Leipzig down Frankfurt to reach German Cup quarters, Cologne strike late

football04 December 2024 23:13| © Reuters
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Lois Openda © Gallo Images

Lois Openda scored a brace as RB Leipzig roared back into form with a 3-0 home win over Eintracht Frankfurt in the German Cup last 16 on Wednesday, while Cologne found a winner in the 121st minute to advance.

Leipzig and their coach Marco Rose came into the game under pressure, after five losses and a draw during a winless November, against a Frankfurt side sitting second in the league.

The hosts, however, started with a flurry and had two goals ruled out for offside before Benjamin Sesko broke through after 31 minutes.

The Slovenian striker collected an Antonio Nusa pass on the turn and bewitched the Frankfurt defence with some clever footwork before tapping home.

Nusa was the provider again to double Leipzig's lead four minutes after halftime, sliding the ball into the path of Openda, who hammered home.

Nusa, still just 19, collected his third assist of the game nine minutes later, again finding Openda who rifled in from long range.

After the goal, Openda ran straight to Rose on the sideline, leading his teammates who piled on and embraced the coach.

"Today we wanted to do something, we wanted to fight together as a team – and we did that tonight," Openda told Sky.

"We wanted to win today and show we are all strong together, with the coach, the fans and the players – that we are one family."

Speaking with Sky, Leipzig and Germany wing-back Benjamin Henrichs praised his coach.

"It's not an easy time for him and for us as well, but it all came out (when we scored). The win was very, very important," the 27-year-old said.

German Cup winners in 2022 and 2023, Leipzig have made the final in four of the past seven seasons.

The loss breaks a run of seven straight wins for Frankfurt and is their first loss since mid-October.

LATE, LATE GOALS

Earlier, a 121st-minute Dejan Ljubicic penalty took Cologne to a 2-1 win over 10-man Hertha Berlin.

Hertha took the lead early when Ibrahim Maza converted a penalty after Derry Scherhant was felled in the box.

Berlin's hopes took a hit soon after when Deyovaisio Zeefuik was red carded for a headbutt in the 25th minute.

The visitors equalised five minutes later when Florian Niederlechner scored an own goal from a Cologne corner.

With scores locked at 1-1, the match went to extra time.

Ljubicic missed a sitter inches from goal on the 100th-minute mark but made good on his error, sending the goalkeeper the wrong way, with penalties looming, to book Cologne's place in the last eight.

2015 winners Wolfsburg beat Hoffenheim 3-0 at home thanks to three goals in 22 second-half minutes.

Scoreless at halftime, Denis Vavro and Jonas Wind scored within four minutes of each other midway through the second half, before Yannick Gerhardt added a third to seal the game in the dying stages.

The win continues Wolfsburg's improvement under former Southampton and RB Leipzig manager Ralph Hasenhuettl, with the Wolves now unbeaten in seven games.

Augsburg beat second-division Karlsruhe 5-4 on penalties away after visiting midfielder Ruben Vargas scored in the 123rd minute to level the scores at 2-2.

Bayer Leverkusen, who eliminated 20-time winners Bayern Munich on Tuesday, have already booked their spot in the quarterfinals along with Stuttgart, Werder Bremen and Arminia Bielefeld, who are the sole third-division side in the final eight.

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