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FA Cup 2020/21 Discussion

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FA Cup first round draw in full

Leyton Orient v Newport County

Havant & Waterlooville v Cray Valley

Sunderland v Mansfield Town

Bolton Wanderers v Crewe Alexandra

Oxford United v Peterborough United

Exeter City v AFC Fylde

Tonbridge Angels v Bradford City

Walsall v Bristol Rovers

Rochdale v Chesterfield

Swindon Town v Darlington

Barnet v Burton Albion

Wigan Athletic v Chorley

Tranmere Rovers v Accrington Stanley

Maldon & Tiptree v Morecambe

Bromley v Yeovil Town

Torquay United v Crawley Town

Eastbourne Borough v Blackpool

Cheltenham Town v South Shields

Stevenage v Concord Rangers

Harrogate Town v Skelmersdale United

Gillingham v Woking

Charlton Athletic v Plymouth Argyle

Hayes & Yeading United v Carlisle United

FC United of Manchester v Doncaster Rovers

Salford City v Hartlepool United

Scunthorpe United v Solihull Moors

Hull City v Fleetwood Town

Colchester United vs Marine

Barrow vs AFC Wimbledon

Dagenham and Redbridge vs Grimsby Town

Cambridge United vs Shrewsbury Town

Brackley Town vs Bishop's Stortford/St Albans City

Eastleigh vs MK Dons

Hampton and Richmond Borough vs Oldham Athletic

Boreham Wood v Southend United

Ipswich Town vs Portsmouth

Port Vale vs King's Lynn Town

Lincoln City vs Forest Green Rovers

Banbury United v Canvey Island
 
All 40 FA Cup round one ties, including those involving non-elite teams, will be played as planned from 6-9 November.

Elite sports can continue behind closed doors during the four-week lockdown from Thursday but rules on grassroots and amateur sport are being finalised.

The government has confirmed that the 10 non-elite teams left in the FA Cup can play under elite protocols.

But golf courses, driving ranges and tennis courts in England have been told to close until at least 3 December.

The BBC is showing 13 of the FA Cup first-round ties, with FC United of Manchester v Doncaster on BBC Two on Saturday (17:30 GMT).

There will be live streams of 12 further matches on BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website over the weekend.

All the matches will be played behind closed doors, with losing teams set to receive a share of prize money to lessen the financial impact of no fans attending.

What about other amateur sports?
Under the new restrictions, many facilities, including gyms and pools, must close, along with other indoor and outdoor leisure centres.

Both golf and tennis are trying to make a case for both to still be permitted outdoors between two individuals from different households in line with restrictions on exercise.

However, Prime Minister Boris Johnson's official spokesperson said the government will not reverse the decision to close golf courses and tennis courts in England.

When asked why the government is shutting them, he said: "People are able to use public spaces or walk or run in the park.

"The purpose of the tougher regulations, which I expect are going to be difficult for very many people, are to significantly reduce social contact."

Golf courses in Wales have been shut since 23 October, but Scotland and Northern Ireland have allowed their courses to stay open.

Tennis courts are also currently closed in Wales but open in Scotland and Northern Ireland, with protocols in place.

Digital, Culture, Media and Sport select committee chair Julian Knight MP said he did not think a "blanket ban" that includes stopping golf and tennis in England was the "correct way of going about things".

"These sports are uniquely built for social distancing and they opened safely in the spring in a limited way," Knight told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

What about youth sports?
BBC senior sports news reporter Laura Scott says there is little hope that under-18s sport will be exempt and almost no hope of indoor gyms and pools reversing orders to close.

Former Wales midfielder Robbie Savage is urging the government to allow grassroots sport for children to continue as long as schools remain open for their "physical and mental wellbeing".

"I would totally understand that if school were to be closed then grassroots sport should run parallel to that," Savage, who coaches youth football, told BBC Radio 5 Live.

"There is real concern - how do you explain taking away playing football three or more times a week when they are still going to school? It's heartbreaking.

"I don't think it will be allowed to continue, I think it will be back in the first week of December and I urge the youngsters to be optimistic - last time it was three months out but this time they hopefully have a date to adhere to."

Former DCMS select committee chair Damian Collins MP has written to Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden asking the government to allow youth sport to continue in England after 5 November.

