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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
John Brewin

FA Cup roundup: Forest revel in spirit of ‘59 against Luton as Exeter shock Oxford

Nottingham Forest's Ramon Sosa celebrates scoring their second goal past Luton with Jota Silva
Nottingham Forest's Ramon Sosa (right) celebrates scoring their second goal past Luton with Jota Silva. Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images/Reuters

With their club legend, Mick Harford, helping to lead the team, Luton, who sacked manager Rob Edwards this week, travelled to Nottingham Forest for a repeat of 1959’s final. And just like that Wembley day, the Hatters departed in disappointment, losing 2-0 at the City Ground.

Ryan Yates, the Forest captain, was the driving force for Nuno Espírito Santo’s team, and scored the first goal for the Premier League high-flyers, a stooping header after a fine cross from Ramón Sosa. The Paraguayan then scored Forest’s second himself, sliding in from close range after Jota Silva’s pass from the right wing to follow up six consecutive Premier League wins with a comfortable stroll into the next round.

Norwich’s season will return to Championship toils after their 4-0 defeat by Brighton. Georginio Rutter scored twice, first with a header from a Joël Veltman cross, while the second saw the striker convert a Yankuba Minteh cross.

Julio Enciso scored Brighton’s third having robbed the dithering Norwich defender Kellen Fisher before bending a wicked shot beyond goalkeeper George Long. Solly March scored Brighton’s fourth, his first goal since August 2023, having missed 14 months with a knee injury, sweeping in a reverse pass from Brajan Gruda.

Bournemouth fielded a strong team against West Brom, though youth product Ben Winterburn made his first ever start in midfield and new Argentinian signing Julio Soler, who arrived from Lanus last week, made his club debut in defence.

The Baggies, still without a manager after the departure of Carlos Corberán but expected to appoint Raphaël Wicky, the Swiss former Young Boys and Basel manager, opened the scoring through Caleb Taylor before Justin Kluivert equalised. Dango Ouattara scored twice in 10 minutes ahead of half-time.

David Brooks, who was the outstanding performer, had supplied three assists by the time Bournemouth were easing to victory with Antoine Semenyo’s goal right after the break. Winterburn had played his part in Outtara’s second goal, too, and Andoni Iraola’s team progressed with style in a tournament the Basque manager has admitted is high among his priorities.

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In one of Saturday’s earlier kick-offs, an icy, foggy encounter saw Leicester ride out the threat of Championship visitors QPR via a resounding 6-2 win, with the defender James Justin scoring twice, including the opener. Jonathan Varane’s long-range strike had drawn the west Londoners level but once Stephy Mavididi and Facundo Buonanotte scored for Ruud van Nistelrooy’s team, QPR could find no way back, despite scoring at half-time. Jamie Vardy’s penalty and Wout Faes’ belting late drive past Joe Walsh completed the rout.

At the Stadium of Light, Tom Cannon’s early penalty for Stoke was levelled by teenager Milan Aleksic’s first ever goal for Sunderland before the tie dragged into extra time. Penalties were beckoning before Niall Ennis’s solo effort delivered a first win for the new Stoke manager, Mark Robins, denied in last season’s semis when at Coventry.

Reading scored a rare goal against Burnley, who have conceded just nine all season in the Championship, but there was to be no surprise win for the troubled League One club. Lewis Wing’s 77th-minute goal, from long range, had been an embarrassment for Burnley keeper Vaclav Hladky and cancelled out Lyle Foster’s opener. But in extra time, Scott Parker sent on the substitute Zian Flemming to score twice and take the 1914 winners through.

Blackburn enter the fourth-round draw after winning 1-0 at Middlesbrough, Andreas Weimann scoring the goal that separated the two contenders for Championship promotion.

Exeter, the League One club, pulled one of the day’s biggest heists in beating Championship team Oxford, with Demetri Mitchell scoring twice before Vincent Harper extended the lead to 3-1. Oxford’s chances of a comeback disappeared with the red card shown to Tyler Goodrham, having taken the lead after a goal from the veteran Matt Phillips.

League One leaders Birmingham beat Lincoln, from the same division 2-1, the visitors’ goal, a penalty from Jovon Makama, coming as a 90th-minute consolation after Ayumu Yokoyama had scored in the first minute and Lyndon Dykes’ half-volley put Blues in command.

Last season’s FA Cup semi-finalists Coventry booked their place in the fourth round of this year’s competition with a penalty shootout victory over Sheffield Wednesday. Liam Kitching’s first-half goal for the hosts was cancelled out by Anthony Musaba’s stoppage-time equaliser before the Sky Blues prevailed 4-3 in the shootout.

Preston’s tie with Charlton and Leyton Orient’s tea-time hosting of Derby were casualties of frozen pitches, with both matches rescheduled for Tuesday evening. So too Mansfield’s hosting of Wigan.

  • This article was amended on 11 January 2025. An earlier version referred to the former Luton manager as Rob Davies, rather than Rob Edwards.

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