Diego Costa sees red in biting dispute as Chelsea exits FA Cup

Diego Costa plunged Chelsea into fresh controversy in its nightmare season by seeing red after an apparent biting incident.

Chelsea had just been humiliated by former striker Romelu Lukaku scoring twice in a five-minute span, including a breathtaking solo goal, when Costa was sent off in the 84th minute of Everton's 2-0 win in the FA Cup quarterfinals.

The fiery striker thrust his head at Gareth Barry, then sunk his teeth toward the Everton midfielder's neck in a biting motion, and got a second yellow card.

There was no immediate reaction from Barry to suggest he had been bitten but Costa was dismissed for the first time in two seasons at Chelsea. "Without seeing, I don't want to give judgment on this,'' Chelsea manager Guus Hiddink said.

"[Costa] was chased a bit in the game. They went after him. They knew it. It is within the rules.''

The result ended any hope Hiddink's side had of winning a title this season.

Everton also ended with 10 men after Barry himself was shown a second yellow card three minutes later for catching Cesc Fabregas. Diego Costa had a fighting spirit and I would like to praise the referee [Michael Oliver],'' Everton manager Roberto Martinez said.

"The sending off of Costa was right. The sending off of Gareth Barry was right and the referee never allowed those emotions to stop the fluency. Whatever happens with Diego Costa I am sure the two players shook it off.''

The FA Cup exit followed Chelsea being eliminated from the Champions League by Paris Saint-Germain on Wednesday.

Any hopes of defending the Premier League trophy were extinguished long ago, with Chelsea currently 10th and highly likely to miss out on European football next season.

Manchester City doesn't look like it will be succeeding Chelsea as Premier League champions after being held 0-0 at relegation-threatened Norwich on Saturday to stay fourth, nine points behind surprise leader Leicester.

The late dismissals at Goodison Park overshadowed Lukaku's superb goals which left Chelsea to rue offloading the Belgium striker in 2014 for 28 million pounds (then $47 million), having spent most of his career on loan away from Stamford Bridge.

Lukaku's first goal came in the 77th minute after Ross Barkley slipped the ball through to him on the left wing. Lukaku weaved past two players before cutting inside past defenders Cesar Azpilicueta and Branislav Ivanovic and striking low past compatriot Thibaut Courtois.

The Belgium goalkeeper was beaten again in the 82nd when Lukaku put the ball through his legs for his 25th goal of the season _ a tally greater than Chelsea's strikers combined.

So, unlike in 2009, Hiddink will not be ending this interim spell as Chelsea manager by lifting the FA Cup.

And Jose Mourinho's permanent successor will have to rebuild the squad by attracting players to a team likely out of Europe. At the same time, Chelsea is still dealing with the legal fallout from Mourinho's rift with its former team doctor on the opening day of the season as Eva Carneiro's constructive dismissal case heads to a public tribunal hearing.

Relegation was the immediate threat to Chelsea when Hiddink replaced Mourinho in December but the champions' Premier League status is not under threat.

Bournemouth also looks like staying for a second season in the top flight after beating Swansea 3-2 to move 13 points clear of the relegation zone with eight games to play.

Steve Cook grabbed the winner after Max Gradel netted his first goal for the south-coast club and Joshua King only his second.

Swansea had leveled twice, first through Modou Barrow and then Gylfi Sigurdsson. But the Welsh club is now only two places and eight points above the drop zone.

Norwich remains in the relegation zone despite drawing with Manchester City, but above Newcastle and Aston Villa.

In Saturday's third Premier League game, Graziano Pelle scored twice as Southampton beat Stoke 2-1, leapfrogging the hosts in the standings to seventh place. Southampton had Sadio Mane sent off in second-half stoppage time for an elbow on Erik Pieters.

     

Author: 
AP