Chelsea into FA Cup semis as late double sinks 10-man Leicester in chaotic battle

Never underestimate Chelsea’s capacity for chaos. Only they could go 2-0 up against Championship opposition in an FA Cup quarter-final and end up needing stoppage-time goals to go through after a second half that will be remembered for Axel Disasi’s preposterous own-goal, more dissent from the crowd and Cole Palmer expunging the toxic atmosphere with a superb assist for Carney Chukwuemeka.

This was Chelsea at their most mystifying. The celebrations at the end were relieved. There had been boos for Mauricio Pochettino and Raheem Sterling when Leicester City fought back to level the tie just after the hour. Chelsea, two wins from collecting their first trophy under Pochettino, were sweating before the substitute Chukwuemeka combined with Palmer and broke Enzo Maresca’s side in the second of two added minutes.

Leicester, who had Callum Doyle sent off at 2-2, had to take heart from one of their closest rivals for promotion, Leeds United, coming close to causing an upset against Chelsea in the fifth round. They have wobbled of late, their lead at the top of the Championship whittled down to one point after a run of one win in five games, but they refused to be overawed.

It meant that Chelsea would have to be on their game if they were to make the most of hosting second-tier opposition for the third time in this year’s competition. Leicester were committed to their style, Harry Winks often dropping back to start moves from deep, and they caused problems during the first half. Patson Daka and Wout Faes both headed wide from inviting positions, the latter after the suspect Robert Sánchez flew off his line to claim a corner and got nowhere the ball.

Leicester needed more conviction in the key areas. For all their bravery, it was worth noting that many of their players had been below the required standard in top flight. Winks has fallen a long way since starting for Pochettino’s Tottenham in the Champions League final five years ago.

There was a remnant of the past in the Nigerian midfielder, Wilfried Ndidi, who was the only player in either starting line-up who played when Leicester beat Chelsea in the 2021 final. There was unease at Maresca having to trust in a centre-back pairing of Faes and Jannik Vestergaard.

Pochettino had picked an attacking team, Enzo Fernández’s suspension in midfield necessitating a switch from the favoured 4-3-3 system to something bolder. Mykahilo Mudryk was rewarded for his stunning goal against Newcastle with a start on the left, Sterling stuck close to Jackson in the middle and Chelsea were ahead after 13 minutes.

The goal came from a transition, sparked by Moisés Caicedo tackling Abdul Fatawu on the edge of Chelsea’s area. Possession was recycled and Palmer sent Jackson down the right. One on one with Vestergaard, he beat the Dane for strength and speed, went outside and rolled a pass across for Marc Cucurella to tap into an empty net.

Leicester’s right side had evaporated, Hamza Choudhury’s positioning exposed. Chelsea kept pushing. Mudryk and Sterling threatened.

Chelsea’s main issue was carelessness. There was a weird moment when Fatawu conceded a penalty with a lunge on Sterling. Palmer has converted five spot-kicks this season, so it was a surprise to see Sterling grab the ball. His kick was too central and Jakub Stolarczyk kept the score at 1-0.

Perhaps Sterling wanted to make a point after being overlooked by England again. Nobody can ever accuse him of hiding. He missed another chance, chipping wide after being released by Caicedo, but he had an assist when he drove down the left and set up Palmer just before half-time.

It was too simple. Chelsea prefer it bewildering. Six minutes into the second half, Disasi obliged. Racing back to deal with a loose ball on the right, the defender felt some pressure from Daka and panicked, even though he was 40 yards from goal. Sánchez, equally unconvincing in possession, was too far to his left and the goalkeeper was powerless to stop Disasi’s slice from spinning into the net.

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