Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

1983 FA Cup final

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Association football championship match
icon
This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "1983 FA Cup final" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(December 2017) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

For the women's event, see1983 WFA Cup final.
Football match
1983 FA Cup Final
Event1982–83 FA Cup
Brighton & Hove AlbionManchester United
Manchester United won after areplay
Final
Brighton & Hove AlbionManchester United
22
Afterextra time
Date21 May 1983
VenueWembley Stadium, London
RefereeAlf Grey (Norfolk)
Attendance99,059
Replay
Brighton & Hove AlbionManchester United
04
Date26 May 1983
VenueWembley Stadium,London
RefereeAlf Grey (Norfolk)
Attendance91,534
1982
1984

The1983 FA Cup final was contested byManchester United andBrighton & Hove Albion atWembley Stadium.

Manchester United were the favourites, as Brighton had been relegated from the First Division that season, and had never reached a cup final before. United had finished third in the league that season and already had four FA Cup victories to their name.

The final ended in a 2–2 draw, forcing a replay at Wembley five days later, which Manchester United won 4–0. It was the third successive year that the FA Cup Final required a replay.[1]

The first match

[edit]

The build-up to the first game included Brighton travelling to Wembley stadium by helicopter instead of using the traditional route of a team coach.Steve Foster, Brighton's captain was suspended for the match having received a booking in a league match against Notts County.[2] Despite Manchester United being strong favourites to win the game, Brighton took an early lead throughGordon Smith, who would become notable late into extra-time.Frank Stapleton equalised andRay Wilkins with a curling shot put Manchester United into the lead.Gary Stevens scored a late equaliser for Brighton which took the game into extra time.

The first game has since became infamous for the radio commentary line byPeter Jones "...and Smith must score" talking about a shot by Gordon Smith, which was then saved by the Manchester United goalkeeperGary Bailey; the quote was subsequently used as a title for a Brighton fanzine. The final whistle went moments later with the final score 2–2 after extra time. Bailey's save had forced a replay and prevented Brighton from winning the first major trophy in their history.[3][4]

The replay

[edit]

The second game, on a Thursday night, started the same way as the first game had, with Brighton taking the game to Manchester United. Although their chances were limited to long-range drives fromJimmy Case, United goalkeeperGary Bailey had a couple of important saves to make. This all changed on 25 minutes, with United's first real attack.Alan Davies, who had made his FA Cup debut in the first game, set up captainBryan Robson for a left-footed drive past Moseley into the corner of the net. Suddenly the atmosphere changed and it was the Manchester United fans who were singing loudest. This was compounded in the 30th minute, when United went 2–0 up, giving the team a two-goal cushion for the first time over the two matches. Brighton failed to clear a corner, and Davies crossed forNorman Whiteside to score with a header, making the 18 year old theyoungest player to ever score in an FA Cup final as per 2024. This capped an incredible 12 months for the teenager, who had played in the1982 FIFA World Cup forNorthern Ireland, and scored in theLeague Cup final defeat toLiverpool earlier that year.

Brighton were rocked but continued to press, yet went further behind just before half time.Gordon McQueen headed on a free-kick and the ball fell to Robson to tap in at the far post, for his second goal of the game. The scoring was completed in the second half when the Dutch midfielderArnold Mühren scored a penalty after Robson had been brought down by Stevens in the penalty area. It was the third consecutive year that a penalty had been awarded (and scored) in the Cup Final replay.

This was the first of three times that Bryan Robson captained Manchester United to FA Cup glory; he also achieved the feat in1985 and1990.

