WEMBLEY, England
Newcastle ended their 56-year trophy drought in stunning style as Dan Burn and Alexander Isak sealed a 2-1 win against Liverpool in the League Cup final on Sunday.
Eddie Howe's side made history
at Wembley with a superb display that left the runaway Premier League leaders
shell-shocked.
Burn put Newcastle ahead late
in the first half and Isak's 27th goal in all competitions doubled their lead
after the interval.
Federico Chiesa got one back
in the closing seconds, but Newcastle held on for their first major silverware
since the 1969 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup.
That success in the
predecessor to the Europa League is a relic of a bygone era, but this
long-awaited triumph will be forever etched in the memories of the Newcastle
fans who turned one half of Wembley into a roiling sea of black and white with
their ecstatic celebrations.
It was also Newcastle's first
major domestic prize dating back 70 years to the 1955 FA Cup.
Since the Magpies lifted the
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, 30 different English teams had won silverware, while
Liverpool had clinched 38 major trophies in that time.
But after losing the 2023
League Cup final against Manchester United, Howe's team returned to Wembley and
set the record straight at last.
"We were well aware of
the history and we wanted to do the club proud. We wanted to score, we wanted
to perform and we wanted to win," Howe said.
"We are breaking new
ground. I thought we were magnificent today."
Newcastle had endured five
relegations to the second tier since their last trophy, with club legends like
Alan Shearer, Paul Gascoigne and Malcolm MacDonald failing to win silverware in
their time on Tyneside.
Aside from a brief period when
Kevin Keegan's self-styled "entertainers" challenged for the title in
the 1990s, Newcastle have endured decades of underachievement and
self-inflicted wounds that rendered them a laughing stock for long periods.
All that changed in 2021 when a Saudi-backed consortium completed a takeover from unpopular owner Mike Ashley and quickly hired Howe as their manager.
Thanks to Howe's astute
leadership and the Saudi financial backing, Newcastle have been transformed
from relegation candidates to silverware winners.
The defeat was another painful
blow for Liverpool just days after their Champions League last 16 exit on
penalties against Paris Saint-Germain.
But despite failing to win
their first trophy under boss Arne Slot, Liverpool still sit 12 points clear at
the top of the Premier League, within touching distance of a record-equalling
20th English title.
"It's a very
disappointing result. The game went the way Newcastle wanted it. They deserved
to win. We were out-played in their style. They won more aerial duels than
us," Slot said.
Liverpool are 23 points ahead
of sixth-placed Newcastle in the league and hadn't lost to them for 17 games
dating back to 2015.
But Howe's men were in no mood
to be cowed by past failures
Newcastle fans unveiled a
banner before kick-off urging their team to "write your name in the
history books".
They rose to the challenge in
spectacular fashion, snapping into tackles and counter-attacking with purpose,
while Liverpool were sluggish and sloppy in possession.
Newcastle's desire and drive
was clear to see when Joelinton tracked back from midfield to stop Jarell
Quansah in his tracks and celebrated with a fist-pumping roar.
Despite nearly being caught
out by Burn's aerial prowess earlier in the game, Liverpool failed to heed the
warning as the towering centre-back put Newcastle ahead in the 45th minute.
Bizarrely left unmarked, with
only the diminutive Alex Mac Allister anywhere near him, Burn was allowed to
rise unchallenged to meet Kieran Tripper's corner as he thumped a powerful
header into far corner from 12 yards.
Burn's goal – Newcastle's
first in a cup final since 1976 – capped an incredible week for the journeyman
centre-back, who received his first England call-up on Friday.
With Liverpool talisman
Mohamed Salah completely anonymous, the lethargic Reds had no answer as Isak
put Newcastle into dreamland after 52 minutes.
Newcastle dominated in the air
again as Jacob Murphy met Tino Livramento's cross with a header that found
Isak, who drilled a superb first-time finish past Caoimhin Kelleher from 10
yards.
Chiesa's stoppage-time strike
set up an anxious finale, but good things comes to those who wait.
And all across Wembley,
Newcastle players and fans celebrated with abandon as a party over half a
century in the making got into full swing.
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