Huddersfield Town and Sheffield United flags at Wembley | |||||||
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| Huddersfield won 8–7 on penalties | |||||||
| Date | 26 May 2012 | ||||||
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| Venue | Wembley Stadium, London | ||||||
| Man of the Match | Peter Clarke (Huddersfield) | ||||||
| Referee | Roger East | ||||||
| Attendance | 52,100 | ||||||
| Weather | Sunny and warm | ||||||
←2011 2013 → | |||||||
The2012 Football League One play-off final was anassociation football match which was played on 26 May 2012 atWembley Stadium, London, betweenHuddersfield Town andSheffield United to determine the third and final team to gainpromotion fromFootball League One to theFootball League Championship. The top two teams of the2011–12 Football League One season,Charlton Athletic andSheffield Wednesday, gained automatic promotion to the Championship, while the teams placed from third to sixth position in the table took part inplay-offs. The winners of the play-off semi-finals competed for the final place for the2012–13 season in the Championship.
Roger East was thereferee for the match which was played in front of 52,100 spectators. The match itself ended in a 0–0 draw and went intoextra time. With no goals in the additional period of play, the match had to be decided with apenalty shootout. Eight of the first ten penalties were missed or saved and the subsequent twelve were all scored. With the shootout level at 7–7, Huddersfield's goalkeeperAlex Smithies scored past his counterpartSteve Simonsen to give them the advantage. Simonsen then struck his penalty high over Smithies' crossbar and the shootout ended 8–7, with Huddersfield gaining promotion to the Championship.
Sheffield United ended theirnext season in fifth position in League One and participated inthe play-offs where they lost toYeovil Town in the semi-final. Huddersfield Town'sfollowing season saw them finish in 19th place in the Championship, three positions and four points above the relegation zone.
| Pos | Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Charlton Athletic | 46 | 30 | 11 | 5 | 82 | 36 | +46 | 101 |
| 2 | Sheffield Wednesday | 46 | 28 | 9 | 9 | 81 | 48 | +33 | 93 |
| 3 | Sheffield United | 46 | 27 | 9 | 10 | 92 | 51 | +41 | 90 |
| 4 | Huddersfield Town | 46 | 21 | 18 | 7 | 79 | 47 | +32 | 81 |
| 5 | Milton Keynes Dons | 46 | 22 | 14 | 10 | 84 | 47 | +37 | 80 |
| 6 | Stevenage | 46 | 18 | 19 | 9 | 69 | 44 | +25 | 73 |
Sheffield United finished the regular2011–12 season in third place inFootball League One, the third tier of theEnglish football league system, one place ahead ofHuddersfield Town. Both therefore missed out on the two automatic places forpromotion to theFootball League Championship and instead took part in theplay-offs to determine the third promoted team. Sheffield United finished three points behind local rivalsSheffield Wednesday (who were promoted in second place) and eleven behind league winnersCharlton Athletic. Huddersfield Town ended the season nine points behind Sheffield United.[1]
Sheffield United's opponents for their play-off semi-final wereStevenage and the first match of thetwo-legged tie took place atBroadhall Way in Stevenage on 11 May 2012.Craig Reid hit the frame of the Sheffield United goal and Stevenage's goalkeeper was forced to make a save fromMichael Bostwick, his own player, but the game ended goalless.[3] The return leg was held three days later atBramall Lane in Sheffield. The first half ended without a goal but late in the second half,Chris Porter scored for the home side with aheader from aMatthew Lowtoncross to secure a 1–0 victory and progression for Sheffield United to the final.[4]
Huddersfield Town facedMilton Keynes Dons in the other play-off semi-final with the first leg being played atStadium MK in Milton Keynes on 12 May 2012. Midway through the first half,Jordan Rhodes gave the visitors the lead when he scored with a header fromLee Novak's cross. In the second half, an exchange of passes betweenJack Hunt andKallum Higginbotham led to Hunt striking from inside the MK Donspenalty area pastDavid Martin in goal to make it 2–0.[5] The second leg took place at theGalpharm Stadium in Huddersfield three days later. Rhodes put the visitors ahead with afree kick beforeDaniel Powell equalised from around 18 yards (16 m).Alan Smith scored a late header to give MK Dons a 2–1 win but Huddersfield progressed to the final with a 3–2aggregate victory.[6]
