Chelsea 1-0 Leeds: Blues deserve their FA Cup final spot — Mail 26/4/26
Chelsea 1-0 Leeds: Blues deserve their FA Cup final spot after dominating here, but questions should be asked as to why they capitulated so shamefully in midweek, writes OLIVER HOLT
By OLIVER HOLT, CHIEF SPORTS WRITER
Enzo Fernandez is enough of an unprepossessing individual
that, at the start of this month, he was banned for two matches by his own club
but he is still capable of being a very fine footballer for Chelsea when the
mood takes him.
On Sunday afternoon at Wembley, the mood took him. The
histrionics of some of his team-mates - Moises Caicedo and Pedro Neto deserve
special mention - might have made the unflinching heroes of Chelsea's FA Cup
winning team of 1970 weep in despair.
But Fernandez played with the kind of unrelenting steel and
unremitting excellence that would have allowed him to hold his own amid the
blood and thunder of earlier eras and it was fitting that it was his first half
header that took Chelsea to the FA Cup final, where they will meet Manchester
City on May 16.
Questions should be asked about quite how a team that
capitulated so shamefully to Brighton & Hove Albion in midweek that the
performance cost previous head coach Liam Rosenior his job, could dominate
Leeds United so comfortably in this semi-final. Some credit for that, of
course, should go to interim coach Calum McFarlane.
Stocked with anti-heroes, Chelsea have become English
football's version of the Dirty Dozen but they deserved the plaudits on Sunday.
Leeds improved after the interval but they were a disappointment in front of
the tens of thousands of supporters who made their way down from Yorkshire.
They did at least win the battle of the noise.
There were swathes of empty seats in the Chelsea end, which
was a sign of quite how disaffected the fans have become with a side that has
lost its last five league games and an ownership regime that they despise.
Their co-owner, Todd Boehly, knows a thing or two about companies selling
tickets at inflated prices. This game was obviously one sell-on too many.
It was hardly a classic and City will be heavy favourites to
lift the trophy but the result did at least breathe a little life into what was
fast becoming a moribund campaign for Chelsea. They now face a battle to try to
climb back into the top five and claim a place in next season's Champions
League.
They will also have time to focus their attentions on
finding a new head coach. McFarlane performed creditably enough the first time
he took the caretaker role when Enzo Maresca left the club in January and this
result was a tribute to him, too.
But however well he does in the next few weeks, it is a sign
of his inexperience that he does not possess the requisite coaching badges to
allow him to take control of Chelsea for more than 12 weeks.
It may be quite a task to persuade an elite manager to join
a club that has become known as a basket-case. Chelsea are now looking for
their sixth permanent head coach under the BlueCo rule and it was a reminder of
their fickleness that their co-owner Behdad Eghbali was sitting a few seats
away from England manager Thomas Tuchel at Wembley, the first boss they fired.
Before the match, Chelsea's players attempted to set a new
world record for the length of their pre-match huddle and forced Leeds to wait
as they delivered pep talks to each other in the centre circle.
It did not seem to do an awful lot for their concentration.
Almost straight from the kick-off, Leeds burst forward and Caicedo brought Noah
Okafor down on the edge of the box. Ao Tanaka lifted the free-kick over the
bar.
Chelsea had a glimpse of a first opening when Caicedo
floated a delicate pass over the top of the Leeds defence into the path of
Alejandro Garnacho. It was a fine run by Garnacho but a dreadful first touch.
It bounced off his shin and straight out of play.
A minute later, Leeds should have scored. Trevoh Chalobah
gave the ball away in midfield and when it was played in to Dominic
Calvert-Lewin, he turned it smartly into the path of Brenden Aaronson.
Two Chelsea defenders collided with each other and Aaronson
was clean through on Robert Sanchez. Aaronson took his shot early but hit it
just too close to the goalkeeper, who made a fine save with his right boot.
Chelsea were the better team, though. Leeds looked
vulnerable and porous and it was not a surprise when Chelsea sliced them open
with ominous ease twice in quick succession midway through the half.
First, Joao Pedro lashed a left-foot shot against the base
of the post and watched it spin across the goal-line and out for a goal kick.
Then, Pascal Struijk gave the ball away, Pedro Neto escaped down the right and
crossed perfectly for Fernandez who ran in unmarked and headed it firmly past
Lucas Perri.
It was Chelsea's first goal for nearly 300 minutes – their
previous effort came against Port Vale in the FA Cup quarter-final. It was also
Chelsea's first goal against Premier League opposition for over 500 minutes.
Fernandez may be a largely unsympathetic individual but he is a fine
footballer.
Leeds made two substitutions at half-time and one of the new
arrivals, Anton Stach, made an immediate impact. His first touch was to lash a
sweetly-struck rising drive from the edge of the area towards the roof of the
net. It took a brilliant save from Sanchez to push it over.
When Chelsea went up to the other end, they nearly scored
the goal of the season. Neto played a ball down the line to Malo Gusto, Gusto
sat a Leeds defender down on his backside with a clever turn and played the
ball inside to Fernandez. Fernandez flicked it on first time to Joao Pedro, who
should have shot straight away but delayed too long and was denied by a tackle.
It was end-to-end now. Okafor curled a cross to the back
post and when Calvert-Lewin leapt well to meet it, the hopes of the legions of
Leeds fans behind that goal rose up in their chests. The Leeds striker's
contact was good but he directed his effort just too close to Sanchez and he
saved it without any drama.
Cole Palmer came on midway through the half and was promptly
booked for throwing the ball away in protest against a decision that went
against him. That's how Chelsea roll these days but somewhere under that
exterior, there is a decent football team trying to emerge.