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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Dominic Booth

Port Vale 1-0 Sunderland: FA Cup fifth round – as it happened

Ben Waine celebrates scoring for Port Vale against Sunderland in FA Cup
Ben Waine of Port Vale celebrates his goal. Photograph: Ryan Browne/Shutterstock

Here’s the match report from Peter Lansley, so that will wrap up our coverage for the afternoon.

What a day for Port Vale. The team rooted to the bottom of League One are in the hat for the FA Cup quarter-finals after stunning Premier League Sunderland, who were a long way below par. Ben Waine to get the freedom of Burslem?

Thanks, as always, for joining us. It’s been fun.

Sunderland’s Régis Le Bris was not happy, but magnanimous in defeat:

Congratulations to our opponent, they played with intensity and patience. It was about the fighting spirit and they seized their opportunity. We had chances but it wasn’t enough to win the game. We didn’t show enough. Sometimes you do not realise what an opportunity it is [to go deep in the FA Cup].

A few Port Vale fans did get onto the pitch after the final whistle, but no harm done from what I saw. You cannot blame them for enjoying this day – no doubt Ben Waine will go down in fan folklore for his two goals in the FA Cup this week.

I’m told this will be Port Vale’s first appearance in an FA Cup quarter-final since 1954 - when they went on to reach the semi-finals.

Even John Rudge, the legendary Vale manager of the 1990s, didn’t reach this far despite beating Everton in a 1996 fourth round upset.

Here’s Jon Brady’s reaction on TNT Sports:

I’m in shock really. We knew we had to suffer, we knew the pitch might have helped us as well. Joe Gauci makes a couple of incredible saves, overall really pleased.

There was the attitude to go [forward] when the opportunity was there. George Hall got in two or three times.

It hasn’t sunk in really. Not that I didn’t believe we could do it, but you need a couple of things to go your way. I’m really pleased for everyone at the football club. You can see we’re getting a connection with our fans through performances.

Southampton have done it, Port Vale have done it, so it’s now over to Norwich to try and make it three upsets and three Premier League teams dumped out of the FA Cup in one day.

Luke McLaughlin is on the live updates for us.

Waine was given the Player of the Match award, by the way – deservedly so.

“Que sera sera” is ringing around Vale Park. They are 90 minutes from Wembley.

Jon Brady is on the pitch blowing kisses to the crowd. He’d never reached beyond the fourth round stage in the past, let alone the quarter-finals.

“Look at this place, I’ve never seen it like this,” says a stunned Ben Waine on TNT Sports. “I know it wasn’t pretty to watch but we dug in so hard, I think we deserved it.”

The New Zealand international adds: “I hope the family are watching back home.”

He says it’s “hands down” the biggest footballing upset he’s been involved in.

A fourth successive 1-0 home win for Port Vale in the FA Cup this season. They’ll be rubbing shoulders with the big boys in the last eight. Who do you want, Valiants? Arsenal? Liverpool? Manchester City? Chelsea?

It’s bouncing at Vale Park. The fans are understandably basking in the moment – their moment.

FT: Port Vale 1-0 Sunderland

Port Vale are into the FA Cup quarter-finals!

What a win, what a story, what an achievement for Jon Brady and his team – the bottom club in League One – they have seen off Premier League opposition in some style today, with Ben Waine goal’s again the difference in an FA Cup tie. Brilliant scenes at Vale Park.

Updated

90 mins+5: This is it – Sunderland are in the last chance saloon. But Vale are meeting every cross and making all the tackles and there seems to be no way through for the Premier League outfit.

Into the last minute.

90 mins+3: Enzo Le Fée blazes a shot so far over, it’s probably landed in another postcode. Le Bris does not look in any way amused by what he’s seen.

90 mins+2: A couple of soft fouls are given away by Sunderland to really alleviate the pressure on Port Vale. They might have a pop at goal from this latest one… no, it’s going into the corner.

Oh and it ends in a good chance for Gray! Whizzed just wide of the post when it was looking like 2-0.

Xhaka puffs out his cheeks after overhitting a cross. It’s been the story of Sunderland’s afternoon, really; their radar has been off from the word go.

We’re going to play six minutes of stoppage time. A groan goes up around Vale Park… I guess it could have been worse, by modern standards.

Updated

89 mins: Walters shepherds another ball out of play, with Vale managing this pretty damn well as things stand.

No doubt there will be a healthy chunk of added time to come.

