Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

1902 FA Cup final

This is a good article. Click here for more information.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British association football match

Football match
1902 FA Cup final
Event1901–02 FA Cup
Sheffield UnitedSouthampton
Sheffield United won after areplay
Final
Sheffield UnitedSouthampton
11
Date19 April 1902 (1902-04-19)
VenueCrystal Palace,London
RefereeTom Kirkham (Burslem, Staffordshire)
Attendance74,479
WeatherDry, moderate wind
Replay
Sheffield UnitedSouthampton
21
Date26 April 1902 (1902-04-26)
VenueCrystal Palace,London
RefereeTom Kirkham (Burslem, Staffordshire)
Attendance33,068
WeatherWindy and bitterly cold
1901
1903

The1902 FA Cup final was anassociation football match betweenSheffield United andSouthampton on Saturday, 19 April 1902 at theCrystal Palace stadium in south London. It was the final match of the1901–02 FA Cup, the 31st edition of the world's oldest football knockout competition, and England's primarycup competition, the Football Association Challenge Cup, better known as theFA Cup.

Sheffield United were appearing in their third final and Southampton in their second – Sheffield United won the cup in1899 and were runners-up in1901; Southampton were runners-up in1900. Both teams joined the competition in thefirst round proper and progressed through four rounds to the final. As a member of theFootball League First Division, Sheffield United were exempt from the competition's qualifying phase. Southampton, as a member of theSouthern League would normally have been required to pre-qualify but, as champions of the Southern League in1900–01, they were givenbyes through the qualifying phase to the first round.

The final was watched by a crowd of 74,479 and ended in a 1–1 draw. The goalscorers wereAlf Common for Sheffield United and, in controversial circumstances,Harry Wood for Southampton. A replay was held a week later on 26 April, also at the Crystal Palace stadium, but before a much-reduced crowd of 33,068. Sheffield United won 2–1 with goals byGeorge Hedley andBilly Barnes against one byAlbert Brown for Southampton. Sheffield United won the cup again in1915 and1925. Southampton, whose appearance in the 1902 final was the last by a team from outsideThe Football League, won the cup in1976.

Background

[edit]

TheFA Cup, known officially as The Football Association Challenge Cup, is an annualknockoutassociation football competition in men's domesticEnglish football. The competition was first proposed on 20 July 1871 byC. W. Alcock at a meeting ofThe Football Association committee. The tournament was first played in the1871–72 season and is the world'soldest association football competition.[1] The 1902 match betweenSheffield United andSouthampton atCrystal Palace was the 31st final and the second of the 20th century. Sheffield United were appearing in the final for the third time, having defeatedDerby County 4–1 in1899 and lost 1–3 toTottenham Hotspur in the1901 replay. Southampton were making their second appearance after losing 0–4 toBury in1900.[2]

Sheffield United were members of theFootball League First Division and, in the1901–02 league championship, amassed 33 points to finish in 10th position, only three points clear of the relegation placings.[3] Southampton were the reigningSouthern League champions, but they slipped to third place in the1901–02 championship, five points behind new championsPortsmouth. Southern League teams normally had to qualify for the first round proper of the FA Cup but, as champions, Southampton were exempted from pre-qualification and were givenbyes to the first round.[4]

Sheffield United's team between 1889 and 1932 was selected by a committee but with the club secretary in charge of the team on match days. In 1902, this wasJohn Nicholson.[5] Southampton's club secretaryErnest Arnfield took charge of their team on match days.[6]

Route to the final

[edit]
Further information:1901–02 FA Cup

Sheffield United

[edit]
RoundOppositionScore
FirstNorthampton Town (a)2–0
SecondBolton Wanderers (h)2–1
ThirdNewcastle United (a)1–1
Third (replay)Newcastle United (h)2–1
Semi-finalDerby County (n)1–1
Semi-final (replay)Derby County (n)1–1
Semi-final (second replay)Derby County (n)1–0
Key: (h) = home venue; (a) = away venue; (n) =neutral venue.Source:[7]

Sheffield United entered the competition in thefirst round proper and played seven matches, including three replays, en route to the final. They played against three teams from the First Division and one from the Southern League.[7]

Early rounds

[edit]

In the first round, they were drawn away on Saturday, 25 January to the Southern League'sNorthampton Town, and won 2–0.[8] The goals were scored byWalter Bennett andAlf Common.[7]

