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FA Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
For the equivalent Scottish competition, see Scottish FA Cup

The Football Association Challenge Cup, commonly known as the FA Cup, is the main "knockout" cup competition in English football, run by and named after The Football Association.

The FA Cup is the oldest football competition in the world. As such its prestige as the sport's premier domestic cup competition is without par around the world. As it involves clubs of all standards playing against each other, there is great scope for "giant-killers" from the lower divisions to eliminate top clubs from the tournament.

The name "FA Cup" usually refers to the men's tournament. The equivalent competition for women's teams is the FA Women's Cup. The women's cup has a much lower public profile than the men's, in common with all women's football in England. Other countries also have their own FA Cup, but they are obliged to make reference to exactly which Football Association the tournament is run by, for example the Scottish FA Cup. Many nations also have similar competitions, inspired by this legendary tournament.

Table of contents
1 Format
2 Trophies
3 Giant-Killers
4 Notable events in the FA Cup
5 Past Winners of the FA Cup
6 External links

Format

The competition is a knockout tournament with pairings drawn completely at random - there are no seeds. The draw also determines which team will play at home. If a match is drawn, there is a replay at the ground of the other team. Drawn replays are now settled with extra time and kicks from the penalty mark (penalty shootouts), though in the past further replays were possible, and some ties took as many as six matches to settle. For the 2005/6 season only, any later-round ties involving teams still involved in European competitions will not be replayed, but settled on the day; this is to allow an early finish to the domestic season in advance of the 2006 World Cup.

Traditionally the final is played at London's Wembley Stadium. However, due to extensive redevelopment of Wembley, finals have been played at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff since 2001. Although early venues include Kennington Oval and The Crystal Palace, this was the first time the final had been played outside of England. The FA Cup final is expected to return to Wembley on May 13, 2006.

The semi-finals are contested at neutral venues; in the past these have usually been the home grounds of teams not involved in that semi-final, such as Old Trafford in Manchester, Villa Park in Birmingham and Hillsborough in Sheffield. However, in 2005 both semi-finals were held at the Millennium Stadium, where the football commentator John Motson says they will also be held in 2006. In future years it is expected that all semi-finals will be played at the new Wembley Stadium.

The competition begins with the Extra-Preliminary rounds contested by non-league clubs in August, which any F.A. affiliated club meeting a basic standard of ability and ground facilities may enter. 644 clubs entered the competition in the 2003/04 season, and a record 660 for 2004/05 (the old record was 656 in 1921/22). Following the Extra-Preliminary Round is a Preliminary Round, four Qualifying Rounds, and six Rounds of the competition proper, followed by the Semi-Finals and the Final. All Football League clubs may enter. Non-league clubs may also enter if they competed in the previous season's FA Trophy or FA Vase and are deemed to be playing in an "acceptable" league for the current season. All clubs entering the competition must have a suitable and safe stadium capacity.

Teams from the higher levels of the non-league "pyramid" may get exemptions from some of these rounds: Clubs from the Nationwide Conference are given a bye to the Fourth Qualifying Round, clubs from Football League One and Two join the winners of the Fourth Qualifying Round in the draw for the First Round proper in November. Football League Championship and Premier League teams are given a bye into the Third Round, traditionally held in the first weekend in January. The Final is played at the end of the season in May. Since the foundation of the Football League, Tottenham Hotspur F.C in 1901 have been the only non-league winners of the FA Cup. They were then playing in the Southern League and were only elected to the Football League in 1908. At that time the Football League consisted of only two 18-team divisions; Spurs's victory then would be comparable to a team near the bottom of the second step of the English football pyramid, the Football League Championship division, winning today.

The winning team qualifies by right for the first round of the UEFA Cup. If the winners also qualify for the Champions League by merit of league position, the losing finalist qualifies for the UEFA Cup in their place. If both finalists qualify for the Champions League, an extra UEFA Cup place is given on the basis of Premier League position.

Trophies

At the end of the final, the winning team is presented with a trophy, also known as the "FA Cup", which they hold until the following year's final. Traditionally, at Wembley finals, the presentation was made at the Royal Box, with players, led by the captain, mounting a staircase to a gangway in front of the box and returning by a second staircase on the other side of the box. At Cardiff the presentation has been made on a podium on the pitch. The cup is decorated with ribbons in the colours of the winning team; a common riddle asks, "what is always taken to the Cup Final, but never used?" (The answer is, "the losing team's ribbons"). Individual members of the teams playing in the final are presented with winners' and losers' medals.

