Everton came from behind on Sunday to beat Middlesbrough 2-1 and progress to the semi-final of the FA Cup, dpa reported.
Marouane Fellaini and Louis Saha scored the goals early in the second half to overturn the first-half lead given to Middlesbrough by David Wheater.
Middlesbrough may be second-bottom of the Premier League, but they were worth their half-time lead.
Jeremie Aliadiere had blazed a glorious chance over after 11 minutes, while Everton's only real threat was a Fellaini header that Brad Jones pushed wide.
The opener arrived a minute before half-time, Wheater meeting Matthew Bates's cross with a firm header.
Tim Howard got a hand to it, but was unable to keep the ball out.
Aliadiere was denied a second just after the break only by a good block from Joleon Lescott.
That miss soon proved costly.
On 51 minutes as Fellaini got to Tim Cahill's cross and looped his header past a poorly-positioned Jones.
Five minutes later Everton had the lead, Saha heading in Steven Pienaar's cross.
Leighton Baines then hit the bar with a swerving free-kick.
Earlier in the day, Arsenal had secured themselves a sixth-round tie against Hull City with a comfortable 3-0 win over Championship side Burnley.
"We did the job in a serious way," said Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger. "In the first half they made the job very difficult for us because they marked us tightly.
"We kept good defensive tightness and we scored a goal. In the second half we scored brilliant goals.
"We could have had a few more but overall we did the job in a conscientious and serious way."
Carlos Vela put Arsenal ahead after 25 minutes, nutmegging Clarke Carlisle before finishing with a sumptuous chip over Brian Jensen.
Eduardo made it 2-0 with his third goal in two appearances since returning from a year out with a broken leg, guiding a volley past Jensen with the outside of his left foot.
Emmanuel Eboue got the late third, finishing another fine move after Alexandre Song had backheeled William Gallas's path into his path.
"The quality of the Arsenal goals was there for everybody to see," said Burnley manager Owen Coyle.
"But I thought we acquitted ourselves well. There's a lot to be pleased about."
Manchester United and Chelsea reached the semi-final on Saturday.