This match was Huddersfield Town's fourth play-off final, their previous three coming in1995 (a 2–1 win overBristol Rovers),2004 (a 4–1 penalty shoot-out win overMansfield Town) and 2011 (a 3–0 loss toPeterborough United), and completed their eighth Football League play-off campaign.[7] ManagerSimon Grayson had previously achieved promotion success as a manager from the Football League One play-offs withBlackpool in the2007 final.[8] Sheffield United had been involved in six previous play-off campaigns, but had never won a play-off final despite attempts in1997,2003 and2009.[9]
The matches between the two teams during the regular season ended in an away win in both matches. Huddersfield secured a 3–0 victory away at Bramall Lane in September 2011, with goals fromOscar Gobern and a brace from Novak, while Sheffield United won 1–0 away at theKirklees Stadium the following February withNeill Collins scoring the only goal.[10][11]Ched Evans was top scorer for Sheffield United with 35 goals during the regular season (29 in the league, 5 in theFA Cup and 1 in theFootball League Trophy).[12] However he was unavailable for selection after being convicted ofrape in April 2012; the conviction was quashed four years later following a retrial.[13][14] Huddersfield Town's leading scorer was Rhodes who had scored 36 league goals in 40 appearances and 2 in theLeague Cup.[15]
Huddersfield's goalkeeperIan Bennett injured his hand during the semi-final second leg against MK Dons, withAlex Smithies on standby as his replacement.Scott Arfield had recovered from the ankle injury that forced him off in the semi-final first leg and later saw him to miss the home tie. Sheffield United'sKevin McDonald picked up ahamstring injury in their 1–0 win in the semi-final second leg, and missed the final.Richard Cresswell had recovered from an eye infection that caused him to miss the previous match, and was available for the final.[16][17] Thereferee for the match wasRoger East who wasassisted by Harry Lennard and Matthew Wilkes. Danny McDermid acted as thefourth official while Mark Scholes was the reserve assistant referee.[18] The match was broadcast live in the United Kingdom onSky Sports.[19] Huddersfield Town adopted a4–4–2 formation while Sheffield United played as a4–4–1–1.[20]
Sheffield Unitedkicked off the match around 3 p.m. on 26 May 2012 atWembley Stadium in front of a crowd of 52,100.[21][22] In the 9th minute, Huddersfield's Hunt made a run down the right wing and crossed but Higginbotham's volley went wide of Sheffield United's goal. Two minutes later, a long pass deep into Huddersfield territory was mis-headed byPeter Clarke and allowed Cresswell to shoot but his attempt was blocked. On 17 minutes,Stephen Quinn headed a cross from Lowton but Huddersfield's goalkeeper Smithies punched it clear. Rhodes saw his header gathered by the Sheffield United goalkeeperSteve Simonsen in the 32nd minute. Three minutes later Smithies came out to clear a cross from Quinn but missed the ball which was cleared, beforeMatt Hill's goal-bound strike from the edge of the penalty area was blocked by Clarke. With six minutes of the half remaining, Hunt cut inside from the right wing and shot from 20 yards (18 m) but his strike was wide of the goal. In injury time of the first half, Huddersfield made a quick break following a Sheffield Unitedcorner, but Rhodes ran the ball off the pitch and the half ended 0–0.[22]
Neither side made any changes to their personnel during the interval. Two minutes into the second half, a poor clearance from Sheffield United foundDanny Ward whose shot from the edge of the penalty area struck the top of the crossbar. In the 54th minute, Lowton won a corner for Sheffield United whichHarry Maguire headed wide of the Huddersfield goal. Clarke then headed a Huddersfield corner wide before Higginbotham was shown the firstyellow card of the match in the 62nd minute for a late tackle on Lowton. Seven minutes later, Rhodes passed to Higginbotham whose first-time volley missed the target. In the 79th minute, Huddersfield made their firstsubstitution of the match withGary Roberts coming on to replace Higginbotham. With