Gustavo Poyet left the Toon Army doubled up in Wembley agony for the third
season in a row as he struck a pair of killer blows to put Chelsea through to
their sixth FA Cup Final.
Poyet's two goals keep boss Gianluca Vialli's multi-national heroes still
fighting on three fronts for glory this season.
The powerful Uruguayan, left out of Chelsea's Champions League spectacular
against Barcelona on Wednesday and one of five changes at Wembley in Vialli's
ever-rolling rotation system, chipped a sparkling 16th minute opener.
Then, after the rare but splendidly deserved event of a Rob Lee equaliser
midway through the second half, notched the winner with a towering header.
It was the Uruguay star's 15th goal of the campaign and just enough to edge
Chelsea home in a genuine thriller.
But you had to feel for Bobby Robson's battling Magpies and their marvellous
fans. They tried all they could to give themselves another crack at Cup Final
glory next month after dismal defeats by Double-winning Arsenal and Manchester
United in the last two years.
And for long spells, their belligerent, lung-bursting style was more than a
match for Chelsea's more sophisticated technique.
Alan Shearer, to whom Wembley has been such a citadel in an England shirt but
without reward now in six appearances for his club, was left with that sinking
feeling again - but how he battled to try to turn it around.
It was his magnificent cross which gave Lee, the man humiliated by former
Newcastle boss Ruud Gullit - who would not even award him a squad number at the
start of the season - the chance to score his first goal nearly two years and
tie up the match with 24 minutes to go.
And if Poyet's equally memorable winner - just six minutes later - had not
arrived so soon afterwards it was perfectly possible to envisage Robson's
resurgent side sweeping home.
Right to the death they kept coming and in stoppage time, Chelsea's wonderful
goalkeeper Ed de Goey had to stretch out a leg to deny Kieron Dyer's low drive.
But in the end it was yet another Blue Day for both these sides who produced a
vibrant contest, containing bags of combative muscle as well as skill yet only
one booking, for Didier Deschamps, to shame last week's turgid semi-final
between Aston Villa and Bolton.
On this evidence, Chelsea will be firm favourites to turn over John Gregory's
Midlands side back at Wembley next month, but the neutrals in the 73,876 crowd
would not have minded the Magpies having the chance instead.
Typical semi-final nerves surfaced in the opening minutes with Deschamps
giving the ball away for Speed to test de Goey's solidarity from 25 yards and
then Lee being caught in possession deep in his own half by George Weah.
The Liberian burst through on a return ball from Chris Sutton and when he
slipped the ball through Given's legs Newcastle were relieved to see an offside
flag raised.
But although Newcastle then took a grip and Nolberto Solano had to be denied
by desperate tackles as he twice cut menacingly into the Chelsea box, Vialli's
men collected themselves again to make the breakthrough 10 minutes later.
Street-wise skipper Dennis Wise's quick free-kick, after Shearer fouled him,
found Poyet who laid off smartly to Weah and continued his run into the box
where he superbly clipped the return ball over Shay Given's head and into the
top corner.
It was a stunning blow for Newcastle who had produced more early energy than
in the entirety of their two previous humiliating Wembley visits.
And although they lost one half of their fearsome aerial force when the
much-injured Duncan Ferguson again had to call it a day - this time with seven
minutes of the first half still to go - they kept winning the midfield
possession and plugging their direct route towards the indefatigable Shearer.
Sutton, who with Weah dropped back dutifully to help repel the missiles that
were being launched into Chelsea's box, splendidly robbed Shearer, his old
Blackburn team-mate, when the England captain looked as if he was about to
score.
And Frank Leboeuf made a marvellous intervention when Solano again skipped
past Jon Harley down Chelsea's left.
But it was the nippy little Peruvian who wasted a golden equalising chance in
the 42nd minute after Shearer, with his chest, again executed the perfect set-up
from substitute Didier Domi's long ball in.
With time and space to spare Solano half-volleyed wildly over the bar from 14
yards.
But Newcastle had found enough encouragement to pick up the pace again at the
start of the second half when de Goey performed wonders keeping out a thundering
half-volley from the industrious Dyer after Shearer got his head to Warren
Barton's cross.
Then the Dutch keeper plunged fearlessly at the feet Nikos Dabizas when the
Greek centre-back tried to score at the second attempt even though it was later
confirmed that Gary Speed's initial through ball had found him marginally
offside.
But even de Goey was powerless to prevent Lee's magic moment in the 66th
minute, with Shearer again the architect.
The England captain turned himself into a winger, skipping past Leboeuf from
Barton's pass down the right and putting over a magnificent cross for Lee,
arriving late, to bullet home with a thrust of his neck muscles, his first goal
since May 1998 - against Chelsea.
Vialli had taken off £10million Sutton at half-time and replaced him with Tore
Andre Flo, the midweek two-goal hero against Barcelona, but the Norwegian was
not in position to stop Lee's thunderbolt.
But parity lasted just six minutes before Poyet completed his double with a
header just as impressive, looping it beyond Given's despairing reach after
Harley, given space by Weah's inviting knock-back, chipped the ball into the
area.
And Chelsea had enough experience and guile not to let a precious advantage
slip for a second time.
Teams:
Newcastle: Given, Barton, Hughes (Ketsbaia 79), Howey, Dabizas,
Solano, Speed, Lee, Dyer, Shearer, Ferguson (Domi 38).
Subs Not Used: Goma, Gavilan, Harper.
Goals: Lee 66.
Chelsea: De Goey, Ferrer (Petrescu 74), Leboeuf, Desailly,
Harley, Di Matteo, Deschamps, Wise, Poyet, Sutton (Flo 45),Weah (Zola 79).
Subs Not Used: Hogh, Cudicini.
Booked: Deschamps.
Goals: Poyet 17, 72.
Att: 73,876
Ref: D Gallagher (Banbury).