Striker Dion Dublin re-emerged from the injury nightmare, which at one stage threatened to ensure he would never play again, to secure a penalty shoot-out victory that took Aston Villa to their first FA Cup final in 43 years.
And Villa were also indebted to keeper David James as he made two crucial
spotkick saves from on-loan Sunderland winger Allan Johnston and Danish
midfielder Michael Johansen after the match had ended goalless after 120
minutes.
But Villa had to ride their luck to reach penalties given that they had
full-back Mark Delaney sent off with 10 minutes left and Bolton striker Dean
Holdsworth produced one of the worst misses ever seen in Wembley history.
However, with Steve Stone, Lee Hendrie and Gareth Barry all scoring for the
Midlands side from the spot, while only Holdsworth could hit the net for Bolton
as James made two acrobatic saves from Johnston and Johansen, the stage was
fittingly set for Dublin.
The centre-forward broke a bone in his neck against Sheffield Wednesday on
December 18 and after first overcoming early fears that he would be
wheelchair-bound, embarked on a determined recovery programme with Wembley as
the goal which kept him going.
It was testament to the England international's fortitude and determination,
however, that it was the FA Cup semi-final and not the final itself - his
original aim - that he should appear in.
Having made a brief substitute's appearance against Derby last Saturday after
three months out, he came off the bench at Wembley with 20 minutes of normal
time left to hit the post with a header and then score the penalty winner to
complete a fairytale recovery.
And so First Division Bolton were heart-broken, their own dreams shattered of
appearing in the last Wembley FA Cup final after winning the first final to be
held in the stadium back in 1923.
Watched by Nat Lofthouse and with defender Mark Fish simply outstanding at the
back, they should realistically have won the game when Holdsworth first hit the
post and then produced a miss to rival Ronny Rosenthal's for Liverpool against
Villa several years ago.
But it was not to be as Villa set up a final against either Chelsea or
Newcastle just four months after boss John Gregory was himself supposedly on the
verge of the sack as pressure mounted on chairman 'Deadly' Doug Ellis to act to
arrest the club's slump.
It was ironically another shoot-out which re-ignited Villa's season as their
defeat on penalties to West Ham in the Worthington Cup - with Gareth Southgate
becoming the fall guy yet again - was overturned because the Hammers fielded an
ineligible player.
This time Villa prevailed though and reached an FA Cup final for the first
time since 1957 even though fellow Worthington Cup semi-finalists Bolton not
only settled quicker but also battled tenaciously in midfield.
Holdsworth flashed a header just past the far post and strike partner Eidur
Gudjohnsen, who had scored in each previous round, turned swiftly past Southgate
only to be denied when Alan Wright flung himself to deflect the ball wide.
Villa's plans were further disrupted by the loss of Ian Taylor on a stretcher
only five minutes later, with Stone coming on to replace him.
With Fish resolute in defence and Robbie Elliott tackling ceaselessly in
midfield, Bolton were displaying a composure which belied their relative
inexperience as the game largely passed Paul Merson by.
However, with Barry beginning to show similarly commanding form, George
Boateng running ceaselessly and Benito Carbone finally making an impact other
than play-acting, Villa's influence steadily began to increase.
After Joachim played a neat one-two with Carbone, he was clean through only to
sky his shot way over the bar and boss Gregory began the demolition work on
Wembley a few months early by kicking his seat and throwing down his programme
in disgust.
Carbone's vision again put the striker clear a couple of minutes later but his
lack of finishing expertise was exposed a second time as keeper Jussi
Jaaskelainen took the pace off his shot before Gudni Bergsson swooped to clear.
Southgate headed the ensuing corner narrowly over the bar but again Bolton
came at Villa at the start of the second-half, with Holdsworth once more going
close.
Although the game was opening up, it was still crying out for a long-overdue
touch of invention or imagination to break the stalemate as Villa could not turn
their increasing possessional advantage into chances.
And so Gregory finally turned to Dublin, although it was Carbone, and not
Joachim, whom he replaced.
It was a barely credible decision, given Joachim's lack of impact, and not
only the Villa fans but also Carbone evidently agreed as the temperamental
Italian, who is still at odds over the terms of a new contract, stormed off and
kicked over a bucket of water.
The second-half limply petered out so the match inexorably went to extra-time
and apart from a lobbed effort just wide by Merson, the disrupted pattern of
play wore on until the final 10 minutes when suddenly the game burst into life.
First the increasingly impressive Johansen fed Johnston, who cut inside and
was brought down by Delaney from behind.
The full-back had been booked just four minutes beforehand and therefore had
to go for his second caution, with Holdsworth striking the ensuing free-kick
against the outside of the post.
But that was nothing compared to the striker's horrendous miss with just nine
minutes left as James came hurtling out of his area, Gudjohnsen intelligently
cut the ball back and Holdsworth blazed his shot way over from just 10 yards out
with the goal at his mercy.
Villa rallied immediately, with Bolton keeper Jaaskelainen just managing to
tip Dublin's header onto the post, and held on with 10 men to reach the penalty
shoot-out.
And while James and Dublin kept their nerve, Southgate thankfully remained
rooted in the centre-circle.
Then again, if you have lost six previous semi-finals, Wembley is hardly the
place to break a promise never to take another penalty again.
Teams
Bolton: Jaaskelainen, Bergsson (O'Kane 92), Fish, Ritchie,
Whitlow, Johansen, Jensen (Warhurst 63), Elliott, Johnston,
Gudjohnsen, Holdsworth.
Subs Not Used: Banks, Passi, Hansen.
Booked: Whitlow, Holdsworth, Warhurst.
Aston Villa: James, Ehiogu, Southgate, Barry, Delaney,
Taylor (Stone 15), Boateng (Hendrie 120), Wright, Merson,
Joachim, Carbone (Dublin 71).
Subs Not Used: Samuel, Enckelman.
Sent Off: Delaney (110).
Booked: Ehiogu, Delaney.
Aston Villa win 4-1 on penalties
Att: 62,828
Ref: D Elleray (Harrow-on-the-Hill).