For an FA Cup semi-final that didn’t offer much to talk about beyond Enzo Fernández scoring the winner, Chelsea’s 1-0 win could provoke a lot of other discussion. Some of it served to quieten even this raucous Leeds United crowd by the end.
By that point, you wouldn’t have thought an FA Cup final appearance was at stake, given how quickly Wembley emptied. Another debate could, of course, be had about staging semi-finals here. Still, there’s something rather sorry about even the Leeds players saluting scores of empty seats.
Maybe that just shows how professional Chelsea’s performance had been. Outside a few spikes of activity like Brenden Aaronson’s early shot and a piledriver from Anton Stach, Calum McFarlane’s side just shut Leeds out. None of the energy that we’d recently witnessed from Daniel Farke’s side was evident. Or, at least, none of it was allowed to be evident. There wasn’t even really a late Leeds flurry.
You could say they didn’t rise to the club’s biggest occasion in years, but that doesn’t feel fair, or true. Witness the desperate defending when Joao Pedro almost turned in a chance just after half-time. Leeds were clearly desperate for this. It’s just not that easy, certainly not in the modern game. Look at the difference in expenditure.
Chelsea have generally had a miserable season where the fans have frequently protested about the ownership, and yet here they are again in an FA Cup final and 90 minutes from potentially winning a third trophy in a year. This obviously isn’t to defend the ownership. It’s more of a comment on how the modern game works.
The financial differences weren’t the only gap, though. There was also the chasm between the discipline Chelsea displayed here and the rabble at Brighton on Tuesday. How do you explain that? McFarlane naturally didn’t go into too much detail, other than to say that his side needed to “break the momentum” of the past few games and that there was a “focus”.
So, the obvious question: where was that focus for Liam Rosenior? The transformation in performance should really be remarkable, but is, of course, fairly routine in football. It happens a lot with a change of managers. It isn’t all that simple, either. If players “aren’t having” a manager, to use the vernacular, there can be all sorts of conscious and subconscious effects. They just don’t feel as motivated, as focused, to use some of McFarlane’s words.

The fact that Fernandez got the winner nevertheless brings a greater symbolism, given that he is a Chelsea dressing-room leader who was the subject of a two-game ban. He was also there shrugging his shoulders at the fans.
Well, he knew exactly what to do here. Fernandez was brilliant. It could be argued that one of the main differences between what went before and this was the Argentine performing to his level, but there was, of course, more to it.
Chelsea were just better structured, with everything just looking like it made sense. Leeds could barely get near their goal. On the one occasion they did, Aaronson may regret not taking the ball on further. Robert Sanchez did save well.
Really, there were improvements in Chelsea’s performances all over the pitch. Joao Pedro, in particular, restored a verve to attack. Although it was only 1-0, the game felt close to settled as a contest once Fernandez plundered that header. Long stretches of it were, in truth, boring. Chelsea didn’t allow Leeds to do anything exciting. This was admittedly aided along by some conspicuous time-wasting, which is an issue authorities surely have to start looking at more seriously.

And, after all that, there is then the symbolism of what this 2026 FA Cup final will showcase. There’s no Crystal Palace this time. Their uplifting victory naturally seems like an inevitable aberration. Southampton-Leeds United came close to offering similar, and there’s little doubt there would have been more meaning to such a final. Manchester City and Chelsea have, after all, been in 16 finals between them over the past 20 years.
They’re well used to trips to Wembley, and generally have grander ambitions. That’s all because they’re just able to spend more.
A wider context to this is also unavoidable, especially with so much current football discussion. Only this season, Chelsea were punished for breaching Premier League rules in a case that brings significant doubt over their title wins of 2015 and 2017. They are still the subject of a related investigation from the very organisers of this competition: the Football Association. Manchester City are, meanwhile, still the subject of an even further-reaching case that goes back to early 2019 and had its hearing concluded as long ago as December 2024. The club insists on its innocence.
Regardless of the outcome, though, it is an absurdity that the case is still ongoing, and there is no resolution. And this is what surrounds English football’s great traditional occasion. Before this semi-final, Chelsea fans were enduring an utterly miserable season, and yet they now have a day Leeds can only dream about.






