Chelsea boss Roberto Di Matteo said his team's
5-4 League Cup win against Manchester United
emphasised his view that Sunday's result was unjust.
The nine-man Blues
lost 3-2 to United at the weekend
with Javier Hernandez's winner coming from an offside position.
"We wanted to show that Sunday's game was really heavily influenced by the officials," Di Matteo told.
United boss Sir Alex Ferguson fielded a young defence on Wednesday, which he conceded "were just too young".
Di Matteo was furious with referee Mark Clattenburg on
Sunday after he booked Fernando Torres for diving, leading to the
Spanish striker's dismissal.
Clattenburg has
since been accused
of allegedly using "inappropriate language" towards Chelsea midfielder John Obi Mikel.
But Di Matteo had only one complaint with the referee
in this Capital One Cup tie - Lee Mason waved away a Juan Mata penalty
claim.
Other than that, the official handled the game in a distinguished manner despite several big decisions.
He rightly awarded three penalties in a thrilling
contest and his assistant correctly judged Gary Cahill's header to have
crossed the line.
Mason also calmly and decisively broke up a scuffle between Oscar and Nani, awarding yellow cards to both players.
Chelsea, who now
face Leeds in the quarter-finals,
twice came from behind with David Luiz scoring from the spot either side of goals from Ryan Giggs and Javier Hernandez.
Cahill made it 2-2 and it looked like Nani's finish
would win it before Eden Hazard's injury-time penalty took the game to
extra-time. Daniel Sturridge and Ramires then made it 5-3 with Ryan
Giggs adding another spot kick in added time.
"We deservedly won the game," Di Matteo added. "We had
so many chances and we had to come back so many times as well and we
showed great character to do so.
"We are trying to play differently but we all like to
win as well. We are playing very well and sometimes you make a step back
to do one forwards.
"It was a typical cup game because of all the young
players in the team, and we had to chase the game. It was a bit more
open than usual."
Ferguson, meanwhile, said his team let slip a great chance to progress and admitted they paid for fielding a young defence.
Centre-back Scott Wootton, 21, was culpable for
Hazard's injury-time penalty to make it 3-3, when he bundled over
Ramires, and the youngster also misjudged a header in extra-time leading
to Sturridge's strike.
"We have done fantastically well and I think we have
thrown the game away really," Ferguson told BBC Sport. "With the game
finished, we had possession of the ball around about the corner flag and
Nani decides to beat a player and we've lost a penalty kick.
"We didn't deserve it but in extra-time I think they found it too much in terms of the young players.
"You can always play young forwards because they don't
cost you the game but young centre-backs have to be really top drawer at
this level of football.
"Wootton is 21 years of age, Michael Keane is 19 years
of age, obviously they will learn. It's a sore lesson from them in that
respect - getting knocked out of the cup.
Ferguson added: "We have good options in attack, but
obviously losing five goals in a game of football, then you have to
worried about that."
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