Carabao Cup
Carabao Cup: Fourth‑Round Draw Sets Stage as Grimsby Town Keep Giant‑killing Run Alive
Carabao Cup 4th-round draw: Grimsby Town through; Everton Aston Villa Nottingham Forest Burnley out.
The fourth-round draw for the Carabao Cup is complete, bringing the remaining teams one step closer to the final at Wembley Stadium. The ties will be played in the week of Oct. 27.
Grimsby Town remain the competition’s unexpected story after progressing past Sheffield Wednesday. The club’s run earlier included the shock of eliminating Manchester United in the second round after a memorable penalty shootout.
The third round produced a number of Premier League casualties. Everton, Aston Villa, Nottingham Forest and Burnley were all eliminated at that stage, clearing the way for a mix of top-flight and lower-league sides to contest the next round.
The draw moves the competition into a phase where momentum and squad management will matter. With Wembley Stadium awaiting the eventual winner, clubs still in the draw will weigh the value of the trophy against the demands of league campaigns and other cup competitions.
Supporters and analysts can review the full list of fixtures drawn for the Carabao Cup fourth round to see the specific match-ups and plan for the coming fixtures. The fourth round will take place in the week of Oct. 27, giving teams time to prepare for a knockout set of ties that could redefine several clubs’ seasons.
As the Carabao Cup reaches this stage, Grimsby Town’s progress continues to be a focal point, while the exits of Everton, Aston Villa, Nottingham Forest and Burnley underline the competition’s capacity for surprise. The remaining fixtures will determine which clubs advance toward Wembley Stadium and a place in the latter stages of the tournament.
Arsenal
Arteta clarifies Saka absence as Madueke steps into Cup spotlight
Arteta: Saka had a warm-up niggle; Madueke responded when called, with Chelsea tie on Tuesday. Read.
Mikel Arteta confirmed that Bukayo Saka was withdrawn from the squad for Saturday’s win over Leeds United after picking up “a little niggle” in the warm-up. The injury was the only notable setback on a positive day for Arsenal ahead of the second leg of their Carabao Cup semi-final against Chelsea.
“He wasn’t comfortable to start the game, so immediately we made a decision to make that change and bring Noni in,” Arteta said, explaining the decision to replace Saka before kick-off.
Squad depth on the right flank was a specific objective for the club during the summer transfer window. Arteta has been open about his intention to assemble multiple high-quality options in every position, and securing a reliable deputy for Saka was part of that plan.
Arsenal agreed a package worth as much as £52 million ($71.4 million) to sign Madueke from Chelsea, and circumstances provided an early opportunity when Saka was sidelined earlier in the season. While the headline goal-and-assist figures have not matched expectations, Madueke has “undoubtedly passed the eye test this season,” contributing when called upon.
Arteta praised the new arrival for his attitude and preparation. “The way he prepares, the way he’s waiting for opportunity, I think he paid off today because he really impacted the team,” the manager said, highlighting Madueke’s readiness to fill the role.
On the collective task, Arteta added: “We talked before the game, it’s going to be a long game, we’re going to have to navigate through different moments in the game, and we’re going to need everybody fulfilling the role that they have on the day, and I think the players executed that incredibly well.”
Madueke is the leading candidate to occupy the right wing when Arsenal face his former club on Tuesday, though Arteta’s squad contains several possible options for the position.
Arsenal
Arteta: Declan Rice’s tunnel confrontation with coach is resolved
Arteta says tunnel confrontation between Declan Rice and a coach, after Carabao Cup win is resolved.
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta said the confrontation between Declan Rice and a member of the coaching staff after the Carabao Cup victory over Chelsea has been settled.
The incident unfolded as the team prepared to leave the tunnel. A clearly frustrated Rice was seen gesturing and shouting at Stuivenberg, and a few steps of separation did not reduce the visible tension.
Centre back Gabriel moved between Rice and Stuivenberg to act as a peacemaker and to try to defuse the situation. The Daily Mail brought the clip to the attention of an expert lip-reader, Jeremy Freeman, who claimed Rice told Stuivenberg to “just go,” before telling Gabriel the coach “does not know what he’s on about.” Gabriel told Rice to “calm down” and the situation ultimately soothed.
Ahead of Sunday’s meeting with Nottingham Forest, Arteta was asked for an explanation of the episode. He declined to expand and said: “All sorted, all good.” When pressed on whether the exchange was a sign of Rice’s determination to succeed, Arteta added: “Yes, and the good thing is that by the time I found out the problem was resolved so that’s very good.”
Arteta’s comments confirmed the issue was handled internally and that no further action would be disclosed. The sequence of events — a tunnel confrontation after the Carabao Cup win, Gabriel intervening, lip-reading claims about Rice’s words, and Arteta’s public reassurance ahead of the Nottingham Forest match — forms the complete account presented by the club and media coverage.
Carabao Cup
Guardiola details five VAR grievances after Semenyo goal is ruled out
Guardiola warned VAR errors have accumulated across five incidents, from FA Cup final, Newcastle tie.
Pep Guardiola used the aftermath of Tuesday’s Carabao Cup semifinal victory over Newcastle United to air a long-standing grievance with VAR decisions that, in his view, have accumulated across several matches. Rayan Cherki would belatedly establish a 2–0 lead for the visitors to take into the second leg of the tie at the Etihad Stadium next month, giving Guardiola the platform to set out his complaints.
City’s manager returned repeatedly to the same themes during a six-minute critique of refereeing and VAR. He defended his players and stressed resilience: “We know how it works and that will make us stronger,” he told Sky Sports. “I’ve said it many times to the team, it is always about that. It’s in that situation how we react and how we compete.”
Guardiola singled out the disallowed second-half goal by Antoine Semenyo, which was awarded on the pitch but overturned by VAR Stuart Attwell on offside lines involving Haaland. The decision required referee Chris Kavanagh to review a pitch-side image after VAR judged Haaland to have been actively interfering with Malick Thiaw’s attempt to clear the effort. Guardiola asked why the decision had to be referred: “Four officials and VAR were not able to take the decision, they had to go to the referee,” he said, later adding with sarcasm: “Today, the line was perfect. Millimetres.”
He also recycled incidents from earlier in the season on Tyneside and the Premier League meeting with Newcastle, describing those moments as missed punishments, including what he called “two insane penalties.” “In the league game here, 60 minutes and 20 minutes, take a look,” Guardiola said. “I don’t understand why in the Premier League game with [Fabian] Schär on Phil [Foden] why VAR didn’t say anything. Then the penalty with [Jérémy] Doku and Thiaw.”
Guardiola referenced last season’s FA Cup final as part of his wider critique: “Did you review the FA Cup final last season? When [Dean] Henderson touched the ball outside the box. Did I say anything?” He urged those responsible for officiating to answer for decisions: “Ask them. Who is the boss of the referees? Ask him [Howard Webb]. It’s the semifinals. We play for a lot to reach the finals. It will make us stronger.”
The reaction to VAR decisions has also drawn outside comment, with ITV pundit Ian Wright calling one contentious FA Cup ruling “absolutely pathetic.”
