Newcastle United reached the quarter-finals of the Carabao Cup after an impressive 2-0 victory over Chelsea.
It was a hugely valuable victory for Eddie Howe’s side after a five-game winless run in the Premier League sees them sit 12th in the table.
A 23rd-minute goal from Alexander Isak put the hosts ahead and they doubled their lead three minutes later when Axel Disasi put the ball in his own net. The result means Newcastle have reached the last eight of the competition for the third successive season.
Chelsea, meanwhile, return back to London well beaten after manager Enzo Maresca’s changed line-up failed to deliver.
Here, our writers analyse the key talking points from the match.
The welcome return of Newcastle’s beautiful chaos
This, as they say, was much more like it. This was like a family reunion or the belated return of an old friend.
Newcastle were angry again, feisty again, swarming again. They were aggressive and remorseless, pressing high and sowing panic around them. It was gorgeous, gory intensity.
That might sound like a funny definition of family, but this was the identity that Eddie Howe infused into his team and which supporters fell in love with.
This is what had been missing after a long summer of uncertainty and another poor transfer window, leaving dented confidence and heavy legs. Not quite at it, not quite right.
Here, the balance was much better. Newcastle did not see much of the ball, but they hoarded impetus, forcing Chelsea into error deep in their own territory.
The first goal was a brutalist masterpiece, Chelsea playing out and Newcastle playing rough, Joelinton putting Renato Veiga under intolerable pressure, Sando Tonali sliding in and the ball breaking for Isak to score.
The second was opportunistic, Lewis Hall taking a quick free kick, Isak’s cross taking a deflection off Christopher Nkunku, Joe Willock heading it on and Axel Disasi flailing and failing to prevent it crossing the line.
Beautiful chaos was back.
George Caulkin
Jorgensen’s meek audition
Enzo Maresca made a point ahead of this game to stress that he is not planning to change his first-choice goalkeeper anytime soon, but Robert Sanchez’s plummeting approval ratings among Chelsea supporters meant that Filip Jorgensen’s first outing against serious opposition was always going to be studied with particular interest.
It is hard to make a strong argument that the 22-year-old did enough with his performance to compel Maresca to reconsider his stance, even if he was not the primary cause of the self-inflicted Chelsea problems that allowed Newcastle to bustle into a decisive 2-0 lead.
Jorgensen had little chance with the Alexander Isak shot that crept under him from close range, after Benoit Badiashile had played Renato Veiga into terrible trouble and Sandro Tonali had pounced on the Portugal international’s rushed pass. His tentative dive for Callum Willock’s header three minutes later was a poor look, but he may well have been put off by the proximity of Disasi, who could not sort his feet out in time to clear the danger.
But around those two big moments there were other signs that Jorgensen might not be the huge upgrade on Sanchez that many fans crave. One floated left-footed kick went straight out of play. Another pass went straight to the feet of Tonali after a jarring bout of indecision on the ball.
Jorgensen did manage to sell the sliding Anthony Gordon with a nerveless drag back almost on his own goal line, but that is not the kind of skill to ease supporter anxieties.
The abiding sense is that the demands of Maresca’s system are the root of their goalkeeper distribution issues, and both Sanchez and Jorgensen are operating close to their limits within it.
Liam Twomey
Howe finally finds the balance he has craved
At their best, teams are seamless, fluid and fluent, full of hidden relationships and partnerships where you cannot see the join.
At other times, they are like jigsaw puzzles; all the pieces are all there but you cannot comprehend how they might fit together.
Newcastle have resembled the latter more than the former this season, particularly in midfield where Howe has decent depth and quality to choose from — more now that Lewis Miley has returned to fitness — but where the overall effect has been disjointed.
True, Chelsea were accommodating. A full team of changes did not make for fluidity of their own, their playing out from the back was haphazard and their high possession encouraged the counter-attack, but Newcastle looked far more balanced.
With Bruno Guimaraes unused until the second half, Tonali played in the centre of midfield and was far more involved. Willock was stationed on the left and with Joelinton shifted in front of him, there was power and ball-carrying prowess.
That meant Anthony Gordon, who returned from a calf injury, switching to the right and although this is not his favored position, his harrying down that flank was a constant menace.
It will have left Howe with some pondering to do; the best teams are not always made up of the best players.
George Caulkin
Maresca’s rotation doesn’t pay off
From the moment the team news dropped it was clear that Chelsea would need to succeed in a very different way at St James’ Park to their usual manner under Enzo Maresca.
The right side of this team, typically the engine of the attack with Noni Madueke pinning his full-back, Cole Palmer picking incisive passes from the right half-space and Malo Gusto pushing into midfield to bolster possession, was entirely changed and deeply unconvincing.
Axel Disasi has never looked anything other than uncomfortable as a right-back, and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall lacks the raw speed or skill to be a reliable threat on the right wing. Inside them was no one playing the traditional Palmer role, with Joao Felix more often drifting towards the left side as he attempted to link up with Christopher Nkunku.
Chelsea’s left flank had its moments with Mykhailo Mudryk and Marc Cucurella both picking out accurate cutbacks from good crossing positions, but it was not until Madueke replaced Dewsbury-Hall that Maresca’s team managed to carry consistent attacking threat to Newcastle, who responded with defensive substitutions to protect their two-goal lead.
Maresca’s decision to keep Palmer on the substitutes’ bench as his team attempted to come back sent a pretty powerful signal of just where the Carabao Cup lies in Chelsea’s list of priorities. A much more balanced, dangerous XI will take on Manchester United at Old Trafford on Sunday and on this evidence, it will very much need to be.
Liam Twomey
What did Eddie Howe say?
We will bring you this after he has spoken at the post-match press conference.
What did Enzo Maresca say?
We will bring you this after he has spoken at the post-match press conference.
What next for Newcastle?
Saturday, November 2: Arsenal (H), Premier League, 12:30 (GMT), 08:30 (ET)
What next for Chelsea?
Sunday, November 3: Manchester United (A), Premier League, 16:30 (GMT), 12:30 (ET)
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(Top photo: Ed Sykes/Getty Images)