FA Cup

March 7, 2010

Full-time

Reading

2 - 4

Aston Villa

FA Cup

13:45 GMT, March 7, 2010

Madejski Stadium, England

Referee: M Dean

Villa seal semi-final spot

Scoring Summary

Reading Aston Villa
Shane Long (27')Ashley Young (47')
Shane Long (42')John Carew (51')
 John Carew (57')
 John Carew (pen 90')

Aston Villa remain on course for a second Wembley final after hat-trick hero John Carew inspired a 4-2 win against Reading in the FA Cup quarter-final at the Madejski Stadium.

• O'Neill wants more from hat-trick hero Carew

The Royals had already knocked out Premier League sides Liverpool and Burnley and a third scalp appeared imminent after Shane Long marked his return from suspension with a two-goal blast during the opening 45 minutes.

Brian McDermott's side were the better team, with Jimmy Kebe causing problems down the right flank and the Villa defence looking nervy.

But Villa turned the tie on its head in dramatic fashion with three goals in the first 12 minutes of the second half through Ashley Young and two from Carew.

Then, in injury time, Carew completed his hat-trick from the penalty spot after being brought down by Ivar Ingimarsson.

Young, James Milner and Stewart Downing also played major roles in Villa ensuring they reached the last four.

Reading opened brightly and Matt Mills squandered a good chance to put them ahead after 10 minutes.

A deep cross from Brian Howard was headed back across goal to Mills, who was in space 12 yards out but he completely miskicked his attempted volley.

Kebe had the ball in the Villa net shortly afterwards but referee Mike Dean had already awarded a free-kick to the visitors for a foul by Simon Church on Stephen Warnock.

Villa retaliated and a low cross from Emile Heskey carried just too much pace to pick out the run of Carew into the box.

Kebe cut out a dangerous cross at full stretch from Milner, who then sent a half-volley over the bar after a Downing corner had only been half cleared.

Reading continued to look threatening and Richard Dunne became the first player to be yellow-carded after 25 minutes for a challenge on Kebe.

Then, two minutes later, Long marked his return from a four-game ban by putting Reading ahead.

A corner from Brian Howard was headed on by Mills and Long was on hand to head past Brad Friedel from close range.

Carew thought he had equalised a minute later when he swept home a free-kick from Milner but he was adjudged to have been offside, although TV replays suggested it was a borderline decision.

But Reading continued to pose a threat and Gylfi Sigurdsson had a powerful goal-bound shot blocked by Dunne.

Young was booked for dissent five minutes before half-time even though Dean awarded Villa a free-kick for a challenge on Carew by Howard.

Then, in the 43rd minute, Long struck for the second time.

A fine move down the right flank saw Sigurdsson find Kebe, who outpaced the Villa defence before cutting the ball back across the box to Long, who made no mistake from 12 yards out.

Villa boss Martin O'Neill would have demanded a positive response from his side in the second half and Young reduced the deficit within two minutes of the restart.

Downing's cross was helped on by Carew and, although Carlos Cuellar mis-kicked, Young was on hand at the far post.

Villa were looking a completely different side and, in the 51st minute, Downing created another goal, this time for Carew.

The former Middlesbrough player was found in space by Milner and his cross was inch perfect for Carew to head wide of Adam Federici.

Then, incredibly, after 57 minutes, Carew struck for the second time to put Villa ahead.

The over-lapping Warnock raced onto a pass from Young and his low centre was met by Carew, who deflected the ball into the far corner of the net with the neatest of touches.

The Norwegian international was booked after celebrating with the Villa fans.

Heskey could have sealed the tie when he raced clear of the Reading defence but Federici blocked his shot.

Reading started to regain their composure and Young came to Villa's rescue when he cleared a header from skipper Ingimarsson off the line.

Then Friedel held onto a volley from Reading substitute Grzegorz Rasiak.

Jay Tabb was booked for bringing down Milner, who himself was yellow-carded for halting Kebe in full flight, before Carew completed his treble from the spot.

  • O'Neill wants more from hat-trick hero Carew

    After the game Aston Villa manager Martin O'Neill challenged John Carew to build on his match-winning hat-trick.

    O'Neill said: "Gabriel Agbonlahor was poorly this morning and had to go home so John steps in and scores a second-half hat-trick which was absolutely delightful. John at his hungriest can perform like that. He got the equaliser for us and his game lifted two or three-fold.

    "Goals give him confidence and the next thing you know he is running the game. He can do that and I want him to perform like that more often. I would be delighted if he could score a hat-trick every week but first he needs to find a level of performance which is up there with the best strikers."

    O'Neill refused to go into detail over the contents of his half-time team talk but the transformation in Villa's play was remarkable. After being second best in the first half Villa had taken the lead by the 57th minute as they blew Reading away with a fabulous spell of attacking play.

    O'Neill said: "It was a great spell by us just after half-time and we needed to do something because we had played so meekly in the first half.

    "I think after all the effort that we have put in in both cups this season, to go out as meekly as we might have done would have been very disappointing. But I am delighted with the team, we have showed great character.

    "The players are fine players and they knew how second best we were in the first half. They didn't need much reminding of that. But I thought Reading played very, very well in the first half. They played with no fear and deserved the second goal and I was pleased to go in just two down.

    "But some of my players have performed unbelievably well this season and they came to the fore again."

    The Royals had already knocked out Premier League sides Liverpool and Burnley and a third scalp appeared imminent after Long marked his return from suspension with a two-goal blast during the opening 45 minutes.

    A first semi-final appearance since 1927 looked on the cards until Villa's superb response but manager Brian McDermott remained realistic.

    He said: "I thought we played really, really well in the first half and we were good value for a 2-0 lead. Our play was excellent and I am looking forward to watching it again on TV tonight. We could even have had more goals.

    "But if you are going to lose a game that's the way to do it, especially in the FA Cup.

    "We came up against a class side and we needed to keep it tight for the first 10 minutes after the break and we just couldn't do that. It wasn't nerves. We came up against players who could be in the Champions League next year.

    "They have pace, power and quality all over the pitch and I think we gave them as tough a game as they have had all season.

    "We knew at half-time that they were capable of producing something and they certainly responded to whatever Martin said."