Danny Welbeck was the hero for Brighton, scoring deep in extra-time as Fabian Hurzelers side beat Newcastle 2-1 in an FA Cup thriller to reach the quarter-finals. Welbecks strike (114) was a final blow for Newcastle, who had what they thought was a winning goal chalked off by VAR in stoppage time of normal time after Anthony Gordon had been shown a straight red card for a push to the head of Jan Paul van Hecke.
It was a moment of madness from the winger, who will now miss the Carabao Cup final against Liverpool on March 16, live on Sky Sports. Alexander Isaks penalty, after Yankuba Minteh fouled Tino Livramento, was cancelled out by Minteh, who had a dramatic first half against his former club.
How the teams lined up | Match statsNewcastle news | Brighton news | FA Cup fixtures & resultsGet Sky Sports on WhatsApp | Download the Sky Sports appBoth sides has chances to win the game in the second half, the best opportunity falling to substitute Joe Willock, who failed to connect with Livramentos cross from six yards out.
The tie looked to be swinging in Newcastles favour until the late red-card drama. Gordon lost his cool, pushing Van Hecke, but Tariq Lamptey levelled things up after receiving his marching orders for a second bookable offence.
Newcastle thought they were heading for the last eight when Fabian Schar popped up in stoppage time with a superb finish to send St James Park wild, but the celebrations were cut short when semi-automated offside found the defender had failed to time his run in behind the Brighton defence.
It meant extra-time and Welbeck, just as he did in the league match between the two sides at St James Park in October, grabbed the winner to complete Newcastles bad afternoon and send Brighton into the last eight.
Welbeck: Thanks to my mum and dad for good genesBrighton matchwinner Danny Welbeck on scoring the winner at St James Park and his form: Its a big moment, to get the winning goal. It was a solid team performance and there was a lot going on in that game today.
A lot of ups and downs, but we stuck with it, stuck together and Im so proud of the lads. Newcastle are a really intense side and they can always put you under pressure. They have some great players with quality in there and are very dangerous.
But we stuck to our guns and put in a great shift. Im feeling very good. Im feeling fit and strong. Thanks to my mum and dad, Ive got good genes, so theres a lot to come. Hurzeler: Staying together was the key Brighton boss Fabian Hurzeler on his sides victory: We had very good moments in the game where we controlled, dominated.
Of course, there were moments where we had to suffer, but we stayed together. We had setbacks in the game, but we always stayed together and that was the positive thing. That was the key because, in the end, it was all about emotions, pushing yourself.
Howe: We couldve done betterNewcastle boss Eddie Howe on a disappointing afternoon for his side: Its a tough one for us to take. It was very bitty, a real physical game for us. It had everything with the red cards as well and extra-time.
We thought wed won it at the end. We had a couple of players feeling the effects of the game. Tino ended up not being able to contribute so, in some respects, we were down to nine. I thought the other substitutes did really well and gave us a bit more energy, but it was a really tough, physical game for both teams.
We could have done better, of course we could. As bad an afternoon as Newcastle could have had Sky Sports News reporter Keith Downie at St James Park: Thats as bad an afternoon as Newcastle could have had.
It was another poor home display, they are out of the FA Cup, and Anthony Gordon is suspended for the Carabao Cup final. Eddie Howes side have absolutely no momentum for the Wembley showdown with Liverpool on March 16, whatsoever.
A shocker for Newcastle. Whats coming up?Newcastle fixturesBrighton fixturesFA Cup fixtures & results