/Man City Join Liverpool in the League Cup Final

Man City Join Liverpool in the League Cup Final

Manchester City clawed back a first-leg deficit to beat Everton by 3-1 in the second-leg and set up a Capital One Cup final date with Liverpool after a thrilling game at the Etihad Stadium. Everton looked on course for Wembley when Ross Barkley’s brilliant run and 20-yard shot added to their 2-1 advantage from the first leg in the 18th minute – but manager Roberto Martinez was left nursing a burning sense of injustice after an enthralling encounter turned on a controversial decision.

Fernandinho’s deflected shot put City level on the night before the break but Everton still had the edge. That was until City substitute Kevin de Bruyne, who was later taken off with a serious-looking knee injury, turned home Raheem Sterling’s cross with 20 minutes left. Everton could not recover their composure and City, who had earlier hit the woodwork through Sergio Aguero and David Silva, sealed their place in the final on 28 February when the Argentine headed De Bruyne’s cross beyond keeper Joel Robles.

Manchester City Join Liverpool in the Capital One Cup Final_1

It meant joy for City and bitter disappoint tinged with fury for Martinez and Everton. This was arguably the biggest game of Roberto Martinez’s reign as Everton manager, and a chance to silence criticism of his methods by setting up a League Cup final meeting with Merseyside rivals Liverpool. And for 70 minutes Martinez and his team looked likely to pull it off, impressively standing toe-to-toe with City with a mixture of defensive solidity and threat on the break.

It was all turned on its head in a moment that will haunt and anger Martinez, as Sterling appeared to have run the ball out of play before crossing for De Bruyne to switch momentum decisively in City’s favour. The home side will not have sympathy for Everton in this context after being convinced Ramiro Funes Mori scored an offside goal in the first leg and that Jesus Navas was denied a penalty after he was fouled by Kevin Mirallas – but it was easy to understand Martinez’s outspoken frustration.

City were increasing the pressure but Everton were surviving, with some good fortune, and that second goal stunned Martinez’s team and gave the home side the push they needed to finally see Everton off. Once more Everton never looked fully secure at the back but they certainly had a hard luck story to tell here.

Curated from Manchester City 3-1 Everton (Agg 4-3) – BBC Sport