2012 FA Community Shield

Last updated

2012 FA Community Shield
2012 FA Community Shield programme.jpg
The match programme cover
Date12 August 2012
Venue Villa Park, Birmingham
Man of the Match Yaya Touré (Manchester City)
Referee Kevin Friend (Leicestershire) [1]
Attendance36,394
WeatherRain showers
19 °C (66 °F) [2]
2011
2013

The 2012 FA Community Shield (also known as The FA Community Shield sponsored by McDonald's for sponsorship reasons) was the 90th FA Community Shield, a football match played on 12 August 2012 between the winners of the previous season's Premier League and FA Cup competitions. The match was contested by the 2012 FA Cup winners, Chelsea, and the champions of the 2011–12 Premier League, Manchester City.

Contents

The 2012 Community Shield was not played at its usual venue, Wembley Stadium, as the stadium hosted the final of the 2012 Olympic football tournament on the same weekend as the proposed date for the Community Shield. [3] It was played instead at Aston Villa's home ground, Villa Park, in Birmingham. It was the first time since the fixture was played at Maine Road in 1973 that the Community Shield had been hosted at a venue other than Wembley (old and new) or the Millennium Stadium. Manchester City won the game 3–2 to claim their first Community Shield since 1972. [4] [5] [6]

Pre-match

The 2012 Community Shield was broadcast live in the United Kingdom on ITV1. [7] Traditionally, the Community Shield has started at 15:00 BST, but the match was due to be played on the final day of the 2012 Olympics, and therefore started at 13:30 BST. [8]

Entry

Chelsea qualified by winning the 2012 FA Cup Final, beating Liverpool 2–1 in the final at Wembley. Chelsea beat Portsmouth 4–0, Queens Park Rangers 1–0, Birmingham City 2–0, Leicester City 5–2 and Tottenham Hotspur 5–1 en route to the final. The 2012 victory was Chelsea's seventh FA Cup triumph and consequently gained a berth in the 2012 Community Shield. The 2012 Community Shield will be Chelsea's tenth appearance in the fixture.

Manchester City qualified for their second consecutive Community Shield by clinching the Premier League title in the final minutes of the season. City made a strong start to the league season, beating rivals Manchester United 6–1 at Old Trafford in October and maintained the lead in the league for the majority of the season. However, a drop in form in March and April meant they fell eight points behind leaders Manchester United who would later drop points to Wigan Athletic and Everton. City won the last six league matches of the season, including a crucial 1–0 victory over United at the Etihad Stadium on 30 April which put City top of the league with a superior goal difference. City needed to now win the final two matches to win the league, irrespective of what United did. They beat Newcastle at St James Park, meaning victory against Queens Park Rangers would seal the title for City. Although taking an early lead, QPR scored twice in the 48th and 66th minute. It looked as if City had blown their chance to win the league with United winning 1–0 at Sunderland. However, two stoppage time goals – one from Edin Džeko and a last-minute goal from Sergio Agüero – completed a remarkable comeback to give City a 3–2 win.[ citation needed ] The league being decided on goal difference was the closest finish since Arsenal and Liverpool in 1989 and ensured Manchester City won their first top-flight league title since 1968. The 2012 Community Shield was Manchester City's ninth appearance in the fixture.

Venue

Villa Park was selected as the venue for the Community Shield as Wembley Stadium was unavailable during the 2012 Summer Olympics. 2012 Community Shield.JPG
Villa Park was selected as the venue for the Community Shield as Wembley Stadium was unavailable during the 2012 Summer Olympics.

In order to avoid clashing with the Olympics, The Football Association (FA) agreed that the Community Shield would not be played in London, igniting speculation that the Community Shield would follow suit with the Supercoppa Italiana and Trophée des Champions and be played overseas. Despite the financial incentive, the FA announced that Community Shield would be held in England.

In previous years when Wembley was unavailable, the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff was used to host major events; this was not viable in 2012 as it was also being used as a venue for Olympic football matches. Venues that were also considered included the Olympic venues of St James' Park in Newcastle and Old Trafford in Manchester, as well as the Stadium of Light in Sunderland, the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, Anfield in Liverpool and Villa Park in Birmingham. [9]

On 1 August 2011, however, it was announced that Villa Park was the interim choice to host the Shield, as the other, larger venues would "still be in Olympic mode". [10] This decision was confirmed on 18 May 2012 after the football season had concluded and it became clear Villa Park would be an ideal neutral venue halfway between the two competing clubs from London and Manchester. [11]

