played outstanding but in the end there must be one winner and that was us today.”

Tuchel sad but proud

Chelsea boss Thomas Tuchel: “Like in the last final, in the Carabao Cup, it’s no regrets. I told the team I’m proud.

“We were sure that we would be competitive and make life very difficult for Liverpool. We did it again. We struggled in the first 15 minutes but then we were excellent for the whole match. We got to 0-0 against maybe the best attacking team in the world and we also created a lot of chances. We deserved it, as they deserved it as well, but again we lose on penalties.

“We are very disappointed of course. We are sad but at the same time proud.

“I was sure we would win today. I was sure before and I was sure during the match that momentum was on our side. I was sure until the very last minute but unfortunately I was not right. I have to digest it and keep on going. That’s life in sports.

“We have everything it takes to win trophies, we proved it. We have a Club World Cup and a European Super Cup and I don’t feel sorry this was at the beginning of the season and in winter.

“We were good in Champions League, strong in both domestic cups, we can produce peak performances and we have the mentality in the club to shape the mentality of the players, but Man City and Liverpool have shown you need this on a consistency.”

What’s next?

Liverpool travel to Southampton on Tuesday at 8pm while Chelsea host Leicester on Thursday at 7.45pm. On the final day of the Premier League season, Liverpool host Wolves and Chelsea host Watford on Sunday at 4pm.

Liverpool’s remaining fixtures

May 17 – Southampton (a) Premier League, live on Sky Sports

May 22 – Wolves (h) Premier League

May 28 – Real Madrid (n) Champions League final

Chelsea’s remaining fixtures

May 19 – Leicester (h) Premier League

May 22 – Watford (h) Premier League

Liverpool beat Chelsea on pens again to win FA Cup

Liverpool completed a clean sweep of the domestic cups with another penalty shoot-out win over Chelsea at Wembley in the FA Cup final, as Kostas Tsimikas struck the decisive spot-kick after Mason Mount’s effort was saved by Alisson.

It had taken 22 penalties to separate the sides in February’s Carabao Cup final and while there were only 14 taken after another goalless 120 minutes on this occasion, it was once again Jurgen Klopp’s side who clinched the silverware by the narrowest of margins, handing Chelsea a third straight FA Cup final defeat in the process.

Mount dropped to his haunches as Liverpool’s players and staff ran off to celebrate with their fans amid a fog of red flares – he has now lost six major finals at Wembley.

Earlier in the shoot-out, Sadio Mane – who scored a winning penalty for Senegal at the Africa Cup of Nations and another to send them to the World Cup earlier this year – had missed the opportunity to clinch it for Liverpool following Cesar Azpilicueta’s strike against the post, but Tsimikas kept his cool to become the unlikely hero.

Liverpool's Kostas Tsimikas celebrates scoring the winning penalty at Wembley
Image:
Liverpool’s Kostas Tsimikas celebrates scoring the winning penalty at Wembley

Liverpool’s success was tempered by injuries to Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk, which could potentially damage their hopes of an unprecedented quadruple, with their Premier League pursuit set to continue on Tuesday at Southampton on Sky Sports and their Champions League final with Real Madrid on May 28.

But the scenes of wild celebration at the end on the pitch and in the stands suggested Liverpool were only focused on this moment. They last won both domestic cups in 2000/01 and this was their first FA Cup triumph since Steven Gerrard’s heroics against West Ham in 2006.

The 141st FA Cup final, 150 years on from the first, had seemed unlikely to go all the way in the opening 15 minutes, as livewire Luis Diaz gave Trevoh Chalobah real problems during an electric start from Liverpool, but Chelsea gained a foothold and hit the bar through a Marcos Alonso free-kick during their own fast start to the second half.

The woodwork was then struck twice in quick succession by Liverpool at the other end inside the final 10 minutes of normal time, with Diaz denied before Andy Robertson miscued a close-range volley.

With fatigue setting in through extra-time on a warm Wembley afternoon, extra-time saw the tempo drop, but the drama cranked up again in the shoot-out – and it was once again the red end celebrating.

How the penalty shoot-out went

  • Alonso scores, Milner scores
  • Azpilicueta hits post, Thiago scores
  • James scores, Firmino scores
  • Barkley scores, Alexander-Arnold scores
  • Jorginho scores, Mane penalty saved
  • Ziyech scores, Jota scores
  • Mount penalty saved, Tsimikas scores

Those Liverpool supporters had booed both the national anthem and Abide With Me before kick-off, but were cheering a sensational start from Diaz when play got underway.

The winger had been a standout performer in Liverpool’s Carabao Cup success over Chelsea and was immediately tormenting Chalobah, getting the better of the 22-year-old centre-back four times inside the first quarter of an hour.

It seemed at that stage only a matter of time before a Diaz move delivered the opener for Liverpool but, with wing-back Reece James tucking in to help out his team-mate Chalobah, Chelsea came through the early storm and created good moments of their own for Christian Pulisic and Marcos Alonso.

Mo Salah went down injured for Liverpool in the FA Cup final with Chelsea
Image:
Mo Salah went down injured for Liverpool in the FA Cup final with Chelsea

The match – and potentially Liverpool’s season – took another twist on 33 minutes, when Salah was forced off. He looked relatively comfortable as he walked down the tunnel but there will now inevitably be concerns about the part he can play in Liverpool’s remaining matches.

His replacement Diogo Jota passed up a fine chance just before half-time, volleying Andy Robertson’s cross over from eight yards before Romelu Lukaku – starting with Kai Havertz out injured – followed suit with a trickier chance moments later.

