If you live for Premier League action, you may be disappointed on Saturday and Sunday - despite the two-week international break being over
For fans who think football started when the Premier League was launched in 1992, the FA Cup is often viewed as an unwelcome distraction.However, the world’s most iconic knockout competition
The Premier League is taking a break this weekend as the quarter-finals of the FA Cup take place, with just seven top flight clubs in action.
Pep Guardiola takes Manchester City back to Bournemouth in the FA Cup quarter-finals on Sunday hoping to avenge the defeat that sparked their stunning decline this season.Looking back at City's first-ever defeat to Bournemouth,
Manchester City is the only thing standing in the way of a soccer fairy tale in the FA Cup. Take away City and the clubs remaining in the famous old competition heading into this weekend’s quarterfinals have not won any silverware between them this century.
Ahead of this weekends FA Cup quarter-finals, heres a look at why the competition matters to the eight teams - Aston Villa, Bournemouth, Brighton, Crystal Palace, Fulham, Man City, Nottingham Forest a
Manchester City's last reasonable chance at a trophy this season hits the Vitality Stadium on Sunday for an FA Cup quarterfinal clash with a confident Bournemouth.