88 mins: Waine is the latest Vale player to go off to a huge noise from the home fans. What an impact he’s had in the FA Cup this season. Grant Ward comes on as Jon Brady’s side smell the finish line.

Time to stick big Dan Ballard up front, Régis?

Updated

86 mins: The clock is against Sunderland here. Every loose pass, every heavy touch, every attack that comes to nothing… it all benefits Port Vale.

84 mins: Ironic cheers from the home faithful greet an over-hit Diarra cross. Another decent attacking position goes begging for the Black Cats.

83 mins: The Vale corner is scuffed into the side netting. Eesh, not what was required there.

And yep, here comes former Arsenal and Leverkusen midfielder Xhaka. Can he spark a late revival from Sunderland here? God knows they need some inspiration.

82 mins: George Hall gets away on the break again after another Sunderland error on the ball. He’s released down the left but O’Nien matches him for pace and forces the shot wide, via a deflection in the end. It’s a Vale corner.

81 mins: There’s a big ovation for left wing-back Liam Gordon as he is substituted.

Elijah Campbell comes on.

80 mins: Off the post! The offside flag goes up in the end, so it may not have counted, but that’s as close as Sunderland have come. Le Fee’s cross was perfectly arrowed towards the back post and Angulo came in at the back stick again but couldn’t find the net. Replays suggest he was indeed offside.

78 mins: Waine is indefatigable. He harries and hustles and runs and presses all day for you, no wonder Brady has kept him on.

76 mins: Another Sunderland free-kick prompts a very questionable decision from Gauci. He opted to come off his line to collect the ball, but was nowhere near it… fortunately from a Vale perspective, Gauci was bailed out by his clearing defenders.

Granit Xhaka is about to enter the fray.

74 mins: A couple of readers are in my inbox to tell me that it wasn’t a red card offence from Ellborg. I’m still unconvinced.

Vale remain a threat on the counter, though, that’s for sure.

72 mins: Port Vale, eight points adrift at the bottom of League One, are around 20 minutes from the FA Cup quarter-finals.

My mistake earlier, by the way: It was George Hall rather than Waine who was felled by Ellborg for that possible Sunderland red card.

70 mins: Good save from Gauci! Angulo ghosted in at the back post to meet a deep cross with a good header. Not sure it was going in, probably hitting the bar, but Gauci didn’t know that and he was forced to palm it over.

And again Ballard darts in at the near post to meet the resulting corner. Is that another fingertip save from the goalkeeper? Either way, Ballard continues to be a threat in the box – and Sunderland are definitely getting closer.

68 mins: Talbi, who has had a pretty torrid afternoon, trots off to be replaced by Isidor.

“Who are ya?” is the chant from the Vale fans. Classic.

Ballard heads comfortably over from a corner.

66 mins: Wilson Isidor is stripped and ready for the visitors. Will Le Bris call upon Granit Xhaka too? Sunderland are a much better team with the Swiss international on the field.

Updated

65 mins: The new-look Vale attacking triumvirate of Waine, Gray and George Hall seem to have given them some extra thrust on the break. This is properly exciting stuff.

Robbie Savage on TNT Sports thinks that a yellow is the right decision. The more I see it, the less I agree with him. I think Waine would have had a clear chance of scoring into an open goal had he not been felled.

62 mins: Waine’s touch beyond Ellborg did send him a little wide… Brady has been booked for his protests, by the way. The decision of yellow card is going to stand and Vale aren’t happy about it.

I think it’s very marginal. I can see a scenario in which a ref gives a red card for that.

61 mins: Ben Waine Geroge Hall has been brought down outside the Sunderland box. Ellborg came rushing out to sprawl at the feet of the Vale forward and got nothing of the ball, but Anthony Taylor has brandished a yellow card instead of a red.

Vale fans aren’t happy. It all came from a brilliant long pass by Andre Gray. VAR is having a long hard look… it’s a classic DOGSO question.

Updated

59 mins: Yet another Sunderland set-piece passes by without much danger to the Vale goal. The delivery was the problem on that occasion, with Chris Rigg sending it far too deep and Ballard struggling to head it back into the danger-zone.

57 mins: For the second time in quick succession, Sunderland’s players fail to attack a ball that’s been sent into the box. I cannot find a justifiable reason for them doing so.

Vale, meanwhile, have brought on former FA Cup finalist Andre Gray, as well as George Hall. Archer and Brown are the men replaced.