He also called on the government to extend his definition of elite sport to include academy players at Premier League clubs and those in development centres like the England Rugby developing player programme and Sports England's talented athlete scholarship scheme.

"Young people will currently be allowed to continue with sport at school, and we believe that the risks to the spread of the coronavirus from outdoor grassroots youth sport would be minimal," he said, in a letter also signed by former sports ministers Tracey Crouch MP and Helen Grant MP.

"There would, however, be clear and lasting benefits for these young people if the government could support this."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/54781128
 
3rd round draw

Draw in full

Huddersfield Town v Plymouth Argyle

Southampton v Shrewsbury Town

Chorley v Derby County

Marine v Tottenham Hotspur

Wolverhampton Wanderers v Crystal Palace

Stockport County v West Ham United

Oldham Athletic v Bournemouth

Manchester United v Watford

Stevenage v Swansea

Everton v Rotherham

Nottingham Forest v Cardiff

Arsenal v Newcastle

Barnsley v Tranmere Rovers

Bristol Rovers v Sheffield United

Canvey Island/Boreham Wood v Millwall

Blackburn Rovers v Doncaster

Stoke City v Leicester

Wycombe v Preston

Crawley v Leeds

Burnley v MK Dons

Bristol City v Portsmouth

QPR v Fulham

Aston Villa v Liverpool

Brentford v Middlesbrough

Manchester City v Birmingham

Luton v Reading

Chelsea v Morecambe

Exeter v Sheffield Wednesday

Norwich v Coventry

Blackpool v West Brom

Newport County v Brighton

Cheltenham v Mansfield
 
There are a few different FA Cup rules this season.

Each team can use 5 subs during the tie.

If a player suffers a concussion (or potential concussion), additional subs can be made.
 
GOAL - Aston Villa 1-4 Liverpool
Mohamed Salah (65 mins)

Seems that this could end up as a big margin of defeat - Liverpool in full flow now
 
Best part about the FA Cup is the giant-killing opportunities every year, the fairy tales of low tier sides beating Premier League teams.

This year's extraordinary story comes tomorrow, when 8th-tier Marine FC come up against Tottenham.

A team with a ground for 3,000 people hosting a Premier League team with a £1 billion 60,000+ seater stadium. The magic of the oldest club competition on the planet.

Hoping and cheering for a big big upset tomorrow. Come on Marine!
 
FULL-TIME
Blackburn 0-1 Doncaster

Darren Moore is a happy man. His Doncaster side have done the business away to Championship Blackburn.

==

FULL-TIME
Stevenage 0-2 Swansea

All over and Swansea progress. Stevenage put up a bit of fight towards the end of the second half but by then it was too late.
 
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2 0 win for Arsenal against Newcastle after extra time.

Arsenal the better side and once again their youngsters playing very well.
 
Scott McTominay celebrated captaining Manchester United for the first time with the early winner which saw off Championship visitors Watford in an unconvincing FA Cup third round win.

The Scotland midfielder led United out with Harry Maguire on the bench and put the hosts ahead with a downward header from Alex Telles' corner.

After the fast start, United struggled to impose themselves as Watford grew.

The Hornets had plenty of possession and came closest through Adam Masina.

United will go into the hat for Monday's fourth and fifth-round draws, while Watford are left to focus on winning promotion back to the Premier League at the first attempt.
 
Leeds getting cuffed 3-0 by Crawley, who'd have thought?
 
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Man Utd vs Liverpool! Now that's tasty.
 
West Ham beat Stockport 1-0


FA Cup fourth-round draw

Cheltenham Town v Manchester City

Bournemouth v Crawley Town

Swansea City v Nottingham Forest

Manchester United v Liverpool

Southampton/Shrewsbury v Arsenal

Barnsley v Norwich

Chorley v Wolves

Millwall v Bristol City

Brighton v Blackpool

Wycombe v Tottenham

Fulham v Burnley

Sheffield United v Plymouth

Chelsea v Luton

West Ham v Doncaster

Brentford v Leicester

Everton v Sheffield Wednesday


FA Cup fifth-round draw

Fulham/Burnley v Bournemouth/Crawley Town

Manchester United/Liverpool v West Ham or Doncaster

Sheffield United/Plymouth v Millwall/Bristol City

Chorley/Wolves v Southampton/Shrewsbury or Arsenal

Barnsley/Norwich v Chelsea/Luton Town

Everton/Sheffield Wednesday v Wycombe/Tottenham

Swansea City/Nottingham Forest v Cheltenham Town/Manchester City

Brentford/Leicester v Brighton/Blackpool
 
FT Southampton 1-0 Arsenal

The FA Cup holders crash out without so much as a whimper - just two shots on target all game!