Team news

  • Kai Havertz was a surprise omission from the Chelsea squad due to injury, with Romelu Lukaku starting up front, while Timo Werner was injured in the warm up. However Mateo Kovacic won his race to be fit. The Blues were otherwise unchanged from their 3-0 win over Leeds on Wednesday.
  • Liverpool made five changes from Tuesday’s win at Aston Villa, with Mohamed Salah back in ahead of Diogo Jota, Thiago Alcantarain place of Curtis Jones, Jordan Henderson covering for the injured Fabinho, Ibrahima Konate preferred to Joel Matip and Andy Robertson replacing Kostas Tsimikas.

The second half also began with a flurry of chances – although this time they were for Chelsea, with Alonso dragging a shot wide, Alisson saving sharply from Pulisic, and Alonso then smacking a free-kick against the bar from out-wide.

Liverpool struck back with Robertson unable to bundle in at the back post, Diaz shooting over from the edge of the box, Jota arrowing just off target and Naby Keita making Edouard Mendy work. But still there was no breakthrough.

The teams continued to trade blows, with Pulisic shooting wide and Diaz bending a fine shot over before James stopped a swift Liverpool counter-attack with a combination of good defending and then a foul on Thiago to earn the first booking of the match.

Chelsea's Christian Pulisic (centre) gets past Liverpool's Sadio Mane (left) and Naby Keita
Image:
Chelsea’s Christian Pulisic (centre) gets past Liverpool’s Jordan Henderson (left) and Naby Keita

But Liverpool kept on coming and hit both posts in quick succession as the clock ticked down, with Diaz denied after a shuffle and shot from eight yards before Robertson miscued his volley from the other side when he seemed certain to convert. There was still time for Diaz to curl just off target but, for the fourth time this season, 90 minutes wasn’t enough to separate these sides.

There was another blow for Liverpool at the turn around, with Van Dijk subbed off and looking frustrated in the dugout. On the pitch, his centre-back partner Ibrahima Konate took a risk when he floored Hakim Ziyech in the box, although ref Craig Pawson waved play on.

A series of Chelsea set-pieces came to nothing and in the second period of extra-time, with fatigue setting in, chances were again in short supply as penalties loomed.

Player Ratings

Chelsea: Mendy (8), Chalobah (7), Silva (8), Rudiger (7), James (8), Jorginho (8), Kovacic (7), Alonso (8), Mount (7), Pulisic (6), Lukaku (5).

Subs: Kante (6), Ziyech (7), Azpilicueta (5), Loftus-Cheek (6), Barkley (7)

Liverpool: Alisson (9), Alexander-Arnold (8), Konate (8), Van Dijk (7), Robertson (7), Thiago (8), Henderson (7), Keita (7), Salah (6), Mane (7), Diaz (9).

Subs: Jota (7), Milner (7), Matip (7), Tsimikas (7), Firmino (7)

Man of the Match: Luis Diaz (Liverpool)

Tuchel’s decision to sub off sub Ruben Loftus-Cheek for Ross Barkley in the final seconds was intriguing move, given how his Kepa Arrizabalaga switch in February back-fired.

Barkley did score his penalty but the tale had an unhappily familiar ending for Chelsea, who, through the finest of margins, missed out on another trophy, with this loss adding to their FA Cup final defeats to Arsenal and Leicester City in recent years.

As for Liverpool – who have drawn level with Chelsea on eight FA Cups – it’s now a question of how much more silverware they can finish the season with…

Klopp: Liverpool and Chelsea both mentality monsters

Jurgen Klopp celebrates Liverpool's win
Image:
Jurgen Klopp celebrates Liverpool’s win

Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp to the BBC: “Outstanding, it was an incredible, intense game against Chelsea – they would have deserved it exactly the same way, like in the Carabao Cup. That’s how small the margins are.

“I couldn’t be more proud of my boys, the shift they put in, how hard they fought, the early changes. I think Virgil is fine, but his muscle was hurt.

“All of these things, missing good chances, overcoming good moments from Chelsea, then having really good moments ourselves…

“Then in the penalty shoot-out, it was nerve-racking, my nails are gone but I really feel for Chelsea. For the second time, 120 minutes and you get nothing, that’s too hard. But for us I’m pretty happy.

“We are mentality monsters but there were mentality monsters in blue as well – it was one penalty. Chelsea played outstanding but in the end there must be one winner and that was us today.”

Tuchel sad but proud

Chelsea boss Thomas Tuchel: “Like in the last final, in the Carabao Cup, it’s no regrets. I told the team I’m proud.

“We were sure that we would be competitive and make life very difficult for Liverpool. We did it again. We struggled in the first 15 minutes but then we were excellent for the whole match. We got to 0-0 against maybe the best attacking team in the world and we also created a lot of chances. We deserved it, as they deserved it as well, but again we lose on penalties.

“We are very disappointed of course. We are sad but at the same time proud.

“I was sure we would win today. I was sure before and I was sure during the match that momentum was on our side. I was sure until the very last minute but unfortunately I was not right. I have to digest it and keep on going. That’s life in sports.

“We have everything it takes to win trophies, we proved it. We have a Club World Cup and a European Super Cup and I don’t feel sorry this was at the beginning of the season and in winter.

“We were good in Champions League, strong in both domestic cups, we can produce peak performances and we have the mentality in the club to shape the mentality of the players, but Man City and Liverpool have shown you need this on a consistency.”

What’s next?

Liverpool travel to Southampton on Tuesday at 8pm while Chelsea host Leicester on Thursday at 7.45pm. On the final day of the Premier League season, Liverpool host Wolves and Chelsea host Watford on Sunday at 4pm.

Liverpool’s remaining fixtures

May 17 – Southampton (a) Premier League, live on Sky Sports

May 22 – Wolves (h) Premier League

May 28 – Real Madrid (n) Champions League final

Chelsea’s remaining fixtures

May 19 – Leicester (h) Premier League

May 22 – Watford (h) Premier League

Forest seize first-leg advantage | 'Sheff Utd will be happier side'

Nottingham Forest took a significant step towards reaching the Championship play-off final as a dominant display helped them to a 2-1 semi-final first-leg win over Sheffield United.

