
EPL Index
·17 March 2025
Eddie Howe delivers Newcastle’s long-awaited silverware

EPL Index
·17 March 2025
The tears flowed, and the joy was unrestrained as Newcastle United finally exorcised the ghosts of 56 years of failure on the Wembley stage. When referee John Brooks blew the final whistle, confirming a 2-1 victory over Liverpool in the Carabao Cup, an ocean of black and white erupted in celebration.
For a club that had endured nine successive defeats at the national stadium since their FA Cup triumph in 1955, this moment was about more than just silverware. It was about history. It was about identity. And it was about redemption.
Photo IMAGO
The wait had stretched across generations. Since lifting the now-defunct Inter-Cities Fairs Cup in 1969, Newcastle had become a club synonymous with glorious failure. They had been a punchline for rival fans, a symbol of unfulfilled potential. That era is now over.
Under Eddie Howe’s astute leadership, Newcastle have cast aside their history of near misses and broken dreams. This was a fully deserved victory, built on discipline, intensity, and an unwavering belief that this time would be different.
Wembley trembled with emotion. Some Newcastle fans were in tears before the final whistle, unable to watch as the seconds ticked down agonisingly. When victory was confirmed, their anthem, “Blaydon Races”, rang out into the night, a powerful declaration that Newcastle were back where they belonged.
This Newcastle team carried the scars of their Carabao Cup final defeat to Manchester United two years ago. That loss had been a brutal lesson, but one they had clearly learned from. This time, they were prepared.
The Toon Army had sent a clear message even before kick-off. A giant flag, emblazoned with “Get Into Them”, was unfurled in the stands. And on the pitch, Howe’s men executed that sentiment perfectly.
Photo IMAGO
Dan Burn, a boyhood Newcastle supporter, opened the scoring in first-half stoppage time, towering above Alexis Mac Allister—who was inexplicably assigned to mark him—before powering in a header from Kieran Trippier’s corner. It was a moment that cemented Burn’s place in Geordie folklore.
Alexander Isak, identified pre-match as Newcastle’s most likely match-winner, doubled the lead shortly after half-time. Reacting sharply to Jacob Murphy’s knockdown, he swept the ball home with the poise of a natural finisher.
For a moment, the ghosts of Newcastle’s past threatened to return. Federico Chiesa’s strike four minutes into added time gave Liverpool a glimmer of hope. But Howe’s side, resilient and composed, managed the final moments with the same authority they had shown all game. Liverpool, outplayed and outthought, never looked like finding an equaliser.
This was a triumph that transcended football. It was a victory for a club, a city, and a fanbase that has waited over half a century for a moment like this.
Eddie Howe and his players have secured their place in Newcastle’s history books. The Carabao Cup may not carry the prestige of the Premier League or Champions League, but for Newcastle, this is everything.
For Howe, the accolades will keep coming. A statue outside St James’ Park, alongside those of Sir Bobby Robson and Alan Shearer, would not feel out of place. Newcastle’s greatest figures have all lived through Wembley heartache—until now.
Howe has become the first English manager to win either the FA Cup or League Cup since Harry Redknapp’s FA Cup triumph with Portsmouth in 2008. He is also the first English coach to lift this particular trophy since Steve McClaren’s success with Middlesbrough in 2004.
When Howe arrived in November 2021, Newcastle were 19th in the Premier League, staring relegation in the face. Since then, his transformation of the club has been nothing short of remarkable.
Last season, he led Newcastle to a top-four finish, securing Champions League football for the first time in two decades. Now, he has delivered silverware, crossing the threshold that so many of his predecessors failed to.
This final showcased everything Howe has instilled into this team. Newcastle suffocated Liverpool with their aggression, pressed relentlessly, and executed a disciplined defensive game plan that reduced Mohamed Salah to a passenger.
Salah failed to register a single shot or create a single chance, a rare and damning statistic. His subdued performance epitomised Liverpool’s struggles. Just days after their Champions League exit to PSG, they looked a side drained of energy and inspiration.
Newcastle, by contrast, looked ferocious. They could have—and perhaps should have—added more goals. But in the end, two were enough.
Afterwards, Howe reflected on the magnitude of the occasion.
“I am very, very emotional and have been all day, which is very unlike me. We knew what was at stake for all of our fans. We wanted to do them proud and win the trophy.”
“We deserved to win but it was tough when Liverpool scored. I was thinking about extra time. We always make it difficult for ourselves. It was never going to be 2-0.”
Howe admitted that even he was surprised by Burn’s goal.
“We worked consistently for two weeks on set-plays just for this game, and if you’d seen us in practice, you would have said we had no chance. We couldn’t believe Dan Burn scored. He hasn’t been training like that.”
This was a victory that belonged to Newcastle. But it also belonged to Howe.
For decades, Newcastle have been a club of unfulfilled potential, a sleeping giant trapped in its own history. Now, under Eddie Howe, they are wide awake.
The party has only just begun on Tyneside.