Fulham 1-1 Sunderland: Captain Tom Cairney scores superb individual goal to earn Marco Silva’s side an FA Cup fourth round replay after Jack Clarke’s opener

For all the talk of the magic of the Cup, this tie very nearly had the most magical of endings when 15-year-old Chris Rigg put the ball in the back of the net in the 90th minute in front of just shy of 6,000 Sunderland fans housed in the Putney End at Craven Cottage.

If the goal stood, Rigg would have become the youngest goalscorer in FA Cup history. As it was, it was disallowed with Abdoullah Ba offside in the build-up and Fulham and Sunderland will have to do it all againvafter a crazy game that had 39 goal attempts yet somehow ended one apiece.

‘Riggy goes to school and gets two days of day release a week where he trains with our first team. The rest of the time, he’s at school,’ said Sunderland boss Tony Mowbray.

Tom Cairney levelled for Fulham to earn the Premier League side a replay against Sunderland

Jack Clarke gave Sunderland a sixth minute lead after an error from Fulham’s Issa Diop

‘When he came on at Shrewsbury, we were 1-0 down and we won the game 2-1 in his 10-minute spell. I felt he maybe had that bit of magic to come on and change the game so we wouldn’t have needed a replay.

‘The age is irrelevant for me. He brings energy as he showed and what a story that would have been — a 15-year-old boy coming on and scoring the winner.’

This was a proper Cup tie. Jack Clarke’s early goal gave the visitors the lead before a moment of brilliance from Fulham captain Tom Cairney levelled the game on the hour mark. Either side of Cairney’s equaliser was a thrilling end-to-end contest that was like pinball in the latter stages as both sides threw everything in their hunt for a deciding goal.

Clarke’s early strike set up the prospect of a fourth round FA Cup upset at Craven Cottage

The Championship side were backed by a strong contingent of away fans in London

Even Marco Silva struggled to make sense of it all. ‘A strange game, a typical FA Cup match if I may say,’ insisted the Fulham manager. ‘The game was too broken for me to enjoy as a manager,’ he admitted.

It has been 50 years since Sunderland won the FA Cup and their impressive display was perhaps marred by a first-half injury to talisman Ross Stewart but they can hold their heads high.

The Black Cats priority lies in the Championship but Mowbray’s youthful side — which finished with nine players aged 22 or younger at full — showed no signs of taking this competition lightly.

A replay was the least that they and their magnificent travelling support deserved.

‘It was an extraordinarily young team who put in a good performance,’ said Mowbray. ‘If anything, there’s a bit of frustration that we didn’t see the game through.’ Silva made seven changes from the Fulham side that lost to Tottenham while Mowbray made just the one alteration from the team that beat Middlesbrough last weekend.

Sunderland were dealt a blow when top scorer Ross Stewart suffered an injury in the first half

The 26-year-old forward was stretchered off with a reported Achilles problem

And it took just six minutes for the Sunderland fans who had made the trip down to London to be rewarded when Clarke nicked the ball off Issa Diop and calmly finished past Marek Rodak.

Just as it looked like everything was going to plan for the visitors, Stewart pulled up inside the Fulham box. You couldn’t help but feel like it was a pivotal moment in their season. Despite the forward missing 15 league games this campaign, his tally of 10 goals in the Championship gives the ‘Loch Ness Drogba’ the best minutes-per-goal ratio in the division.

Still Sunderland posed a persistent threat, particularly down the right flank, with their quick link-up play. Patrick Roberts, formerly of Fulham, was a handful all afternoon and he set up Amad Diallo but the Manchester United loanee dragged his shot wide.

Sunderland keeper Anthony Patterson was called into action in dramatic fashion on the brink of half-time. Andreas Pereira’s volley looked destined to crash into the back of the net yet Daniel Ballard was back on the line and his shin deflected the ball to the keeper and away from danger.

Captain Cairney showed superb footwork in the box before firing the Premier League side level

The Fulham midfielder celebrated his first goal of the season in front of the home supporters

The second half was borderline chaos with end-to-end action from the off. Hugh Grant, a Fulham fan and in attendance at Craven Cottage, would certainly have approved.

Harry Wilson forced Patterson into a flying save before Roberts and Diallo combined again but the latter’s shot was kept out. From the resulting corner, Fulham broke but Wilson could find no way past Patterson. At the other end, a buccaneering run from Roberts nearly had the perfect finish but his strike rolled wide.

MATCH FACTS AND RATINGS

Fulham (4-2-3-1): Rodak 7, Tete 6, Tosin 6, Diop 6, Kurzawa 6, Joao Palhinha 6 (Reed 78), Cairney 7 (De Cordova-Reid 78), Pereira 7, Wilson 6 (Willian 69, 5), Vinicius 5 (Mitrovic 64, 5), Solomon

Subs not used: Leno, Ream, Duffy, James, Harris

Goals: Cairney 61

Booked: Wilson, Kurzawa

Manager: Marco Silva 6

Sunderland (4-2-3-1): Patterson 8, Hume 7, Ballard 7, Batth 7, Alese 6 (Huggins 45), Michut 6 (Ekwah 77), Neil 6, Roberts 7 (Rigg 86), Diallo 7, Clarke 7 (Bennette 77), Stewart 5 (Ba 20, 6)

Subs not used: Bass, Kelly, Johnson, Watson

Goals: Clarke 6

Booked: Alese, Batth

Manager: Tony Mowbray 7

Referee: Michael Salisbury 6

Attendance: 22,905

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Aleksandar Mitrovic was brought off the bench as the Premier League side chased a winner

Mowbray had his hands on his head and the visitors were made to rue their missed chances just minutes later as Fulham levelled on the hour mark. Layvin Kurzawa picked out Cairney who sat down two Sunderland defenders before unleashing a low left-footed strike that flew past Patterson.

Both managers looked to the bench. Neither fancied a replay. at the Stadium of Light. Silva threw on the likes of Willian and Aleksandar Mitrovic.

Mowbray turned to the kids and Rigg — who wasn’t even born when Willian made his debut — so nearly finished a story for the ages.

Fulham could have snatched it in added time but the superb Patterson denied Bobby Decordova-Reid and Willian.

The whistle blew but frankly, this was a game that no one at Craven Cottage wanted to end.

Sunderland’s 15-year-old subsitute Chris Rigg appeared to have dramatically won the tie

The teenager saw his effort ruled out for offside with the sides now facing a replay

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