Gabriel's first half own-goal ends the Gunners' defence of the trophy and the Saints go marching on to the firth round.
 
FULL-TIME
Cheltenham 1-3 Man City

Cheltenham were in dreamland until the 81st minute.

The League Two side have done themselves proud but come up short as Manchester City progress to the fifth round of the FA Cup.
 
Today's results so far:

Chelsea 3 Luton 1

Brentford 1 Leicester 3

Fulham 0 Burnley 3
 
Klopp outclassed by Ole, Liverpool totally dominated, MU could have ended up with 5 if they were more clinical. All without bruno.
 
FT: Man United 3-2 Liverpool

Bruno Fernandes with a brilliant freekick to win the match.
 
Enjoyed the MUFC v LFC match.

Both teams put out strong XIs and really went for it.

Good to see Salah back on the scoresheet, but more frustration for Klopp.
 
Easy 3 0 win for Everton over Sheff Wed.

Different class.
 
Never nice losing to the Utd but glad we are out. LFC simply dont have the defence to play in 3 competiions from Feb onwards.

We will still challenge for the League and Champions League.

FA cup will be city again imo.
 
FA Cup fifth-round draw

Burnley v Bournemouth/Crawley Town

Manchester United v West Ham

Sheffield United v Bristol City

Wolves v Southampton

Barnsley v Chelsea

Everton v Wycombe/Tottenham

Swansea City v Manchester City

Leicester v Brighton
 
3 late goals sees Spurs beat Wycombe 4 1.

They face Everton in the next round.
 
FA Cup fifth round in progress with quarter-final places up for grabs

Burnley boss Dyche makes seven changes to starting XI for Bournemouth tie

Woodgate in caretaker charge of Bournemouth. Wilshere not involved
 
FULL-TIME
Burnley 0-2 Bournemouth

All over! A deserved win for Bournemouth as they make light work of their Premier League opponents to progress to the FA Cup quarter finals.
 
It went to Extra Time but Manchester United eventually beat West Ham 1-0.

Scott McTominay scored in extra time as Manchester United beat West Ham to reach the quarter-finals of the FA Cup.

Neither side could be separated in a drab 90 minutes in which both looked to be suffering from the effects of a packed and relentless season.

But McTominay, who came off the bench towards the end of the second half, broke the deadlock in the seventh minute of extra time with a snap shot from Marcus Rashford's pass.

Until then West Ham's best hope of winning appeared be via a penalty shootout, having failed to manage a shot on target in normal time.
 
FULL-TIME
Swansea 1-3 Manchester City

Manchester City join neighbours Manchester United and Bournemouth in the quarter-finals.
 
Tonight's results.

Incredible game at Goodison Park.

Screenshot_20210210-225327_Samsung Internet.jpg
 
FULL-TIME
Wolves 0-2 Southampton

Saints deservedly into the hat for the quarter-finals. They were the better side from start to finish.
 
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Chelsea's winning run under Thomas Tuchel continued with a narrow victory over Barnsley to set up an FA Cup quarter-final with Sheffield United.

Championship side Barnsley were the better team in the first half with Kepa Arrizabalaga blocking Callum Brittain's attempt at point-blank range.

Chelsea, who made 10 changes, got the breakthrough when Tammy Abraham tapped home after Reece James' pass.

Abraham looked offside when he scored but VAR was not in use at Oakwell.

The video assistant referee system is only in operation at Premier League grounds in the FA Cup.

Chelsea are now unbeaten in five games since Tuchel took charge in January and will entertain Sheffield United in the sixth round on the weekend of 20-21 March.
 
Saints march into semis
Bournemouth 0-3 Southampton

Southampton have already booked their spot in the FA Cup semi-finals, thanks to victory at south coast rivals Bournemouth.
 
