A Game That Didn’t Follow the Script
It wasn’t supposed to look like this. On Saturday, April 25, at Wembley Stadium, Manchester City beat Southampton 2–1 in their FA Cup semi-final. That’s the headline. But the way it happened — that’s where the story sits.
City had control. About 70% of the ball, 26 shots, most of the territory. And yet, for a long time, it didn’t feel like control meant much. At half-time, it was still 0–0. No real panic, but no real fluency either.
Southampton Waited — Then Struck
Southampton weren’t chasing the game. They stayed compact in their 4-2-3-1, didn’t overcommit, and just waited for a moment. They got it in the 79th minute.
Finn Azaz picked the ball up and curled one into the top corner from distance. It was clean, almost too clean. The kind of goal that changes everything in a second. Suddenly, the Championship side were leading at Wembley. For a brief moment, it didn’t feel like an upset anymore — it felt possible.
Three Goals. Eight Minutes. Everything Changes
What followed was quick. Really quick.82nd minute — Jeremy Doku. A shot that took a slight deflection and crept into the far corner. Not perfect, but enough. The game flipped again almost immediately.
Then 87th minute — Nico González. This one was different. Cleaner. More decisive. He struck through it with power, giving the goalkeeper no chance. From 1–0 down to 2–1 up in eight minutes. City didn’t rebuild control. They just took the moments when they came.
Control Was There — But Not Always Clarity
The numbers will say City dominated. And in parts, they did. But it wasn’t smooth. Pep Guardiola made eight changes, and it showed. The rhythm wasn’t always there. Moves broke down. Final passes didn’t land.
Even Erling Haaland, who came on later, couldn’t shift that final edge — and that run now stretches to 15 semi-finals or finals for City without a goal or assist. Still, the result stands.
Another FA Cup final. A fourth in a row.And the treble? Still alive.
Southampton Leave With Something, Even Without the Result
This will hurt Southampton. It has to. They were minutes away. After Azaz’s goal, they had it in their hands. And even before that, they had their chances — Ross Stewart testing the goalkeeper, Kuryu Matsuki forcing a save late on.
But once the equaliser went in, it felt like the game tilted too far. Still, there’s something in this performance. They didn’t just sit back. They competed. Properly. And with the Championship play-offs ahead, Wembley might not be done with them this season.
What This Manchester City vs Southampton FA Cup Really Showed
This wasn’t just a semi-final. It was a reminder of how games like this are decided. Not always through perfect structure or total control, but through small windows — moments where the game opens up just enough. City didn’t look perfect. Not for long stretches. But when it mattered, they were sharper. And right now, that’s enough to keep everything alive.
