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Manchester City edge out Leicester in Women's FA Cup as Chelsea are stunned

<span>Photograph: Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images</span>
Photograph: Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images

The FA Cup holders Manchester City saw off the challenge of a new-look full-time Leicester to set up a semi‑final against the 14-time winners Arsenal on Thursday night. The winner of that tie will be odds‑on favourites to lift the trophy, after Emma Hayes’s all-star Chelsea side were stunned by Everton at Goodison Park on Sunday.

There, the French forward Valérie Gauvin, who joined from Montpellier in the summer, scored the winner as Everton recovered from Erin Cuthbert’s early goal, their first coming from a Lucy Graham header, to set up a semi final with Birmingham.

With their new manager, Carla Ward, in place following the departure of Marta Tejedor, Birmingham beat Brighton 4-2 on penalties after the Republic of Ireland forwardDenise O’Sullivan, on loan at Brighton from North Carolina Courage, levelled the score at 2-2 in the 90th minute.

Related: Lisa Evans powers Arsenal past Tottenham and into FA Cup semi-finals

Cup upsets in women’s football are rare and getting rarer. Occasionally, at best, a mid-table Women’s Super League side may get the better of one of the division’s top sides, as Everton demonstrated on Sunday, but teams below the fully professional top flight just don’t stand a chance.

For Leicester, the odds were marginally better than usual. Over the summer, freshly under the wing of King Power, the Championship team went fully professional and recruited 13 new players. Inadvertently thwarting their ambitions of turning over Manchester City, however, was the rule that only six new recruits could be registered for the rescheduled tournament’s close.

“Every club in the transfer window has different parameters and different requirements they needed to do,” their manager, Jonathan Morgan, had said in midweek. “Our requirements were that we went full-time. That means we had to do a bigger overhaul of players.” While a more moderately strengthened City were untroubled by the rule, Morgan had to pick and choose who would be in contention.

One player who took a step down to rejoin her childhood club, the former Reading midfielder Remi Allen, shone at Quorn FC’s Farley Way Stadium on Sunday. Despite the difficult task ahead, she hoped to pass on her experience of pulling off a previous major upset to lift her team here.

“When I was at Birmingham we beat Arsenal in the quarter-finals of the Champions League, over two legs,” she said. “We were very, very, very much the underdogs. They had Kelly Smith playing for them, the big, big guns, and I think it’s just having that real togetherness, that real fight and that real desire.”

With Allen captaining Leicester in the absence of Holly Morgan, this attitude showed in the first 35 minutes when Leicester nipped at the heels of their opponents, pressing hard whenever out of possession.

Unfortunately that aggression seemingly opened the door for City on the windswept 4G pitch from which rubber crumbs flew into the air with every bounce and roll of the ball. City took the lead after a pass played into the feet of Georgia Stanway in the centre of the box ended in a tangle in which she fell to the ground. The winger Chloe Kelly smashed in the soft penalty.

Less than 10 minutes later City doubled their lead when Ellen White headed into the path of Stanway who lofted it over the out-of-place keeper Demi Lambourne.

Leicester though , could find solace in the fact that they then not only held strong, but pulled a goal back. After Millie Farrow was fouled in the box the former Arsenal and Manchester United forward Charlie Devlin scored from the spot.

The Manchester City manager, Gareth Taylor, was unsurprised by their opponents’ tenacity. “I watched them play twice already this season,” he said. “They were very emphatic here against Blackpool. I also saw them play away at Sheffield, they scored very late, they never give up.”

For Leicester’s WSL ambitions they can take heart from having gone toe to toe with the elite here.

“I’m just really proud,” said Morgan. “You look at their squad and think ‘wow’. We are aiming to be like them one day but in terms of the short and medium term we want to get promoted into that league at some point.”