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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
John Brewin

Sheffield United 3-2 Blackburn: FA Cup quarter-final – as it happened

Tommy Doyle celebrates his dramatic late winner.
Tommy Doyle celebrates his dramatic late winner. Photograph: Jan Kruger/Getty Images

Here’s Jonathan Liew’s match report from Bramall Lane.

Paul Heckingbottom, the Blades manager.

Pleased with the performance, proud and it was a fantastic game where both teams played their part. We went behind twice to one of the best counter-attacking teams in the division. Some players are not willing to shoot from there but Tommy is not one of those. A fantastic goal and one worth winning any game. Plenty of players who have not been to Wembley, it was a game of big moments and it lived up to it.

Some reaction from Jon-Dahl Tomasson, the Blackburn manager.

Bitterly disappointed to lose the game. You know how cruel and tough football can be. Disappointed we couldn’t give our fans the dream of going to Wembley. It was enjoyable for the fans and congratulations to Sheffield United. The players did an excellent job and will be disappointed like we all are. They should be proud when they look back on this cup run It was something special.

Here’s the winning goal, and it was a beauty,

Tommy Doyle, FA Cup goal hero, speak to ITV: “Amazing. We worked really hard for that. We made it difficult for ourselves at times but to be going to Wembley is a special feeling. I just give it a good wallop. Probably one the best feelings I have had when the fans go mental. I want to create my own history.”

Updated

Full-time: Sheffield United 3-2 Blackburn Rovers

Tommy Doyle, the grandson of two FA Cup winners from 1969, was the hero of a classic Cup match that rolled back the years to remind of just how good the competition can be. It’s all on the line, and games can swing in so many directions. Blackburn will rue a tie that got away from them but have the play-offs to think of. Blades can dream of Wembley, and must hope it doesn’t distract them from automatic promotion. What a game.

Doyle is congratulated by Sheffield United's manager Paul Heckingbottom.
Doyle is congratulated by Sheffield United's manager Paul Heckingbottom. Photograph: Darren Staples/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

90+8 min: Basham tries to launch away the ball but a corner is conceded. One last chance, and up goes Aynsley Pears. But the ball is headed clear, and that’s that. Blades are off to Wembley in five weeks.

90+7 min: Ndiaye almost composes another, but Bogle’s finish is rather tired for a second-half sub.

90+5 min: Bramall Lane is rocking, and the plastic Alan Cork beards can be put on the production line by the swagmen. Wembley Way will be thick with the smog of Woodbines.

90+3 min: Tommy Doyle, of course, is the grandson of two late City legends in Glyn Pardoe and Mike Doyle. On the television commentary, rather unfortunately, Clive Tyldesley appears unaware they are both no longer with us and thinks they will be celebrating together. Perhaps they will be, but that’s a whole, other, very deep question.

Updated

Goal! Sheffield United 3-2 Blackburn (Doyle, 90+1)

From long distance, having had an earlier sighter, the Manchester City loanee, slams in a shot, across Foderingham and beyond. What a goal, a minor FA Cup classic.

Doyle scores sees his shot cross swerve in.
Doyle scores sees his shot cross swerve in. Photograph: Nigel French/PA
Doyle celebrates with teammates after scoring.
Doyle celebrates with teammates after scoring. Photograph: Jan Kruger/Getty Images

Updated

90 min: That Blades goal knocked the stuffing from Blackburn, who had a couple of chances to win the game and now find themselves under severe pressure. Four minutes added on.

89 min: Bogle on for Baldock as a Sheffield United change.

87 min: The pressure climbing up and up, and Berge sets up Doyle to shoot, but rather lamely.

85 min: All Blades now, with Ndiaye prominent like he was in the opening stages.

82 min: Now Blades fancy this one, to try and get another one, the winner, before full-time.

Goal! Sheffield United 2-2 Blackburn Rovers (McBurnie, 81)

It’s a solo effort, Ollie McBurnie picking up the ball in the area, turning past one, and then perhaps miskicking but scoring at the far post. As solo goals go, that’s scruffy and doesn’t say much for a five-man defence.

McBurnie manoeuvres in the box and scores.
McBurnie manoeuvres in the box and scores. Photograph: Darren Staples/AFP/Getty Images
McBurnie celebrates after scoring.
McBurnie celebrates after scoring. Photograph: Jan Kruger/Getty Images

Updated

79 min: Berge has been snuffed out in midfield. Rovers make a change, Wharton and Britton on, Hedges and Rankin-Costello off, with Wharton a centre-back. That makes a back five and may give more room to Berge.

77 min: Sheffield United chance, made by McAtee, missed by McBurnie. Billy Sharp thought he should have got the pass.

76 min: Loud roars as Brereton-Diaz hounds down a long hoof down the channels. This is the FA Cup we know and love.

