Twice the Sky Blues were on the brink of knocking out their Championship opponents, but each time the Blues struck at the death – and then they held their nerve in the penalty shoot-out that followed.
After a goalless first half, the tie sprung into life when Amadou Bakayoko’s shot squirted home five minutes into the second half.
Max Biamou twice missed good chances to double the Sky Blues’ lead, but it still looked as though they had done enough to advance.
However, Harlee Dean headed home in the second minute of stoppage time to level things up and Birmingham almost won it only for Lukas Jutkiewicz’s header to crash against the crossbar in the final seconds of normal time.
In extra-time, League One Coventry surged ahead again when Biamou tucked home after being teed up by Callum O’Hare with six minutes left.
However, there was another sting in the tail in the final minute as Jeremie Bela’s speculative crosscum-shot from the right sailed over Marko Marosi and went in off the far post.
Rollercoaster
Buoyed by their reprieve, Birmingham triumphed 4-1 in the ensuing penalty shoot-out. Goalkeeper Lee Camp proved the hero, saving from Liam Walsh and Jamie Allen, while the Blues stuck away all their spot-kicks.
Relieved boss Clotet said: “Coventry made it very difficult for us and we struggled to create flow in attack but one thing we had was the ability to work harder to the end, believe in ourselves and take the game to a penalty shoot-out.
“We are very happy it went in our favour. It was a fantastic night.”
Coventry boss Mark Robins said: “I’m proud of the players. They’ve come out on the wrong side of a result and we had three good chances to put the game to bed in normal time that we didn’t take, which means you always run the risk.”
Esta historia es de la edición February 09, 2020 de The Football League Paper.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición February 09, 2020 de The Football League Paper.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
I'd still want to keep Pat on side
Patrick Bamford has always been a player who divides opinion amongst Leeds supporters.
WHITES & THE BLADES SPEED ON
LEEDS and Sheffield United maintained their pace at the top of the table with comfortable home victories - but Sunderland slipped off the summit.
BAILEY: WE'LL GIVE POPPIES THE RESPECT THEY DESERVE
OWEN Bailey knows exactly how pumped up seventh-tier Kettering Town will be when Doncaster Rovers roll into ramshackle Latimer Park today.
TOWN EARN THEIR CORN!
HARROGATE mon Weaver breathed a sigh of relief after his side edged past Gainsborough Trinity at a rain-sodden Exercise Stadium.
OH MY JOSH - O'S KEEPER IS THE HERO!
RICHIE Wellens praised keeper Josh Keeley as Leyton Orient reached the third round following a dramatic win over National League Oldham.
'IT HASN'T BEEN MY WHOLE FOCUS AND THAT HELPED ME
SHAUN Barker never attempted to conceal the fact that he had no burning desire to play football.
MATT'S BOYS SHOW CLASS
WYCOMBE side-stepped a tricky second round fixture by defeating Wealdstone at Grosvenor Vale.
LUKE SEETHES OVER SLOPPY SWANS START
LUKE Williams admitted he gave his players the hairdryer treatment at half-time after seeing them come into the break trailing against bottom of the table Portsmouth.
UPSET FOR HARRIS AS TYLER HITS STUNNER
Neil Harris insisted the fact that Millwall were bitterly disappointed to claim only a point shows the progress his side have made over the past 10 months.
ANTE AT THE DOUBLE FOR ON-SONG CITY
NORWICH head coach Johannes Hoff Thorup paid tribute to the home fans after watching his side come through a tough test against Luton to win comfortably in the end.