Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Man City record FA Cup’s biggest win in 66 years with Exeter thrashing

Pep Guardiola’s team put 10 goals past League One side Exeter but Erling Haaland could not get on the scoresheet

Antoine Semenyo scored his first goal for Man City in a 10-1 win over Exeter
Antoine Semenyo scored his first goal for Man City in a 10-1 win over Exeter (AFP via Getty Images)

Manchester City recorded the biggest FA Cup win from a top-flight side since 1960 as Pep Guardiola’s team thrashed League One’s Exeter City 10-1 at the Etihad.

Antoine Semenyo made his debut for City following his £64m move from Bournemouth and was among the scorers, along with youngsters Max Alleyne and Ryan McAidoo as well as strikes from first-team stars Rodri, Tijjani Reijnders, Nico O’Reilly and two from Rico Lewis.

Exeter’s Jake Doyle-Hayes and Jack Fitzwater both put through their own net, while George Birch gave the away fans something to shout about with a stunning 90th-minute consolation. However, Exeter’s celebrations were short lived as Lewis scored his second - and City’s 10th - in stoppage time.

Remarkably, Erling Haaland was not among the scorers despite starting for Guardiola’s team and playing the entire first half.

According to Opta, City became the first English top-flight team to score 10 or more goals in a cup competition since Liverpool beat Fulham 10-0 in the League Cup in 1986. It’s the biggest FA Cup win from a top-flight side since Tottenham won 13-2 against Crewe in a fourth-round replay in 1960.

Elsewhere in the FA Cup, Semenyo's former club Bournemouth suffered penalty shoot-out heartbreak after a 3-3 thriller at Newcastle.

Harvey Barnes fired the hosts ahead five minutes into the second half, but goals from Alex Scott and David Brooks looked set to send Bournemouth through in normal time.

However, Anthony Gordon's stoppage-time penalty forced an extra 30 minutes and Barnes put Newcastle back into the lead before Marcus Tavernier equalised at the death to send the tie into a marathon shoot-out.

Aaron Ramsdale saved the 18th spot-kick from Bafode Diakite as Newcastle progressed to round four 7-6 on penalties.

Newcastle players celebrate with Aaron Ramsdale after surviving a shoot-out against Bournemouth
Newcastle players celebrate with Aaron Ramsdale after surviving a shoot-out against Bournemouth (Getty Images)

Fulham were trailing to Hayden Hackney's goal for Championship Middlesbrough but second-half strikes from Harry Wilson, Emile Smith Rowe and Kevin wrapped up a 3-1 victory.

Sunderland goalkeeper Robin Roefs saved penalties from James Garner, Thierno Barry and Beto to knock out Everton.

Garner had scored from the spot to cancel out Enzo Le Fee's strike and take the tie to penalties after a 1-1 draw, but the Black Cats won the shoot-out 3-0.

National League Boreham Wood's adventure was ended by Burton, with strikes from Kyran Lofthouse, Fabio Tavares, Dylan Williams and JJ McKiernan adding to a Charlie O'Connell own goal in a thumping 5-0 victory for the League One side.

National League South Weston-super-Mare also came up short in a 3-2 defeat at Grimsby.

Sprightly 36-year-old Ashley Barnes scored twice as Burnley eased past Millwall 5-1, while goals from Keane Lewis-Potter and Mathias Jensen - from the penalty spot - saw Brentford through 2-0 at Sheffield Wednesday.

Jorgen Strand Larsen netted a hat-trick as Wolves eased to a 6-1 thrashing over League Two Shrewsbury.

Lamine Cisse's late goal gave Stoke a 1-0 win over Championship leaders Coventry, while Patson Daka and Stephy Mavididi fired Leicester to a 2-0 win at Cheltenham.

Southampton held off a second-half fightback to win 3-2 at League One strugglers Doncaster and goals from Jaden Philogene and Jacob Greaves gave Ipswich a 2-1 win at home to Blackpool.

Emil Riis scored a hat-trick as Bristol City thumped Watford 5-1 and Birmingham won 3-2 at Cambridge,

Includes reporting from PA

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in