74 min: Ooof. Brereton-Diaz spins and goes and his layoff just misses Gallagher. Another chance to win it passed up.

73 min: Ahmedhodzic goes the length of the field, only to be brought down by a fine tackle. No foul given. The Rovers fans now singing of Wembley.

71 min: Hedges cuts in and smashes the inside of the post. Oof. That would have been the clincher.

69 min: A break in play, and Wes Foderingham is injured. Off goes Jack Robinson, and on comes Billy Sharp, with Foderingham recovered and clapping loudly in encouragement.

67 min: More Joe Pearson: “My turn. Since I’m quite old, my ‘Let It Flow’ reference would have to be Dave Mason.”

66 min: Sheffield United have gone off the boil since the first half ended, some miskicks and the formerly neat play long forgotten. Billy Sharp is coming on soon. Is he still the leading scorer in English football since 2000? Or is that now Harry Kane? Answers on a virtual postcard to…

62 min: Hayden Carter is booked and the FA Cup system means he will miss the semi if Rovers get there. Or he could get a red card and serve three-match EFL ban. We think. Go figure.

Goal! Sheffield United 1-2 Blackburn Rovers (Szmodics, 60)

Blades are caught napping in front of their goal, and Gallagher springs the offside trap by seeing Egan is keeping them onside. The finish is excellent.

Szmodics slots in.
Szmodics slots in. Photograph: Anna Gowthorpe/REX/Shutterstock
Szmodics celebrates with teammates after scoring.
Szmodics celebrates with teammates after scoring. Photograph: Naomi Baker/Getty Images

Updated

58 min: Oh wow, Travis plays in McAtee and a Blades goal seems certain, only for Aynsley Pears to save and bail out his defender by saving with his foot.

McAtee has a shot saved by Pears.
McAtee has a shot saved by Pears. Photograph: Nigel French/PA

Updated

56 min: End to end, as McAtee swings fresh air after Ndiaye cuts the ball inside. Off goes Gallagher down the other end, only to commit a foul.

55 min: Berge, skilful yet with the cruising speed of a VW-Beetle, loses the ball. It might not be the ideal game for someone of such stately speed.

53 min: Neither teams seem willing to play for extra-time and penalties just yet. The referee meanwhile seems to keeping wishing to let it flow.

50 min: Wes Foderingham meanwhile makes a pair of fine saves, the second at close range from Ben Brereton-Diaz, after Harry Pickering’s effort from the edge of the box.

48 min: Luke Jones gets in touch: “When Sheffield United scored, they had a player (Egan I think) on his hands and knees on the touchline. There’s something about a player on the floor, raising his head to watch the ball as it spins into the net, that just adds so much drama to a goal. Perfect look for this game.”

“Temur Ketsbaia,” says Steve Wiles. Well that’s a player I’d forgotten. Bald, Georgian and lot of fun if I remember. I could google it but the memory I have is all good so why bother.”

47 min: Baldock arrives late on to a McAtee pass and hits the side-netting.

46 min: The teams take to the field to the tune of Judas Priest’s United, then some more John Denver, as booed by the Rovers fans. Perhaps the musical interlude put off McAtee as Ndiaye put him in to score from close range. The guilty party blames a bobble.

Andy McCulloch gets in touch: “Must be the first time notoriously hedonistic space-rockers Spiritualized have been mentioned in the commentary at 42 minutes? The band’s lysergic single ‘Let It Flow’ lends itself well to the ethos of Nicholson, Cruyff, samba soccer, and Guardiola, et al.”

Perhaps refs need to keep things on the straight and narrow a bit more. You know it’s true.

Tom Stratford gets in touch: “Hi John, if Joe has any further questions on the penalty/yellow card decision I understand José María Enriquez Negreira now offers a bespoke refereeing consultancy service to help with this sort of thing?”

Updated

Half-time: Sheffield United 1-1 Blackburn Rovers

This is what the FA Cup is about. No quarter asked, none given. Both teams wanting to win, neither of them appearing to care about their league position. Two well-matched teams, two odd goals. All to play for…

45 min: Half-time approaches and some well-earned rests. It’s been full-bore stuff, and high-end stuff, too. Rankin-Costello, of Blackburn, is penalised for knocking over Ndiaye. Three minutes added on.

42 min: Men. At it. Ahmedhodzic launches Brereton-Diaz to the floor, and the ref waves play on. As it should be. Let it flow.

41 min: Baldock does well to nod away when the ball was arrowing to Brereton-Diaz, and that sets up another dead-ball examination from Rovers. Ryan Hedges takes, but that’s cleared. With Paul Heckingbottom bellowing instructions.

39 min: These teams are really well-matched. Both team glint with steel but Blades have a bit more verve while Rovers are strong on the set pieces.

37 min: Ndiaye tries a flick that fails to come off but it’s Blades playing the more creative football.