56 mins: Now Vale have an opportunity to send in a set-piece. Ellborg is equal to the delivery from Brown though.

55 mins: Sunderland are finally turning up the heat a tad. Here comes an O’Nien long throw … which NOBODY attacks and Vale’s defenders can watch it bounce harmlessly into the arms of Gauci.

Updated

54 mins: I’m astonished that Le Fée opted to chip it into the scrum of bodies there rather than test Gauci from 25 yards or so. The Sunderland fans weren’t best pleased with his decision either.

Ben Waine has gone into the book for a pull-back on Le Fée. Probably a decent booking to take from a Port Vale perspective.

52 mins: Ah that’s a clumsy foul from Ojo on Diarra, in a spot Vale would prefer not to concede a free-kick. The Sunderland fans are behind the goal their team are attacking in this second half.

Enzo Le Fée may fancy a crack at goal from here.

Updated

50 mins: It’s slow going in terms of buildup play from Sunderland right now. Talbi has sunk to the turf after getting a blow in the face from Lawrence-Gabriel, but it’s nothing too serious.

48 mins: Ethon Archer and Rhys Walters are two Vale players who really stood out in the first half, for me. The former is lightning quick and has been an outlet up front throughout and the latter has done well to bring the ball down in midfield under pressure and get passes away.

Gauci makes an important save after a melee, of sorts, in the hosts’ box following a Sunderland corner.

46 mins: There’s a snapshot from Talbi early in proceedings but it’s way over the crossbar. Sunderland are going to have to get a lot closer than that.

Second half: We’re back under way.

Tyler Magloire has replaced Cameron Humphreys at the back for Vale.

Will we see Andre Gray in the second half? He’s on the Vale bench.

“We’re one game away from the quarter-finals,” he said before this game. “And we don’t know what the draw would be but it could be a big team away and a lot of the lads, and the supporters, haven’t experienced that. I’ve been there and done it but it’s still a big occasion. As a footballer you want to play at the highest level as much as you can.”

It is more than likely Port Vale will draw another Premier League if they get through the next 45 minutes. Then they’d be 90 minutes from a Wembley semi-final.

We’re nearly ready for the second half.

Maybe Steve will be drawing those curtains if he’s watching from his bedroom and this Sunderland display continues much longer.

I’m off to grab a quick brew before the second half madness commences.

Steve McQuade gets in touch on email:

Lifelong Sunderland fan, resident in the Potteries for decades with a bedroom overlooking the ground. Fond memories of Vale Park being a happy hunting ground, but also went to support the Vale.

Top memory: Denis Smith’s promotion party after Sunderland won 1 - 0 back in the 80s at Vale Park. Eric Gates with about 10 minutes to go. Pretty sure it is on YouTube still.

Port Vale’s scores in the FA Cup since beating Maldon & Tipree 5-1 in the first round in November:

  • Port Vale 1-0 Bristol Rovers (2R)

  • Port Vale 1-0 Fleetwood (3R)

  • Port Vale 1-0 Bristol City (4R, AET)

  • Port Vale 1-0 Sunderland (5R, HT)

HT: Port Vale 1-0 Sunderland.

The added time period brought a half-chance for Ballard, who headed from a deep cross tamely at Gauci, but was otherwise well negotiated by Port Vale.

Regis Le Bris has some work to do in his half-time team talk; he will not be impressed with Sunderland’s showing so far. Yes the pitch isn’t ideal, but the Black Cats haven’t been authoritative enough in midfield and they’ve been too easily irked by Vale at set-pieces. The home team go off to a standing ovation at the break – they’ve been brilliant.

Three added minutes at the end of the first half. No idea why. There’s only been one stoppage I can remember.

45 mins: Diarra jinks between a couple of Vale players and surges down the right before a fizzing low cross goes across the six yard box, evading everyone. The home fans were holding their breath then.

44 mins: The stats tell us that Port Vale have had six shots, to Sunderland’s five, with one each on target.

Jon Brady will be delighted, providing his team can marshal this to half-time. We shouldn’t get too many added minutes.

42 mins: Sunderland are building up a head of steam, of sorts, before the break. Angulo, who has looked one of their brighter players, pops a left-footed shot at goal but Gauci is there to save.

40 mins: Yet another misplaced Sunderland pass leads to another Vale opportunity on the counter. Again Ballard gets himself in harm’s way, blocking from Archer.

Can the visitors regain control and hit back before the break?