It's an emphatic finish from Kevin de Bruyne that all but puts Pep Guardiola's side in the semi-finals!

Everton 0-2 Man City
 
FULL-TIME
Chelsea 2-0 Sheff Utd

Chelsea's love affair with the FA Cup continues - they're through to the semi-finals.

Not quite the manner of victory we might have expected before kick-off, but the bottom line is they have won and are going to Wembley!
 
FA Cup semi-finals: Chelsea v Man City, Leicester/Man Utd v Southampton

Eight-time winners Chelsea will play quadruple-chasing Manchester City in the FA Cup semi-finals.

Leicester and Manchester United know they will face Southampton in the last four if they can earn victory in their quarter-final on Sunday.

Leicester and United were drawing 1-1 when the semi-final draw was made at half-time at the King Power Stadium.

The semi-finals will take place on the weekend of 17-18 April at Wembley, with the final at the same venue on 15 May.

The final could be played in front of 20,000 fans because it has been earmarked as one of the proposed pilot events to test the return of big crowds to UK venues this year.

Full draw:

Leicester/Manchester United v Southampton

Chelsea v Manchester City

How the teams got to the semi-finals

Chelsea are aiming to go one better than last season when they lost to Arsenal in the FA Cup final.

The Blues continued their impressive start under recently-appointed manager Thomas Tuchel with a hard-fought semi-final win over Sheffield United earlier on Sunday.

City, who are aiming to win a quadruple of Premier League, FA Cup, League Cup and Champions League, reached the semi-finals when late goals from Ilkay Gundogan and Kevin de Bruyne earned a 2-0 win at Everton on Saturday.

Southampton cruised into the last four - for the second time in four seasons - with a 3-0 win at Championship side Bournemouth, putting their recent troubles in the Premier League to one side.

Prospective semi-final opponents Manchester United and Leicester have both thrashed Southampton 9-0 within the past two seasons.

BBC
 
FULL-TIME
Leicester 3-1 Man Utd

Leicester reach their first FA Cup semi-final since 1982. They will play Southampton at Wembley in four weeks' time.

Manchester United are out.
 
[MENTION=130076]PetroDollars[/MENTION]

UEFA cup or another year with an empty cabinet. :)
 
We were leggy today and had no energy, this is what happens when you play back to back games and face a team that spent the week in a jacuzzi.

Nevertheless I'll be fine with a second position finish in the league, europa will just be the bonus for us.
 
Leicester City v Man City final I reckon.

It's going to take a brilliant performance for anyone to beat Man City.
 
Manchester City are the "benchmark" across Europe but Chelsea "will hunt them" next season, says the London club's manager Thomas Tuchel.

The teams meet in the FA Cup semi-final on Saturday with Tuchel searching for a first win over a Pep Guardiola side.

City are 20 points clear of fifth-placed Chelsea in the league and look set to win a third title in four years.

"We have to accept there is a gap between us and Manchester City," said Tuchel, who took over in January.

"If you look at the fixture in the Premier League and the fixtures in the last years we have to accept this.

"And it's important that we accept this without making ourselves too small. From day one of next season we we will hunt them. We will try to close the gap between us."

German Tuchel said City and German champions Bayern Munich were the "benchmark" in European football.

Guardiola's side have won seven of their past nine games against Chelsea, including 3-1 at Stamford Bridge in January when Frank Lampard was still in charge.

"We have to admit there is a gap but for 90 minutes we are very self-aware and very self-confident that we believe we can close the gap tomorrow for one game," Tuchel said.

Tuchel has failed to beat Guardiola in five attempts as a manager - two games with Mainz and three at Borussia Dortmund, all when Guardiola was in charge at Bayern Munich - and said the former Barcelona boss has been a "huge influence" on him.

"When he was coach at Barcelona I didn't have the chance to know him personally, but I was watching almost every game," the German said.

"I was very impressed by the way they made success happen, by the style they were playing, all the academy guys, the offensive ball possession."
 
Brilliant performance from Chelsea as they beat Man City 1 0.

Well organised and barely gave Man City any opportunities on goal.
 
Brilliant win for Chelsea, they have the best all round squad imo.

Next season they will be title challengers and strong favourites to win the FA cup this year.

A Chelsea v City CL final is also on the cards. Chelsea will be my fav to win this too.
 
