Man City and Everton suffer League Cup exits
September 26, 2012
City lost 4-2 after extra-time to top flight rivals Aston Villa with a completely different team to the one that started the 1-1 draw against Arsenal on Sunday, while Everton made six changes and were beaten 2-1 by second tier Leeds United.
Chelsea also rung the changes but emphatically booked their place in the fourth round with a 6-0 win over Wolverhampton Wanderers at Stamford Bridge.
City's second-string team still included multi-million pound signings Carlos Tevez, Jack Rodwell, James Milner, Gareth Barry and Mario Balotelli.
The latter drilled home a low shot to give City the lead with his first club goal since March, before Villa levelled when their former midfielder Barry deflected the ball into his own net.
Aleksandar Kolarov whipped in a free kick to give City the advantage for the second time on 64 minutes but Gabriel Agbonlahor levelled five minutes later to force extra time.
Charles N'Zogbia pounced on a loose ball to make it 3-2 and Agbonlahor wrapped up the tie with the aid of a big deflection that caused his shot to loop over City keeper Costel Pantilimon.
"I'm disappointed for the result, Aston Villa are a good team but we didn't play well," City manager Mancini said.
"Our play is not quick, we want to take one touch too many, this is not good."
Everton manager David Moyes retained only Victor Anichebe, Seamus Coleman, Marouane Fellaini, Johnny Heitinga and Kevin Mirallas from the team that started the 3-0 win over Swansea City on Saturday.
The visitors had made a barnstorming start to the Premier League campaign, sitting third after five matches, but their new-look 11 were quickly under pressure at Elland Road.
They fell behind when Aidy White jinked his way through the heart of the visitors' defence and curled a shot into the top corner after four minutes.
Leeds doubled their lead when a Danny Pugh shot was prodded into the bottom corner by Rodolph Austin in the second half before Sylvain Distin headed in a late consolation.
"I didn't think there was a weakness tonight, I thought we deserved it and make no mistake they wanted this tonight, they wanted to win," Leeds manager Neil Warnock said on Sky Sports.
"We put our head and bodies on the line but you have to do that in the cup."
John Terry put his FA hearing into racially abusing Anton Ferdinand out of his mind to return to Chelsea's starting line-up having started on the bench for Saturday's Premier League clash against Stoke City.
It was Terry's central defensive partner, Gary Cahill, who broke the deadlock heading in a Juan Mata free kick after four minutes, before Ryan Bertrand stroked home from 10 metres and Mata effectively ended the contest scoring Chelsea's third with only 17 minutes on the clock.
A second-half penalty from Oriol Romeu made it four before Fernando Torres headed a fifth and Victor Moses wrapped up the tie by scoring his first Chelsea goal.
"If you show complacency and disrespect to the opposition you pay the price," Chelsea assistant coach Eddie Newton told reporters. "We focused on the game, dealt with the matters at hand and we got a very good result and performance."
Garry Monk scored in the 90th minute for Premier League Swansea City who came from 2-1 down late on to beat third tier Crawley 3-2, while Wigan Athletic won 4-1 in an all-Premier League encounter at West Ham United.
Sunderland were reduced to 10 men after midfielder Lee Catermole was sent off in the first half against third tier MK Dons but still won 2-0 thanks to a Craig Gardner free kick and a tight-angled finish from James McClean.
Premier League new boys Southampton won 2-0 at home to Sheffield Wednesday. — Reuters
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