November 22, 2024

Joelinton strike takes Newcastle one step closer to Carabao Cup final – 5 talking points

Jacob Murphy #JacobMurphy

Newcastle took one step closer to their first domestic final since 1999 with a 1-0 Carabao Cup first-leg victory over Southampton at St Mary’s Stadium.

The Magpies started the brighter of the two sides and had a couple of opportunities to open the scoring, with Joe Willock missing two early chances. The former Arsenal midfielder fired well wide from the edge of the box before striking a volley over the crossbar from point-blank range.

Just as Southampton were growing into the game, Newcastle thought they had taken the lead through Joelinton, but his strike was ruled out for handball in the build-up. The Brazilian then should’ve found the back of the net just after the break, but somehow managed to blast over from a couple of yards.

Joelinton made amends with just under 20 minutes to go when he stabbed home from close range to put the Magpies in front. Moments later, Adam Armstrong equalised for Southampton, only for VAR to rule it out for handball in the lead-up. That sucked the life out of the hosts as Newcastle held on for a narrow first-leg win.

Here are five talking points from the contest on the south coast.

Joelinton the match-winner

Having missed a gilt-edged chance to give the Magpies the lead earlier in the game, Joelinton made amends by scoring the goal that would hand Newcastle a narrow advantage heading into the second leg. A terrific piece of play from Alexander Isak saw the Swede spin past his marker before flashing the ball across the face of goal for Joelinton to tap home.

It was a poacher’s effort from the Brazilian and he is starting to show his best form with his second goal in four games. His finish also put Newcastle one step closer to the Carabao Cup final as they eye their first domestic trophy in over 60 years.

Joelinton scored the winner for Newcastle against Southampton © PA Joelinton scored the winner for Newcastle against Southampton Caleta-Car shown red card in fiery affair

Southampton saw red in the latter stages after Duje Caleta-Car was given his marching orders. The Croatian was handed a second yellow card following a cynical foul on Allan Saint-Maximin.

It was a rash challenge from Caleta-Car and that type of foul was brewing given how feisty the game was. To make matters worse, second-half substitute Jacob Murphy was seen waving Caleta-Car off the pitch – an incident that could cause more tension between the two teams after a series of other bad fouls that caused yellow cards.

After his red card, Caleta-Car will be banned for the second leg at St James’ Park next week – a decision that could cost Saints given how impressive he has been in their upturn in form.

Referee controversy

Newcastle thought they had taken the lead in the 40th minute after Joelinton stabbed home from close-range following Callum Wilson’s blocked effort. However, the referee decided to chalk the goal off almost immediately for a handball by the Brazilian midfielder as he brought the ball down before slotting home.

It was a decision that caused uproar from the Newcastle players and away fans inside the ground, while supporters on social media were also fuming that the goal didn’t stand. VAR had a look at the incident but stuck with the on-field decision.

Joelinton thought he gave Newcastle the lead against Southampton © Getty Images Joelinton thought he gave Newcastle the lead against Southampton

Replays suggested that the ball rolled down the arm of Joelinton before he lashed home beyond Gavin Bazunu. By the letter of the law, it was the correct decision by Stuart Attwell. In the FIFA rule book, if the ball touches an attacking player’s hand or arm in the immediate build-up play to a goal, a handball should be awarded.

A similar instance occurred in the second-half when Armstrong bundled the ball home, but VAR ruled the goal out due to handball. The ball appeared to strike Armstrong’s hand as he tussled with Dan Burn, before the ball rolled home, only for the technology to overrule the referee’s initial decision.

Orsic struggles on full debut

From the World Cup third-place play-off to the Carabao Cup semi-final, Mirslav Orsic has had quite the month since he last started a game before being named in the XI to face Newcastle. The 30-year-old scored in Croatia’s 2-1 win over Morocco on December 17 to help his nation win a bronze medal at the tournament.

However, there was little time off for Orsic, who made the switch to Southampton in a deal worth around £8million from Dinamo Zagreb earlier this month – a deal that looked a bargain on paper. Orsic hasn’t set the world alight on the south coast so far, though, and failed to deceive on his full debut for the club.

Mislav Orsic struggled on his full Southampton debut © Getty Images Mislav Orsic struggled on his full Southampton debut

He was handed his first start by Nathan Jones as the Saints boss shuffled his pack but struggled to get involved and looked a complete passenger every time Southampton went forward. After Orsic was replaced on the 57 minute mark, Southampton looked a lot more dangerous.

Saint-Maximin frustration

There were some calls from Newcastle fans for Saint-Maximin to be named in the starting XI for the trip to St Mary’s after the Magpies failed to score for the third time in four matches against Crystal Palace on Saturday. Newcastle have been solid defensively of late, keeping six successive clean sheets in the Premier League, but lack some spark and creativity in attack.

However, despite boasting a wealth of pace and creative ability, Saint-Maximin was named on the bench once again – to the frustration of many Newcastle supporters. The same applied to record-signing Isak, but his retched injury record could be a major factor behind his latest snub.

Saint-Maximin hasn’t started a match since November and it is becoming a theme – a scenario that looked almost impossible 12 months ago. The winger came on for the final 20 minutes and made an impressive impact during his time on the pitch, causing Caleta-Car to be sent off.

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