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Alan Pardew welcomes Palace FA Cup success amid Premier League woes

Alan Pardew has targeted an end to Crystal Palace's poor run in the Premier League after watching his team progress to the FA Cup semi-finals at Wembley with a 2-0 win at Championship side Reading.

Their fourth Cup win from four has punctuated a worrying period in the league in which they last won at Stoke on Dec. 19 and which has left them at risk of joining the battle against relegation.

Pardew's team were convincing winners at the Madejski Stadium, however, through Yohan Cabaye's 86th-minute penalty and Frazier Campbell's close-range strike in the fourth minute of second-half stoppage time, and in the belief his team now have some momentum, the manager said: "There's different pressure on us in the league, but maybe Leicester [on March 19] is a good game for us. No one expects us to beat them.

"I'm pleased for our fans who have suffered in our home games of late. It's great to see that end happily with a semifinal to come. Great forward play from [Wilfried] Zaha and [Yannick] Bolasie and [Emmanuel] Adebayor, which was quite exciting at every level, so we have to take that into the next game.

"We were good and I was pleased for the players. It took a penalty to break them down in the end. I thought it was going to go to a replay, if I'm honest.

"We've won, but we've got to win in the league. A semifinal in the cup brings an excitement to you, and we hope that rubs off on our league form.

"We've had to win at Southampton and Tottenham, Stoke at home and now at Reading, and yet we can't get a win in the league.

"We've been pressure conscious of late, but that wasn't there in the cup. We have 10 games left now and we're looking forward to them."

That Palace were waiting until so late in the game to secure victory owed much to the performance of Reading goalkeeper Ali Al-Habsi, who made several impressive saves -- notably from Yannick Bolasie and Mile Jedinak -- and also got a hand to Cabaye's penalty.

"Ali played really well and made some fabulous saves," said manager Brian McDermott. "Ola John had a great chance and the first goal was always going to be decisive. The players are gutted in the dressing room, we want this every week.

"We went toe to toe with a very good Premier League side. Our priority is the league. We don't want it to be a situation where we talk about the FA Cup and FA Cup runs. We want to be talking about winning league games. The last 18 months, we've not done that."