35 min: Ndiaye, Lowe and Doyle tried to play some football, and McAtee goes down the left, and tries to hang the ball up for McBurnie. The ball is headed behind, and hurriedly.

33 min: Good Foderingham from a Blackburn free-kick delivered to the head of Hyam, though he had been given chance to save. Tyler Morton’s delivery has been excellent.

32 min: Jack Robinson is lucky not to receive a second yellow for a rather reckless sliding tackle.

30 min: This is a rather magical FA Cup match, played at Championship pace, but without the buttock-clenching, all-or-nothing, this-is-so-important intensity of the EFL.

Goal! Sheffield United 1-1 Blackburn (Gallagher own goal, 28)

From outfield, through a field of players, Pears has no chance as the ball flies off Sam Gallagher and in, after Max Lowe thwacks a second ball from a corner at goal. Hit and hope, and hope was on Blades’ side. We are level.

Max Lowe keeps the celebrations muted after his off-target shot rebounds in off Sam Gallagher.
Max Lowe keeps the celebrations muted after his off-target shot rebounds in off Sam Gallagher. Photograph: Darren Staples/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

25 min: Joe Pearson: “I presume a fair bit of your audience are blissfully unaware of Aynsley Dunbar. But do you know him from Zappa or Journey, or indeed both?”

Answer: he plays the drums on Bowie’s Pin-Ups, replacing Woody Woodmansey, and was also in Whitesnake, the 1987 edition.

More Joe: “I don’t understand the yellow. Was it yellow because the keeper still had to make a save, otherwise it would have been red?”

I think you might have cracked the code there.

23 min: The Potteries’ most famous Chilean kept calm but this game threatens to boil over. Blades fans not happy with VAR. That goal wouldn’t have stood in previous rounds with no VAR.

Goal! Sheffield United 0-1 Blackburn (Brereton-Diaz 22)

Side-footed, right-footed, the Chilean international slots past Foderingham, who gets a touch but can’t keep it out. Against the run of play, but now we have a cup tie on our hands.

Ben Brereton Diaz puts away the penalty.
Ben Brereton Diaz puts away the penalty. Photograph: Jan Kruger/Getty Images

Updated

Penalty to Blackburn!

19 min: Chance for Blackburn…Gallagher’s shot is blocked by Robinson and Foderingham makes a save. Did it come off Robinson’s hand? Perhaps. The ref is called to the VAR set, and it’s given a penalty to Blackburn. It’s a yellow card for Robinson, when it might have been red. He’s lucky in one sense, unlucky in another.

Sam Gallagher’s shot hits Jack Robinson on the hand on its way to goal.
Sam Gallagher’s shot hits Jack Robinson on the hand on its way to goal. Photograph: Jan Kruger/Getty Images

Updated

16 min: Blades are piling it on, and must fancy a goal soon. They’ve dominated. Ahmedhodzic heads the ball behind from a corner in their latest attack.

Updated

14 min: Lovely play from Blades, with delicacy from Ndiaye, then Berge slips in McAtee. This is a highly skilled team, not at all like the Chris Wilder team of recent years.

13 min: Blackburn have been pegged back and are forced to look to the break for opportunities.

12 min: Tommy Doyle, footballing royalty himself, of impeccable lineage, has a free-kick cleared by Rovers.

10 min: And, lo, it appears Aynsley Pears is indeed named after Middlesbrough stalwart Steve Pears, once a reserve at Manchester United. Was he named after Aynsley Dunbar?

8 min: Good defending from Carter in stopping McBurnie sending away Ndiaye, and then Blades go away again. McAtee escapes and it’s down to him and Pears in the Rovers goal. Pears saves well. Then Doyle surges on from midfield and blams a shot at goal. Good save from Pears again. Any relation of Steve Pears?

6 min: To use the words of the late John Motson, it’s a crisp competitive cup tie. Needs a goal, actually. And there is something of an old-school vibe here, with neither manager resting many players.

5 min: Blades at last get time on the ball, and McAtee and McBurnie try to send away Ndiaye. This time, Rovers get it clear.

3 min: Sheffield United look a little overawed, with keeper Wes Foderingham charging out and almost making a mess of a clearance. Rovers look like they fancy it.

1 min: Away we go. And here comes John Denver, Annie’s Song and greasy chip butties. Perhaps the only football song to mention Woodbines….an early chance for Brereton Diaz, and he takes too much time over it, and has his shot blocked.

The teams are out at Bramall Lane where it’s quite the atmosphere, bubbling for a Sunday, midday kickoff. That’s what the Cup of Dreams is all about.

Paul Heckingbottom also spoke to the BBC.

There’s not many times you get the opportunity to go to Wembley as a player or as a fan. It would be a reward for the fans, for their support. We know what is at stake. The FA Cup is huge and this season seems to have been a good one and we’ve been involved in a couple of different occasions and stories so it would be nice to have another one. They’ll approach the game the same way as us, what have they got to lose?

