FA Cup final: Wigan stun Manchester City with 1-0 win at Wembley Stadium
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FA Cup final: Wigan stun Manchester City with 1-0 win at Wembley Stadium
Ben Watson nodded home in stoppage-time as Wigan Athletic saw off Manchester City 1-0 to win the FA Cup final in dramatic circumstances.
The Latics, in their first final appearance, made the most of their numerical advantage in the closing stages, after Pablo Zabaleta had seen red for City.
It was a deserved triumph for the Latics, for whom Callum McManaman was outstanding, and completed a personal triumph for chairman Dave Whelan, who broke his leg in the 1960 final. But for City, it means a trophyless campaign, and raises further questions over the future of Roberto Mancini, who it is rumoured will be replaced by Manuel Pellegrini in the summer.
It is true to say City's targets have changed markedly thanks to the money invested by Sheikh Mansour, but, as Roman Abramovich has discovered, and Tony Fernandes has done so painfully this season, money guarantees nothing.
Wigan boss Roberto Martinez came up with an ingenious way of trying to overcome the massive odds stacked against his team. In leaving Arouna Kone and McManaman upfield even as City pressed, he forced the Blues to temper their attacking instincts, denying them the width which adds to the obvious danger their flair players pose.
When the half-time whistle blew City could claim most of the best chances. But in Joel Robles, preferred in goal to Ali Al Habsi, Wigan had a keeper in form. The Spain Under-21 star turned away an early effort from Yaya Toure and denied Sergio Aguero and Samir Nasri later in the half.
In the middle was the best of the lot as Wigan's notoriously flaky defence parted to let Nasri through, which allowed David Silva to set up Carlos Tevez. The Argentina star looked certain to score as his effort headed to one corner as Robles plunged towards the other. Somehow though, the on-loan Atletico Madrid man kept it out with his legs, in one of those moments that ends up being etched in final history.
And Wigan had chances to get their noses in front during that opening period too. McManaman was a constant threat, but first after running onto Kone's pass and then electing to check inside and curl home with his left foot rather than shooting first-time with his right, then embarking on a Ricky Villa-like slalom and driving a shot against Zabaleta, he wasted the best of them.
Not that he could be blamed 18 minutes after half-time when he embarked on a bewitching run into the City box and was only denied by Vincent Kompany's brave block.
Mancini executed a tactical rejig to counter Martinez's attacking intentions, but it was Wigan who hit the woodwork, albeit unintentionally, as Maloney's intended far post free-kick bounced off the bar with Joe Hart stranded.
And they had an extra man six minutes from the end when Zabaleta chopped down McManaman to collect a second yellow card and follow Kevin Moran and Jose Antonio Reyes into the FA Cup final hall of shame.
It was the signal for another Wigan assault, and by now no-one could deny they deserved something from the game.
The Latics, in their first final appearance, made the most of their numerical advantage in the closing stages, after Pablo Zabaleta had seen red for City.
It was a deserved triumph for the Latics, for whom Callum McManaman was outstanding, and completed a personal triumph for chairman Dave Whelan, who broke his leg in the 1960 final. But for City, it means a trophyless campaign, and raises further questions over the future of Roberto Mancini, who it is rumoured will be replaced by Manuel Pellegrini in the summer.
It is true to say City's targets have changed markedly thanks to the money invested by Sheikh Mansour, but, as Roman Abramovich has discovered, and Tony Fernandes has done so painfully this season, money guarantees nothing.
Wigan boss Roberto Martinez came up with an ingenious way of trying to overcome the massive odds stacked against his team. In leaving Arouna Kone and McManaman upfield even as City pressed, he forced the Blues to temper their attacking instincts, denying them the width which adds to the obvious danger their flair players pose.
When the half-time whistle blew City could claim most of the best chances. But in Joel Robles, preferred in goal to Ali Al Habsi, Wigan had a keeper in form. The Spain Under-21 star turned away an early effort from Yaya Toure and denied Sergio Aguero and Samir Nasri later in the half.
In the middle was the best of the lot as Wigan's notoriously flaky defence parted to let Nasri through, which allowed David Silva to set up Carlos Tevez. The Argentina star looked certain to score as his effort headed to one corner as Robles plunged towards the other. Somehow though, the on-loan Atletico Madrid man kept it out with his legs, in one of those moments that ends up being etched in final history.
And Wigan had chances to get their noses in front during that opening period too. McManaman was a constant threat, but first after running onto Kone's pass and then electing to check inside and curl home with his left foot rather than shooting first-time with his right, then embarking on a Ricky Villa-like slalom and driving a shot against Zabaleta, he wasted the best of them.
Not that he could be blamed 18 minutes after half-time when he embarked on a bewitching run into the City box and was only denied by Vincent Kompany's brave block.
Mancini executed a tactical rejig to counter Martinez's attacking intentions, but it was Wigan who hit the woodwork, albeit unintentionally, as Maloney's intended far post free-kick bounced off the bar with Joe Hart stranded.
And they had an extra man six minutes from the end when Zabaleta chopped down McManaman to collect a second yellow card and follow Kevin Moran and Jose Antonio Reyes into the FA Cup final hall of shame.
It was the signal for another Wigan assault, and by now no-one could deny they deserved something from the game.
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