The present FA Cup trophy is the fourth. The first, the 'little tin idol', was used from the inception of the Cup in 1871-2 until it was stolen from a shop window in Birmingham while held by Aston Villa in 1895. It was never seen again and is presumed to have been melted down. The second trophy was a replica of the first, and was last used in 1910 before being presented to the FA's long-serving president Lord Kinnaird. It was sold at Christie's on 19th May 2005 for Ł420420,000 (Ł478,400 including auction fees and taxes) to David Gold, the chairman of Birmingham City F.C. A new, larger, trophy was bought by the FA in 1911 designed and manufactured by Fattorini's of Bradford and won by Bradford City in its first outing, the only time a team from Bradford has reached the final. This trophy still exists but is now too fragile to be used, so an exact replica was made and has been in use since the 1992 final. Therefore, though the FA Cup is the oldest domestic football competition in the world, its trophy is not the oldest; that title is claimed by the Scottish Cup.

Giant-Killers

The FA Cup has a long tradition of lower-division and non-league teams becoming "giant-killers" by defeating highly-ranked opponents. Yeovil Town F.C reached the fifth round in 1948-49 while in the Southern League, and defeated League opposition many other times before winning promotion to the Football League in 2003. In 1956-57 Bournemouth beat Wolves and Spurs before a controversial quarter-final defeat by Manchester United. Non-league Hereford United F.C famously beat Newcastle United in 1972. A fifth-round tie in 1977-78 pitched two giant-killers together: Third Division Wrexham, who had beaten Bristol City and Newcastle, and non-league Blyth Spartans A.F.C who had beaten Stoke. Wrexham won the replay in front of a huge crowd at St James' Park in Newcastle, but were beaten by Arsenal in the next round. Wrexham did get some revenge a few years later when they beat Arsenal in a 1992 third round tie in north Wales. The achievement was especially notable as the previous year Arsenal had been league champions and Wrexham had finished bottom of the league. In 1988-89 Coventry, the winners two seasons previously, lost away 2-1 to Sutton United of the Conference. Sutton United's achievement was followed by an 8-0 thrashing at the hands of Norwich City.

Notable events in the FA Cup

Past Winners of the FA Cup

Manchester United have won the cup the most times - eleven in all. Two clubs have won the cup on three consecutive occasions - Wanderers (1876-8) and Blackburn Rovers (1884-6). Leicester City hold the unfortunate record of having appeared in four FA Cup finals without ever winning the cup.

The top 10 clubs by number of wins (and when they last won and lost a final):

Club Winner Last win Runner-up Last losing final
1 Manchester United 11 2004 6 2005
2 Arsenal 10 2005 7 2001
3 Tottenham Hotspur 8 1991 1 1987
4 Aston Villa 7 1957 3 2000
5 Newcastle United 6 1955 7 1999
= Liverpool 6 2001 6 1996
= Blackburn Rovers 6 1928 2 1960
8 Everton 5 1995 7 1989
= West Bromwich Albion 5 1968 5 1935
= Wanderers F.C 5 1878 0 N/A

Clubs with 4 or less wins:

Six clubs have won the FA Cup as part of a League and Cup double, these are Preston North End (1889), Aston Villa (1897), Spurs (1961), Arsenal (1971, 1998, 2002), Liverpool (1986) and Manchester United (1994, 1996, 1999). The double winners are highlighted in bold in the table below. Arsenal and Manchester United share the record of three doubles. Arsenal are the only club to win doubles in distinct decades, and have in fact won in three different decades.

In 1999, Manchester United added the Champions League crown to its double, an accomplishment known as The Treble.

In 2001, Liverpool did not win the league, but won the League Cup and UEFA Cup to complete a different treble. This less prestigious set of results has been called, by opposition fans, the Tin Pot Treble. They also won the FA Charity Shield and the European Super Cup.

The full results of the final:

Year Winner Runner-up Score Venue
1872 Wanderers F.C Royal Engineers 1 - 0 Kennington Oval
1873 Wanderers F.C Oxford University 2 - 0 Lillie Bridge, London
1874 Oxford University Royal Engineers 2 - 0 Kennington Oval
1875 Royal Engineers Old Etonians 1 - 1 (aet) ; 2 - 0 (replay) Kennington Oval
1876 Wanderers F.C Old Etonians 1 - 1 (aet) ; 3 - 0 (replay) Kennington Oval
1877 Wanderers F.C Oxford University 2 - 1 (aet) Kennington Oval
1878 Wanderers F.C Royal Engineers 3 - 1 Kennington Oval
1879 Old Etonians Clapham Rovers 1 - 0 Kennington Oval
1880 Clapham Rovers Oxford University 1 - 0 Kennington Oval
1881 Old Carthusians Old Etonians 3 - 0 Kennington Oval
1882 Old Etonians Blackburn Rovers 1 - 0 Kennington Oval
1883 Blackburn Olympic Old Etonians 2 - 1 (aet) Kennington Oval
1884 Blackburn Rovers Queens Park 2 - 1 Kennington Oval
1885 Blackburn Rovers Queens Park 2 - 0 Kennington Oval
1886 Blackburn Rovers West Bromwich Albion 0 - 0 (aet) ; 2 - 0 (replay) Kennington Oval; Racecourse Ground, Derby (replay)
1887 Aston Villa West Bromwich Albion 2 - 0 Kennington Oval
1888 West Bromwich Albion Preston North End 2 - 1 Kennington Oval
1889 Preston North End Wolverhampton Wanderers 3 - 0 Kennington Oval
1890 Blackburn Rovers Sheffield Wednesday 6 - 1 Kennington Oval
1891 Blackburn Rovers Notts County 3 - 1 Kennington Oval
1892 West Bromwich Albion Aston Villa 3 - 0 Kennington Oval
1893 Wolverhampton Wanderers Everton 1 - 0 Fallowfield, Manchester
1894 Notts County Bolton Wanderers 4 - 1 Goodison Park
1895 Aston Villa West Bromwich Albion 1 - 0 Crystal Palace
1896 Sheffield Wednesday Wolverhampton Wanderers 2 - 1 Crystal Palace
1897 Aston Villa Everton 3 - 2 Crystal Palace
1898 Nottingham Forest Derby County 3 - 1 Crystal Palace
1899 Sheffield United Derby County 4 - 1 Crystal Palace
1900 Bury Southampton 4 - 0 Crystal Palace
1901 Tottenham Hotspur Sheffield United 2 - 2 (aet); 3 - 1 (replay) Crystal Palace
1902 Sheffield United Southampton 1 - 1 (aet); 2 - 1 (replay) Crystal Palace; Burnden Park (replay)
1903 Bury Derby County 6 - 0 Crystal Palace
1904 Manchester City Bolton Wanderers 1 - 0 Crystal Palace
1905 Aston Villa Newcastle United 2 - 0 Crystal Palace
1906 Everton Newcastle United 1 - 0 Crystal Palace
1907 Sheffield Wednesday Everton 2 - 1 Crystal Palace
1908 Wolverhampton Wanderers Newcastle United 3 - 1 Crystal Palace
1909 Manchester United Bristol City 1 - 0 Crystal Palace
1910 Newcastle United Barnsley 1 - 1 (aet); 2 - 0 (replay) Crystal Palace; Goodison Park (replay)
1911 Bradford City Newcastle United 0 - 0 (aet); 1 - 0 (replay) Crystal Palace; Old Trafford (replay)
1912 Barnsley West Bromwich Albion 0 - 0 (aet); 1 - 0 (aet, replay) Crystal Palace; Bramall Lane (replay)
1913 Aston Villa Sunderland 1 - 0 Crystal Palace
1914 Burnley Liverpool 1 - 0 Crystal Palace
1915 Sheffield United Chelsea 3 - 0 Old Trafford
1916 - 1919 No matches due to World War I
1920 Aston Villa Huddersfield Town 1 - 0 (aet) Stamford Bridge
1921 Tottenham Hotspur Wolverhampton Wanderers 1 - 0 Stamford Bridge
1922 Huddersfield Town Preston North End 1 - 0 Stamford Bridge
1923 Bolton Wanderers West Ham United 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1924 Newcastle United Aston Villa 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1925 Sheffield United Cardiff City 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1926 Bolton Wanderers Manchester City 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1927 Cardiff City Arsenal 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1928 Blackburn Rovers Huddersfield Town 3 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1929 Bolton Wanderers Portsmouth 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
 
1930 Arsenal Huddersfield Town 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1931 West Bromwich Albion Birmingham 2 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1932 Newcastle United Arsenal 2 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1933 Everton Manchester City 3 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1934 Manchester City Portsmouth 2 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1935 Sheffield Wednesday West Bromwich Albion 4 - 2 Wembley Stadium
1936 Arsenal Sheffield United 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1937 Sunderland Preston North End 3 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1938 Preston North End Huddersfield Town 1 - 0 (aet) Wembley Stadium
1939 Portsmouth Wolverhampton Wanderers 4 - 1 Wembley Stadium
 