Brilliant turn around by tuchel, who exposes how terrible lampard was, with each passing day.

Arsenal should learn a lesson and see what a top level manager can do and get one before the current one trashes them down the drain forever.
 
Leicester beat Southampton in second FA Cup semi-final

FT: Leicester 1-0 Southampton
 
Leicester beat Southampton in second FA Cup semi-final

FT: Leicester 1-0 Southampton

Leicester City reached their first FA Cup final since 1969 as Kelechi Iheanacho's second-half goal gave them victory over Southampton at Wembley.

Iheanacho was the beneficiary of fine work by Jamie Vardy to score at the second attempt 10 minutes after the interval.

The game was played in front of 4,000 supporters as part of a pilot scheme, with research being carried out on allowing fans back in to sporting events as coronavirus restrictions are eased.

Tickets were limited to residents of Brent - the north London borough where Wembley Stadium is situated - and key workers.

Those inside Wembley witnessed a mainly dour game but Leicester, playing in their first semi-final since 1982, will not care - and neither will their followers.

Southampton were strangely lacking in intensity, barely threatening Leicester keeper Kasper Schmeichel.

Ibrahima Diallo went closest to an equaliser for the Saints but his powerful drive went just wide.

Brendan Rodgers' side will now face Chelsea in the final on 15 May, their first appearance in the showpiece since they lost 1-0 against Manchester City in 1969.
 
Brendan Rodgers has been in a Premier League title race with Liverpool, won the lot in Scotland with Celtic, and tasted Wembley success in the Championship play-off final with Swansea in 2011.

However, a major English trophy is currently missing from his CV - and he has the chance to address that on Saturday, when his Leicester side take on Chelsea in the FA Cup final.


Max stake varies. See bet slip for details. Odds subject to fluctuation. Further T&Cs apply. 18+
Rodgers has had a remarkable impact at Leicester, with the Foxes on course for a top-four finish this season after frustratingly slipping out of the Champions League qualifying places last season.

However, a piece of silverware would be a tangible recognition of the improvements he's made at the club.

Speaking on the Pitch to Post Preview Podcast ahead of the final, Sky Sports News reporter Paul Gilmour said victory for Rodgers over Chelsea - the club where he was once youth and reserve team boss - would be a significant step up, in terms of his standing as a manager.

"It would propel him to another level," said Gilmour.

"He's already well thought of, everybody knows what type of manager he is. I get the impression he's highly ambitious as well.

"It wouldn't surprise me if he managed Chelsea at some point in the future because of his links to Chelsea and I wonder if he has some unfinished business there at some point in his career. But for the time being, at Leicester, he's made them so consistent.

"You can see the work he's done at Liverpool, Celtic and Leicester, he's proven himself to be a very talented manager. A player's manager. Players love him. I've spoken to quite a few Leicester players, and Jonny Evans more than anybody, and Jonny raves about him.

"But if he starts to add trophies to that it will just propel him to that next level.

"It's no surprise to me to hear Tottenham have been monitoring him over the years and keeping an eye on him. That's the kind of calibre of manager he is.

"He's going to be at the very top level of the game and he deserves to manage in the Champions League. If Leicester can hold on and get that top-four place, he'll be right at home in that competition next season."

If Rodgers and Leicester are to pull of the FA Cup win - the first in the Foxes' history - they'll need to find a way through Chelsea's mean defence. Under Thomas Tuchel, the Blues have kept 19 clean sheets in 26 games.

However, while Jamie Vardy (two goals in his last 24 games) has struggled to re-find his goal-scoring form since having a hernia operation earlier this year, Kelechi Iheancho has stepped up.

Leicester's Nigerian striker has hit 15 goals in his last 17 games and has an outstanding record in FA Cup ties, finding the net 14 times in his last 19 appearances in the competition.

Sky Sports football writer Ron Walker says sustaining that output will be the next challenge for Iheanacho, 24, as he looks to establish his reputation, but believes Leicester have the tools at their disposal to trouble Chelsea.

"Iheanacho has always looked like he had something about him," Walker told the Pitch to Post Preview Podcast. "Even when he was at Man City and he was very raw. There was a reason he was on the fringes there and sometimes you just need something to fall for you and then it goes like that.

