Second-half strikes from Raul Jimenez and Diogo Jota knocked 12-time winners Manchester United out of the FA Cup on Saturday night. Neither side could find the breakthrough in the first half but Jimenez opened the scoring in the 70th minute. Jota doubled Wolves' lead six minutes later with a fine solo effort and sent them through to the semi-finals of the competition. Diogo Jota doubled Wolves' lead six minutes after they went ahead with a fine individual effort on the counter attack Jota scores his side's second goal of the game and runs away to celebrate in front of the Wolves supporters in the second half Wolves striker Raul Jimenez (centre) celebrates after scoring the opening goal in the 70th minute of the FA Cup match Jimenez celebrates scoring his side's first goal of the game in the second half of the match against Manchester United Victor Lindelof (not pictured) was shown a red card for sliding tackle but decision was overturned by video assistant referee Referee Martin Atkinson indicates that the red card has been overturned by VAR and Lindelof received a yellow card instead Just to underscore that the old order has been overturned for good, Paul Pogba was handed the armband. He has been given that honour by Jose Mourinho, then stripped of it, humiliatingly. Now he was restored to centre stage and this was the first time, with neither Ashley Young nor David de Gea picked, that he has led the team out since his demotion. Yet both managers had their eyes on the famous old trophy. The only significant changes were the goalkeepers. Otherwise Nuno Santo stuck to his best starting eleven. And Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's changes were largely tactical or enforced: Diogo Dalot for Young, Ander Herrera for Fred and Anthony Martial for Romelu Lukaku. The Molineux atmosphere also suggested that the four-time FA Cup winners, their last triumph coming in 1960, carved some silverware. A healthy United contingent and the late kick off combined to make this a raucous occasion. Anthony Martial has an effort on goal during the first half but neither side could find the breakthrough in the first period Wolves striker Jimenez (left) vies with Manchester United's Spanish midfielder Ander Herrera (right) during the first half Wolves' Ruben Neves (left) and Manchester United's Paul Pogba speak to match referee Martin Atkinson during the first half MATCH FACTS, PLAYER RATINGS AND MATCH ZONE Wolves: John Ruddy, Saiss, Coady, Boly, Doherty, Dendoncker, Neves, Joao Moutinho, Jonny, Jota, Jimenez. Subs: Bennett, Ivan Cavaleiro, Helder Costa, Gibbs-White, Ruben Vinagre, Norris, Traore. Man Utd: Romero, Dalot, Lindelof, Smalling, Shaw, Ander Herrera, Matic, Pogba, Lingard, Rashford, Martial. Subs: De Gea, Jones, Mata, Andreas Pereira, Rojo, Fred, McTominay. Referee: Martin Atkinson Raul Jimenez opened the scoring for the home side in the 70th minute. CLICK HERE for more from Sportsmail's Match Zone. Yet the early exchanges were absorbing rather than thrilling. Solskjaer reverted to his first formation of 4-3-3, with Pogba playing the advanced midfield role behind a front three of Martial, Marcus Rashford and Jesse Lingard. They probed, with Rashford's movement impressive, always looking to get in behind Wolverhampton's back three. Yet Nuno's team are too well organised to concede much. They allowed United possession drew them on and bided their time. But a Pogba strike wide and a Rashford shot from 30 yards is all they really produced in that opening quarter, despite the intricacy of their passing. Wolves would have their moments. Matt Doherty's cross for Diogo Jota, which saw the striker stretch out a leg and force a save from Sergio Romero served warning that more was to come. Then a flurry of VAR issues livened up proceedings. Manchester United's Jesse Lingard (left) and Wolves' Jimenez battle for the ball during the FA Cup quarter-final Manchester United interim manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer (right) and Wolves boss Nuno Espirito Santo on the touchline Manchester United's Lingard (left) and Wolves' Willy Boly battle for the ball during a tight first 45 minutes on Saturday night Wolves claim came from a 36th minute Joao Moutinho corner, with Chris Smalling bundling into the back of Willy Boly and Leander Dendoncker. Smalling did have his arm loosely around Boly, but it seemed a rather normal coming together and referee Martin Atkinson didn't appear to consult his video assistant. Two minutes later United had their own VAR opportunity, also from a corner. In a Paris re-run, Diogo Dalot shot and Jonny Otto turned his back only for the ball to strike his elbow. The FA allow a more generous interpretation for defenders of the handball rule than UEFA and thus it was never likely to succeed. Still, United have learned something from their Champions League experience. In Paris only Dalot appealed. Here, six players vociferously demanded a penalty. After a short conversation, Atkinson dismissed them. From another United corner just before half-time would come the best chance of the half: for Wolves. Catching United on the counter, Wolves advanced the ball to Ruben Neves who threaded it inside Victor Lindelof, trying to hold the fort on his own, for Jota. Credit Romero for swiftly closing the angle by advancing off his line and smothering the ball, but Jota should have scored. Manchester United midfielder Pogba is fouled by Wolves defender Willy Boly during the first period of FA Cup tie The pattern remained unchanged at the start of the second half. Both teams largely cancelled each other out, though the odd chance did emerge. Those of Rashford on 47 minutes and Neves on 50 minutes, a long-range strike, were wildly wide. Yet the 54th minute Moutinho corner brought the best moment of the match. The lovely floated corner was met with impressive force by the head of Jimenez. It looked inevitably destined for the goal until Romero leapt to his left, raised a hand and managed, despite its force, to lift it over. Wolves though were encouraged. They scented blood, more so when Neves delightful curled pass fell just short of Jimenez a minute later. And then when Moutinho found space to open up and curl a shot from 20 yards, United were grateful again to Romero, diving to his left to touch the ball over the bar. United were temporarily on the back foot, just surviving a precarious 10 minutes. With Herrera, Rashford and Matic all on yellow cards, they could ill afford any mistake. Rashford and Lingard continued to attempt to make runs to relive the pressure the reality was the Neves and Moutinho had established midfield superiority. The difficulty was making it count. Wolves' Diogo Jota reacts to a missed chance during the FA Cup quarter-final match at Molineux on Saturday evening The South Bank roared for a penalty on 69 minutes when Dendoncker ran into the back of Herrera but that was optimistic. Still, they would have to wait long for something genuine to cheer. Wolves were stretching United, switching play from side to side when Moutinho, who had been excellent throughout drove into the United box. In one run, he took out three United players and drilled the ball into Jimenez. Despite the fact that Lindelof blocked his first strike and that there appeared to be three defenders around in, the Mexican managed to swivel round, connect again and strike past Romero, who on this occasion could barely see from whence the ball came. It was an extraordinarily sloppy goal to concede and yet well deserved for Wolves. Worse was to come for United in terms of defending. As they threw men forward to attack – Andreas Pereira was on for Herrera – Wolves countered on them, hooking the ball out for Jota. Luke Shaw was the last line of resistance and though initially he seemed he have the situation under control, Jota’s desire and aggression simply saw him get the better of the left back, leaving him on the floor. Now he advanced on goal and Lindelof rushed back to attempt to block him. But he got his shot away, Romero, for once, reacted late and slow, and it crept in past him. Manchester United goalkeeper Sergio Romero makes a save to deny Jimenez from finding the net with a header All rights reserved for this news site dailymail and under his responsibility