Officials

The match officials for the game were confirmed on 3 July 2012. Kevin Friend of Leicestershire was named as referee, having previously been the fourth official at both the 2011 League Cup Final and the 2011 Community Shield, and refereed the 2009 FA Vase Final. Friend was assisted by Michael McDonough of Northumberland and Richard West from the East Riding of Yorkshire, while the fourth official was Anthony Taylor of Cheshire, and Charles Breakspear (Surrey) was the reserve assistant referee. [1]

Match

Details

Chelsea 2–3 Manchester City
Torres Soccerball shade.svg40'
Bertrand Soccerball shade.svg80'
Report Y. Touré Soccerball shade.svg53'
Tevez Soccerball shade.svg59'
Nasri Soccerball shade.svg65'
Villa Park, Birmingham
Attendance: 36,394
Referee: Kevin Friend (Leicestershire) [1]
Kit left arm chelsea1213h.png
Kit left arm.svg
Kit body chelsea1213h.png
Kit body.svg
Kit right arm chelsea1213h.png
Kit right arm.svg
Kit shorts millonarios11a.png
Kit shorts.svg
Kit socks chelsea1213h.png
Kit socks long.svg
Chelsea [12]
Kit left arm.svg
Kit body mcfc away 12-13-v2.png
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Kit shorts mcfc away 12-13.png
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Manchester City [13]
GK1 Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Petr Čech
RB2 Flag of Serbia.svg Branislav Ivanović Red card.svg 42'
CB26 Flag of England.svg John Terry (c)
CB4 Flag of Brazil.svg David Luiz
LB3 Flag of England.svg Ashley Cole Yellow card.svg 62'
CM8 Flag of England.svg Frank Lampard Yellow card.svg 45+1'
CM12 Flag of Nigeria.svg Mikel John Obi Yellow card.svg 45+1'
RW7 Flag of Brazil.svg Ramires Yellow card.svg 32'
AM10 Flag of Spain.svg Juan Mata Sub off.svg 75'
LW17 Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Eden Hazard Sub off.svg 72'
CF9 Flag of Spain.svg Fernando Torres
Substitutes:
GK22 Flag of England.svg Ross Turnbull
DF24 Flag of England.svg Gary Cahill
DF34 Flag of England.svg Ryan Bertrand Yellow card.svg 80'Sub on.svg 72'
MF5 Flag of Ghana.svg Michael Essien
MF16 Flag of Portugal.svg Raul Meireles
FW23 Flag of England.svg Daniel Sturridge Sub on.svg 75'
FW40 Flag of Brazil.svg Lucas Piazon
Manager:
Flag of Italy.svg Roberto Di Matteo
Chelsea vs Man City 2012-08-12.svg
GK30 Flag of Romania.svg Costel Pantilimon Yellow card.svg 80'
CB15 Flag of Montenegro.svg Stefan Savić Yellow card.svg 11'Sub off.svg 46'
CB4 Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Vincent Kompany (c)Yellow card.svg 49'
CB5 Flag of Argentina.svg Pablo Zabaleta
RM7 Flag of England.svg James Milner
CM42 Flag of Cote d'Ivoire.svg Yaya Touré
CM34 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Nigel de Jong
LM13 Flag of Serbia.svg Aleksandar Kolarov
AM8 Flag of France.svg Samir Nasri Sub off.svg 77'
CF16 Flag of Argentina.svg Sergio Agüero
CF32 Flag of Argentina.svg Carlos Tevez Sub off.svg 89'
Substitutes:
GK63 Flag of Norway.svg Eirik Holmen Johansen
DF22 Flag of France.svg Gaël Clichy Sub on.svg 46'
DF28 Flag of Cote d'Ivoire.svg Kolo Touré
MF11 Flag of England.svg Adam Johnson
MF21 Flag of Spain.svg David Silva Sub on.svg 77'
MF62 Flag of Cote d'Ivoire.svg Abdul Razak
FW10 Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg Edin Džeko Sub on.svg 89'
Manager:
Flag of Italy.svg Roberto Mancini

Man of the match Yaya Touré (Manchester City)

Assistant referees:
Michael McDonough (Northumberland) [1]
Richard West (East Riding of Yorkshire) [1]
Fourth official:
Anthony Taylor (Cheshire) [1]
Reserve official:
Charles Breakspear (Surrey) [1]

Match rules

  • 90 minutes
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores level after 90 minutes
  • Seven named substitutes, of which six may be used

Statistics

ChelseaManchester City
Total shots913
Shots on target59
Ball possession46%54%
Corner kicks59
Fouls committed1414
Offsides00
Yellow cards53
Red cards10

Source: ITV Sport [14]

See also

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References

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