"It will be interesting to see whether this is a purple patch or if he can keep these sort of numbers up to be a first-choice striker for a team in the Champions League places.

"But Rodgers, to a certain extent, would have been sat quite happily watching Arsenal against Chelsea. I know Chelsea made a lot of changes but Arsenal were happy to sit back, soak up pressure and try - although not massively succeed - to hit Chelsea on the break.

"I know Rodgers has made Leicester into a team more comfortable on the ball but the way they won the Premier League was hitting teams on the break. I know Vardy has changed his game a little bit and he's becoming more of the man to play alongside Iheanacho at the moment but they have plenty of pace in the team.

"Chelsea have only scored more than two goals in one game in the entire time Tuchel has been there. They're just not that prolific, so if you can frustrate them, with the pace, trickery and guile Leicester have got on the break, they're always going to get chances."

As for Chelsea, the return of N'Golo Kante to the side could be the key factor, says Gilmour. The French World Cup winner has been in impressive form in recent weeks but was left out of the squad against Arsenal on Wednesday night to rest an Achilles problem.

If he is fit to play, he could be the difference, says the Sky Sports News reporter.

"The midfield battle should be really interesting because if Kante is OK - and by all accounts it seems it was precautionary resting on Wednesday against Arsenal with his Achilles - he has been back to his sensational best," said Gilmour.

"Leicester know exactly what he's about. But that midfield battle could be crucial. When James Maddison is on the top of his game he's a massive threat but we just haven't seen it enough from him since he got back from injury. Then you bring Youri Tielemans into that as well, against Jorginho and Kante, who are probably going to be the 'double-six' for Tuchel.

"I see that area of the field being a key part of the Cup final - and if Kante plays to the level he's played at recently, he's enough to make a difference."


https://www.skysports.com/football/...putation-by-upsetting-his-former-club-chelsea
 
Mason Mount: 'I want to win trophies with Chelsea'

Mason Mount says he wants to follow in the footsteps of Chelsea legends who won trophies, starting with Saturday's FA Cup final against Leicester.

Midfielder Mount joined Chelsea aged six and made his first-team debut under former boss Frank Lampard in 2019.

He is bidding to win his first major trophy with the club in Saturday's showpiece (17:15 BST kick-off).

"I want to fulfil my dreams and the dreams of the others players coming through with me," said Mount.

"We want to win trophies. I looked at a lot of players - the legends from Chelsea - when I was at the academy and witnessed the first team winning trophies and major trophies.

"I wanted to take things from every part of their game. I wanted to follow in their footsteps. Players like Lampard, John Terry, Didier Drogba, Ashley Cole, Petr Cech... All of them really.

"They have won major trophies and played so many times for the club."

At 22 years and 87 days, Mount became the club's youngest goalscorer in a Champions League knockout match when he netted in the quarter-final victory over Porto.

He scored in the semi-final win over Real Madrid, setting up a final against Premier League champions Manchester City.

Mount has also captained Chelsea in two of his four FA Cup appearances this season.

"I try to lead and be a big player," said Mount. "Even though I'm young, I want to influence, win games and win trophies.

"From very young, I set the goal I wanted to make the first team and I didn't let anything affect me. I was so driven.

"I didn't let anyone tell me it wasn't going to happen. Because I was so mentally strong, I was always telling myself I was going to do it. That has always been my focus and mentality."

Saturday's match will be broadcast live on BBC One, the iPlayer and the BBC Sport website.

About 21,000 people will be allowed inside England's national stadium as part of a pilot event to test the return of big crowds to venues.

Mount's form this season has seen him become a key figure under Thomas Tuchel despite being left out of the side in the German's first game in charge.

"[Tuchel] went for experience and from that moment I got my head down and wanted to show what I could do," said Mount.

"When a new manager comes in you have to get used to how he plays and the transition was very easy. He tried to give everyone instructions and it really helped us as a team. He was very clear.

"I know what I need to do to keep getting better. I will be working hard to try to achieve big things in the game."

Mount has always had a strong relationship with his father and he says he is close to reaching the targets they set together at the start of the season.

"I always speak with my dad and we set targets," he said. "I am not going to tell you them but I am close to achieving it. I only have a couple of games left, so I need to step up.

