ENGLAND: Swansea win first major trophy

England

Swansea City have ended Bradford City’s English League Cup fairytale with a record-breaking 5-0 victory in the final at Wembley Stadium. The win for the Swans crowns the club’s centenary year with a first major trophy.

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Bradford had accounted for Arsenal, Aston Villa and Wigan Athletic en route to the final, but they fell well short in their bid to become the first team from England’s fourth division to lift the prize.

Goals from Nathan Dyer and Michu gave Swansea a 2-0 half-time lead, with Dyer doubling his tally early in the second half before Jonathan de Guzman added a fourth with a penalty after Bradford goalkeeper Matt Duke was sent off. De Guzman made it five in injury time as Swansea broke the victory margin record set by Manchester United against Wigan Athletic in the 2006 final.

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“As a player, I had the luck to play in the biggest teams in different countries,” Swansea manager Michael Laudrup told BBC radio. “Swansea is not the biggest team in the Premier League, but we are here winning a trophy and that is fantastic. To win a trophy with a smaller club is outstanding.”

Bradford mustered just one attempt at goal over the course of the 90 minutes, but their fans nonetheless revelled in the achievement of being the first English fourth-tier side to reach a major Wembley final.

Laudrup surprisingly fielded midfielder Ki Sung-Yueng at centre-back in place of the injured Chico Flores, but the South Korean had a gentle introduction to the game as the Welsh club bossed possession.

Ben Davies was unable to convert Swansea’s first chance of note, leaping well to head wide from Angel Rangel’s high cross in the 14th minute, but two minutes later, Laudrup’s men took the lead.

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Bradford had ventured forward en masse for the first time, but when the move broke down mid-way inside the Swansea half, the minnows were exposed. Wayne Routledge drove forward before slipping the ball wide to Michu, and when the Spaniard’s low shot was palmed away by Duke, Dyer slid in to give Swansea the lead from close range.

The advantage procured, Swansea seemed in no hurry to extend their lead. Leon Britton sliced a half-volley wide after a corner was half-cleared in the 31st minute, and Swansea did not have another attempt at goal until Michu doubled their advantage five minutes before half-time.

Pablo Hernandez threaded a pass into his countryman’s feet and with Bradford’s defenders standing off, Michu had time to turn and take a touch before prodding a left-foot shot into the bottom-right corner.

Shortly afterwards, Britton sent Routledge scampering down the inside-right channel, but his shot was pushed over the bar by Duke, who comfortably caught a subsequent shot from Hernandez. Any hopes Bradford had of mounting a second-half comeback vanished in the 47th minute when Dyer sped down the right flank and exchanged passes with Routledge before lashing a shot inside the left-hand post.

Improbably, things went from bad to worse for Bradford in the 56th minute when Duke was shown a straight red card for felling Dyer in the penalty area.

Things turned a bit sour shortly afterwards for Swansea, and sadly, their infighting might become the bigger story from this final than their spectacular performance. Jonathan de Guzman drew a penalty and a red card on Duke for denial of a clear goal-scoring opportunity in the 56th minute, and as both the regular penalty taker and the man who won the spot kick, de Guzman wanted to take. Dyer, on a hat trick, disagreed and threw a downright temper tantrum when de Guzman refused to let him take. The Dutch-Canadian buried his penalty, and Dyer did not celebrate with his teammates.

Dyer was eventually substituted to boos from the Wembley crowd, and Swansea eventually added a fifth goal for good measure. After a long spell of pressure and a delivery into the box from Angel Rangel, de Guzman netted his second of the day to put the icing on the cake for the Swans.

WillBurns

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