May 6, 2012

Chelsea FC Overcame Liverpool FC 2-1 To Win Their Seventh FA Cup

Chelsea
It's getting to the point where Roberto Di Matteo would have strong grounds for unfair dismissal if Roman Abramovich doesn’t keep him as Chelsea manager.

The Italian was supposed to provide nothing more than a safe pair of hands until the end of the season when Abramovich decided that having a man who was sacked by West Brom in temporary charge was a better option than Andre Villas-Boas.

But two months on, the Blues have won the FA Cup and have a Champions League Final to come.
Goals by Ramires and Didier Drogba took the famous old trophy back to Stamford Bridge for the fourth time in six seasons and seventh time overall.

And if Di Matteo’s men were impressive in the way they dominated Kenny Dalglish’s side for more than three-quarters of the contest, the sheer defiance they showed after Andy Carroll’s reply was just as telling.

Petr Cech’s save to push Carroll’s 82nd-minute header onto the crossbar will go down as one of the cup final’s definitive moments.

Liverpool insisted that the ball had crossed the line – but television replays suggested assistant referee Andrew Garratt’s eyes had not failed him.

And so, 14 years after he scored a goal that was once the fastest in Cup-final history, this was another day for Di Matteo to savour. 

Chelsea FC overcame Liverpool FC 2-1 to win their seventh FA Cup and their fourth in six years thanks to Ramires's first-half goal and a landmark strike by Didier Drogba.

It was a cagey first half and, although Ramires gave Chelsea an early lead, opportunities were few and far between. Drogba doubled the Blues' advantage after the break to become the only player to score in four FA Cup finals. Andy Carroll gave Liverpool hope with an emphatic strike but Chelsea held on with the help of a superb reflex save by Petr Čech.

In his programme notes Chelsea's interim manager Roberto Di Matteo hailed his side's 'class and character' in their 5-1 semi-final victory against Tottenham Hotspur FC and Juan Mata showed plenty of the former to set up Ramires for the opening goal on 11 minutes. The Spanish international pounced on a mistake by Jay Spearing to find Ramires with a perfectly weighted pass and the midfielder raced clear of José Enrique to fire in a shot which went in off Pepe Reina at his near post.

Liverpool came close to an immediate response but Branislav Ivanović blocked Craig Bellamy's goal-bound volley after Chelsea failed to clear Glen Johnson's centre. Midway through the first half the lively Salomon Kalou looked to have weaved his way through the Liverpool defence but his mesmerising run was halted by Daniel Agger at the final hurdle.

The UEFA Champions League finalists continued to control the game in the second half and doubled their lead on 52 minutes. Frank Lampard evaded the challenge of Spearing in midfield and slid the ball into the path of Drogba, who squeezed his effort through the legs of Martin Škrtel and into the bottom right-hand corner to become the first player to score in four FA Cup finals.

Seemingly down and out, Liverpool were back in the game 12 minutes later when substitute Carroll pounced on a loose ball, made himself some room in the penalty area and rifled it into the roof of the net giving Čech no chance.

Buoyed by their goal, Liverpool went in search of an equaliser and came close when Carroll's header was superbly pawed on to the crossbar by Čech with eight minutes remaining. The west Londoners held on, however, to give themselves the perfect boost ahead of the UEFA Champions League showpiece in a fortnight's time.

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