The
Football Association Challenge Cup, commonly known as the
FA Cup, is the main "knockout" cup competition in
English football, run by and named for
The Football Association. It is the oldest football competition in 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 competition is a knockout (single elimination) tournament with ties 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 penalty competitions, though in the past further replays were possible, and some ties took as many as five matches to settle. The semi-finals are contested at neutral venues, and the final is normally played at
Wembley Stadium in
London. During the redevelopment of Wembley, finals have been played at the
Millennium Stadium in
Cardiff.
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. 596 clubs entered the competition in the 2001/02 season. 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.
Teams from the higher levels of the non-league "pyramid" may get exemptions from some of these rounds: Clubs from the Football Conference are given a bye to the Fourth Qualifying Round, clubs from the Second[?] and Third[?] Divisions of the Football League join the winners of the Fourth Qualifying Round in the draw for the First Round proper in November. First Division 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.
The winning team qualifies by right for the first round of the UEFA Cup. If the winners qualify for the Champions League, the losing finalists qualify for the UEFA Cup. If both finalists qualify for the Champions League, an extra UEFA Cup place is given on the basis of Premier League position.
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 have beaten League opposition many times since then. 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 in 1971. 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.
- The first final to be played at Wembley, in 1923, drew an over-capacity crowd of more than 200,000. Spectators spilled onto the field, but were moved back by a single mounted policeman, and the game (which came to be known as the "White Horse Final[?]") was played with spectators lining the edge of the pitch.
- The final of 1953 is known as the Matthews Final[?]. The match between Blackpool[?] and Bolton Wanderers[?] saw Stanley Matthews, at the age of 38, in his third attempt to win an FA cup winners medal for Blackpool. Bolton were 3-1 up with 22 minutes remaining and looked set to win the match when Blackpool's Stan Mortensen[?] scored from a Matthews cross. With less than five minutes remaining Blackpool equalised from a Mortensen free kick and shortly after the restart, with everybody anticipating extra time, Matthews passed to Bill Perry[?] who securing a 4-3 victory for Blackpool.
- The first FA Cup final played outside of England was in the final of the 2000/2001 season at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff. Liverpool came from behind (against the balance of play) to snatch a 2-1 victory over Arsenal. Arsenal went back to Wales the following two seasons to win the Cup.
- For the first time, the FA Cup was played under a roof in the final of the 2002/2003 season, held on May 17, 2003 at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, with Arsenal F.C. and Southampton F.C. benefitting from cover from the rain (Arsenal were the 1 - 0 winners).
Manchester United have won the cup the most times - ten in all. Two clubs have won the cup on three consecutive occasions - Wanderers (1876-8) and
Blackburn Rovers[?] (1884-6)
The top 10 clubs by number of wins (and when they last won and lost a final):
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 doubles are highlighted in bold in the table below. Arsenal and Manchester United share the record of three doubles.
The full results of the final.