Swansea 2-3 Man City
Sergio Aguero's controversial late winner ensured Manchester City dramatically kept their quadruple bid on track as they came from two goals down to beat Swansea and reach the FA Cup semi-finals.
Substitute Aguero beat Swansea keeper Kristoffer Nordfeldt with a diving header off Bernardo Silva's low cross at the end of a superb move in the 88th minute.
Replays showed the Argentina striker was marginally offside but the video assistant review system was not in use at the Liberty Stadium, despite having been used in City's third and fourth-round ties at their Etihad Stadium home.
City had levelled in contentious circumstances too when Cameron Carter-Vickers was judged to have tripped replacement Raheem Sterling in the area and Aguero's penalty hit the post before rebounding in off Nordfeldt for an own goal.
Defeat was harsh on the impressive hosts, who led 2-0 inside 30 minutes through Matt Grimes' penalty and Bersant Celina's spectacular second.
The former City player, who was mocked for an extraordinary penalty miss against West Brom on Wednesday, curled a sumptuous first-time effort beyond Ederson at the end of a tremendous, flowing move.
City fielded a strong side but needed Sterling and Aguero to come off the bench to shake them out of their fatigue, the latter setting up Bernardo for the visitors' opener, which sparked their thrilling comeback in the last half hour.
'It is incredible we are fighting for everything' - Guardiola
Sterling and Sergio finally stir City
Aguero wins it for Man City with 'offside' goal
Having scored 16 goals in three previous FA Cup games this season and after thrashing Schalke 7-0 in the Champions League on Tuesday, City's bright start to this game seemed to indicate that this would be another stroll.
Yet after missing a few chances, with Nordfeldt also making two fine saves, the front three of Gabriel Jesus, Leroy Sane and Riyad Mahrez started to lose their composure - and so did City's defence.
Fabian Delph, who was sent off in his side's fifth-round defeat by Wigan last year, was caught out by Connor Roberts' deft touch to bring down a long pass and felled the Swansea right-back from behind to concede a clear penalty for the opener.
The visitors then failed to track the runners as Swansea swept forward, leaving Celina unmarked for the second.
The Premier League leaders carried limited threat in the early stages of the second half and looked on course for a tame exit to a side who are 15th in the Championship.
Yet Sterling and Aguero proved to be the difference after they were brought on either side of the hour mark, the latter calmly picking out Bernardo after his own effort was blocked before the excellent Portugal midfielder curved a fine effort into the far corner.
Sterling then feinted past Carter-Vickers before falling under the challenge. Andre Marriner awarded a penalty but replays suggested the centre-back touched the ball before clipping Sterling's ankle, and Swansea's injustice was compounded by Aguero's fortunate conversion.
Pep Guardiola's ruthless side were not prepared to settle for extra time, pushing forward once more and working the ball out to Bernardo on the left of the area to pick out Aguero perfectly, with the lack of VAR working in City's favour.
"I'm sorry it was offside. I don't understand why VAR is not used in this competition at this stage. Hopefully next season this won't happen," Guardiola told BBC Sport.
"The penalty was really lucky but you need it, especially when you're in four competitions."
Wolves 2-1 Man Utd
Wolverhampton Wanderers produced an outstanding second-half performance to overpower Manchester United and reach their first FA Cup semi-final for 21 years on an atmospheric night at Molineux.
Nuno Espirito Santo's side, in their first quarter-final since 2003, fully deserved their victory as United produced their worst performance under the interim management of Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.
United goalkeeper Sergio Romero, in for David de Gea, had kept United level with brilliant saves from Diogo Jota and Raul Jimenez either side of the interval, before the Mexican striker swivelled in the area to finally give Wolves the reward their domination merited with 20 minutes remaining.
Wolves were rampant and it was no surprise when the dangerous Jota doubled their lead six minutes later, shrugging off United's Luke Shaw on the break before shooting low past the exposed Romero.
United defender Victor Lindelof was shown a red card by referee Martin Atkinson for a touchline challenge on Jota, but it was downgraded it to yellow after a VAR review and, even though Marcus Rashford pulled one back in stoppage time, Wolves were worthy winners.
SEE OTHER RESULTS:
- Readers Comments desired, Share Your Story in comment box below;
0 Comments