Manchester City’s quest for a quadruple of trophies remains intact after Gabriel Jesus’s solitary early goal was enough to see off Brighton 1-0 and reach the FA Cup final yesterday.
Pep Guardiola’s men will return to Wembley to face either Watford or Wolves on May 18 for what they hope will be the chance to clinch the first ever domestic treble in English football history.
City looked set for an easy afternoon when Jesus opened the scoring after just four minutes, but never hit top gear with one eye on their Champions League quarter-final, first leg at Tottenham on Tuesday.
And Brighton were left to rue a controversial decision not to send-off Kyle Walker just after the half hour mark for a clash with Alireza Jahanbakhsh. With City staying in London until their trip to Tottenham’s new stadium in midweek, Sergio Aguero had travelled south on Friday but was not risked after a minor muscle injury.
Jesus stepped up in the Argentine’s absence by stooping to head home his 18th goal of the season, but the Brazilian’s opener owed much to a wonderfully inviting cross from Kevin de Bruyne. That was the third time in as many games City had struck inside the first five minutes, but unlike in cruising past Fulham and Cardiff in the Premier League, they failed to put the game out of Brighton’s reach before the break.
The Seagulls grew into the game as the first 45 minutes wore on without really threatening an equaliser, but were left furious when Walker escaped a red card that could easily have changed the course of the game.
The England international was unhappy that Jahanbakhsh stood on his trailing leg as the pair jostled at the back post and went head-to-head with the Iranian. However, after a VAR review, the yellow card shown to Walker by Anthony Taylor was deemed sufficient.
Walker was then replaced at half-time by Danilo to keep him out of further trouble, but City still failed to hit anywhere near the heights of their recent form to give Brighton hope.
However, Aymeric Laporte’s last-ditch clearance to prevent Glenn Murray forcing Shane Duffy’s header over the line was the closest they came to an equaliser.
The introduction of Fernandinho for the final 25 minutes allowed City to restore some order and Mat Ryan was forced into a fine save to stop Raheem Sterling adding a second on the day he had bought 550 tickets for pupils of his former school to get the chance to witness a Wembley showpiece.
City goalkeeper Ederson was not even forced into a save until four minutes from time when Jose Izquierdo stung the Brazilian’s palms from long range, but the English champions held on to take another step closer to history.
Meanwhile Manchester City’s Kevin De Bruyne is unsure if he can get back to his best for the reigning Premier League champions after injuries restricted his playing time this season, the midfielder said on Friday.
The 27-year-old has had a stop-start season with two knee injuries and trouble with his hamstring limiting him to only nine Premier League starts this season while City chase an unprecedented quadruple.
The Belgian was one of the favourites for the player of the year award last season, with eight goals and 16 assists in City’s league title-winning campaign, but has scored only two league goals this season.
“I don’t know what my level is going to be but to be fair I don’t really care,” De Bruyne told reporters.
“Now it’s the business end (of the season), I just need to
do what I can do to help the team win games. If that means playing five games or 10 games, I’ll take it all. It’s been that kind of season.
“It’s like 12 or 13 cup games, it makes it exciting. In the end maybe we lose everything but at least we are here at this stage.”
De Bruyne said recovering from injuries that sidelined him for more than 19 weeks this season was far more difficult than stepping on to the field for City.
“I feel sometimes my season had double the length of other players because every time you need to be in, you need to make almost double the hours,” he said. “It’s more draining than to play in the end. You never have a day off because you need to work on your recovery.
“A lot of the time you’re alone but you have to do it. I did it and I’m happy I’m back.”
Manchester City’s Bernardo Silva, David Silva (right) and Gabriel Jesus (centre) celebrate their victory in the FA Cup semi-final against Brighton in London yesterday. (Reuters)