"There were a couple of times when my dad thought maybe it wasn't going to happen for me. I just said 'I am going to do it, give it a couple of years and see what happens'.

"I remember scoring on my debut at the Bridge last year and speaking to him afterwards and saying 'who would have thought, eh? You didn't think I would be here, so I proved you wrong'.

"He was like 'yes, you did'. That was a nice feeling. If I win a trophy it will be for the family and the coaches I have worked with at Chelsea. It will be very special."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/57101302
 
Coaches Thomas Tuchel and Brendan Rodgers will battle it out to try to win their first trophy in English football when Chelsea and Leicester City meet in Saturday's FA Cup final at Wembley (12.15 p.m. ET).

It's a game that will see two of the Premier League's top teams face off to win the oldest cup competition in football, with the FA Cup first contested in 1871-72.

Chelsea are aiming to win their ninth FA Cup (and seventh this century), which would put them clear in third on the all-time list behind Manchester United (12) and Arsenal (14). Leicester, who stunned the football world by winning the 2015-16 Premier League title, go into their first FA Cup final since 1969 looking to win it for the first time.


Is it going to be a close game?

It's the first time since 2007, when title winners Man United lost to league runners-up Chelsea, that the final will be contested by two teams in the top four, so it promises to be an evenly balanced game with no clear favourite.

Leicester are third in the Premier League, two points ahead of Chelsea, heading into the final week of the league season, and there is little to separate the two sides in recent form. Over the last 10 league games, Chelsea sit third in the form table with six wins, two draws and two defeats. Leicester are fifth having won five, drawn twice and lost three times.

A 2-0 defeat at Leicester in January proved to be Frank Lampard's last league game as Chelsea manager; he was sacked less than a week later and replaced by Thomas Tuchel. Coincidentally, the two teams meet again in the Premier League at Stamford Bridge next Tuesday in a game that will be crucial for Champions League qualification.


How has Thomas Tuchel changed Chelsea?

Tuchel, 47, started the season in charge of Paris Saint-Germain before being sacked in December, but he could finish the campaign by guiding Chelsea to success in the FA Cup and Champions League.

When Tuchel replaced Lampard in mid-January, Chelsea were ninth in the Premier League and losing ground on the top four, but he's overseen a dramatic transformation with 17 victories and three defeats in his 26 games in all competitions. Tuchel won domestic cups in Germany and France with Borussia Dortmund and PSG, and he's elevated Chelsea, bringing defensive solidity (18 clean sheets in 26 games) and coaxing much-improved form out of expensive forwards Timo Werner and Kai Havertz, as well as restoring defenders Antonio Rudiger and Marcos Alonso to the team.

Under Tuchel, Chelsea eliminated Man City at the semifinal stage and also beat Pep Guardiola's team, whom they will also face in the Champions League final in Portugal on May 29, in the Premier League last week.


What about Brendan Rodgers?

Leicester were 11th in the Premier League and closer to the relegation zone than the top four when Rodgers left Celtic to replace Claude Puel in February 2019. Since then, Leicester have been on an upwards trajectory, winning 57 of Rodgers' 108 games in charge. They finished fifth last season and on course to improve on that this time around.

Rodgers has brought stylish football to the King Power Stadium, and also turned the club into the one most likely to break up the so-called "Big Six." He has revived the career of 34-year-old striker Jamie Vardy and has improved emerging stars such as James Maddison, Kelechi Iheanacho, Harvey Barnes and Youri Tielemans.

The former Liverpool manager won seven major honours in less than three years at Celtic, but he has yet to win a trophy in English football. Lifting the FA Cup would be a huge boost to his reputation and put him in contention for bigger jobs in the Premier League and Europe.


Who are the key players?

Having been overlooked consistently by Lampard, playing just nine games, Rudiger has been crucial to Chelsea's revival under Tuchel. In 19 league games without the Germany defender, Chelsea have conceded 26 goals, but they have shipped just seven in the 17 games he has started. Rudiger was rested for Wednesday's 1-0 defeat against Arsenal, but is expected to be fit to take his place at centre-back against Leicester.

Former Leicester midfielder N'Golo Kante is another key man for Chelsea, while the recent attacking form of Christian Pulisic and Havertz make them big players for Tuchel.