Jack Colback took advantage of an ill-timed slip from Ben Osborn to fire Steve Cooper’s men in front (10), before Blades captain John Egan was caught in possession by Joe Lolley, allowing Brennan Johnson to fire in an crucial, ice cold second (71).

But just as hope looked to be fading for United, they pulled one back in second-half stoppage time, as Sander Berge bundled the ball over the line, despite replays suggesting Jack Robinson handled the ball before doing the midfielder did so (90+1).

On Tuesday night at the City Ground, the teams will go to battle once more – in a game live on Sky Sports Football – for a place at Wembley on Sunday May 29.


Tuesday 17th May 7:30pm


Kick off 7:45pm

Sky Sports Football
Sky Sports Football

How Cooper’s Reds took a step towards Wembley

As South Yorkshire basked in temperatures of over 20 degrees, there was a party atmosphere at Bramall Lane, as the journey to Wembley began for two of the giants of the second tier.

In his programme notes, Paul Heckingbottom called upon the Blades fans to “understand how important the role they have in what we are trying to achieve is” and they responded as expected, creating a deafening cauldron of noise that clearly spurred the players on to an encouraging start.

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Jack Colback was on hand to put Nottingham Forest ahead against Sheffield United in their first-leg encounter

It was nearly rewarded early on, too, when Sander Berge was bundled to the deck as he attacked a free-kick, though referee Andre Marriner quickly indicated that he would be taking no further action. But within seconds, Forest took the lead.

Time seemed to stand still for a moment, as Joe Worrall’s speculative aerial ball found Sam Surridge, who squared for Philip Zinckernagel. Ben Osborn lost his footing, the Dane had a shot saved by Wes Foderingham, but Colback was on hand to bail out his team-mate and find the net.

Sheffield United came close to drawing level when John Egan’s powerful, goalbound header was headed off the line by Surridge, but it was all Forest for the remainder of the half – they could quite fathomably have scored two or three more goals.

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Brennan Johnson put Nottingham Forest 2-0 ahead versus Sheffield United in the first leg of their Championship play-off clash

High-risk defending from the hosts allowed Johnson to drive into the box from halfway to sting the Blades goalkeeper’s palms, before Ryan Yates nodded wide unmarked. Foderingham then made a crucial save to deny Surridge from close-range, before clawing Johnson’s header away seconds later.

Though United were less vulnerable on the counter after the break, and their attacks became more coherent, time after time their finishing left plenty to be desired, while Brice Samba able to make numerous simple catches from crosses into the box.

And they were architects of their own downfall midway through the second half, when Egan was too slow to react to Lolley’s run, with the substitute able to get a shot away that was deflected into the path of Johnson, who finished coolly.

The hosts did, however, find a way to halve the deficit in the closing minutes, when Berge forced the ball over the line to renew Blades hopes ahead of Tuesday’s second leg.

What the managers said…

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Despite losing 2-1 to Nottingham Forest, Sheffield United manager Paul Heckingbottom was pleased with his side’s resilience as they gave themselves a chance of still progressing in the second leg.

Sheffield United’s Paul Heckingbottom: “Their players are coming off gutted and ours are coming off with a chance. It’s half-time and we’ve been behind before this season and come back and won. We’ve got to recover and prepare as well as we can – that starts now.

“We went to the very end and our goal was pivotal for us. We knew they’d be coming and countering. They’ve got good players in transition and we weren’t good enough.

“In the second half we were much better. They defended their box really well and obviously when they break, their opportunities come when we’re stretched. It was an error which led to their second goal, but credit our players for fighting back.”

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Nottingham Forest manager Steve Cooper was pleased with his side’s performance in their 2-1 first leg win over Sheffield United.

Nottingham Forest’s Steve Cooper: “I’m not going to walk out of here irritated that we’ve taken a lead in the first leg of the play-offs. There’s frustration of course that we’ve conceded and we should have scored more than we did, but it was a proper play-off game.

“In the second half they had more of the ball than we’d have liked, but we still looked a threat. If someone had said we’d have created that many chances in a game of that tension away from home you’d be very happy with it. We’ve got a lot of young players who haven’t experienced games like this. We’re very positive and we can’t wait for Tuesday now. Let’s go.”

Analysis: ‘Sheff Utd will be happier side after late goal’

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Sander Berge’s late header pulled one back for Sheffield United against Nottingham Forest ahead of the second leg.

Former Forest defender Michael Dawson on Sky Sports Football:

“Time will tell whether that goal will cost Forest. They could have been far more ahead. But at 2-0 there is always that opportunity. Sheffield United will be a lot happier now with the manner in which the game ended.

“If you’d asked them before the game they’d have snapped your hand off for a 2-1 lead. But they’ll be so disappointed with the goal they conceded.”

Former Sheff Utd midfielder Michael Brown on Sky Sports:

“That was the chance, right in the final seconds, they needed something going into the second leg. It was a disappointing performance overall but it shows how tight it can be, if you can get something at the end of it.

“Now there’s a bit more confidence on what was a real difficult afternoon for Sheffield United.”

Man of the Match – Brennan Johnson

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Brennan Johnson believes Nottingham Forest could have beaten Sheffield United in more emphatic fashion, but he’s confident his side will still progress to the Championship play-off final.

“We’re in a good position from winning the game. We played well today and had a lot of chances. We’d have liked the advantage to have been bigger, but we’ll take any advantage going into Tuesday.”

What’s next?

The play-off semi-final second leg will take place at the City Ground on Tuesday May 17, live on Sky Sports Football; Kick off 7.45pm. The winner will face either Huddersfield or Luton in the play-off final at Wembley on Sunday May 29.

Forest seize first-leg advantage | 'Sheff Utd will be happier side'

Nottingham Forest took a significant step towards reaching the Championship play-off final as a dominant display helped them to a 2-1 semi-final first-leg win over Sheffield United.

