Brighton 2-1 Chelsea: Kaoru Mitoma's second-half winner sends ...
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Kaoru Mitoma's second-half winner sent Brighton through to the FA Cup fifth round at Chelsea's expense, with the comeback victory easing the slight pressure on Seagulls manager Fabian Hurzeler.
The Seagulls were in the firing line after their dismal 7-0 loss to Nottingham Forest last week and started this cup tie in horrific fashion - with goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen fumbling Cole Palmer's harmless cross into his own net after five minutes.
But Chelsea have had their issues recently and one of them is letting leads slip. They were pegged back seven minutes after that early Verbruggen gift as Georginio Rutter nodded Joel Veltman's delicious cross past former Seagulls goalkeeper Robert Sanchez.
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Chelsea could have re-taken the lead before half-time but Christopher Nkunku - starting up front with Nicolas Jackson and Marc Guiu both injured - chose to pass to Palmer instead of shoot when through on goal. The England international could only put his headed effort onto the roof of the net.
Brighton took their chance after the break, as Mitoma was played in by a delicate Rutter pass - the finish even more sumptuous over the flailing Sanchez.
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It was a cup tie which exposed Chelsea's carelessness but also lack of cutting edge up top. Since Boxing Day, they have taken the lead then failed to win the game on five occasions.
They also ended this game with one shot on target - it came after four minutes when Palmer stung Verbruggen's gloves from distance.
Brighton, meanwhile, move into Monday's fifth-round draw ending their mini-slump of back-to-back Premier League defeats - though Chelsea can get revenge next week, as these two are reunited on Valentine's Day, live on Sky Sports' Friday Night Football.
Analysis: Chelsea's nightmare after Christmas continues
When Chelsea last met Brighton in late September, they scored four goals. Cole Palmer got them all. Crucially, they were in the run of being the Premier League's great entertainers.
Now the Blues' output appears to have frozen and stuck. This was the fifth time since Christmas where Chelsea have taken a lead and not seen the win through. Leads have been chucked away for dropped points against Fulham, Crystal Palace, Bournemouth, Man City and now Brighton.
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After their last defeat against City, Gary Neville accused Chelsea of missing an opportunity at the Etihad and their FA Cup exit followed the same story.
They faced a Brighton side who shipped seven last weekend, saw their goalkeeper chuck one into his net after five minutes on Saturday and even captain Lewis Dunk came off at half-time to destabilise the Seagulls' backline even further. But Chelsea could muster just one shot on target - which came just four minutes in.
After scoring four in the last encounter between these two, Palmer was nullified. Christopher Nkunku's rustiness was clear to see - his 33 touches was the second-lowest tally out of Chelsea's starters. He also failed to have a shot all game.
Nicolas Jackson could come back for the next trip to Brighton on Valentine's Day but even he has gone eight games without a goal. How Chelsea get out of this rut of not scoring enough and throwing away leads is unclear at the moment.
Maresca: Chelsea need to learn to win 1-0
Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca:
"We started very good, the first half the only shot we conceded on goal was their goal. We controlled, created some chances. And the second half it was more the same.
"The only shot on goal was the second goal. After the second goal, we had a few chances to draw it. We missed. But if there is something good after the defeat, is now we can be focused on the Premier League and Conference League.
"It's a shame, no doubt. But then we see how complicated this competition us. We saw big clubs struggle against Championship, against League One - how difficult it is.
"It's a big shame for us, but if there's something positive, we can focus on the Premier League and the Conference League. In the premier League, hopefully we can continue our journey there which is very good, hopefully we can finish it well.
"For me, we need to learn how to win games 1-0. I said that many games, no doubt. But at the same time, against West Ham we were losing 1-0 and then won 2-1. So I think it's part of the season, it's part of the football. Sometimes you're down and you win. Sometimes things happen like tonight.
"But for sure, I said to the players many weeks ago and I said it again tonight: in terms of a team, we need to sometimes learn how to win 1-0. Big clubs, they do that."
Hurzeler: I stayed calm after Forest thrashing
Brighton manager Fabian Hurzeler:
"I was just in the locker room and said to them how proud I was of how they bounced back, how they reacted after the big loss, and the start today.
"It's not easy to come back like this, especially after this week. But we all stayed calm. We stayed positive and trusted the process.
"Today was well deserved and I really liked how they played together, stuck together, how they enjoyed working against the ball and how brave they were in ball possession.
"It's very important not to overreact in these moments. It's important to trust the process and stay predictable for the team. In the end, they will look at you.
"So I stayed very positive, calm and I trusted the process. I didn't overreact. I analysed it quite honestly, like I did the previous game.
"After the Nottingham game, there were some reasons why this happened. We always know what potential this squad has, it's about bringing it now more and more consistently. It's not about one game, it's about doing it two, three, four or five games."