Jonny Evans is similarly important to Leicester, but the former Man United defender has a 50-50 chance to play due to a heel injury that forced him to miss the team's last two games. The 33-year-old is regarded as the glue that holds Leicester's defence together, meaning his absence would be a major blow.

Leicester will need Maddison and Tielemans on form in midfield and hope that former Man City striker Iheanacho can extend a run that has seen him score 13 goals in his last 12 games.

How did the two teams get to the final?
Leicester beat Championship teams Stoke City and Brentford before winning an all-Premier League tie against Brighton in round five, when Iheanacho scored the only goal of the game in the 90th minute. Man United were eliminated in a 3-1 quarterfinal win at the King Power Stadium, before Iheanacho earned a 1-0 victory over Southampton in the semis.

Chelsea started their FA Cup campaign with a 4-0 win against League Two Morecambe before beating Championship sides Luton Town and Barnsley in rounds four and five. Sheffield United were then beaten 2-0 at Stamford Bridge in the quarterfinals, with Hakim Ziyech's goal sealing a 1-0 semifinal win against Man City.


What about Leicester's FA Cup final record?

Several clubs have lost more finals than Leicester -- Manchester United and Everton share the unenviable record of having lost eight -- but those teams have all won the cup on at least once. Leicester have made it to four FA Cup finals and lost them all -- in 1949, 1961, 1963 and 1969 -- which gives them the distinction of most final appearances without lifting the trophy.

Recent history is also against Leicester. Of the last 25 finals, only two (Portsmouth 2008, Wigan 2013) have been won by clubs outside the so-called "Big Six." During that period, Arsenal (8), Chelsea (7), Man Utd (4), Man City (2) and Liverpool (2) have dominated. Tottenham, the other "Big Six" team, haven't won the FA Cup since 1991.

Yes. A crowd of 21,000, the largest in England since COVID-19 restrictions were imposed in March 2020, will be attending. An attendance of 8,000 was allowed for the Carabao Cup final at Wembley between Man City and Tottenham last month and, with that proving a success, the crowd limit has been raised for Saturday's game.

Supporters will not need to have been vaccinated to gain entry, but they will have to provide a negative COVID-19 test within 36 hours of kick-off.

The game is designated as a test event by the UK government and the success, or otherwise, will influence the number of fans allowed to watch Euro 2020 games at Wembley in June and July.

Who is the referee? What about VAR?

Michael Oliver will take charge as referee, with Stuart Burt and Simon Bennett running the lines as his assistants. Stuart Attwell has been appointed as fourth official after an injury to Paul Tierney. Sian Massey-Ellis will become the first female official to be involved in the final, having been appointed as assistant video assistant referee to the VAR, Chris Kavanagh.

The English Football Association have invited Ben Kay, the groundsman at League One club Accrington Stanley, to support the Wembley pitch team in the build-up to the final after he helped ensure that non-league Chorley's third-round tie against Derby County went ahead despite sub-zero temperatures. Kay and his colleagues slept on the Chorley pitch overnight and rotated small heaters to prevent the playing surface from freezing.

https://www.espn.com/soccer/english...helsealeicester-clash-at-wembley-who-will-win
 
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Leicester goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel speaking on BBC One: "It's an amazing occasion and something I've dreamt of all my life.

"The fans of Leicester know how long it's been since we've been in a final like this and its an amazing opportunity for all of us.

"Being at Wembley with fans after the year we've all had, it's a sign of progress and hopefully a sign of what's to come.

"We know a win here would mean a great deal to the owners and show all the hours and investment they put into the club is paying off."

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Chelsea captain Cesar Azpilicueta speaking to BBC One: "We know how traditional the FA Cup is in this country and for our club.

"Everyone with experience has to help, it's a massive opportunity. We are back in the FA Cup final, we are in the Champions League final, it is a big day and we have to be ready for it.

"It is extra special to have them [the fans] back. It is a special atmosphere in the FA Cup final and hopefully we can share the joy with them afterwards."
 
Hoping for a Midlands triumph!

Is there crowd noise pipped in for the final ? I can’t tell if they have
 
Scrappy so far.

Midfield battle.

Bad news for Leicester though with Evans having to go off injured.
 
Brilliant win for Leicester.

Great goal by Youri Tielemans but that disallowed goal for Chelsea - that was so tight.
 
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