1940 Abandoned due to World War II
1941 - 1945 No matches due to World War II
1946 Derby County Charlton Athletic 4 - 1 (aet) Wembley Stadium
1947 Charlton Athletic Burnley 1 - 0 (aet) Wembley Stadium
1948 Manchester United Blackpool 4 - 2 Wembley Stadium
1949 Wolverhampton Wanderers Leicester City 3 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1950 Arsenal Liverpool 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1951 Newcastle United Blackpool 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1952 Newcastle United Arsenal 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1953 Blackpool Bolton Wanderers 4 - 3 Wembley Stadium
1954 West Bromwich Albion Preston North End 3 - 2 Wembley Stadium
1955 Newcastle United Manchester City 3 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1956 Manchester City Birmingham City 3 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1957 Aston Villa Manchester United 2 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1958 Bolton Wanderers Manchester United 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1959 Nottingham Forest Luton Town 2 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1960 Wolverhampton Wanderers Blackburn Rovers 3 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1961 Tottenham Hotspur Leicester City 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1962 Tottenham Hotspur Burnley 3 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1963 Manchester United Leicester City 3 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1964 West Ham United Preston North End 3 - 2 Wembley Stadium
1965 Liverpool Leeds United 2 - 1 (aet) Wembley Stadium
1966 Everton Sheffield Wednesday 3 - 2 Wembley Stadium
1967 Tottenham Hotspur Chelsea 2 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1968 West Bromwich Albion Everton 1 - 0 (aet) Wembley Stadium
1969 Manchester City Leicester City 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1970 Chelsea Leeds United 2 - 2 (aet); 2 - 1 (replay) Wembley Stadium; Old Trafford (replay)
1971 Arsenal Liverpool 2 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1972 Leeds United Arsenal 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1973 Sunderland Leeds United 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1974 Liverpool Newcastle United 3 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1975 West Ham United Fulham 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1976 Southampton Manchester United 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1977 Manchester United Liverpool 2 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1978 Ipswich Town Arsenal 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1979 Arsenal Manchester United 3 - 2 Wembley Stadium
1980 West Ham United Arsenal 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1981 Tottenham Hotspur Manchester City 1 - 1 (aet); 3 - 2 (replay) Wembley Stadium
1982 Tottenham Hotspur Queen's Park Rangers 1 - 1 (aet); 1 - 0 (replay) Wembley Stadium
1983 Manchester United Brighton & Hove Albion; 2 - 2 (aet); 4 - 0 (replay) Wembley Stadium
1984 Everton Watford F.C 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1985 Manchester United Everton 1 - 0 (aet) Wembley Stadium
1986 Liverpool Everton 3 - 1 Wembley Stadium
1987 Coventry Tottenham Hotspur 3 - 2 (aet) Wembley Stadium
1988 Wimbledon Liverpool 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1989 Liverpool Everton 3 - 2 (aet) Wembley Stadium
1990 Manchester United Crystal Palace 3 - 3 (aet); 1 - 0 (replay) Wembley Stadium
1991 Tottenham Hotspur Nottingham Forest 2 - 1 (aet) Wembley Stadium
1992 Liverpool Sunderland 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1993 Arsenal Sheffield Wednesday 1 - 1; 2 - 1 (replay, aet) Wembley Stadium
1994 Manchester United Chelsea 4 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1995 Everton Manchester United 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1996 Manchester United Liverpool 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1997 Chelsea Middlesbrough 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1998 Arsenal Newcastle United 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
1999 Manchester United Newcastle United 2 - 0 Wembley Stadium
2000 Chelsea Aston Villa 1 - 0 Wembley Stadium
2001 Liverpool Arsenal 2 - 1 Millennium Stadium
2002 Arsenal Chelsea 2 - 0 Millennium Stadium
2003 Arsenal Southampton 1 - 0 Millennium Stadium
2004 Manchester United Millwall 3 - 0 Millennium Stadium
2005 Arsenal Manchester United 0 - 0 (aet); Arsenal win 5-4 on penalties Millennium Stadium

External links

This article is part of the series: Football in England
League competitions The FA Cup competitions
FA Premier League FA Cup
The Football League (Champ, 1, 2) England
team
League Cup
Football Conference (Nat, N, S) FA Community Shield
Northern Premier League (Prem, 1) List of
clubs
Football League Trophy
Southern League (Prem, 1W, 1E) FA Trophy
Isthmian League (Prem, 1, 2) Records FA Vase
English football league system FA NLS Cup
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