Chelsea prevail in semi
Chelsea will face London rivals Tottenham in next month's League Cup final after crushing Everton's dream of a first domestic final appearance in eight years here on Wednesday.
Joe Cole's well-taken strike with just over 20 minutes left Everton with little prospect of overturning their 2-1 first-leg deficit at Goodison Park.
An uninspiring contest was at least graced by a decisive moment of real quality, Cole gathering Florent Malouda's 40-yard diagonal pass with a superb first touch before stroking the ball past Everton's American goalkeeper, Tim Howard.
The match-winner admitted the win had required a disciplined performance from him and him teammates.
"Everton are a top side, all credit to them, they always give us a great game but we wanted to win and we showed that," Cole said. "We've been on the end of a few bad semifinal experiences in Liverpool but it will be a nice flight home tonight. It was a good performance."
Cole, whose goal will have caught the eye of new England boss Fabio Capello, added that his strike could not have come at a better moment.
"We needed it, we were under a lot of pressure," he said. "We stick together from back to front. Everyone defends and attacks together."
Chelsea boss Avram Grant paid tribute to the way his line-up had coped with the absence of over half his first choice line-up. "It's a big test of character and the players are doing a great job," Grant said. "I said we had a good squad. What they did today and in the last month was amazing.
Everton's need to overturn their first-leg deficit ensured a frantic start to proceedings, although real chances were thin on the ground as the home side failed to take their cue from their fired-up supporters.
Petr Cech got down smartly to his left to keep out a Joleon Lescott header from Mikel Arteta's corner after only nine minutes, but Chelsea's deliberate slowing of the pace soon began to have an impact on the tempo of the contest.
With Nicolas Anelka operating as a sole forward and the visitors' back four dropping very deep, Chelsea had few problems coping with the their hosts' limited attempts to break them down.
And gradually it was the Londoners who began to dominate proceedings, with Anelka testing Howard with a low drive just before the half hour mark and Malouda then lifting a good chance over the bar from 12 yards.
There was another warning shot for Everton just after the break, when Anelka found space in the box for a shot that was deflected onto the bar by Phil Jagielka.
Everton finally began to threaten with Phil Neville forcing a sharp save from Cech when he connected with a low corner from Arteta.
Cech then denied Jagielka with his feet after the midfielder had attempted to direct Leon Osman's mishit shot goalwards with a clever back-heel.
Suddenly it seemed as if Everton might just be on the brink of finding the inspiration they needed but had lacked for the opening hour of the match.
Instead, it was Cole who applied the killer blow for Chelsea after a superbly judged long ball by Malouda from wide on the left.
The England midfielder's superb control and equally assured right-foot finish did the rest and gave Chelsea an unassailable 3-1 aggregate lead.
Everton boss David Moyes responded by throwing young striker Victor Anichebe into the fray at the expense of midfielder Lee Carsley.
But the switch to two strikers came too late and Moyes was left to rue his decision to start the match with Andrew Johnson as his lone forward.
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