Sheffield were drawn at home in the second round against First DivisionBolton Wanderers. The match was played atBramall Lane on Saturday, 8 February and Sheffield won 2–1.[9] The Sheffield goalscorers were Bennett andFred Priest.[7]James McKee scored for Bolton.[10]

Sheffield faced First Division opposition again in the third round (the quarter-final stage) having been drawn away toNewcastle United. This tie went to a replay after a 1–1 draw atSt James' Park on Saturday, 22 February. In its report of the third round matches,The Times mentioned that Newcastle had beaten the league-leadersSunderland and so were confident of success against Sheffield. However, as the report says, Sheffield United had a "reputation as keen fighters in cup ties".[11] Sheffield led 1–0 at half-time andThe Times says "Newcastle only managed to draw the match after a great struggle".[11] Sheffield's goal was scored by Priest.[7] The Newcastle equaliser was scored byWillie Stewart.[12]

Five days later, Sheffield won 2–1 in the replay at Bramall Lane.[13] Their goalscorers wereErnest Needham and Common.[7]R. S. McColl scored for Newcastle.[12]

Semi-final

[edit]

The semi-finals were staged atneutral venues on Saturday, 15 March, and Sheffield United were drawn to playDerby County atThe Hawthorns inWest Bromwich. The result was a 1–1 draw before a crowd of 33,603.[14]The Times report says that Derby were the better team and "deserved to win".[15] After Derby took an early lead throughBen Warren,[16] Sheffield's second-half equaliser was scored against the run of play byGeorge Hedley[7] after a mistake by the Derby goalkeeper,Jack Fryer, andThe Times says this cost Derby a victory.[15]

The replay was arranged for Thursday, 20 March atMolineux inWolverhampton and this also ended 1–1, watched by 13,284. In a brief report,The Times mentioned that the weather was "squally" and conditions were therefore difficult.[17][18] The match went to extra time and the goalscorers were Priest for Sheffield andDick Wombwell for Derby.[19]

A second replay was necessary and was played a week later on Thursday, 27 March, at theCity Ground inNottingham. The crowd figure was about 15,000. This time the deadlock was broken. Priest scored the only goal of the game after Derby had missed a penalty and Sheffield United won 1–0 to reach their third final in four seasons.[20][21][22]

Southampton

[edit]
RoundOppositionScore
FirstTottenham Hotspur (a)1–1
First (replay)Tottenham Hotspur (h)2–2
First (second replay)Tottenham Hotspur (n)2–1
SecondLiverpool (h)4–1
ThirdBury (a)3–2
Semi-finalNottingham Forest (n)3–1
Key: (h) = home venue; (a) = away venue; (n) =neutral venue.Source:[23]

Like Sheffield United, Southampton entered the competition in the first round proper and played six matches, including two replays, en route to the final. They played against three teams from the First Division and one from the Southern League.[23]

Early rounds

[edit]

In the first round, Southampton were drawn away to their Southern League rivals,Tottenham Hotspur, who were the FA Cup-holders.[23] The match was played atWhite Hart Lane on Saturday, 25 January before a crowd of 20,000 and ended in a 1–1 draw. The goals were scored byDavid Copeland for Tottenham andTommy Bowman for Southampton.[24][25]

The replay atThe Dell was played on Wednesday, 29 January. The crowd was 10,000 and the match ended in another draw, this time 2–2. Extra time was played but without any change in the score and a second replay was necessary. The Tottenham goals were both scored byTed Hughes and Southampton's scorers wereEdgar Chadwick andJoe Turner.[24]

The second replay was played on aneutral venue atElm Park, the home ofReading FC, on Monday, 3 February, in front of a crowd of only 6,000. The pitch was icy and covered in snow, so much so that the touchlines had to be painted blue, and the match kicked off with snow still falling.[24] As in their first two meetings, the teams were very evenly matched and the tie was eventually decided by a mistake. The score at half-time was 0–0 but then Tottenham took the lead with a goal byJack Kirwan. Southampton equalised very quickly with a goal byArchie Turner and then, when it looked as if the match would end in another draw, Tottenham'sSandy Tait made a poor backpass to his goalkeeperFred Griffiths. It was intercepted byAlbert Brown who rounded Griffiths to score the winning goal.[24]