39 mins: A Port Vale breakaway brings to the crowd to their feet once more, Ojo takes too long to feed Archer and Ballard is able to shift across to intercept, albeit conceding a throw-in.

From that throw, Brown gets a half-chance to steer goalwards from Archer’s low cross-cum-shot. Wide.

37 mins: I’m not sure the classic cliche of the pitch being a ‘leveller’ has been very applicable in recent professional football… until today.

35 mins: There’s no doubt the bobbles on the Vale Park surface are slowing Sunderland down. On a couple of occasions Talbi has stopped in his tracks after an errant touch. The inside left area in the half Sunderland are attacking is particularly poor.

33 mins: A big chance for Diarra as Gauci comes steaming out of his goal to stop a through-ball and the Sunderland player looks to dink it over him… it’s just wide and it probably should have been a goal.

32 mins: Brady will be absolutely chuffed. So far the Port Vale gameplan has worked to perfection: keep it tight early on, threaten via set pieces and use the pitch to their advantage.

Sunderland have been meek and mild, not their usual selves at all.

30 mins: A bit of hubris from Port Vale – Brown goes sliding into Ballard and rightly earns a booking. That was a poor tackle, not red card worthy, but reckless.

Southampton have won 1-0 at Fulham. Could we have two non-Premier League sides in the FA Cup last eight?

29 mins: To think all that Port Vale pressure stemmed from O’Nien’s strange decision to whack it back towards his own goal from near the halfway line.

“Glad all over” rings around Vale Park to celebrate another Ben Waine goal in the FA Cup. It came from a corner that Sunderland failed to clear. Dajaune Brown tried something acrobatic but Waine read the loose ball well to direct a brilliant header into the corner.

GOAL! Port Vale 1-0 Sunderland (Waine, 28)

And Vale have made Sunderland pay! Ben Waine again!

Updated

That bizarre moment has jolted Port Vale and their fans into life.

It would have been utterly crazy had it not been for Ellborg’s quick thinking.

25 mins: Luke O’Nien has nearly scored the own goal of the season, no, the century! He turned back from left-back and hit a long ball towards his own keeper… honestly, it’s going in and Ellborg is forced to head it away for a corner.

24 mins: Brady is absolutely incensed when a throw-in is given Sunderland’s way rather than in favour of his team. The Australian seemed so mild mannered in his press conference on Friday. It just shows what the heat of FA Cup battle can do to a man… to be fair I think he was right, Rhys Walters’ pass seemed to deflect off a blue Sunderland shirt.

22 mins: Brady would have wanted his team to come through the opening 20 minutes unscathed and Port Vale have done so without too much alarm, that one Mayenda chance aside. In open play Sunderland have been kept at arms length.

The next stage for Vale will be pushing towards half-time and keeping it goalless, while offering some kind of threat up front themselves. The hosts have had just one shot so far.

20 mins: This is an attritional watch at the moment.

17 mins: Sunderland are yet to fully get going. They seem unable to decide whether to play their usual passing football or bypass the pitch and go long.

16 mins: Superb play from Jordan Lawrence-Gabriel at right wing-back, just battering his way past O’Nien by sheer force of will. Jon Brady has got some fight into his players, judging from these opening exchanges.

14 mins: “Come on Vale” is the call from the stands as they sense their team are being pushed back a touch.

Archer, Brown and Waine are the hosts’ front three but they’ve seen precious little of the ball so far.

12 mins: Joe Gauci takes under pressure as the corner is swung in left-footed from the right. A settler for the Vale keeper.

11 mins: Angulo muscles his way past a couple of Port Vale players before turning on the after-burners, then feeding Mayenda. It’s good play from the Sunderland winger, eventually winning his team a corner.

10 mins: O’Nien is getting forward from left-back as Sunderland try to take control. The ball is still spending a lot of time in the air.

8 mins: Sunderland may now have got the memo. They’ve launched a couple of long balls down the channels in the past few minutes. There’s some proper scrapping going on for the second balls.

VAR are happy that Kyle John didn’t handle it, so on we go.

There’s no shortage of action in either box so far!

5 mins: Wow, now Sunderland go close from a corner! It looked for all the world like Mayenda was about to head home, but it struck a Port Vale player and then the woodwork.

VAR are checking for a possible handball here.

4 mins: Sunderland are already having a few issues playing it around their back line. Melker Ellborg takes a dodgy touch or two. It might not be the best tactic today, lads.

