Leeds power past Norwich to reach FA Cup last eight for first time since 2003

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After Southampton and Port Vale caused shocks, could Philippe Clement mastermind a third of the day for Norwich? The answer was a resounding no as Leeds United cuffed their guests aside and progressed to a first quarter-final in 23 years.

Leeds have not contested a semi‑final since 1987 when losing 3-2 against Coventry after extra time but are only 90 minutes away from breaching a 53-year gap to the previous walk-out at Wembley in the competition: the 1973 showpiece, which Sunderland won 1-0.

United are in the hat after opening-half strikes from Sean Longstaff and Gabriel Gudmundsson and Joël Piroe’s clincher as the end neared – the last goal illustrative of how Daniel Farke’s team were supremely professional – even when Norwich burst into life for a passage after the break.

Farke said: “If I could’ve painted a game day of cup competition this would be it. You can’t take going through for granted. Just have a look at what happened on some other pitches.”

Following a pre-tie medley of tunes headed by Fanfare for the Common Man, Leeds engineered a flurry of goalmouth action that culminated in the opener. Lukas Nmecha was heavily involved in all. The No 9’s first act was to scoop home after a defensive mix-up featuring Daniel Grimshaw and Ruairi McConville. As each failed to deal with Jaka Bijol’s flighted delivery, Wilfried Gnonto nipped in and the ball went to Nmecha, who scored.

Except, the video assistant referee intervened and Gnonto was adjudged – correctly – to have handballed and it was chalked off. This was greeted with renditions of “Fuck VAR”, and the congregation’s ire deepened when Nmecha was denied a penalty for the claim of a shove by McConville.

But now came Longstaff’s fine finish. Gnonto passed to an overlapping Gudmundsson whose chip from the left was taken on the full by the No 8’s left foot before, as balletic, he pirouetted and volleyed beyond Grimshaw with his right.

Leeds were a swarm in white. A Daniel James cross-shot was turned in by Gnonto but he was offside and Norwich, a defensive horror show, allowed Bijol, raiding from defensive berth, to run free into their area: if Nmecha’s radar was on point the centre-back would have been in.

Leeds’s second was slick. Ao Tanaka, drafted in by Farke to pull the strings, did so: a slide-rule ball into Nmecha’s feet in front of Norwich’s D was turned back to Longstaff who pinged possession right to James. The winger’s cross was not cleared by those in yellow, and Gudmundsson did the rest.

Gabriel Gudmundsson drives home Leed’s second goal.
Gabriel Gudmundsson drives home Leeds’ second goal. Photograph: Robbie Jay Barratt/AMA/Getty Images

As Leeds are three points above the drop zone, Farke had retained only Gudmundsson and Ethan Ampadu from the midweek defeat at Sunderland. “It’s never easy [with nine changes],” he said.

Clement’s call was the opposite as only Vladan Kovacevic, for Grimshaw, dropped out from the win at Leicester last weekend. “Big Phil”, as Canaries devotees call him, has won their hearts for guiding them to 10 points above the drop zone with 11 games left after he took over in November when second-bottom of the Championship with nine points after 15 games. Yet at the interval the Frenchman needed stern words to wake his unit.

For the second half he replaced Grimshaw with Kovacevic and Farke took off his right-back, Sebastiaan Bornauw, for James Justin.

The same Leeds dominance ensued as James twice threatened Norwich’s danger zone. Clement, robed in grey jacket and dark trousers, was impotence personified on the touchline until a Paris Maghoma burst drew a free-kick on the left. The same player drove this in and José Córdoba’s header flew over.

At 5.59pm – sunset – Piroe took an energy gel as he, observing Ramadan, broke his fast.

This came as Clement made a triple substitution – Anis Ben Slimane, one of the three also took a gel before entering – and unlike the boos that greeted the same occurrence last week during Leeds’s defeat against Manchester City, there were none. Those jeers may, though, have been due to there being not enough communication regarding what the break was for, the club stated.

Farke was pleased at this. “Football is a perfect example of how we can all live together – especially in these crazy times.”

Norwich certainly brightened. Jack Stacey, the third of Clement’s mid‑period replacements, ran in but went down and the move fizzled out. Then, the death knell for their hopes. The excellent Nmecha powered inside from the left and stroked to Piroe who swept past Kovacevic, the No 10 pointing to the heavens in celebration.

Clement said: “It was difficult to adapt to the intensity. In the second half we played much better, creating opportunities. It is a very young squad, three months ago they were playing relegation football in the Championship and I am convinced they will improve from this.”

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