seven minutes remaining, Huddersfield won a corner after Maguire cleared the ball behind, from whichTommy Miller's header was pushed out by Simonsen before Clarke's follow-up shot was cleared off the Sheffield United goal-line byMichael Doyle. Rhodes then headed a cross fromCalum Woods wide of the goal before Sheffield United made their first change of the game with Porter coming on for Cresswell in the 85th minute. Porter's first contribution was to head the ball wide of the Huddersfield post. In the last minute of the match Roberts appeared to have been brought down in the Sheffield United penalty area byRyan Flynn but no foul was awarded. The match ended 0–0 and went intoextra time.[22]
Huddersfield kicked off the first period of extra time and the first chance came in the fourth minute when Porter headed Quinn's cross goal-bound but it was blocked by Woods. In the 8th minute,Sean Morrison blocked Quinn's volley to keep the match goalless, and a minute laterAlan Lee came on for Ward in Huddersfield's second substitution. In stoppage time in the first half of extra time, a run from Quinn ended with his low shot being pushed away by Smithies, before Maguire was booked. The half ended with the score still at 0–0. Three minutes in the second period of extra time, Sheffield Untied'sMichael O'Halloran replaced Flynn before Lee's strike from 6 yards (5.5 m) was saved by Simonsen. In the 112th minute,Nick Montgomery cleared Clarke's header off the Sheffield United goal-line. Soon after,Damien Johnson was booked for a foul on Quinn the edge of the Huddersfield penalty area but the resulting free kick fromLee Williamson was easily gathered by Smithies. With four minutes remaining, Scott Arfield came on to replace Novak and just before the final whistle,Andy Taylor was brought on for Montgomery, as the game went to apenalty shootout.[22]
The penalties were taken in front of the Huddersfield Town fans, with their side starting the shootout. Miller's strike was easily saved by Simonsen before Smithies pushed Williamson's spot kick away. Johnson's strike was wide of the goal before Collins opened the scoring after sending Smithies the wrong way. Lee then had his penalty saved by Simonsen before Lowton's strike was easily caught by Smithies. Clarke scored before Taylor's shot hit the post, making it 1–1 after four penalties each side. The next twelve spot kicks were scored and with the score at 7–7 after 20 penalties, only the goalkeepers remained. Smithies strike went in before Simonsen's shot was high over the crossbar. The final score was 8–7 to Huddersfield who were promoted to the Championship.[22]
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Man of the Match: Assistant referees: |

| Huddersfield Town | Sheffield United | |
|---|---|---|
| Total shots | 18 | 18 |
| Shots on target | 5 | 7 |
| Ball possession | 50% | 50% |
| Corner kicks | 8 | 9 |
| Fouls committed | 19 | 15 |
| Offsides | 1 | 3 |
| Yellow cards | 2 | 1 |
| Red cards | 0 | 0 |
Grayson, the winning manager, conceded that there was little between the sides during the final: "There was nothing in the game whatsoever ... What an unbelievable end to the game and I really feel for Sheffield United. Hopefully they can come up next year ... The best way to get promoted is by winning at Wembley"[23] His counterpart Wilson refused to blame Simonsen for the defeat after his penalty miss: "To save the penalties like Steve did, who would have thought it would come down to that? He nearly got his hand to two others but that's the way it goes sometimes. I don't know if that's fate but for him to miss the penalty, it's blameless".[23] Montgomery revealed that Simonsen "was devastated" but that "there's no blame attached to him ... it's a heartbreaking way to end it, but we've just got to try and come back stronger next season".[20]
Sheffield United ended theirnext season in fifth position in League One and participated inthe play-offs where the lost toYeovil Town in the semi-final.[24][25] Huddersfield Town'sfollowing season saw their manager Grayson sacked in January 2013 after a 12-game winless streak.[26]Mark Robins was appointed as his replacement the following month and he led Huddersfield to a 19th-place finish in the Championship, three positions and four points above the relegation zone.[27][28]