Pep Guardiola’s quest to
win an unprecedented quadruple with Manchester City came to a stunning and
controversial end when they fell to a 1-0 defeat at third-tier Wigan in the
fifth round of the FA Cup on Monday.
AFP
report continues:
In
an uncanny repeat of the 2013 FA Cup final, in which City had a player sent off
before losing to a late Wigan winner, Guardiola’s side had Fabian Delph
dismissed amid stormy scenes before Will Grigg’s 79th-minute goal decided the
game.
A
famous night was marred, however, by a post-match pitch invasion by Wigan
supporters which saw a number of them confront City players, with striker
Sergio Aguero required to defend himself.
Earlier
the drama had been provided by Northern Ireland international Grigg who capitalized
on an error by Kyle Walker who allowed a pass to run through to the Wigan man
and kept ahead of John Stones before finishing clinically from just inside the
area.
It
was only City’s second defeat to English opposition since losing an FA Cup
semi-final to Arsenal last April while their opponents can now look forward to
a quarter-final home tie with Southampton.
The
pivotal sending-off arrived in first half injury-time when Fabian Delph made a
rash challenge on Wigan’s Max Power, prompting referee Anthony Taylor to pull a
yellow card out of his pocket before changing his mind and producing red.
That
infuriated City players, who surrounded the referee, and the dispute spilled
into the rival technical areas with Sergio Aguero having to be dragged away by
Guardiola as he argued furiously with Wigan coaches.
The
scene turned even uglier, with television cameras in the tunnel capturing
footage of Guardiola and Wigan manager Paul Cook in a major verbal
confrontation and being kept apart by staff.
Wasteful Aguero
City
might have enjoyed a far more comfortable evening had their record goalscorer
Aguero not missed a golden opportunity after just two minutes, heading over
Bernardo Silva’s pinpoint cross from just six yards.
And
home keeper Christian Walton needed to be alert a few moments later, diving
smartly to parry away a fierce strike from Ilkay Gundogan.
Guardiola
had made six changes for the tie, while still fielding a strong line-up, but
two of his fringe players — full-back Danilo and back-up goalkeeper Claudio Bravo
were guilty of errors which offered the hosts a glimmer of hope.
First
Bravo and Danilo dithered in dealing with the ball, almost presenting Gareth
Roberts with a chance on the six-yard line.
And
then Danilo was robbed of the ball by Roberts, the ball breaking for Grigg who
raced half the length of the field before shooting into the side-netting.
City
were enjoying the bulk of possession but, without the rested Kevin De Bruyne
and Raheem Sterling, were struggling to create clear chances.
They
came close, from Leroy Sane’s 26th-minute corner which Gundogan flicked across
the six-yard area, but defender Aymeric Laporte failed to connect with the ball
at his feet.
When
City next threatened, after Stones headed down Delph’s cross, Fernandinho’s
shot rose over by some distance when he looked certain to score.
Gundogan
and Danilo, twice, also threatened the Wigan goal and Walton saved superbly
from an Aguero drive, moments before the explosive dismissal of Delph.
Guardiola
brought on England right-back Walker as a half-time substitute, moving Danilo
over to Delph’s vacant left-back spot.
Despite
their disadvantage, City still enjoyed the majority of possession although,
apart from Chey Dunkley blocking a Danilo shot, there was little to concern
Walton as the tie approached the 65-minute mark and Guardiola opted to bring De
Bruyne into the fray.
The
Belgian’s introduction brought a far greater threat from City, particularly
from set-pieces.
On 73 minutes, De Bruyne found Aguero at the near-post but his shot was blocked and Danilo maintained the pressure with a low centre across the goalline before Grigg’s dramatic intervention.
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