Everton survive a MAJOR scare as they finally see off Rotherham in extra-time thanks to Abdoulaye Doucoure’s late winner that puts Carlo Ancelotti’s men into the fourth round
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To understand how seriously Carlo Ancelotti is taking the FA Cup – and what peril Everton were in – the cost of his substitutions told the story.
With Rotherham, next to bottom in the Championship, having secured parity and appearing capable of causing shock and embarrassment, Everton’s manager turned around and summoned four players deep in the second half worth a combined £95million.
That Ancelotti was forced to take such measures illustrates how uncomfortable an afternoon that had appeared to be straightforward had become. Everton needed one of those changes – £22m Abdoulaye Doucoure – to conjure a winning goal in extra-time to secure their progress.
Everton survived an almighty scare to make it through to the FA Cup fourth round with a 2-1 victory against Rotherham
Cenk Tosun opened the scoring within the opening 10 minutes by lobbing Jamal Blackman with Anthony Gordon assisting
However, Rotherham’s Matthew Olosunde brought the visitors level in the second half by squeezing a shot in at the far post
Turkish striker Tosun thought he had restored the hosts’ lead with five minutes to go but VAR ruled his goal out for offside
But substitute Abdoulaye Doucoure scored three minutes into extra time to slot home what would be the winning goal
MATCH FACTS
Everton (4-2-3-1): Olsen; Coleman, Keane, Godfrey, Digne (Mina 66); Davies (Sigurdsson 66), Andre Gomes; Iwobi (Doucoure 61), Rodriguez (Nkounkou 95), Gordon (Bernard 61); Tosun
Subs not used: Holgate, Branthwaite, Lossl, Simms
Booked: None
Goals: Tosun 9, Doucoure 93
Rotherham (5-4-1): Blackman; Olosunde (Jones 90), Ihiekwe, Wood, MacDonald, Harding (Clarke 83); Lindsay (Jozefzoon 76), Barlaser, Crooks (Vassell 67), Wiles; Smith (Hirst 77)
Subs not used: Johansson, Miller, Tilt, Vickers
Booked: Hirst
Goal: Olosunde 56
Referee: Stuart Attwell
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Not that Ancelotti took any satisfaction. His team eventually found a way to win thanks to their superior ability and fitness but for much of it, Everton were scruffy. If anything, he would have admired the diligence and perseverance Rotherham displayed to cause such problems.
Paul Warne’s side – who arrived here on the back of eight defeats in 10 games – were the better team for long periods and defeat hurt them. They kept going until the final whistle and made things as uncomfortable for their hosts as possible.
Everton started brightly enough. A mazy run from Anthony Gordon in the third minute carried him into Rotherham’s box but his shot was blocked; another effort from Andre Gomes fizzed wide of the post and the brisk started suggested they had set their intentions.
Sure enough, a goal quickly followed when Gordon – desperate to make the most of a starting opportunity – slipped a ball through to Cenk Tosun, who held his nerve and dinked his finish over goalkeeper Jamal Blackman.
There were only eight minutes gone and you anticipated a procession.
Not so. Everton, remarkably, failed to muster another shot on target before the final whistle and were continually hemmed back by a team who played without inhibitions.
Whatever difficulties Rotherham have endured in the Championship, they were not apparent here.
Rotherham changed the course of the contest in the 25th minute when Matt Olosunde got the better of a clearly unfit Lucas Digne and charged into the box, forcing a save from Robin Olsen before Dan Barlaser followed up with a drive that required the Swede to take decisive action.
It provided a noticeable injection of confidence and, suddenly, they seemed to understand that Everton were vulnerable. A corner from Barlaser, shortly after, was met at the near post by Matt Crooks but his header skimmed the crossbar.
Everton got the ideal start to the game when Gordon played in Tosun, whose delicate finish beat Chelsea loanee Blackman
Rotherham could have equalised when Matt Crooks’ (right) header from a corner landed on the roof of the Everton net
Tosun had a half chance to double his tally and Everton’s lead but could only skew his effort tamely wide of the target
Carlo Ancelotti was left exasperated and frustrated with his side’s performance in the first and second halves on Saturday
Eventually, Rotherham’s reward arrived.
Early in the second half, Olosunde – a former Manchester United graduate – got away from Digne again and, this time, placed his shot beyond Olsen and into the net via the inside of a post.
At that point, the only outcome you could foresee was a shock but Ancelotti took decisive action. On came Yerry Mina, Gylfi Sifgurdsson and Bernard, along with Doucoure, and Everton found some balance and they thought they had won it in the 84th minute, only for VAR to rule out a Tosun strike.
No matter. Early in extra-time, James Rodriguez – who to that point had been a passenger – provided a beautiful pass for Doucoure and the midfielder galloped away before curling his left shot drive past Blackman.
The celebrations were muted. Relief was the main emotion.
His frustration would grow when the visitors then went level when Olosunde found a way to slide the ball past Robin Olsen
His side then survived a hammerblow thanks to VAR after Tosun had got on the end of James Rodriguez’s dangerous free-kick
But in the third minute of the first half of extra time, Doucoure broke Rotherham hearts by calmly finishing beyond Blackman
Fellow substitute Bernard could then have sealed the match for Ancelotti’s side but his effort crashed against the post
There were significant delays in extra time too, with Angus MacDonald (middle) and Yerry Mina suffering heavy blows