In the second round on Saturday, 8 February, Southampton were drawn at home against the reigning Football League championsLiverpool, who had dropped into a mid-table position in the First Division.[3] According to the Southampton trainer Bill Dawson, the match was "the finest exhibition of football put up by (Southampton)".[26] Southampton won 4–1 with goals from Archie Turner (2), Joe Turner andBert Lee. Liverpool's goal was scored byGeorge Fleming.[27][28]

Southampton then faced First DivisionBury atGigg Lane in the third round on Saturday, 22 February. Bury had outplayed Southampton in the1900 FA Cup Final, winning 4–0, so Southampton wanted to redress the balance somewhat. In a match that Collett, Chalk and Holley have described as a "real thriller",[29][30] Southampton took a measure of revenge by winning 3–2. As described in Chalk and Holley's account, the match was all square at 2–2 with goals byHarry Wood and Joe Turner matching those byGeorge Ross andCharlie Sagar for the home side.[29] Injuries to the two Southampton goalscorers had reduced them to nine players and the team were defending "desperately" to hang on for a replay. After a spell of seven successivecorners for Bury, Albert Brown broke up the pitch with most of the Bury players in the Southampton half. After sprinting the full length of the pitch, Brown unleashed a shot that hit the crossbar and rebounded over his head. Edgar Chadwick was following up and trapped the ball, feinted to go past the goalkeeper and, as the match report says, "coolly slotted the ball in the other corner" to secure victory.[30]

Semi-final

[edit]

In the semi-final on Saturday, 15 March, Southampton returned to White Hart Lane, this time a neutral venue, to play First DivisionNottingham Forest and won 3–1 after extra time. The score was 1–1 at the end of normal time after goals by Chadwick for Southampton andJohn Calvey for Forest.[31] In extra time, Albert Brown scored twice, once from thepenalty spot and then, in the final minute, with what the match report called "a wonderful goal with a screw shot from an oblique angle".[30]

Southampton were now in the final for the second time in three years and it was the third season in succession that a Southern League team had reached the final. Meanwhile, with Sheffield United needing two replays to settle their semi-final against Derby County, Southampton sought an advantage by sending Harry Wood to theCity Ground inNottingham so that he could "spy" on them in their second replay.[30]

Match

[edit]

Pre-match

[edit]
Ernie Needham, Sheffield United's captain

In the build up to the final, Sheffield United's captainErnie "Nudger" Needham, vowed to make amends for their defeat by Tottenham in the1901 final, declaring that his team "had let the north down".[32] Needham, anEngland international, had writtenAssociation Football, published in 1901. It was an instruction book on football tactics whichThe Outlook described as "a valuable book by a practical expert".[33]

For extra preparation, Southampton's players went to nearbyChilworth and stayed at the Clump Inn which had useful training facilities.[34][35] They had doubts about the fitness of both goalkeeperJack Robinson, who had caught a chill at the training camp, and defenderC. B. Fry, who had been injured, but both were declared fit to play.[35] In the early years of the FA Cup, only amateur players could take part but professionalism now dominated to the extent that Fry, also anEngland international cricketer, was the first amateur to play in the final since 1893.[35]

First match

[edit]

The first match was played atCrystal Palace on Saturday, 19 April before a crowd of 74,479.[36] The weather was cloudy but dry with a moderate wind. Many fans tried to get a better view of the match by climbing the surrounding trees which, according to David Bull and Bob Brunskell, "shook as though whipped by a gale, denoting the enthusiasm of adventurous individuals who were in their branches".[35] There was clash of kit as both teams normally played in red and white stripes. It was agreed that Southampton would wear their normal kit and Sheffield United wore white shirts with dark shorts.[37]

No goals were scored in the first half. Sheffield United took the lead early in the second half with a goal byAlf Common.[35] They appeared to be on their way to victory when, with two minutes to play, Southampton's captainHarry Wood equalised. Wood had been in anoffside position tying up his bootlaces when the ball reached him. After consultation between the referee and his linesmen, the officials decided that the ball had struck a United defender, thus playing Wood onside.[37] No extra time was played and the result was a 1–1 draw, necessitating a replay.[36]

Sheffield United goalkeeperWilliam "Fatty" Foulke

At the end of the game United's goalkeeper,William "Fatty" Foulke, protested to the officials that the equalising goal should not have been allowed. Foulke, who was reputed to weigh more than 20stone (280pounds; or 127kg), left his dressing room unclothed and angrily pursued the referee,Tom Kirkham, who took refuge in a broom cupboard. Foulke had to be stopped by a group of FA officials from wrenching the cupboard door off its hinges to reach the hapless referee.[38]

