Bradford hold off Villa to reach cup final
Reuters - Tuesday 22 January 2013, 21:45
Bradford City struck a blow for the paupers and restored the faith of
those who say Premier League riches have killed the romance of English
football by holding off Aston Villa to reach the League Cup final on
Tuesday.
Protecting a 3-1
lead from the first leg at Valley Parade, scene of a devastating fire
that killed 56 fans in 1985, the League Two side lost 2-1 on the night
but won 4-3 on aggregate to become the first fourth tier side to reach a
major English domestic cup final for 51 years.
Nine
years after falling out of the top flight and into a financial meltdown
that brought them to their knees, the Yorkshire club can look forward
to a money-spinning Wembley final against European champions Chelsea or
Swansea City.
Rochdale were
the last club from the fourth rung of the English football ladder to
reach a major domestic showpiece when they lost to Norwich City in the
1962 League Cup final.
But
that was when the competition was in its infancy and many top clubs did
not even bother entering, whereas Bradford's fairytale run accounted for
top flight Wigan Athletic in the fourth round and Arsenal in the last
eight - both on penalties.
Bradford's
6,000 travelling fans dared to dream of a triumph to rival the club's
1911 FA Cup triumph - the pinnacle of a topsy turvy past - but Christian
Benteke's 24th-minute opener for Villa seemed to swing the odds back
toward the home side.
However,
Bradford weathered a wave of attacks from five-times League Cup winners
Villa and struck back through James Hanson's 55th-minute header to make
it 1-1 on the night and send the visiting supporters into ecstasy.
Andreas
Weimann's 88th-minute goal put the hosts in front again at Villa Park
and set up a frantic finale but Bradford survived four nerve-jangling
minutes of stoppage time to etch their name into the pantheon of great
British sporting upsets.
"This
is dreamland, hopefully we will have a great following at Wembley and
do the club proud," goalkeeper Matt Duke, hero of their shootout wins
over Wigan and Arsenal, told Sky Sports.
"I
am not convinced it will ever sink in. You dream of this as a kid,
playing at Wembley, and like I say I just want to do the club proud."
STAGGERING PERFORMANCE
Shell-shocked
Villa manager Paul Lambert congratulated Bradford but had harsh words
for his side whose defending from set-plays cost them dear over the two
legs.
"We've lost four goals
from set-pieces over two games which is not good enough," he said. "I am
embarrassed. We will never have a better chance to reach the final."
Apart
from a torrid first half when they barely got over the halfway line,
Bradford's display over the two legs was staggering for a side
languishing 10th in League Two and who almost fell out of the Football
League two seasons ago.
Once
Hanson's bullet header flew past Villa keeper Shay Given 10 minutes into
the second half they were the better side and might have even gone
ahead on the night when Garry Thompson rattled Given's crossbar with a
shot from the edge of the area.
Weimann's
late reply, when he rounded Duke to tap in, was not enough to save
Premier League strugglers Villa, whose callow side now face a battle to
avoid relegation.
"I thought we had a great chance with the two goals from the first leg," Bradford manager Phil Parkinson said.
"First half Aston Villa were excellent but in the second half we played really well. It is dreamland.
"The lads were absolutely fantastic and what it means for the club and the city is absolutely tremendous.
"I
think we could fill Wembley on our own," he added looking forward to
the February 24 final against Swansea or Chelsea who meet in their second
leg in Wales on Wednesday with City leading 2-0 after the first leg at
Stamford Bridge.
Premier
League salaries now regularly top 100,000 pounds per week and
transfer fees have run into millions for years in stark contrast to
Bradford's intrepid team of giant killers who were assembled for the
meagre sum of 7,500 pounds.
While
hard cash can buy Premier League glory, Bradford have proved this
season that there is still room for the dreamers and that the heart of
domestic cup football, often derided as an inconvenience by the big
clubs, is still beating strongly.