
John Carew clinched the win for Villa with two
late goals from the penalty spot
John Carew won and scored two late penalties to see
off Crystal Palace and keep alive Aston Villa's hopes of reaching a
second Wembley final.
Gabby Agbonlahor glanced in a header to
put Villa ahead in the FA Cup replay.
Darren Ambrose levelled
from the penalty spot after Stephen Warnock's clumsy challenge on Alan
Lee.
Carew was then twice fouled by Matthew Lawrence in the box
and blasted home both spot-kicks as Villa made the last eight for the
first time in 10 years.
It was a sorry end to a
brave display from the Eagles, who went into administration last month.
Villa boss Martin O'Neill will be relieved to have survived Palace's
spirited second-half fightback as his side prepares to face Manchester
United at Wembley on Sunday in the Carling Cup final.
The two
clubs had starkly contrasting preparations for the game with Villa
basking in the build-up to that match, while Palace wait to discover the
future of boss Neil Warnock, who has been strongly linked with Queens
Park Rangers.
The teams' previous meeting had ended in
controversy when Warnock fumed at the erroneous award of a corner that
led to Stiliyan Petrov's late equaliser.
If he was angry then, he
is sure to be further inflamed by a near carbon copy of the Selhurst
Park incident that led to Villa's first goal.
The hosts started
in blistering fashion as Palace keeper Julian Speroni kept the visitors
in it with two smart stops from Carew and another from Young.
The
best early chance fell to Agbonlahor, who expertly spun past Claude
Davis and burst into the box only to see Speroni parry his low shot.
Warnock
then wasted a golden chance to tee up the poised Carew after being
brilliantly sent through by James Milner.
Palace centre-back Davis made numerous crucial last-ditch challenges
and was possibly fortunate not to concede a penalty when one of his
clumsier efforts on Agbonlahor went unpunished by referee Martin
Atkinson.
But just as it seemed Palace would reach half-time
unscathed, they fell behind to a goal uncannily similar to Petrov's
leveller in south London 10 days ago.
The ball appeared to touch
Milner last when it rolled out of play as he tussled with Nick Carle by
the touchline but the England midfielder's sheepish appeal rendered a
corner-kick.
Young duly whipped over the set-piece and Agbonlahor
shook off Shaun Derry and converted from four yards out.
The
goal inspired Palace to create their best chance of the half as Carle's
25-yard strike from whistled just past the post.
And the Eagles
began the second half brightly with Ambrose twice testing Brad Guzan
from long range.
Agbonlahor was then foiled by Speroni in a
one-on-one, before Young saw his effort brilliantly tipped around the
post by the impressive Palace keeper.
Neil Danns had a great
chance to level when he lashed an effort across the face of goal from a
few yards out after Villa failed to clear.
But the visitors
didn't have to wait long for an equaliser, with official Atkinson again
in the thick of the action.
Warnock bundled over Lee eight yards
from goal and the referee gave a penalty, which Ambrose struck sweetly
into the right-hand corner.
Villa, mindful that extra-time would
do little to help their Wembley preparations, immediately found an extra
gear as they searched for a winner.
Young and Richard Dunne both
blazed over from close range before a rush of blood from Palace
defender Lawrence helped the hosts regain the lead with nine minutes
remaining.
He needlessly hauled down Carew in the area and the
Norwegian striker picked himself up to blast the spot-kick into the roof
of the net.
The brave but tiring visitors had no riposte and
Villa continued to pile forward, with Speroni performing more heroics to
superbly tip over Stewart Downing's 20-yard drive.
The win was
secured when Lawrence again conceded a soft penalty with a rash
challenge on Carew just inside the box.
The striker converted
emphatically for a second time as Villa made the quarter-finals for the
first time since they finished runners-up to Chelsea in 2000.