Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

1962 FA Cup final

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
icon
This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "1962 FA Cup final" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(January 2025) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Football match
1962 FA Cup final
Event1961–62 FA Cup
Tottenham HotspurBurnley
31
Date5 May 1962
VenueWembley Stadium,London
RefereeJim Finney (Hereford)
Attendance100,000
1961
1963

The1962 FA Cup final took place on 5 May 1962 atWembley Stadium and was won byTottenham Hotspur overBurnley, by a 3–1 scoreline. Due to the lack of passion and excitement, replaced by patience and cautious play, the final was dubbed "The Chessboard Final". Tottenham were the holders, having won theLeague andFA CupDouble theprevious season. They had finished the 1962 league campaign in third place. Burnley finished runners-up in the league that season, behindIpswich Town.

Road to Wembley

[edit]

Tottenham Hotspur

[edit]

Home teams listed first. All teams from Division One, except Plymouth Argyle (Division Two)

Round 3:Birmingham City 3–3 Tottenham Hotspur (Greaves 2, Jones)

Replay: Tottenham Hotspur 4–2 Birmingham City (Medwin 2, Allen, Greaves)

Round 4:Plymouth Argyle 1–5 Tottenham Hotspur (Medwin, White, Greaves 2, Jones)

Round 5:West Bromwich Albion 2–4 Tottenham Hotspur (Smith 2, Greaves 2)

Round 6: Tottenham Hotspur 2–0Aston Villa (Blanchflower, Jones)

Semi-final: Tottenham Hotspur 3–1Manchester United (atHillsborough Stadium,Sheffield) (Medwin, Greaves, Jones)

Burnley

[edit]

Home teams listed first. All teams from Division One, except Leyton Orient (Division Two) and Queens Park Rangers (Division Three)

Round 3: Burnley 6–1Queens Park Rangers (Harris 2, Elder, Connelly, Mcllroy, Ingham o.g.)

Round 4: Burnley 1–1Leyton Orient (Harris)

Replay: Leyton Orient 0–1 Burnley (Miller)

Round 5: Burnley 3–1Everton (Miller, Connelly, Robson)

Round 6:Sheffield United 0–1 Burnley (Pointer)

Semi-final: Burnley 1–1Fulham (atVilla Park,Birmingham) (Connelly)

Replay: Burnley 2–1 Fulham (atFilbert Street,Leicester) (Robson 2)

Match review

[edit]

Tottenham Hotspur took an early lead whenJimmy Greaves scored past Burnley goalkeeperAdam Blacklaw with a low left foot shot to the right corner of the net. The score remained 1–0 until half time. Burnley equalised shortly after the interval throughJimmy Robson, who in doing so had scored the 100thFA Cup Final goal at Wembley. However,Bobby Smith quickly countered for Tottenham Hotspur to restore their one-goal lead. Smith had scored in the1961 final and remained the only player to score in successive finals for the next forty years, untilFreddie Ljungberg ofArsenal repeated the feat with goals in the2001 and2002 finals.

With ten minutes remaining, Burnley defender Tommy Cummings handled the ball on the goal-line and a penalty was awarded to Tottenham.Danny Blanchflower sealed victory for Tottenham with a penalty that sent Blacklaw the wrong way, securing Tottenham Hotspur's fourth FA Cup title.

Despite the opinion of the final by the press, the game itself actually produced more action in the penalty area than any previous post-war final, with the two keepers being forced into more saves from shots on target than any two keepers in any previous post-war final.

The game also pivoted on two moments of controversy. The first came midway through the second half when Jimmy Robson was put through to score what looked like a second equaliser for Burnley. The linesman's flag ruled the goal out and while BBC television pictures are not conclusive the call was an extremely close one. The second centred on Tottenham's decisive penalty when the opposite linesman flagged for a foul, presumably on goalkeeper Blacklaw seconds before the handball incident for which the penalty was awarded. The referee did not seem to see the linesman's flag and pointed to the spot while, to their credit, none of the Burnley players protested.[1]

Media coverage

[edit]

The game was the nineteenth cup final to be broadcast in its entirety by the BBC, for the fourth time as aGrandstand special. The commentator wasKenneth Wolstenholme, whose post-match comments again went against the majority of the media when he stated that it was his belief that the final would "rank among the great post-war finals", having been "keenly contested by two great teams", a statement supported by the match statistics.