Jack Colback took advantage of an ill-timed slip from Ben Osborn to fire Steve Cooper’s men in front (10), before Blades captain John Egan was caught in possession by Joe Lolley, allowing Brennan Johnson to fire in an crucial, ice cold second (71).

But just as hope looked to be fading for United, they pulled one back in second-half stoppage time, as Sander Berge bundled the ball over the line, despite replays suggesting Jack Robinson handled the ball before doing the midfielder did so (90+1).

On Tuesday night at the City Ground, the teams will go to battle once more – in a game live on Sky Sports Football – for a place at Wembley on Sunday May 29.


Tuesday 17th May 7:30pm


Kick off 7:45pm

Sky Sports Football
Sky Sports Football

How Cooper’s Reds took a step towards Wembley

As South Yorkshire basked in temperatures of over 20 degrees, there was a party atmosphere at Bramall Lane, as the journey to Wembley began for two of the giants of the second tier.

In his programme notes, Paul Heckingbottom called upon the Blades fans to “understand how important the role they have in what we are trying to achieve is” and they responded as expected, creating a deafening cauldron of noise that clearly spurred the players on to an encouraging start.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Jack Colback was on hand to put Nottingham Forest ahead against Sheffield United in their first-leg encounter

It was nearly rewarded early on, too, when Sander Berge was bundled to the deck as he attacked a free-kick, though referee Andre Marriner quickly indicated that he would be taking no further action. But within seconds, Forest took the lead.

Time seemed to stand still for a moment, as Joe Worrall’s speculative aerial ball found Sam Surridge, who squared for Philip Zinckernagel. Ben Osborn lost his footing, the Dane had a shot saved by Wes Foderingham, but Colback was on hand to bail out his team-mate and find the net.

Sheffield United came close to drawing level when John Egan’s powerful, goalbound header was headed off the line by Surridge, but it was all Forest for the remainder of the half – they could quite fathomably have scored two or three more goals.

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Brennan Johnson put Nottingham Forest 2-0 ahead versus Sheffield United in the first leg of their Championship play-off clash

High-risk defending from the hosts allowed Johnson to drive into the box from halfway to sting the Blades goalkeeper’s palms, before Ryan Yates nodded wide unmarked. Foderingham then made a crucial save to deny Surridge from close-range, before clawing Johnson’s header away seconds later.

Though United were less vulnerable on the counter after the break, and their attacks became more coherent, time after time their finishing left plenty to be desired, while Brice Samba able to make numerous simple catches from crosses into the box.

And they were architects of their own downfall midway through the second half, when Egan was too slow to react to Lolley’s run, with the substitute able to get a shot away that was deflected into the path of Johnson, who finished coolly.

The hosts did, however, find a way to halve the deficit in the closing minutes, when Berge forced the ball over the line to renew Blades hopes ahead of Tuesday’s second leg.

What the managers said…

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Despite losing 2-1 to Nottingham Forest, Sheffield United manager Paul Heckingbottom was pleased with his side’s resilience as they gave themselves a chance of still progressing in the second leg.

Sheffield United’s Paul Heckingbottom: “Their players are coming off gutted and ours are coming off with a chance. It’s half-time and we’ve been behind before this season and come back and won. We’ve got to recover and prepare as well as we can – that starts now.

“We went to the very end and our goal was pivotal for us. We knew they’d be coming and countering. They’ve got good players in transition and we weren’t good enough.

“In the second half we were much better. They defended their box really well and obviously when they break, their opportunities come when we’re stretched. It was an error which led to their second goal, but credit our players for fighting back.”

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Nottingham Forest manager Steve Cooper was pleased with his side’s performance in their 2-1 first leg win over Sheffield United.

Nottingham Forest’s Steve Cooper: “I’m not going to walk out of here irritated that we’ve taken a lead in the first leg of the play-offs. There’s frustration of course that we’ve conceded and we should have scored more than we did, but it was a proper play-off game.

“In the second half they had more of the ball than we’d have liked, but we still looked a threat. If someone had said we’d have created that many chances in a game of that tension away from home you’d be very happy with it. We’ve got a lot of young players who haven’t experienced games like this. We’re very positive and we can’t wait for Tuesday now. Let’s go.”

Analysis: ‘Sheff Utd will be happier side after late goal’

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Sander Berge’s late header pulled one back for Sheffield United against Nottingham Forest ahead of the second leg.

Former Forest defender Michael Dawson on Sky Sports Football:

“Time will tell whether that goal will cost Forest. They could have been far more ahead. But at 2-0 there is always that opportunity. Sheffield United will be a lot happier now with the manner in which the game ended.

“If you’d asked them before the game they’d have snapped your hand off for a 2-1 lead. But they’ll be so disappointed with the goal they conceded.”

Former Sheff Utd midfielder Michael Brown on Sky Sports:

“That was the chance, right in the final seconds, they needed something going into the second leg. It was a disappointing performance overall but it shows how tight it can be, if you can get something at the end of it.

“Now there’s a bit more confidence on what was a real difficult afternoon for Sheffield United.”

Man of the Match – Brennan Johnson

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Brennan Johnson believes Nottingham Forest could have beaten Sheffield United in more emphatic fashion, but he’s confident his side will still progress to the Championship play-off final.

“We’re in a good position from winning the game. We played well today and had a lot of chances. We’d have liked the advantage to have been bigger, but we’ll take any advantage going into Tuesday.”

What’s next?

The play-off semi-final second leg will take place at the City Ground on Tuesday May 17, live on Sky Sports Football; Kick off 7.45pm. The winner will face either Huddersfield or Luton in the play-off final at Wembley on Sunday May 29.

Forest seize first-leg advantage | 'Sheff Utd will be happier side'

Nottingham Forest took a significant step towards reaching the Championship play-off final as a dominant display helped them to a 2-1 semi-final first-leg win over Sheffield United.

Jack Colback took advantage of an ill-timed slip from Ben Osborn to fire Steve Cooper’s men in front (10), before Blades captain John Egan was caught in possession by Joe Lolley, allowing Brennan Johnson to fire in an crucial, ice cold second (71).

But just as hope looked to be fading for United, they pulled one back in second-half stoppage time, as Sander Berge bundled the ball over the line, despite replays suggesting Jack Robinson handled the ball before doing the midfielder did so (90+1).

On Tuesday night at the City Ground, the teams will go to battle once more – in a game live on Sky Sports Football – for a place at Wembley on Sunday May 29.


Tuesday 17th May 7:30pm


Kick off 7:45pm

Sky Sports Football
Sky Sports Football

How Cooper’s Reds took a step towards Wembley

As South Yorkshire basked in temperatures of over 20 degrees, there was a party atmosphere at Bramall Lane, as the journey to Wembley began for two of the giants of the second tier.

In his programme notes, Paul Heckingbottom called upon the Blades fans to “understand how important the role they have in what we are trying to achieve is” and they responded as expected, creating a deafening cauldron of noise that clearly spurred the players on to an encouraging start.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Jack Colback was on hand to put Nottingham Forest ahead against Sheffield United in their first-leg encounter

It was nearly rewarded early on, too, when Sander Berge was bundled to the deck as he attacked a free-kick, though referee Andre Marriner quickly indicated that he would be taking no further action. But within seconds, Forest took the lead.

Time seemed to stand still for a moment, as Joe Worrall’s speculative aerial ball found Sam Surridge, who squared for Philip Zinckernagel. Ben Osborn lost his footing, the Dane had a shot saved by Wes Foderingham, but Colback was on hand to bail out his team-mate and find the net.

Sheffield United came close to drawing level when John Egan’s powerful, goalbound header was headed off the line by Surridge, but it was all Forest for the remainder of the half – they could quite fathomably have scored two or three more goals.

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Brennan Johnson put Nottingham Forest 2-0 ahead versus Sheffield United in the first leg of their Championship play-off clash

High-risk defending from the hosts allowed Johnson to drive into the box from halfway to sting the Blades goalkeeper’s palms, before Ryan Yates nodded wide unmarked. Foderingham then made a crucial save to deny Surridge from close-range, before clawing Johnson’s header away seconds later.

Though United were less vulnerable on the counter after the break, and their attacks became more coherent, time after time their finishing left plenty to be desired, while Brice Samba able to make numerous simple catches from crosses into the box.

And they were architects of their own downfall midway through the second half, when Egan was too slow to react to Lolley’s run, with the substitute able to get a shot away that was deflected into the path of Johnson, who finished coolly.

The hosts did, however, find a way to halve the deficit in the closing minutes, when Berge forced the ball over the line to renew Blades hopes ahead of Tuesday’s second leg.

What the managers said…

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Despite losing 2-1 to Nottingham Forest, Sheffield United manager Paul Heckingbottom was pleased with his side’s resilience as they gave themselves a chance of still progressing in the second leg.

Sheffield United’s Paul Heckingbottom: “Their players are coming off gutted and ours are coming off with a chance. It’s half-time and we’ve been behind before this season and come back and won. We’ve got to recover and prepare as well as we can – that starts now.

“We went to the very end and our goal was pivotal for us. We knew they’d be coming and countering. They’ve got good players in transition and we weren’t good enough.

“In the second half we were much better. They defended their box really well and obviously when they break, their opportunities come when we’re stretched. It was an error which led to their second goal, but credit our players for fighting back.”

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Nottingham Forest manager Steve Cooper was pleased with his side’s performance in their 2-1 first leg win over Sheffield United.

Nottingham Forest’s Steve Cooper: “I’m not going to walk out of here irritated that we’ve taken a lead in the first leg of the play-offs. There’s frustration of course that we’ve conceded and we should have scored more than we did, but it was a proper play-off game.

“In the second half they had more of the ball than we’d have liked, but we still looked a threat. If someone had said we’d have created that many chances in a game of that tension away from home you’d be very happy with it. We’ve got a lot of young players who haven’t experienced games like this. We’re very positive and we can’t wait for Tuesday now. Let’s go.”

Analysis: ‘Sheff Utd will be happier side after late goal’

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Sander Berge’s late header pulled one back for Sheffield United against Nottingham Forest ahead of the second leg.

Former Forest defender Michael Dawson on Sky Sports Football:

“Time will tell whether that goal will cost Forest. They could have been far more ahead. But at 2-0 there is always that opportunity. Sheffield United will be a lot happier now with the manner in which the game ended.

“If you’d asked them before the game they’d have snapped your hand off for a 2-1 lead. But they’ll be so disappointed with the goal they conceded.”

Former Sheff Utd midfielder Michael Brown on Sky Sports:

“That was the chance, right in the final seconds, they needed something going into the second leg. It was a disappointing performance overall but it shows how tight it can be, if you can get something at the end of it.

“Now there’s a bit more confidence on what was a real difficult afternoon for Sheffield United.”

Man of the Match – Brennan Johnson

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Brennan Johnson believes Nottingham Forest could have beaten Sheffield United in more emphatic fashion, but he’s confident his side will still progress to the Championship play-off final.

“We’re in a good position from winning the game. We played well today and had a lot of chances. We’d have liked the advantage to have been bigger, but we’ll take any advantage going into Tuesday.”

What’s next?

The play-off semi-final second leg will take place at the City Ground on Tuesday May 17, live on Sky Sports Football; Kick off 7.45pm. The winner will face either Huddersfield or Luton in the play-off final at Wembley on Sunday May 29.

Forest seize first-leg advantage | 'Sheff Utd will be happier side'

Nottingham Forest took a significant step towards reaching the Championship play-off final as a dominant display helped them to a 2-1 semi-final first-leg win over Sheffield United.

Jack Colback took advantage of an ill-timed slip from Ben Osborn to fire Steve Cooper’s men in front (10), before Blades captain John Egan was caught in possession by Joe Lolley, allowing Brennan Johnson to fire in an crucial, ice cold second (71).

But just as hope looked to be fading for United, they pulled one back in second-half stoppage time, as Sander Berge bundled the ball over the line, despite replays suggesting Jack Robinson handled the ball before doing the midfielder did so (90+1).

On Tuesday night at the City Ground, the teams will go to battle once more – in a game live on Sky Sports Football – for a place at Wembley on Sunday May 29.


Tuesday 17th May 7:30pm


Kick off 7:45pm

Sky Sports Football
Sky Sports Football

How Cooper’s Reds took a step towards Wembley

As South Yorkshire basked in temperatures of over 20 degrees, there was a party atmosphere at Bramall Lane, as the journey to Wembley began for two of the giants of the second tier.

In his programme notes, Paul Heckingbottom called upon the Blades fans to “understand how important the role they have in what we are trying to achieve is” and they responded as expected, creating a deafening cauldron of noise that clearly spurred the players on to an encouraging start.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Jack Colback was on hand to put Nottingham Forest ahead against Sheffield United in their first-leg encounter

It was nearly rewarded early on, too, when Sander Berge was bundled to the deck as he attacked a free-kick, though referee Andre Marriner quickly indicated that he would be taking no further action. But within seconds, Forest took the lead.

Time seemed to stand still for a moment, as Joe Worrall’s speculative aerial ball found Sam Surridge, who squared for Philip Zinckernagel. Ben Osborn lost his footing, the Dane had a shot saved by Wes Foderingham, but Colback was on hand to bail out his team-mate and find the net.

Sheffield United came close to drawing level when John Egan’s powerful, goalbound header was headed off the line by Surridge, but it was all Forest for the remainder of the half – they could quite fathomably have scored two or three more goals.

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Brennan Johnson put Nottingham Forest 2-0 ahead versus Sheffield United in the first leg of their Championship play-off clash

High-risk defending from the hosts allowed Johnson to drive into the box from halfway to sting the Blades goalkeeper’s palms, before Ryan Yates nodded wide unmarked. Foderingham then made a crucial save to deny Surridge from close-range, before clawing Johnson’s header away seconds later.

Though United were less vulnerable on the counter after the break, and their attacks became more coherent, time after time their finishing left plenty to be desired, while Brice Samba able to make numerous simple catches from crosses into the box.

And they were architects of their own downfall midway through the second half, when Egan was too slow to react to Lolley’s run, with the substitute able to get a shot away that was deflected into the path of Johnson, who finished coolly.

The hosts did, however, find a way to halve the deficit in the closing minutes, when Berge forced the ball over the line to renew Blades hopes ahead of Tuesday’s second leg.

What the managers said…

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Despite losing 2-1 to Nottingham Forest, Sheffield United manager Paul Heckingbottom was pleased with his side’s resilience as they gave themselves a chance of still progressing in the second leg.

Sheffield United’s Paul Heckingbottom: “Their players are coming off gutted and ours are coming off with a chance. It’s half-time and we’ve been behind before this season and come back and won. We’ve got to recover and prepare as well as we can – that starts now.

“We went to the very end and our goal was pivotal for us. We knew they’d be coming and countering. They’ve got good players in transition and we weren’t good enough.

“In the second half we were much better. They defended their box really well and obviously when they break, their opportunities come when we’re stretched. It was an error which led to their second goal, but credit our players for fighting back.”

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Nottingham Forest manager Steve Cooper was pleased with his side’s performance in their 2-1 first leg win over Sheffield United.

Nottingham Forest’s Steve Cooper: “I’m not going to walk out of here irritated that we’ve taken a lead in the first leg of the play-offs. There’s frustration of course that we’ve conceded and we should have scored more than we did, but it was a proper play-off game.

“In the second half they had more of the ball than we’d have liked, but we still looked a threat. If someone had said we’d have created that many chances in a game of that tension away from home you’d be very happy with it. We’ve got a lot of young players who haven’t experienced games like this. We’re very positive and we can’t wait for Tuesday now. Let’s go.”

Analysis: ‘Sheff Utd will be happier side after late goal’

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Sander Berge’s late header pulled one back for Sheffield United against Nottingham Forest ahead of the second leg.

Former Forest defender Michael Dawson on Sky Sports Football:

“Time will tell whether that goal will cost Forest. They could have been far more ahead. But at 2-0 there is always that opportunity. Sheffield United will be a lot happier now with the manner in which the game ended.

“If you’d asked them before the game they’d have snapped your hand off for a 2-1 lead. But they’ll be so disappointed with the goal they conceded.”

Former Sheff Utd midfielder Michael Brown on Sky Sports:

“That was the chance, right in the final seconds, they needed something going into the second leg. It was a disappointing performance overall but it shows how tight it can be, if you can get something at the end of it.

“Now there’s a bit more confidence on what was a real difficult afternoon for Sheffield United.”

Man of the Match – Brennan Johnson

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Brennan Johnson believes Nottingham Forest could have beaten Sheffield United in more emphatic fashion, but he’s confident his side will still progress to the Championship play-off final.

“We’re in a good position from winning the game. We played well today and had a lot of chances. We’d have liked the advantage to have been bigger, but we’ll take any advantage going into Tuesday.”

What’s next?

The play-off semi-final second leg will take place at the City Ground on Tuesday May 17, live on Sky Sports Football; Kick off 7.45pm. The winner will face either Huddersfield or Luton in the play-off final at Wembley on Sunday May 29.

Forest seize first-leg advantage | 'Sheff Utd will be happier side'

Nottingham Forest took a significant step towards reaching the Championship play-off final as a dominant display helped them to a 2-1 semi-final first-leg win over Sheffield United.

Jack Colback took advantage of an ill-timed slip from Ben Osborn to fire Steve Cooper’s men in front (10), before Blades captain John Egan was caught in possession by Joe Lolley, allowing Brennan Johnson to fire in an crucial, ice cold second (71).

But just as hope looked to be fading for United, they pulled one back in second-half stoppage time, as Sander Berge bundled the ball over the line, despite replays suggesting Jack Robinson handled the ball before doing the midfielder did so (90+1).

On Tuesday night at the City Ground, the teams will go to battle once more – in a game live on Sky Sports Football – for a place at Wembley on Sunday May 29.


Tuesday 17th May 7:30pm


Kick off 7:45pm

Sky Sports Football
Sky Sports Football

How Cooper’s Reds took a step towards Wembley

As South Yorkshire basked in temperatures of over 20 degrees, there was a party atmosphere at Bramall Lane, as the journey to Wembley began for two of the giants of the second tier.

In his programme notes, Paul Heckingbottom called upon the Blades fans to “understand how important the role they have in what we are trying to achieve is” and they responded as expected, creating a deafening cauldron of noise that clearly spurred the players on to an encouraging start.

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Jack Colback was on hand to put Nottingham Forest ahead against Sheffield United in their first-leg encounter

It was nearly rewarded early on, too, when Sander Berge was bundled to the deck as he attacked a free-kick, though referee Andre Marriner quickly indicated that he would be taking no further action. But within seconds, Forest took the lead.

Time seemed to stand still for a moment, as Joe Worrall’s speculative aerial ball found Sam Surridge, who squared for Philip Zinckernagel. Ben Osborn lost his footing, the Dane had a shot saved by Wes Foderingham, but Colback was on hand to bail out his team-mate and find the net.

Sheffield United came close to drawing level when John Egan’s powerful, goalbound header was headed off the line by Surridge, but it was all Forest for the remainder of the half – they could quite fathomably have scored two or three more goals.

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Brennan Johnson put Nottingham Forest 2-0 ahead versus Sheffield United in the first leg of their Championship play-off clash

High-risk defending from the hosts allowed Johnson to drive into the box from halfway to sting the Blades goalkeeper’s palms, before Ryan Yates nodded wide unmarked. Foderingham then made a crucial save to deny Surridge from close-range, before clawing Johnson’s header away seconds later.

Though United were less vulnerable on the counter after the break, and their attacks became more coherent, time after time their finishing left plenty to be desired, while Brice Samba able to make numerous simple catches from crosses into the box.

And they were architects of their own downfall midway through the second half, when Egan was too slow to react to Lolley’s run, with the substitute able to get a shot away that was deflected into the path of Johnson, who finished coolly.

The hosts did, however, find a way to halve the deficit in the closing minutes, when Berge forced the ball over the line to renew Blades hopes ahead of Tuesday’s second leg.

What the managers said…

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Despite losing 2-1 to Nottingham Forest, Sheffield United manager Paul Heckingbottom was pleased with his side’s resilience as they gave themselves a chance of still progressing in the second leg.

Sheffield United’s Paul Heckingbottom: “Their players are coming off gutted and ours are coming off with a chance. It’s half-time and we’ve been behind before this season and come back and won. We’ve got to recover and prepare as well as we can – that starts now.

“We went to the very end and our goal was pivotal for us. We knew they’d be coming and countering. They’ve got good players in transition and we weren’t good enough.

“In the second half we were much better. They defended their box really well and obviously when they break, their opportunities come when we’re stretched. It was an error which led to their second goal, but credit our players for fighting back.”

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Nottingham Forest manager Steve Cooper was pleased with his side’s performance in their 2-1 first leg win over Sheffield United.

Nottingham Forest’s Steve Cooper: “I’m not going to walk out of here irritated that we’ve taken a lead in the first leg of the play-offs. There’s frustration of course that we’ve conceded and we should have scored more than we did, but it was a proper play-off game.

“In the second half they had more of the ball than we’d have liked, but we still looked a threat. If someone had said we’d have created that many chances in a game of that tension away from home you’d be very happy with it. We’ve got a lot of young players who haven’t experienced games like this. We’re very positive and we can’t wait for Tuesday now. Let’s go.”

Analysis: ‘Sheff Utd will be happier side after late goal’

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Sander Berge’s late header pulled one back for Sheffield United against Nottingham Forest ahead of the second leg.

Former Forest defender Michael Dawson on Sky Sports Football:

“Time will tell whether that goal will cost Forest. They could have been far more ahead. But at 2-0 there is always that opportunity. Sheffield United will be a lot happier now with the manner in which the game ended.

“If you’d asked them before the game they’d have snapped your hand off for a 2-1 lead. But they’ll be so disappointed with the goal they conceded.”

Former Sheff Utd midfielder Michael Brown on Sky Sports:

“That was the chance, right in the final seconds, they needed something going into the second leg. It was a disappointing performance overall but it shows how tight it can be, if you can get something at the end of it.

“Now there’s a bit more confidence on what was a real difficult afternoon for Sheffield United.”

Man of the Match – Brennan Johnson

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Brennan Johnson believes Nottingham Forest could have beaten Sheffield United in more emphatic fashion, but he’s confident his side will still progress to the Championship play-off final.

“We’re in a good position from winning the game. We played well today and had a lot of chances. We’d have liked the advantage to have been bigger, but we’ll take any advantage going into Tuesday.”

What’s next?

The play-off semi-final second leg will take place at the City Ground on Tuesday May 17, live on Sky Sports Football; Kick off 7.45pm. The winner will face either Huddersfield or Luton in the play-off final at Wembley on Sunday May 29.

