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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Ed Aarons at St Mary's

Grimsby manager thought fans ‘were mad’ for dreaming of Southampton win

Gavan Holohan of Grimsby celebrates with teammates after he makes it 1-0.
Gavan Holohan of Grimsby celebrates with teammates after he makes it 1-0. Photograph: Robin Jones/Getty Images

The Grimsby manager, Paul Hurst, dedicated their historic victory against Southampton to the club’s supporters after they reached the sixth round of the FA Cup for the first time in 84 years.

More than 4,000 fans and their inflatable Harry Haddock mascots saw two penalties from Gavan Holohan either side of half-time seal a historic win despite the Premier League’s bottom side hitting back through Duje Caleta-Car and the substitute Theo Walcott seeing his equaliser disallowed with 10 minutes left.

Sixteenth in League Two after winning the National League play-offs last season, if Grimsby win their quarter-final at Brighton they will play their semi-final at Wembley. They have already beaten five teams from higher divisions during their run to the last eight.

“Some of the fans probably had expectations that we could win but I thought they were mad. It was nice that they were proved right,” said a delighted Hurst.

Burnley boss Vincent Kompany is set to make an emotional return to Manchester City after the clubs were paired together in the FA Cup quarter-final draw.

Former City skipper Kompany, who won four Premier League titles and two FA Cups among his haul of trophies during his 11-year-stay with the club, will take the Clarets to the Etihad Stadium later this month.

The Championship leaders booked their showdown with the reigning English champions minutes before the draw, courtesy of a 1-0 win over League One Fleetwood. 

League Two Grimsby’s reward for their shock 2-1 win at top-flight Southampton is a trip to Brighton.

Gavan Holohan’s penalty double either side of half-time produced a huge upset at St Mary’s and left them one win away from a trip to Wembley.

The Mariners, who have reached the quarter-finals for the first time since the second world war, sit in 16th place in the fourth tier, while the Seagulls lie eighth in the Premier League.

Carabao Cup winners Manchester United will entertain top-flight rivals Fulham with a place in the semi-finals at stake.

They had to come from behind to beat West Ham 3-1 at Old Trafford, three days after their Wembley victory over Newcastle.

The final tie will see Championship promotion hopefuls Sheffield United host second-tier counterparts Blackburn, who beat Leicester City 2-1 on Tuesday night. 

FA Cup quarter-final draw in full

Manchester City v Burnley

Manchester United v Fulham

Brighton & Hove Albion v Grimsby Town

Sheffield United v Blackburn Rovers

Ties will be played on 17-19 March.

“As the night went on I think a bit more belief spread throughout them and it was really nice to enjoy the scenes with them at the end. It felt like there is a connection there between us. Grimsby Town being in the quarter-finals of the FA Cup is something I thought I would never hear.”

Grimsby Town fans celebrate after the final whistle.
Grimsby Town fans celebrate after the final whistle. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters

Grimsby benefited twice from VAR decisions, first when Lyanco handled a cross from Joshua Emmanuel for their first penalty and then when Walcott’s equalising goal was ruled out. Hurst admitted that he was relieved to see Holohan coolly convert his spot-kicks on both occasions given that Grimsby had failed to score a penalty all season.

“We’d had two penalties before tonight and missed them both,” he said. “The penalty gave us some hope and at that point I was just thinking it was nice for the fans to have something to cheer. I’m not a massive fan of VAR and the decisions take far too long. But it’s obviously gone for us tonight.”

Southampton’s interim manager, Rubén Sellés, made nine changes from their defeat against Leeds at the weekend but his side struggled to create chances until the introduction of the captain, James Ward-Prowse, in the second half. They were booed off the pitch by supporters having slumped to a fifth loss in their last six matches.

“I’m disappointed with the whole team,” said Sellés. “As soon as something happened in the game we were not robust enough to come back. We had a conversation afterwards to try and get some points clear but now we have a period of reflection and see where we need to continue going forward.”

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