Manchester City U18s 2-1 Manchester United U18s: The feisty encounter was played in the backdrop of the controversial decision to play the game at the Joie Stadium, with the Etihad unavailable
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Manchester City players and staff celebrate after winning the trophy for a fifth timeopen image in gallery
Manchester City players and staff celebrate after winning the trophy for a fifth time (Peter Byrne/PA)
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Manchester City secured their fifth FA Youth Cup title with a dramatic late winner from Reigan Heskey, defeating rivals Manchester United 2-1.
Heskey, son of former England international Emile, struck in the 87th minute to seal the victory.
Godwill Kukonki had cancelled out Floyd Samba’s opener for City late in the first half, setting up a tense finish.
Watched by figures including Pep Guardiola and Phil Foden, City asserted their dominance in the second half, claiming the trophy for the second time in three years.
Oli Reiss’s victorious side now look ahead to a clash with Chelsea for the Under-18 Premier League title next Friday.
Reigan Heskey celebrates his late winneropen image in gallery
Reigan Heskey celebrates his late winner (Alex Livesey - The FA/The FA via Getty Images)
Despite the presence of Michael Carrick and Bruno Fernandes among their supporters, Darren Fletcher’s Manchester United were ultimately outplayed at the Joie Stadium, a venue that drew some controversy due to the unavailability of the Etihad.
Much of the build-up had focused on the club’s respective top-scorers, City’s 16-year-old Teddie Lamb and United’s 15-year-old JJ Gabriel.
Lamb, who has 28 goals in as many appearances this season, saw a close-range effort repelled by Cameron Byrne-Hughes in the 24th minute.
Gabriel, scorer of 26 goals in 29 games, pipped Lamb to the Premier League’s under-18 player of the year award this week but his first involvement was to be booked by Tom Nield for simulation, moments after City’s Dante Headley was cautioned for the same offence in a feisty first half.
Pep Guardiola was in attendanceopen image in gallery
Pep Guardiola was in attendance (Alex Livesey - The FA/The FA via Getty Images)
Five minutes before half-time, City’s lead came via the sons of former Blackburn defender Chris Samba. Tyrone Samba was felled by Rafe McCormack and his 17-year-old brother Floyd curled a shot into the top left-hand corner.
United were level just 59 seconds later. Jim Thwaites, on the first-team bench at Chelsea last month, crossed from deep and Kukonki barged his way through to head home.
City turned up the heat in the second half. Tyrone Samba fired into the side-netting and Ryan McAidoo saw a cross deflected on to the crossbar.
With time running out, McAidoo ran into a wall of defenders inside the United box but City worked it wide for Heskey to cut inside his defender and fire into the roof of the net.