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Holders Chelsea ground out a 2-0 win at second-tier Middlesbrough on Wednesday to set up an FA Cup quarter-final glamour tie at Manchester United. |
Second-half goals from Ramires and Victor Moses secured victory at the Riverside Stadium as Chelsea bounced back from Sunday’s 2-0 loss at Manchester City, which had seen them slip to fourth place in the Premier League.
Victory in the fifth-round tie means Chelsea remain on course for what would be a fifth FA Cup title in seven seasons.
Chelsea made eight changes to the side beaten by City at the weekend, with Fernando Torres and skipper John Terry both returning to the starting line-up.
Oscar and Moses also came back into the team and they almost combined to break the deadlock in the 11th minute, but Oscar could not get enough purchase on his shot from his teammate’s cut-back.
Chelsea started authoritatively but as the first half wore on, Middlesbrough came back into the game. In the 26th minute, Scott McDonald came close to opening the scoring but his header from Nicky Bailey’s right-wing cross drifted narrowly wide of the right-hand post.
The hosts went even closer five minutes before half-time, with Petr Cech spilling a shot from Boro winger Mustapha Carayol and obliging Terry to make a hurried clearance.
It therefore came as something as a relief to the visitors when Ramires put them in front six minutes into the second half.
Yossi Benayoun laid the ball back to Ramires and his placed shot from the edge of the box beat goalkeeper Jason Steele with the aid of a slight deflection off the back of the crouching Torres. The goal calmed Chelsea’s nerves and after Steele had tipped over a shot from Torres, Terry headed wide at a corner.
Eden Hazard replaced Benayoun and the Belgian quickly created Chelsea’s second goal in the 73rd minute, neatly exchanging passes with Oscar and speeding into the box before squaring for Moses to score from close range. Interim manager Rafael Benitez has risked the wrath of owner Roman Abramovich by asking why the club insisted on making him an ‘interim’ manager when he replaced the sacked Roberto di Matteo. “I have a title. Someone decided the title would be ‘interim’. Why? Just in case?” he said on Wednesday.
“If they want to blame me for everything that is wrong and then they say, ‘We will put interim just in case,’ fine, that is your decision.
“I don’t agree, but it’s your decision and now everybody has to take responsibility. If we are in the Champions League, I will be the happiest man in the world. But next year, I will leave anyway because I have finished my contract, so they (his critics) don’t need to be worried about me.”