The Times criticised the teams for persistent foul play and named Southampton as the worst offenders, calling them the "chief delinquents". The match was ruined by frequent stoppages for free kicks. The reporter said of the controversial equaliser that it was "a doubtful goal".[36] The reporter praised the Sheffield defence, especially the three half-backs and Needham in particular.[36] Sheffield were handicapped by injuries to their right-side forwards,Walter Bennett andAlf Common, but the half-backs raised their games and took on the extra work needed while, as directed by Needham, most of Sheffield's attacks were from left-side.[36]

Replay

[edit]

The replay took place a week later on 26 April, again at Crystal Palace. On a bitterly cold and windy day, the crowd was 33,068, less than half the number who had watched the first match. As Southampton had worn red and white stripes in the first match, this time they swapped to white shirts with Sheffield in their normal stripes. Southampton fielded an unchanged team; Sheffield had to replaceWalter Bennett, who had an ankle injury, withBilly Barnes. Barnes played at inside right andAlf Common moved to Bennett's right wing position.[39][40][30]

Two minutes into the game, Southampton goalkeeper Robinson stumbled when trying to intercept a cross byBert Lipsham, allowingGeorge Hedley to score the opening goal for Sheffield.[39][30] Playing against the wind, Southampton pressed for an equaliser and Foulke was kept busy throughout the rest of the first half but Southampton wasted their chances. According toThe Times, "Boyle and Needham were very good" for Sheffield, while Common was always a danger when running down the right wing. Sheffield maintained their lead until half-time.[39]

Southampton hoped to do better in the second half with the wind behind them but, as before, they wasted chances and were unable to overcome the Sheffield half-backs. Eventually, however, Albert Brown equalised after 70 minutes with a shot from a pass by Chadwick.[39]The Times says that Southampton then had the upper hand for several minutes and "should have scored" again.[39] Foulke had to make saves from Chadwick, Wood and Lee.[37] It looked as though the match was going into extra time, when, with ten minutes remaining, Robinson failed to cut out a cross from Common and Barnes was left with an unguarded net to score the winner for Sheffield.[39] Southampton had a chance to equalise in the final minute, but Fry kicked the ball high over the crossbar.[37]

Details

[edit]

Final

[edit]
Sheffield United1–1Southampton
Common 55'[36]Wood 88'
Attendance: 74,479
Referee:Tom Kirkham,Burslem
Linesmen: A. Davis & J. Howcroft
Sheffield United
Southampton
GKEnglandWillie Foulke
RBEnglandHarry Thickitt
LBIrelandPeter Boyle
RHEnglandErnest Needham (c)
CHEnglandBernie Wilkinson
LHEnglandHarry Johnson
RWEnglandWalter Bennett
IREnglandAlf Common
CFEnglandGeorge Hedley
ILEnglandFred Priest
LWEnglandBert Lipsham
Club secretary:
EnglandJohn Nicholson
GKEnglandJack Robinson
RBEnglandC. B. Fry
LBEnglandGeorge Molyneux
RHScotlandSamuel Meston
CHScotlandTommy Bowman
LHEnglandBert Lee
RWEnglandArchie Turner
IREnglandHarry Wood (c)
CFEnglandAlbert Brown
ILEnglandEdgar Chadwick
LWEnglandJoe Turner
Club secretary:
EnglandEr Arnfield

Match rules

Notes

  • Players are listed above according to their positions on the field. There was no shirt numbering in 1902.[e]

Replay

[edit]
Sheffield United2–1Southampton
Hedley 2'
Barnes 79'
[39]Brown 70'
Crystal Palace, London
Attendance: 33,068
Referee: Tom Kirkham, Burslem
Linesmen: A. Davis & J. Howcroft
Sheffield United
Southampton
GKEnglandWillie Foulke
RBEnglandHarry Thickitt
LBIrelandPeter Boyle
RHEnglandErnest Needham (c)
CHEnglandBernie Wilkinson
LHEnglandHarry Johnson
RWEnglandAlf Common
IREnglandBilly Barnes
CFEnglandGeorge Hedley
ILEnglandFred Priest
LWEnglandBert Lipsham
Club secretary:
EnglandJohn Nicholson
GKEnglandJack Robinson
RBEnglandC. B. Fry
LBEnglandGeorge Molyneux
RHScotlandSamuel Meston
CHScotlandTommy Bowman
LHEnglandBert Lee
RWEnglandArchie Turner
IREnglandHarry Wood (c)
CFEnglandAlbert Brown
ILEnglandEdgar Chadwick
LWEnglandJoe Turner
Club secretary:
EnglandEr Arnfield

