FA Cup

March 6, 2010

Full-time

Portsmouth

2 - 0

Birmingham

FA Cup

12:30 GMT, March 6, 2010

Fratton Park, England

Referee: S Bennett

Piquionne brace books Wembley date

Scoring Summary

Portsmouth Birmingham
Frederic Piquionne (67') 
Frederic Piquionne (70') 

Portsmouth's season has seen four different owners and the threat of liquidation but will also include a trip to Wembley after Frederic Piquionne earned them victory over Birmingham at Fratton Park.

• Grant salutes Portsmouth

Pompey, saddled with debt and being pursued by Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs, will earn more than £600,000 in prize money and broadcasting fees for reaching the FA Cup semi-final but money was hardly on their minds as they celebrated victory against Alex McLeish's men.

Piquionne's goals brightened up a quarter-final tie short on action until he struck in the 67th and 70th minutes, then Liam Ridgewell had an effort ruled out for the visitors despite the ball appearing to cross the line.

Before that, there was little to do for the two England goalkeepers on display, with David James looking to re-establish himself as Fabio Capello's first choice and Joe Hart tipped as a future number one.

They were barely tested during a first 45 minutes short of entertainment and goalmouth action, despite Birmingham having James McFadden in their forward line after overcoming groin problems during the week.

John Utaka, one of three survivors in the starting XI from Pompey's winning team in 2008, took just eight seconds to drill a shot at Hart - but it was not a sign of things to come.

James, Utaka and Hermann Hreidarsson offered a reminder of Wembley two seasons ago when Pompey defeated Cardiff, with the likes of Lassana Diarra, Glen Johnson and Sulley Muntari then sold at a profit but the club still plunging into financial crisis.

Adrift at the foot of the Barclays Premier League and with the threat of a nine-point deduction hanging over them for entering administration. the commitment of Avram Grant's men could not be questioned. Jamie O'Hara had been struggling with a back problem but insisted on playing.

In James, Grant has a goalkeeper desperate to get back ahead of Robert Green in the England pecking order and he tidily dealt with Birmingham's only chance of the first half. Lee Bowyer unselfishly set up Cameron Jerome and James denied the striker with a save at the near post.

Aside from Jerome's chance, the tie became a midfield battle with Michael Brown and Bowyer leading each side. One tackle from Brown, on his central-midfield opponent, earned a yellow card.

It meant flowing football did not figure prominently. When Nadir Belhadj did spot the chance of a counter-attack and tried to switch play, his ball to Danny Webber was accidentally blocked by referee Steve Bennett.

Utaka had sight of goal just before the break when O'Hara sent him down the left but he flashed over the crossbar after cutting inside and forcing Stephen Carr to backtrack.

There was more of the same after the restart, with neither side threatening with intent and both defences on top.

The visitors had Roger Johnson in their defence and he was looking for revenge after being in the Cardiff side that lost to Pompey nearly two years ago.

He and Scott Dann at the centre of Birmingham's defence meant it needed something special for the hosts to make an impression - and Piquionne provided it.

The French striker made no mistake from close range for the opener. Steve Finnan put the ball back in the danger area after a corner and found Utaka, Hart looked to have the situation under control but Dann crashed into him and the ball fell for Piquionne to tap in.

Piquionne's second came three minutes later. O'Hara played him through and the striker twisted and turned around Johnson before planting his finish past Hart for his fourth goal in three games.

There was time for James to pull off a stunning double save, although Ridgewell's header from close range looked over the line on replays.

  • Grant salutes Portsmouth

    Portsmouth boss Avram Grant saluted the spirit of the club's players and supporters after booking a place in the FA Cup semi-finals on an emotionally charged afternoon at Fratton Park.

    Grant, following his lap of honour after the final whistle, said: "Football is more than football. All these people are so happy. You can break many things but you cannot break our spirit. The spirit of the players and fans was high. Other people maybe thought we would break but nobody can break our spirit.

    "I'm very proud, when you see players of the age of Hermann Hreidarsson and David James giving their heart for the team. It's important for the spirit of football. There are some moments in your life you always remember and this is one of them. I was in the Champions League final and was happy, this is the same.''

    Victory earns Pompey £600,000 in prize money and broadcasting fees, but Grant added: "This is the last thing I care about now. We don't know what will happen in the next hour or day. One thing we can do is keep the spirit of the team, try to play good football in the right style with the right tactics and tell everyone we will respect any rule.

    "I always say to respect rules but rules also need to be logical. This club deserves more than anyone to be at Wembley because the players and fans are victims of things done by others. I will say it again and again until someone listens.''

    Birmingham boss Alex McLeish refused to make excuses for the defeat but felt his side would have been in the driving seat for a replay if Ridgewell's goal had stood.

    "We should have had a lifeline with a perfectly legitimate goal but unfortunately it wasn't to be,'' he said. "It would have given us a lifeline and I wouldn't bet against my team coming back if we got that goal. They've done that this season.

    "You would expect an official at this level to see that. They do the fitness tests and part of that is the vision side of things. It's a shame the guy missed that, I'm sure he will be hurting about it. I don't see how he could be obscured because he was over the line. Nobody was over the line so he should have been on that corner flag. James actually landed and caught it behind the line.''

    The incident came minutes after FIFA announced they would not be pursuing goal-line technology. "My stance has always been that they should,'' McLeish said. "That is a frustrating decision by FIFA because I think they are doing their officials a disservice.

    "It's not easy for their guys to see it in a split second. We feel he should have seen that but in a split second, you see offside decisions (given). I know you can't stop every part of the game but certainly for key decisions in a major competition like the FA Cup, your chances of getting to semi-finals and finals are few and far between for a little club like us.''