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Habib Diarra’s controversial penalty earns Sunderland FA Cup win at Oxford

February 15, 2026 at 04:07 PM
By Robert O'Connor
Habib Diarra’s controversial penalty earns Sunderland FA Cup win at Oxford
The Championship hosts proved stubborn opponents.

Analysis & Context

The Championship hosts proved stubborn opponents. Habib Diarra’s controversial penalty earns Sunderland FA Cup win at Oxford. Stay informed with the latest developments and expert analysis on this important story.
The Championship hosts proved stubborn opponents. SportFootballHabib Diarra’s controversial penalty earns Sunderland FA Cup win at OxfordThe Championship hosts proved stubborn opponents.Robert O'Connor Sunday 15 February 2026 16:07 GMTBookmarkBookmark popoverRemoved from bookmarksClose popoverSunderland’s Habib Diarra scored the only goal from the penalty spot (Adam Davy/PA). (PA Wire)Your support helps us to tell the storyRead moreSupport NowFrom reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.Your support makes all the difference.Read moreSunderland reached the FA Cup fifth round for the first time since 2015 as Habib Diarra’s contentious first-half penalty earned a 1-0 win away to Oxford.The Championship side proved stubborn opponents on a pitch that had been lashed by rain earlier in the day, but the surface held out at the Kassam Stadium and so did Regis Le Bris’ Premier League visitors, scraping through thanks to a decision that convinced few supporters in the home section.Dennis Cirkin was the beneficiary, going over in the box under a challenge by Christ Makosso. With no VAR to advise, one look was all referee Thomas Kirk got and Diarra capitalised to help his team emerge from a tricky tie.This had been a league fixture last season, Sunderland losing 2-0 here in April en route to ending the regular campaign with five straight defeats. Four weeks later they triumphed in the play-off final at Wembley to secure their top-flight return and have not looked back.Oxford by contrast are facing the real prospect of their time in the second tier ending after two seasons, but they put relegation fears aside and put up a worthy fight, particularly in the closing stages as the Wearsiders were made to cling on.It had looked like being a straightforward afternoon for Sunderland, who were the better team in the first half. After 13 minutes, Chemsdine Talbi crossed for Wilson Isidor, who missed his kick with his first effort then shovelled his next into the side-netting.Jamie Donley, whose audacious long-range lob gave Leyton Orient the lead against Manchester City in the fourth round a year ago, albeit via an own goal from the goalkeeper, had Oxford’s first sight of goal when his drive was beaten away by Robin Roefs. The 21-year-old on loan from Tottenham was making only his second appearance after getting injured on his debut in the previous round.Oxford had not been awarded a penalty since their League One play-off semi-final against Peterborough 85 games ago.Sunderland were under no such curse and went ahead after 33 minutes. Makosso went in clumsily and tripped Cirkin inside the box and, although the decision appeared generous towards the Premier League side, Diarra stepped up to calmly send the goalkeeper the wrong way.Makosso came as close as anyone in yellow at the end of the half with a header wide from Will Vaulks’ throw-in.At the break, boos greeted the officials from home supporters who felt that decisions – the penalty chief among them – had gone against their side.Matt Ingram’s saves kept Oxford in with a shout as the tie entered its final half-hour, first from Romaine Mundle’s drive then acrobatically from a long-range blast from Talbi. Trai Hume was also denied at the goalkeeper’snear post from outside the box.Oxford’s moment looked to have arrived in the 70th minute when the ball dropped in the box for substitute Jamie McDonnell, but he could only side-foot his effort over the bar.More aboutSunderlandOxfordLeague OnePremier LeagueVARMost popularPopular videosBulletinRead next

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