Some pre-match thoughts from Jon-Dahl Tomasson, the Blackburn manager, in speaking to the BBC.

It’s an opportunity for every player to be part of the new history of the club. It’s something we need to chase. There will be only one team winning the FA Cup at the end but we can dream of Wembley. Just saying the word Wembley says it all about the passion and this great competition. I’m hopeful of going there.

The FA Cup is the biggest cup in the world in my opinion. We haven’t been this far for a while so it has been an excellent run and we’re enjoying it. We beat them two weeks ago but we know we can lose this game because they are a team who need to get promoted when you look at their budget and their Premier League players.

Tomasson, who became an elite player, was a youngster when Newcastle reached the 1998 FA Cup final but didn’t play as support to Alan Shearer. That honour went to Temur Ketsbaia. And the sub striker, in days of five subs? Andreas Andersson.

In the fifth round, both teams beat Premier League opposition.

Philip Rebbeck gets in touch: “It might be worth noting that these two grand old clubs have won the FA Cup ten times between them. Admittedly the last came in 1925 and 1928 respectively but still impressive.”

Daniel Gallan wrote a short preview of this match.

It’s been eight years since a team from outside the Premier League made the semi-finals of the FA Cup (Reading, in 2015). That drought will end this Sunday as one of Sheffield United or Blackburn will progress to the last four. This is the most open and inclusive edition of the tournament for some time – half of the final eight teams play outside the top flight. Sheffield United were third-tier semi-finalists in 2014, and this is their third quarter-final in four seasons. Blackburn have a shoddy record at Bramall Lane, having lost there in all four of their previous visits – and Rovers’ last win here came courtesy of an Alan Shearer double in 1994. A win this weekend and a trip to Wembley would provide a shot in the arm for either team as they both push for promotion.

My colleague and friend Will Unwin travelled up the M65 to deepest Lancashire, to get the lowdown on Rovers.

The last time Blackburn won an FA Cup quarter-final, in 2007, Hayden Carter was at Manchester City – the club they beat that day – albeit in the under-sevens. The defender was released at 13 and was signed by Blackburn, where he has been joined by a number of teammates who went through similar rejection at Premier League clubs. They hope the next stage of their journey will be a Wembley semi-final, the reward if they win at Sheffield United on Sunday.

Rovers’ facilities and setup attract youngsters from farther afield. Lewis Travis arrived after time with Liverpool in his mid-teens, Joe Rankin-Costello from Manchester United and Tyrhys Dolan played for Manchester City, Preston and Burnley before joining in his late teens.

Good detail on those Champo clubs’ team news tweets. Premier League teams take note, as requested by the MBM community.

The teams

Sheffield United: Foderingham; Ahmedhodzic, Egan, Robinson; Baldock, Doyle, Berge, McAtee, Lowe; Ndiaye, McBurnie. Subs: Davies, Bogle, Basham, Arblaster, Norwood, Coulibaly, Fleck, Jebbison, Sharp

Blackburn Rovers: Pears, Rankin-Costello, Carter, Hyam, Pickering, Travis, Morton, Hedges, Szmodics, Brereton, Gallagher. Subs: Kaminski, Brittain, S. Wharton, Phillips, Edun, Garrett, A. Wharton, Dolan, Leonard.

Updated

Preamble

A big day out for the Championship, on terrestrial TV, rather than those of us devoted to the dulcet tones of Don Goodman and Andy Hinchcliffe, David Prutton and Michelle Owens in the studio, with Lee Hendrie’s suits an extra bonus. Both teams have far bigger fish to fry in the EFL, with Blades in second but with Middlesbrough’s hot breath down their neck. Rovers meanwhile were grateful to Neil Warnock’s Huddersfield yesterday and kept their toe in fifth place, and a play-off chance.

Now for the distraction of the FA Cup in which Blades have a more storied recent history than Rovers, despite Blackburn’s 1990s golden era. United reached the semis in 2013-14, losing to Hull, 2002-3, losing to Arsenal, and 1992-3, losing to Sheffield Wednesday with Alan Cork’s beard up front. Rovers last reached the semis in 2004-5, when they lost to Arsenal with Mark Hughes as manager. The previous time to that was in 1960, Brian Douglas and all that, when they lost the final in to Wolves.

To set aside all that history, both managers, Paul Heckingbottom and Jon-Dahl Tomasson, are likely to shuffle their pack. Blades did just that against Tottenham in the previous round and that really stuck in the craw of Antonio Conte, who mentioned it as part of his rant at Southampton yesterday.

Anyway, a visit to Wembley for two of English football’s oldest clubs is on the line.

Kick-off at 12pm UK time. Join me.

Updated

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