As in all broadcasts of previous finals, the game was televised in black and white with score updates being provided by camera shots of Wembley's large scoreboard. However, in a new innovation the BBC introduced zoomed-in shots of the match which gave television spectators the feeling that they were just yards away from the action. All previous finals had been filmed almost entirely from one or two cameras giving long-range images of the game. Radio cameras, situated behind each goal, were brought more into use in this final, having previously been in position but virtually ignored by the director in the previous six finals.

Both major cinema newsreels,Pathé andMovietone, covered the game for broadcast in their newsreels that evening throughout the United Kingdom and Ireland. Both companies filmed the game in colour, with both commentaries echoing the belief that it had been a classic final. Both companies also gained access to the post-match celebrations in the Tottenham dressing room

BBC Radio commentary was provided byRaymond Glendenning and Alan Clarke

A few seconds of newsreel footage of the crowd at the final was used in the "ode to joy" scene of the 1965Beatles feature filmHelp!

Guest of honour

[edit]

TheQueen and theDuke of Edinburgh were the official guests of honour. The former presented the trophy while the latter had been introduced to the two teams before the game. This final also marked the end of the tradition of the winning captain leading the stadium in three cheers for Her Majesty and the playing of the national anthem after the presentation. The national anthem was still sung before and after the final until 1971.

This was the last final with exposed terraces at Wembley; by 1963 the roof had been extended all the way around the stadium in preparation for the1966 FIFA World Cup.

Edwin Mosscrop, who featured in the winning Burnley team in the1914 final, was an invited guest of Burnley and went onto the pitch before this final. He was the last surviving pre-First World War international player when he died in 1980.

European qualification

[edit]

Tottenham's victory in the competition paved the way for them to compete in theEuropean Cup Winners' Cup for the1962–63 campaign. They went on to win the trophy, making them the first English and British club to win a European trophy.[2]

Match details

[edit]
Tottenham Hotspur3–1Burnley
ReportRobson 50'
Attendance: 100,000
Referee:Jim Finney
Tottenham Hotspur
Burnley
1ScotlandBill Brown
2EnglandPeter Baker
3EnglandRon Henry
4Northern IrelandDanny Blanchflower (c)
5EnglandMaurice Norman
6ScotlandDave Mackay
7WalesTerry Medwin
8ScotlandJohn White
9EnglandBobby Smith
10EnglandJimmy Greaves
11WalesCliff Jones
Manager:
EnglandBill Nicholson
1ScotlandAdam Blacklaw
2EnglandJohn Angus
3Northern IrelandAlex Elder
4EnglandJimmy Adamson (c)
5EnglandTommy Cummings
6EnglandBrian Miller
7EnglandJohn Connelly
8Northern IrelandJimmy McIlroy
9EnglandRay Pointer
10EnglandJimmy Robson
11EnglandGordon Harris
Manager:
EnglandHarry Potts

Match rules

  • 90 minutes
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary
  • Replay if scores still level

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Tottenham 3–1 Burnley".Daily Mirror. Archived fromthe original on 9 April 2014. Retrieved30 March 2014.
  2. ^"Spurs European Glory". Archived fromthe original on 16 December 2007. Retrieved24 June 2011.

External links

[edit]
Seasons
Qualifying rounds
Finals
Burnley F.C. matches
FA Cup Finals
FA Charity Shield
Associate Members' Cup Final
Play-off Finals
Other matches
National
FA Cup
Finals
Knockout
League Cup finals
FA Charity Shields
International
UEFA Champions League final
UEFA Europa League finals
European Cup Winners' Cup final
UEFA Super Cup
Other matches
FA competitions
Football League
Lower leagues
European competitions
Related tonational team
Club seasons
First Division
Second Division
Third Division
Fourth Division
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1962_FA_Cup_final&oldid=1276259256"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp