Clicky
Sports

Watford remain in between treble and Man City


Bangladeshpost
Published : 18 May 2019 01:31 PM | Updated : 28 Aug 2020 05:10 AM

The 138th FA Cup final takes place on Saturday evening as treble-chasing Manchester City face underdogs Watford at Wembley Stadium.

City have already won the EFL Cup at the national stadium this season, followed up by lifting the Premier League, and now only the Hornets stand between them and a place in history.

Since the introduction of the EFL Cup in 1960, no English side has ever managed to win a clean sweep of major honours on offer in a single season. After beating Chelsea in February's EFL Cup final and finishing a point above Liverpool in a thrilling title race, City are on the verge of crossing off another incredible achievement.

The debate as to whether City are the greatest Premier League side ever will continue to rumble on. A total of 198 points across the last two seasons - including a record-breaking centurion campaign last time out - certainly stands them in good stead.

For all the hype surrounding the Citizens last season, it was arguably their ability to overtake and then hold off Liverpool this season that is deserving of more praise. With the pressure on heading into every single match, Pep Guardiola's men ended the campaign with 14 successive league wins.

There was the disappointment of exiting the Champions League to Tottenham Hotspur, of course, denying them the chance of winning a quadruple, but three trophies out of four - four out of five including the Community Shield, as Guardiola insists - would not be a bad third campaign in English football for the Catalan coach.

City, knocked out of the FA Cup by Wigan Athletic in the fifth round last season, have so far overcome three lower-league sides and two Premier League opponents to make it this far.

After crushing Rotherham United 7-0 and Burnley 5-0 in rounds three and four respectively, the Citizens were made to work a little harder to see off Newport County, albeit with a final scoreline of 4-1, and they then required a huge slice of luck to beat Swansea City 3-2.

The Citizens trailed 2-0 at the Liberty Stadium with a little over 20 minutes to go but, thanks to some strange refereeing that day in March, they prevailed thanks to goals from Bernardo Silva and Sergio Aguero, either side of Kristoffer Nordfeldt's own goal.

City then beat Brighton & Hove Albion in the semi-finals to reach the final for the 11th time, but this is their first since 2013 when losing 1-0 to Wigan. 

They have won the competition five times, but just once - in 2011 - during the Abu Dhabi era.

The vast majority of City's squad have still yet to lift this famous cup. Saturday's match provides Aguero & Co. with an opportunity to put that right and create some English football history in the process.

In a year of incredible comebacks, Watford's miraculous recovery in the last round to beat Wolverhampton Wanderers has almost become forgotten. Watford were one down after 36 minutes and two behind with 62 minutes gone through goals from Matt Doherty and Raul Jimenez. Enter stage right Gerard Deulofeu, who came on with 25 minutes left and exited the pitch in extra time having struck twice.

Those goals came either side of Troy Deeney's penalty in the final seconds of normal time, providing Watford's supporters with one of the most memorable afternoons in their history as they came out on top 3-2 in a battle between two of the Premier League's overachievers.

Wolves gained a little revenge by holding off the Hornets to finish seventh in the top flight. However, there could be another sting in the tail as victory for Watford on Saturday will see them claim the final Europa League spot up for grabs at the expense of Wanderers.

There is more than just a cup on the line for Javi Gracia's side this weekend, then, with the return of European football at Vicarage Road also up for grabs.

Wolves were the third top-flight side Watford have defeated in their run to the final, having also beat Newcastle United 2-0 at St James' Park and Crystal Palace 2-1 on home soil. There was also a 2-0 win at Woking in round three and a slender 1-0 victory away to Queens Park Rangers.

Gracia heavily rotated his side in the early rounds, leading to criticism from the outside, though his decision to rest players has ultimately paid off as his men are into their first FA Cup final in 35 years and finished 11th in the Premier League.

That bottom-half finish can be considered a little disappointing, though, as the Hertfordshire outfit lost three league games in a row and went four without a win to slip down the table as their campaign fizzled out, not that their supporters will care one bit if they can beat the best side in the country and lift the cup for the first time in their history.

Watford's only previous FA Cup final appearance came in 1984 under manager Graham Taylor when losing 2-0 to Everton at the old Wembley. Now, after more than three decades of waiting, they have a chance to put that right on Saturday.

Back-up goalkeeper Claudio Bravo is Man City's only confirmed absentee, with Fernandinho and Benjamin Mendy expected to recover from knee injuries.

Mendy has been a bit-part figure for the champions in another frustrating campaign, though, and is unlikely to usurp Oleksandr Zinchenko for a starting berth at left-back.

There also has to be a question mark over Fernandinho's involvement as he has not been used since injuring his knee on April 24 and Ilkay Gundogan has performed well in the holding role during the Brazilian's absence.

The versatile Bernardo can be used either in central midfield or in the frontline. That may depend on whether Kevin De Bruyne is ready to start following his return from the bench against Brighton last weekend.