| Event | 1988–89 FA Cup | ||||||
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| Afterextra time | |||||||
| Date | 20 May 1989 | ||||||
| Venue | Wembley Stadium,London | ||||||
| Man of the Match | Ian Rush | ||||||
| Referee | Joe Worrall (Cheshire) | ||||||
| Attendance | 82,800 | ||||||
| Weather | Warm and fine, with hazy sunshine | ||||||
←1988 1990 → | |||||||
The1989 FA Cup final was the final of the1988–89 FA Cup, the topfootball knockout competition in England. The match was aMerseyside derby betweenLiverpool andEverton, played atWembley Stadium,London, on 20 May 1989. Liverpool won 3–2 afterextra time, with a goal fromJohn Aldridge and two fromIan Rush.Stuart McCall scored both Everton goals. The final was played five weeks after theHillsborough disaster, in which 95 Liverpool fans were killed in a crush (the death toll rose to 96 in 1993 and 97 in 2021), and before kick-off there was a minute's silence and the teams wore black armbands as a sign of respect.Gerry Marsden, lead singer ofGerry & the Pacemakers, led the crowd in a rendition of his hit "You'll Never Walk Alone", which had become synonymous with Liverpool Football Club.[1]
Liverpool took the lead in the match after four minutes throughJohn Aldridge, and held onto that lead until the ninetieth minute, when Everton substituteStuart McCall equalised, and apitch invasion by Everton fans ensued. McCall had scored just once for Everton before the FA Cup final, having joined them fromBradford City at the start of the season.
McCall's goal was the last kick of the 90 minutes and the match went into extra time. On 95 minutes, Liverpool substituteIan Rush scored with a half-volley on the turn to give Liverpool a 2–1 lead. Everton again equalised five minutes later when McCall scored his second, chesting and volleying pastBruce Grobbelaar and into the corner of the net, becoming the first substitute to score twice in a final. Rush, who had scored twice in Liverpool's 3–1 win in the first Merseyside derby finalthree years earlier, scored his second goal in the 104th minute, with a header from a floatedJohn Barnes cross.[2]
Liverpool had continued their domination of the English game (they were league champions in 1988 and runners-up in 1987), but Everton had declined since their 1987 title triumph and finished sixth in the league in 1989.
UEFA voted for the ban on English clubs in European competitions to continue for a fifth season, ruling out Liverpool's hopes of competing in theCup Winners' Cup, although they were still in contention for the league title at this stage, and ultimately were only deprived of the title (and a unique seconddouble) by a last-gasp goal intheir final game of the season.
Liverpool striker Ian Rush had now scored four goals in FA Cup finals (both two-goal hauls against Everton) and was one of 11 players (five for Liverpool) to have featured in both of the all-Merseyside FA Cup finals. Stuart McCall made FA Cup history when he became the first substitute to score two goals in an FA Cup final. Ian Rush matched the feat two minutes later.[3]
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Match rules
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