2 mins: Goodness me, that’s a half chance for Vale from the corner, as Connor Hall flicks a half-volley towards goal. There’s no pace on it so Ellborg collects easily in the end.

1 min: Eesh, yeah, I can now see why this pitch has been so problematic. There are huge muddy brown areas all over the place. Jon Brady said it had gone “backwards” despite some repair work being done in the summer. But the funny is it may suit Vale today …

Archer wins an early corner for the home side.

KICK OFF

Let’s gooooooo.

The players are out onto the much-talked about Vale Park pitch and we’re ready to rock. A Robbie Williams song is the walk-on music, though it’s understood the Take That star isn’t in the crowd today.

Vale fans will be happy to hear that Northampton, second bottom in League One (although still eight points above the Valiants), are losing 1-0 at AFC Wimbledon right now. The Cobblers are also Jon Brady’s former team.

Escaping relegation this season will arguably be a tougher task for Vale than taking down Sunderland today.

Vale Park is filling up nicely before kick off. I was told on Friday that 10,000 tickets had been sold and an attendance upwards of 12,000 was expected in a ground that holds around 16,000 but has only been full once this season – for the visit of Arsenal in September’s Carabao Cup tie.

Our other live football offering this Sunday lunchtime is a tasty one. Alex Reid is your man for updates from the latest Old Firm derby.

Updated

Andre Gray scored his only Premier League hat-trick against Sunderland for Burnley in 2016. (He’s still got the match ball on display in his house).

And the Port Vale striker has imparted some words of wisdom to his less experienced teammates re playing against top flight opponents:

It’s a completely different level. You think you’re strong, you think you’re fast, you think you’re smart… until we come across these teams and you realise they’re stronger, they’re faster and they’re smarter.

But the good thing is, and the reason we love the game, is giant-killings, moments like this. That’s why FA Cup games are different. They’re going to come here and they’re not going to enjoy playing against a League One team. It’s possible, it’s always possible.

I had the pleasure of visiting Vale Park on Friday to chat to Jon Brady and Andre Gray about today’s game. One of Brady’s most cherished footballing memories is scoring in the FA Cup at Sheffield United for Rushden and Diamonds in 1999, while Gray is a former finalist of the competition with Watford. (Just don’t mention the score of that 2019 final).

Please enjoy my preview piece, and apologies for the shameless self-plug.

Jon Brady has tended to set Port Vale up in a 3-4-3 since he took charge in early January, so I think that’s what we’ll see today. He’s got some experienced forward players on the bench in the shape of former Norwich winger Onel Hernández and ex Burnley and Watford striker Andre Gray, both who are new at the club.

Sunderland have gone fairly strong, despite their injury problems, in their usual 4-2-3-1. Granit Xhaka is only on the bench but the lineup is only two players different from the one that won at Leeds in midweek, with Noah Sadiki and Trai Hume dropping out.

Team news

Port Vale: Gauci; John, Humphreys, C.Hall; Lawrence-Gabriel, Walters, Ojo, Gordon; Waine, Archer, Brown.

Subs: Amos, Headley, Campbell, Ward, G.Hall, Magloire, Gray, Hernández.

Sunderland: Ellborg; O’Nien, Ballard, Alderete, Geetruida; Rigg, Le Fée, Talbi; Diarra, Angulo; Mayenda.

Subs: Moore, Isidor, Abdullahi, Aleksic, Xhaka, J.Jones, Whittaker, H.Jones, Geragusyan.

Preamble

There have been no shocks in the FA Cup fifth round yet, so the baton falls to Port Vale – who only booked their spot in this round on Tuesday with an extra-time win over Bristol City – who host Sunderland. Vale haven’t reached this stage since 1996, after they shocked holders Everton at Vale Park. Given they’re rooted to the foot of League One and the Black Cats are flying high in the Premier League, the chances of an upset seem low. But it’s the cup. You never know for sure. This may not be the most glamorous of ties but isn’t that where the real magic of the FA Cup lies?

A healthy crowd is expected in Burslem for this one, with Sunderland looking to join the big boys of Liverpool, Arsenal, Chelsea and Manchester City in a star-studded quarter-final lineup. Team news will follow in the next post and kick off is 1.30pm (GMT).

Stay tuned for all the buildup and minute-by-minute updates from the game itself. On a problematic Vale Park pitch and with the hosts having nothing to lose, I repeat that this really could be a tasty one. Let’s find out together.

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