Match rules

  • 90 minutes duration (two halves of 45 minutes each; teams change ends at half-time).
  • 30 minutes of extra time if scores level at end of normal time.
  • Replay at a later date if scores still level at end of extra time.
  • No substitutes allowed.

Notes

  • Players are listed above according to their positions on the field. There was no shirt numbering in 1902.

Post-match

[edit]

The trophy was presented to Ernie Needham by Lady Beatrice Villiers, who was accompanied by her fatherLord Jersey.[39]The Times said of the replay that it had been a good, hard game and without the "foul work" that had ruined the original match. In the reporter's opinion, the replay was "one of the best finals seen for some years".[39]

Sheffield United have made three further FA Cup final appearances. They won in both1915 againstChelsea and1925 againstCardiff City, but lost toArsenal in1936.[48] Southampton have played in two more finals. They won the cup in1976 when they defeatedManchester United, but lost to Arsenal in2003.[48]

Southampton were the third Southern League team in succession to reach the FA Cup final, following themselves in 1900 and Tottenham in 1901. They remain the last team from outside the Football League to reach the final.[49] Southern League teams began joining the Football League in the 1900s – Tottenham's application was accepted in 1908 and Southampton, along with several other clubs, joined in 1920.[50]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^The duration of a football match has been 90 minutes since an agreement in 1866 for thematch between London and Sheffield.[41]
  2. ^The FA introduced the option of extra time into its rules in 1897.[42]
  3. ^The1875 final was the first in which a replay took place;[43] this method of deciding the winners continued until 1999.[44] The2005 final was the first to be settled bypenalty shoot-out.[2]
  4. ^Although there were isolated instances of substitution in earlier times, it was not until the beginning of the 1965–66 season that substitutes were first allowed in English top-class matches, and then only for replacement of injured players.[45]
  5. ^The first known instance of shirt numbering in English football was in March 1914.[46] It was not until the 1939–40 season that a numbering system was formally introduced.[47]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Collett 2003, pp. 16–17.
  2. ^ab"FA Cup Finals". London: The Football Association. Retrieved22 October 2020.
  3. ^ab"England 1901-02". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved22 October 2020.
  4. ^Chalk & Holley 1987, p. 26.
  5. ^Clarebrough, Denis; Kirkham, Andrew (2008).Sheffield United Who's Who. Sheffield: Hallamshire Press. pp. 392–396.ISBN 978-18-74718-69-7.
  6. ^"Sheffield United v Southampton, 19 April 1902".11v11.com. Battersea: Association of Football Statisticians. Retrieved22 October 2020.
  7. ^abcdefgCollett 2003, p. 539.
  8. ^"Northampton Town v Sheffield United, 25 January 1902".11v11.com. Battersea: Association of Football Statisticians. Retrieved22 October 2020.
  9. ^"Sheffield United v Bolton Wanderers, 8 February 1902".11v11.com. Battersea: Association of Football Statisticians. Retrieved24 October 2020.
  10. ^Collett 2003, p. 152.
  11. ^ab"The Association Cup".The Times. London: Times Newspapers Limited. 24 February 1902. p. 11.
  12. ^abCollett 2003, p. 432.
  13. ^"Sheffield United v Newcastle United, 27 February 1902".11v11.com. Battersea: Association of Football Statisticians. Retrieved24 October 2020.
  14. ^"Sheffield United v Derby County, 15 March 1902".11v11.com. Battersea: Association of Football Statisticians. Retrieved24 October 2020.
  15. ^ab"Derby County v. Sheffield United".The Times. London: Times Newspapers Limited. 17 March 1902. p. 11.
