Arsenal enjoyed a Carling Cup walk in the St Jamesโ Park as they overpowered a second-string Newcastle in their own backyard. The fleet-footed Theo Walcott stole the show, notching a brace of goals to remind both Arsene Wenger and us Fantasy Managers of his devastating form before injury temporarily de-railed his campaign. Elsewhere, extra-time wins for Villa and West Ham saw them progress to the last eight in another night of cup squad rotation merrimentโฆ
Theo Walcott and Nicklas Bendtner pushed their claims for starting roles with goals in the convincing 4-0 win over Newcastle at St Jamesโ Park. Walcott, in particular, looked sharp and provided plenty of concern for the home defence with his pace and movement. Given his outstanding start to the season, it will be interesting to see how Wenger deals with his availability for the forthcoming fixtures.
Wengerโs lineup last night saw Laurent Koscielny return from a back problem to bolster a defence that also included Johan Djourou, with Emmanuel Eboue and Kieran Gibbs starting at full-back. Elsewhere the eleven was completed by a mix of players who are likely to find themselves on the bench against West Ham this weekend โ Denilson, Carlos Vela and Craig Eastmond – and those who will be pushing for inclusion โ Tomas Rosicky, Bendtner and of course Walcott. Despite the goalscoring feats, those three would seem likely to start life on the bench, such is the competition for starts. Gibbs will be a doubt however, he limped off early on with what has been reported as a knee injury โ another niggle for the young left-back.
Cesc Fabregas was introduced mid-way through the second-half by Wenger as the Gunners boss look to sharpen up his skipper. Typically Fabregas contributed the assists for Bendtnerโs second and Arsenalโs third.
Chris Hughton made a string of changes to his eleven, handing starts to the likes of Ryan Taylor, Tamas Kadar, Alan Smith, Haris Vuckic, Peter Lovenkrands and Nile Ranger โ all of which are unlikely to trouble the teamsheet come the visit of Sunderland on Sunday.
The start for Wayne Routledge, and perhaps even Mike Williamson at the back, puts question marks over their inclusion in Sundayโs starting eleven. Routledge has lost his place of late and Jonas Gutierrez seems likely to continue on the left-flank. Williamsonโs situation seems more secure in the short-term but with Sol Campbell and Steven Taylor battling back to fitness, his starting role is clearly coming under increased threat.
One final footnote, Joey Barton picked up a late booking last night – his fourth of the campaign putting him on the suspension tightrope. One more yellow and he faces a one-match ban; not a great scenario given the cauldron expected for Sunday’s local derby with Sunderland.
Aston Villa progressed to the last eight thanks to strikes from Emile Heskey and an extra-time winner from Stewart Downing. The victory came at a price though – Marc Albrighton seeing red for hauling back Burnleyโs Wade Elliot; Albrighton will now miss Sundayโs local derby with Birmingham โ a blow to his Fantasy owners who have already questioned his first XI security of late.
Houllier is quickly running out of attacking options for Sundayโs game with Gabby Agbonlahor already ruled out. John Carew will also be a doubt after pulling out of last nightโs tie late on through illness. That meant that Ashley Young started the match in the strikers role, with Stephen Ireland pushed up in support. Ireland will now likely maintain his role โin the holeโ against Birmingham, with Young shifted to a wide role and Heskey brought back in to lead the attack. Steve Sidwell looks set to get the opportunity to make a claim for a run of starts with club skipper Stylian Petrov sidelined for two months. Sidwell started last night and, given Albrightonโs suspension, looks set to get the nod again on Sunday. Stephen Warnock was suspended for last night’s tie having picked up his fifth booking of the season at the weekend – he will therefore make a return against Birmingham.
Victor Obinna and Manuel da Costa chose the Carling Cup to register their first goals of the season after weeks of threatening in the Premier League. The pair struck in extra-time to hand the Hammersโ passage to the last eight but it was the performance of the ever-reliable Scott Parker that caught the eye. Parker headed West Hamโs equaliser to take the tie into the extra period and provided the catalyst for much of the home sideโs attacking play on the night.
Following his quality strike against United, Tony Pulis handed a start to Tuncay, slotting him alongside Kenwyne Jones up front against the Hammers. Jones had given Stoke an early lead from a Jermaine Pennant corner, but Tony Pulis was unable to keep both players on the pitch due to illness. Jones and Pennant were duly replaced in the second-half, a forced change which Pulis later identified as a turning point in the tie after the efforts of West Ham’s subs – Mark Noble and Victor Obinna – proved decisive factors in the win.
From a Fantasy perspective we now have to consider that Jones and Pennant, along with Matt Etherington who missed the game with a knock sustained against United, as doubts for the trip to Goodison this weekend.
