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Eberechi Eze’s 16th-minute goal fired Crystal Palace to the first major trophy in their history as they secured a 1-0 FA Cup victory over Manchester City at Wembley.

City were the better side in the first 15 minutes as they had Palace camped inside their own half with Haaland meeting Kevin De Bruyne’s cross after six minutes to force a decent save from Henderson.

The Palace stopper was called into action five minutes later when he stopped Josko Gvardiol’s header from Savinho’s corner.

Manuel Akanji then headed over Savinho’s next set-piece inswinger and it seemed a matter of when, not if, a totally dominant City would open the scoring.

But suddenly, Palace were ahead. Jean-Philippe Mateta held up a long punt forward before he turned the ball round the corner to Munoz.

The Colombia international’s pinpoint pass was met by Eze, who steered the ball past Stefan Ortega.

It marked only the second time Palace had crossed the halfway line and they might have doubled their advantage moments later, only for Ortega to save well from Ismaila Sarr.

With only Henderson to beat, Haaland was denied a clear scoring opportunity. Controversially, VAR did not think so claiming the ball was going away from the goal and Henderson was in the clear.

City had every right to feel aggrieved, but they were then awarded a chance to wipe out Palace’s lead when Tyrick Mitchell’s sliding tackle missed the ball and took out Bernado Silva instead.

Referee Stuart Attwell hesitated momentarily before pointing to the spot. This time, VAR would not come to Palace’s rescue, but Henderson did, when he pulled off a strong one-handed save to deny Marmoush  and not Haaland who had kissed the ball before passing it to his team-mate  from 12 yards.

With half-time approaching, man-of-the-hour Henderson was back in action when he produced a flying save to stop Jeremy Doku’s curling effort.

Palace started the second half just as they did the first –pinned inside their own half.

But, just as in the opening period, the south London club had the ball in the back of the net with their first attack on City’s goal.

Munoz’s thrash at goal deflected off Maxence Lacroix – and then Sarr – with a wrong-footed Ortega making the save before Munoz poked the rebound home.

However, wild scenes in the Palace end were curtailed when VAR intervened with Sarr in an offside position.

Amid the frantic action on the pitch, there was chaos off it, too, as backroom staff from both teams had to be separated.

City were enjoying plenty of possession and De Bruyne presented Nico O’Reilly with a fine chance but he delayed his shot and Palace cleared their lines.

Front and centre in the first half, Henderson was not called into action until the 82nd minute.

But when he was, he was equal to the task as he denied 19-year-old substitute Claudio Echeverri from scoring on his debut, in normal time and then again in the sixth of 10 added on minutes on an afternoon, Henderson, nor anyone connected with Palace, will ever forget.

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Eberechi Eze’s 16th-minute goal fired Crystal Palace to the first major trophy in their history as they secured a 1-0 FA Cup victory over Manchester City at Wembley.

City were the better side in the first 15 minutes as they had Palace camped inside their own half with Haaland meeting Kevin De Bruyne’s cross after six minutes to force a decent save from Henderson.

The Palace stopper was called into action five minutes later when he stopped Josko Gvardiol’s header from Savinho’s corner.

Manuel Akanji then headed over Savinho’s next set-piece inswinger and it seemed a matter of when, not if, a totally dominant City would open the scoring.

But suddenly, Palace were ahead. Jean-Philippe Mateta held up a long punt forward before he turned the ball round the corner to Munoz.

The Colombia international’s pinpoint pass was met by Eze, who steered the ball past Stefan Ortega.

It marked only the second time Palace had crossed the halfway line and they might have doubled their advantage moments later, only for Ortega to save well from Ismaila Sarr.

With only Henderson to beat, Haaland was denied a clear scoring opportunity. Controversially, VAR did not think so claiming the ball was going away from the goal and Henderson was in the clear.

City had every right to feel aggrieved, but they were then awarded a chance to wipe out Palace’s lead when Tyrick Mitchell’s sliding tackle missed the ball and took out Bernado Silva instead.

Referee Stuart Attwell hesitated momentarily before pointing to the spot. This time, VAR would not come to Palace’s rescue, but Henderson did, when he pulled off a strong one-handed save to deny Marmoush  and not Haaland who had kissed the ball before passing it to his team-mate  from 12 yards.

With half-time approaching, man-of-the-hour Henderson was back in action when he produced a flying save to stop Jeremy Doku’s curling effort.

Palace started the second half just as they did the first –pinned inside their own half.

But, just as in the opening period, the south London club had the ball in the back of the net with their first attack on City’s goal.

Munoz’s thrash at goal deflected off Maxence Lacroix – and then Sarr – with a wrong-footed Ortega making the save before Munoz poked the rebound home.

However, wild scenes in the Palace end were curtailed when VAR intervened with Sarr in an offside position.

Amid the frantic action on the pitch, there was chaos off it, too, as backroom staff from both teams had to be separated.

City were enjoying plenty of possession and De Bruyne presented Nico O’Reilly with a fine chance but he delayed his shot and Palace cleared their lines.

Front and centre in the first half, Henderson was not called into action until the 82nd minute.

But when he was, he was equal to the task as he denied 19-year-old substitute Claudio Echeverri from scoring on his debut, in normal time and then again in the sixth of 10 added on minutes on an afternoon, Henderson, nor anyone connected with Palace, will ever forget.