Match details

[edit]
Brighton & Hove Albion2–2 (a.e.t.)Manchester United
Smith 14'
Stevens 87'
ReportStapleton 55'
Wilkins 72'
Attendance: 99,059
Referee:Alf Grey (Great Yarmouth)
Brighton & Hove Albion
Manchester United
GK1EnglandGraham Moseley
RB2EnglandChris Ramsey
CB6EnglandGary Stevens
CB5EnglandSteve Gatting
LB3EnglandGraham Pearce
RM11EnglandNeil Smillie
CM4Republic of IrelandTony Grealish (c)
CM7EnglandJimmy Case
LM8Republic of IrelandGary Howlett
CF9Republic of IrelandMichael Robinson
CF10ScotlandGordon Smith
Substitute:
MF12Republic of IrelandGerry Ryan
Manager:
EnglandJimmy Melia
GK1EnglandGary Bailey
RB2EnglandMike Duxbury
CB5Republic of IrelandKevin Moran
CB6ScotlandGordon McQueen
LB3ScotlandArthur Albiston
RM11WalesAlan Davies
CM4EnglandRay Wilkins
CM7EnglandBryan Robson (c)
LM8NetherlandsArnold Mühren
CF9Republic of IrelandFrank Stapleton
CF10Northern IrelandNorman Whiteside
Substitute:
MF12Republic of IrelandAshley Grimes
Manager:
EnglandRon Atkinson

Assistant referees:
Colin Downey (Hounslow)
John Pardoe (Kidderminster)
Reserve official:
John Connock (Bristol)

Match rules

  • 90 minutes
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary
  • Replay if scores still level
  • One named substitute
  • Maximum of one substitution

Replay match details

[edit]
Brighton & Hove Albion0–4Manchester United
Robson 25',44'
Whiteside 30'
Mühren 62' (pen.)
Attendance: 91,534
Referee:Alf Grey (Norfolk)
Brighton & Hove Albion
Manchester United
GK1EnglandGraham Moseley
RB2EnglandSteve Gatting
CB6EnglandGary Stevens
CB5EnglandSteve Foster (c)
LB3EnglandGraham Pearce
RM11EnglandNeil Smillie
CM4Republic of IrelandTony Grealish
CM7EnglandJimmy Case
LM8Republic of IrelandGary Howlett
CF9Republic of IrelandMichael Robinson
CF10ScotlandGordon Smith
Substitute:
MF12Republic of IrelandGerry Ryan
Manager:
EnglandJimmy Melia
GK1EnglandGary Bailey
RB2EnglandMike Duxbury
CB5Republic of IrelandKevin Moran
CB6ScotlandGordon McQueen
LB3ScotlandArthur Albiston
RM11WalesAlan Davies
CM4EnglandRay Wilkins
CM7EnglandBryan Robson (c)
LM8NetherlandsArnold Mühren
CF9Republic of IrelandFrank Stapleton
CF10Northern IrelandNorman Whiteside
Substitute:
MF12Republic of IrelandAshley Grimes
Manager:
EnglandRon Atkinson

Match rules

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
  • One named substitute.
  • Maximum of one substitution.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Ross, James M. (6 August 2020)."England FA Challenge Cup Finals".Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved8 August 2020.
  2. ^Greg, Whelan."Steve Foster chats Brighton, his famous headwear and the 1983 FA Cup final".Sky Sports. Retrieved25 June 2025.
  3. ^Philip, Cornwall."My favourite game: Manchester United v Brighton, 1983 FA Cup final replay".Guardian.
  4. ^Mike, Walters."Forgotten FA Cup final goal remembered after infamous Brighton vs Man Utd commentary".Mirror. Retrieved25 June 2025.

External links

[edit]
Seasons
Qualifying rounds
Finals
National teams
League competitions
Levels 1–4
Level 5
Levels 6–7
Levels 8–9
Cup competitions
FA cups
Football League cups
European competitions
Club seasons
First Division
Second Division
Third Division
Fourth Division
Club
Grounds
Matches
Rivalries
Related teams
National
FA Cup
Finals
Other
League Cup finals
FA Community Shields
Notable league matches
Other
International
UEFA Champions League
Finals
Other
European Cup Winners' Cup finals
UEFA Europa League finals
UEFA Super Cups
Intercontinental Cups
FIFA Club World Cup finals
Other matches
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1983_FA_Cup_final&oldid=1320426728"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp