Iheanacho scores but it’s Villa for EFL Cup final at Wembley

Iheanacho scores but it’s Villa for EFL Cup final at Wembley

Trezeguet scored a last minute winner to send Villa to Wembly for Carabao Cup final

Nigeria’s Kelechi Iheanacho scored  for Leicester but it is Aston Villa that  are going to Wembley after Trezeguet’s late strike gave the home side victory over Leicester City, just as extra-time loomed.

Trezeguet thumped home a stoppage-time winner as Aston Villa beat Leicester City 2-1 to reach the EFL Cup final.

The winger got on the end of Ahmed El Mohamady’s superb cross from the right and sent a fine volley across goal and into the right corner.

It gave Villa a 3-2 aggregate triumph and left Leicester distraught, with the match having looked destined to go to extra time.

Matt Targett had given Villa a 12th-minute lead, but Leicester deservedly levelled through Kelechi Iheanacho in the 72nd minute.

A clash with Manchester City or Manchester United awaits Dean Smith’s team, while Brendan Rodgers’ Leicester must put the disappointment behind them. Leicester at least remain in the FA Cup, while they also sit third in the Premier League.

After earning a 1-1 draw at the King Power Stadium on January 8, Premier League strugglers Villa knew this was a glorious chance to reach a major final.

Their last cup final came in 2015 and resulted in huge disappointment, with Villa manhandled by Arsenal, who triumphed 4-0 to land the FA Cup.

Targett’s opener was a low left-footed shot through Kasper Schmeichel’s defences after a touch of trickery from the impressive Jack Grealish.

Grealish, dribbling at the Leicester defence, flicked the ball into the path of the overlapping Targett to his left, and a shot across goal proved too powerful to Schmeichel to grasp.

Villa goalkeeper Orjan Nyland had saved well twice from James Maddison by that stage, and a further stunning stop in the 34th minute saw Youri Tielemans’ 20-yard strike tipped against the bar.

Grealish and Targett threatened for Villa early in the second half, with Iheanacho denied by Nyland at the other end.

It was Grealish who was making Villa tick, and a wonderful ball into the box from the playmaker should have been touched in by new signing Mbwana Samatta who failed to connect and was substituted two minutes later.

Leicester, relieved by that miss, levelled when Harvey Barnes drove the ball across goal from the left – possibly a miscued shot – for Iheanacho to crack home.

An extra 30 minutes began to look inevitable, but Leicester stood off El Mohamady and allowed him to deliver a high-quality ball, with Trezeguet timing his run perfectly to side-foot past Schmeichel.

At the final whistle, a pitch invasion signalled the home fans’ joy, with Leicester devastated.

What does it mean? Leicester are not the finished article

Rodgers’ side may have been highly impressive for much of this season, but here, as in the first leg, they looked ordinary for spells.

With Jamie Vardy only fit enough for substitute duty, and not appearing until the 56th minute, they lacked a cutting edge at times and Ayoze Perez was largely ineffective until making way for the Foxes’ top scorer. Villa were bright and creative, albeit reliant on their impressive goalkeeper at times. Goal.com