  16. ^Collett 2003, p. 269.
  17. ^"The Association Cup".The Times. London: Times Newspapers Limited. 21 March 1902. p. 9.
  18. ^"Derby County v Sheffield United, 20 March 1902".11v11.com. Battersea: Association of Football Statisticians. Retrieved24 October 2020.
  19. ^Collett 2003, pp. 269, 539.
  20. ^"The Association Cup".The Times. London: Times Newspapers Limited. 28 March 1902. p. 9.
  21. ^Rippon, Anton (2013).Derby County: The Story of a Football Club(PDF). Derby: North Bridge Publishing. p. 22.ISBN 978-09-92677-90-9.
  22. ^"Sheffield United v Derby County, 27 March 1902".11v11.com. Battersea: Association of Football Statisticians. Retrieved24 October 2020.
  23. ^abcCollett 2003, p. 560.
  24. ^abcdBull & Brunskell 2000, pp. 28–29.
  25. ^Collett 2003, p. 609.
  26. ^Bull & Brunskell 2000, p. 30.
  27. ^Collett 2003, p. 379.
  28. ^"Southampton 4–1 Liverpool".LFC History. Liverpool Football Club. 8 February 1902. Retrieved22 October 2020.
  29. ^abCollett 2003, p. 199.
  30. ^abcdefChalk & Holley 1987, p. 30.
  31. ^Collett 2003, p. 454.
  32. ^Lloyd & Holt 2005, p. 66.
  33. ^"Association Football".The Outlook. London: The Outlook Company. 8 December 1900. p. 608.
  34. ^Chalk & Holley 1987, pp. 28–29.
  35. ^abcdeBull & Brunskell 2000, p. 31.
  36. ^abcdef"The Association Cup".The Times. London: Times Newspapers Limited. 21 April 1902. p. 11.
  37. ^abcdBull & Brunskell 2000, p. 32.
  38. ^Bull & Brunskell 2000, pp. 30–33.
  39. ^abcdefghi"The Football Association Cup – The Final Tie".The Times. London: Times Newspapers Limited. 28 April 1902. p. 13.
  40. ^Bull & Brunskell 2000, p. 32–33.
  41. ^Young, Percy M. (1981) [1962].Football in Sheffield. Sheffield: Dark Peak. p. 22.ISBN 978-09-50627-24-3.
  42. ^Murray, Andrew (24 June 2016)."A brief history of (extra) time: is the format right for the modern game?".FourFourTwo. Bath: Future plc. Retrieved12 October 2020.
  43. ^Collett 2003, p. 19.
  44. ^McNulty, Phil (4 February 2005)."FA Cup in danger of losing lustre". London: BBC Sport. Retrieved12 October 2020.
  45. ^Ingle, Sean (25 July 2001)."Whatever happened to Len Shackleton's old club?".The Guardian. London. Retrieved12 October 2020.
  46. ^Cavallini, Rob (2007).Play Up Corinth: A History of The Corinthian Football Club. Stadia. p. 114.ISBN 978-07-52444-79-6.
  47. ^"27. Gunners wear numbered shirts".Arsenal History. London: The Arsenal Football Club plc. 1 June 2017. Retrieved22 October 2020.
  48. ^ab"The Emirates FA Cup – Results Archive". London: The Football Association. Retrieved12 August 2020. Individual seasons are accessed via a dropdown menu.
  49. ^Collett 2003, p. 29.
  50. ^Goldstein, Dan (2000).Rough Guide to English Football. London: Rough Guides Ltd. pp. 480,527–528.ISBN 978-18-58285-57-3.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Bull, David; Brunskell, Bob (2000).Match of the Millennium. Southampton: Hagiology Publishing.ISBN 978-09-53447-41-1.
  • Chalk, Gary; Holley, Duncan (1987).Saints – A Complete Record. Derby: Breedon Books.ISBN 978-09-07969-22-8.
  • Collett, Mike (2003).The Complete Record of the FA Cup. Cheltenham: SportsBooks Ltd.ISBN 978-18-99807-19-2.
  • Lloyd, Guy; Holt, Nick (2005).The FA Cup – The Complete Story. London: Aurum Press.ISBN 978-18-45130-54-1.

External links

[edit]
Seasons
Qualifying rounds
Finals
FA competitions
Football andSouthern Leagues
Lower leagues
Related tonational team
Club seasons
First Division
Second Division
Southern League
FA Cup Finals
Football League play-off Finals
Others
FA Cup Finals
League Cup Finals
FA Charity Shield
Full Members' Cup Final
Football League play-off Final
Football League Trophy Final
Other matches
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1902_FA_Cup_final&oldid=1319473977"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp