LONDON – Substitute Ben Watson scored an injury-time winner to give
Wigan Athletic a sensational 1-0 win over Manchester City at Wembley
Stadium on Saturday in the biggest FA Cup final upset in 25 years.
With extra time beckoning, Watson met a Shaun Maloney corner with a near-post header to stun 2011 cup winners City and give Wigan the first major trophy in their 81-year history.
Victory represented a fairytale moment for the modest northwest club
and their chairman, Dave Whelan, who punched the air with delight at the
final whistle, after a shock that stands comparison with Wimbledon’s
1988 success over Liverpool.
He had earlier led the team onto the pitch, having broken his leg
while playing for Blackburn Rovers in the 1960 FA Cup final in an
incident that ended his top-level football career.
Beneath driving rain, Wigan manager Roberto Martinez celebrated with
his players on the pitch, as the Latics temporarily forgot their
perilous fate in the Premier League, where they are on the brink of
relegation.
Watson’s goal completed a miserable season for City and their
manager, Roberto Mancini, who awoke on Saturday to media reports that he
is about to be replaced by Malaga manager Manuel Pellegrini.
League champions last year, City will finish the season without a
trophy after being burnt off by Manchester United in the league and
crashing out of the Champions League in the group phase.
City were overwhelming pre-game favourites but Mancini showed how
seriously he was taking the game by starting with Joe Hart in goal,
despite having previously vowed to persevere with deputy Costel
Pantilimon.
Wigan welcomed back Antolin Alcaraz following a hamstring problem,
but Maynor Figueroa, Ivan Ramis, Ronnie Stam and Jean Beausejour all
missed out out through injury.
True to expectations, City started on the front foot, with Wigan
goalkeeper Joel Robles forced to parry a dipping Yaya Toure half-volley
in the fourth minute after Carlos Tevez hit the wall with a free-kick.
Wigan refused to be cowed, however, and City soon found themselves on the back foot.
Callum McManaman should have done better than curl wide from seven
yards after cutting inside Matija Nastasic from Arouna Kone’s sweeping
pass, while Gareth Barry had to produce a carefully timed challenge on
McManaman right on the edge of the City area.
It was not until the 29th minute that City showed signs of life as an
attacking force, with Robles narrowly diverting an effort from a
sliding Tevez over the bar with his foot following a cut-back by David
Silva.
City ended the half strongly, with Robles saving from Barry and then
springing to his left to fist away a well-struck curler from Nasri.
Mancini’s men remained on the front foot in the second period and
Emmerson Boyce had to produce a timely block to prevent Aguero from
turning in Tevez’s low cross at the near post.
Mancini introduced James Milner and Jack Rodwell from the bench and
the pair nearly combined for the opener in the 72nd minute when Rodwell
got his head to Milner’s free-kick, only for Robles to save.
Wigan had been subdued, but with 15 minutes to play, Maloney almost
broke the deadlock with a cunning free-kick from wide on the right that
bounced off the top of the bar.
Wigan were given further reason for optimism in the 84th minute, when
Pablo Zabaleta was shown a second yellow card for felling McManaman as
he bore down on goal.
Maloney whipped the resulting free-kick wide, but Wigan had the
momentum and in the first minute of injury time, Watson glanced
Maloney’s corner past Hart to write his name in cup final history.
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