Forest seize first-leg advantage | 'Sheff Utd will be happier side'

Nottingham Forest took a significant step towards reaching the Championship play-off final as a dominant display helped them to a 2-1 semi-final first-leg win over Sheffield United.

Jack Colback took advantage of an ill-timed slip from Ben Osborn to fire Steve Cooper’s men in front (10), before Blades captain John Egan was caught in possession by Joe Lolley, allowing Brennan Johnson to fire in an crucial, ice cold second (71).

But just as hope looked to be fading for United, they pulled one back in second-half stoppage time, as Sander Berge bundled the ball over the line, despite replays suggesting Jack Robinson handled the ball before doing the midfielder did so (90+1).

On Tuesday night at the City Ground, the teams will go to battle once more – in a game live on Sky Sports Football – for a place at Wembley on Sunday May 29.


Tuesday 17th May 7:30pm


Kick off 7:45pm

Sky Sports Football
Sky Sports Football

How Cooper’s Reds took a step towards Wembley

As South Yorkshire basked in temperatures of over 20 degrees, there was a party atmosphere at Bramall Lane, as the journey to Wembley began for two of the giants of the second tier.

In his programme notes, Paul Heckingbottom called upon the Blades fans to “understand how important the role they have in what we are trying to achieve is” and they responded as expected, creating a deafening cauldron of noise that clearly spurred the players on to an encouraging start.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Jack Colback was on hand to put Nottingham Forest ahead against Sheffield United in their first-leg encounter

It was nearly rewarded early on, too, when Sander Berge was bundled to the deck as he attacked a free-kick, though referee Andre Marriner quickly indicated that he would be taking no further action. But within seconds, Forest took the lead.

Time seemed to stand still for a moment, as Joe Worrall’s speculative aerial ball found Sam Surridge, who squared for Philip Zinckernagel. Ben Osborn lost his footing, the Dane had a shot saved by Wes Foderingham, but Colback was on hand to bail out his team-mate and find the net.

Sheffield United came close to drawing level when John Egan’s powerful, goalbound header was headed off the line by Surridge, but it was all Forest for the remainder of the half – they could quite fathomably have scored two or three more goals.

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Brennan Johnson put Nottingham Forest 2-0 ahead versus Sheffield United in the first leg of their Championship play-off clash

High-risk defending from the hosts allowed Johnson to drive into the box from halfway to sting the Blades goalkeeper’s palms, before Ryan Yates nodded wide unmarked. Foderingham then made a crucial save to deny Surridge from close-range, before clawing Johnson’s header away seconds later.

Though United were less vulnerable on the counter after the break, and their attacks became more coherent, time after time their finishing left plenty to be desired, while Brice Samba able to make numerous simple catches from crosses into the box.

And they were architects of their own downfall midway through the second half, when Egan was too slow to react to Lolley’s run, with the substitute able to get a shot away that was deflected into the path of Johnson, who finished coolly.

The hosts did, however, find a way to halve the deficit in the closing minutes, when Berge forced the ball over the line to renew Blades hopes ahead of Tuesday’s second leg.

What the managers said…

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Despite losing 2-1 to Nottingham Forest, Sheffield United manager Paul Heckingbottom was pleased with his side’s resilience as they gave themselves a chance of still progressing in the second leg.

Sheffield United’s Paul Heckingbottom: “Their players are coming off gutted and ours are coming off with a chance. It’s half-time and we’ve been behind before this season and come back and won. We’ve got to recover and prepare as well as we can – that starts now.

“We went to the very end and our goal was pivotal for us. We knew they’d be coming and countering. They’ve got good players in transition and we weren’t good enough.

“In the second half we were much better. They defended their box really well and obviously when they break, their opportunities come when we’re stretched. It was an error which led to their second goal, but credit our players for fighting back.”

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Nottingham Forest manager Steve Cooper was pleased with his side’s performance in their 2-1 first leg win over Sheffield United.

Nottingham Forest’s Steve Cooper: “I’m not going to walk out of here irritated that we’ve taken a lead in the first leg of the play-offs. There’s frustration of course that we’ve conceded and we should have scored more than we did, but it was a proper play-off game.

“In the second half they had more of the ball than we’d have liked, but we still looked a threat. If someone had said we’d have created that many chances in a game of that tension away from home you’d be very happy with it. We’ve got a lot of young players who haven’t experienced games like this. We’re very positive and we can’t wait for Tuesday now. Let’s go.”

Analysis: ‘Sheff Utd will be happier side after late goal’

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Sander Berge’s late header pulled one back for Sheffield United against Nottingham Forest ahead of the second leg.

Former Forest defender Michael Dawson on Sky Sports Football:

“Time will tell whether that goal will cost Forest. They could have been far more ahead. But at 2-0 there is always that opportunity. Sheffield United will be a lot happier now with the manner in which the game ended.

“If you’d asked them before the game they’d have snapped your hand off for a 2-1 lead. But they’ll be so disappointed with the goal they conceded.”

Former Sheff Utd midfielder Michael Brown on Sky Sports:

“That was the chance, right in the final seconds, they needed something going into the second leg. It was a disappointing performance overall but it shows how tight it can be, if you can get something at the end of it.

“Now there’s a bit more confidence on what was a real difficult afternoon for Sheffield United.”

Man of the Match – Brennan Johnson

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Brennan Johnson believes Nottingham Forest could have beaten Sheffield United in more emphatic fashion, but he’s confident his side will still progress to the Championship play-off final.

“We’re in a good position from winning the game. We played well today and had a lot of chances. We’d have liked the advantage to have been bigger, but we’ll take any advantage going into Tuesday.”

What’s next?

The play-off semi-final second leg will take place at the City Ground on Tuesday May 17, live on Sky Sports Football; Kick off 7.45pm. The winner will face either Huddersfield or Luton in the play-off final at Wembley on Sunday May 29.