|
|
|
| Millwall
(1) 1 |
Chelsea
(1) 1 |
| Lovell
7 |
Cusack
o.g. 25 |
by
Maurice Woolf at the Den
Millwall
manager George Graham was disgusted with two of his players'
performances, but he was justifiably proud of the way the rest battled.
Graham
said: "Two of my players were a disgrace, but the other nine kept
battling. It was good experience for us.
"I
hope the fans appreciate the football that was played. There was some
very good stuff."
He
refused to name the two players but stated he had told them in no
uncertain terms what he thought of them.
"We
lost our real chance of winning when Dean Neal had to come off. We just
fizzled out up front after that.”
|
Stevens
and Lindsay Smith, of Millwall, and Chelsea's Kerry Dixon, Dave Speedie,
Keith Jones and Joe McLaughlin.
Once
again by a quirk of fate Millwall conceded an own goal to Chelsea when
they were riding high.
Dixon
claimed the goal from Dave Speedie's cross, but the ball hit Dave Cusack
chest and went into the net as Sansome was covering the Dixon header.
This
goal came in the 25th minute, 18 minutes after the Lions went into the
lead.
Anton
Otulakowski was fouled by Colin Lee. Skipper Les Briley took the
free-kick and Steve Lovell, unmarked, headed the ball powerfully past
the keeper.
And
how the Den fans their biggest turnout-for six years - roared the goal.
Millwall took complete control until the Chelsea equaliser.
The
Lions had every chance of forcing extra |
● Dave
Cusack turns away in celebration as Lovell's header beats Chelsea
keeper Niedzwiecki |
|
"Once
Chelsea equalised they were able to feel comfortable and even though we
had a chance of taking them after our early goal. I knew our chances had
gone when the equaliser came."
Chelsea
boss John Neal said: "We knew that Millwall would cause us a few
flutters, but once we equalised we felt comfortable."
Fate
Referee
Alan Seville booked six players - Keith |
time,
but their poor finishing let them down.
When
Neal was injured - he had a groin strain - their chances completely
vanished.
Speedie
demonstrated the difference between a class player and an ordinary one.
One moment he was clearing the ball off his own line, then he was at the
other end, chipping Sansome and seeing the ball bit the post.
|
● Flare
up at the Den. A Policeman gingerly approaches a burning flare
Millwall:
Sansome, Stevens, Roffey, Briley, Smith, Cusack, Lowndes, Bremner, Neal
(Sheringham 35 mins), Lovell, Otulakowski.
Chelsea:
Niedzwiecki; Lee, Rougvie, Pates, McLaughlin, Bumstead, Jones, Spackman,
Dixon, Speedie, Thomas. Sub.Cannonville.
Referee:
Alan Seville (Birmingham). Att.: 11,157. |
|
|
|
Millwall
1 Chelsea 1 (2 -4 on aggreate)
DAVE
CUSACK is still fuming over Millwall's Milk Cup dream turned sour.
The
luckless Lions defender was the victim of a fluke goal that killed off
Millwall's bid to force their way in to the third round draw.
Manager
George Graham's side had reduced the 3-1 deficit from the first leg with
a sizzling seventh minute goal.
But
just minutes later Chelsea’s David Speedie swung a dangerous cross in
to the Millwall goalmouth and star striker Kerry Dixon met it with a
header that struck Cusack on the chest and beat goalkeeper Paul Sansome.
Afterwards
the 28-year-old defender fumed, "It was a really weak header from
Dixon, and Paul was right in line with it, waiting to catch the ball.
“But
it just hit me and there was nothing I could do, the ball changed
direction completely and just plopped over the line."
Yet
worse was still to come - leading scorer Dean Neal was forced off after
35 minutes with a groin strain.
While,
after that, they never looked, likely, to pull back the three goals they
needed for victory, the |
Lions
produced the smooth soccer that has taken them to third spot in Division
Three.
They
grabbed that early goal after Anton Otulakowski had been fouled and
skipper Les Briley sent in a looping free-kick as Steve Lovell rose to
head a superb effort.
Otulakowski
sent a screaming volley inches over the bar, 10 minutes before the
break.
But
the best chances fell to 18-year old substitute Teddy Sheringham who
squandered three second half opportunities.
Yet
while Millwall can curse their luck there is little doubt that Chelsea
had something in hand for much of the match.
And
as for the widely predicted violence, the only fireworks on the terraces
came in the shape of a flare that was thrown from the Chelsea end in the
second half.
Manager
Graham admitted, Chelsea looked comfortable, and our hopes went with
Neal. We played some nice football, but we couldn’t finish it off.
Millwall:
Sansome, Stevens, Roffey, Briley, Smith, Cusack, Lovell, Bremner, Neal
(Sheringham) Lowndes, Otulakowski.
Referee:
Alan Seville (Birmingham) Att: 11,157 |
|
|
|
|
|
|