2020 FA Women's League Cup final

Last updated
2020 FA Women's League Cup final
Chelsea FC Women v Arsenal WFC, 29 February 2020 (08).jpg
Event 2019–20 FA Women's League Cup
Date29 February 2020 (2020-02-29)
Venue City Ground, West Bridgford, Nottinghamshire
Player of the Match Ann-Katrin Berger
Referee Helen Conley
Attendance6,743
2019
2021

The 2020 FA Women's League Cup final was the ninth final of the FA Women's League Cup, England's secondary cup competition for women's football teams and its primary League Cup tournament. It took place on 29 February 2020 at the City Ground, and was contested by Arsenal and Chelsea. [1]

Contents

Arsenal had competed in all but one (2016) of the previous finals, winning five. Chelsea made their first appearance in a League Cup final having been a losing semi-finalist at the hands of Manchester City in each of the last two seasons. [2] [3]

Route to the final

RoundOppositionScore
GS London City Lionesses (A)5–0
GS Charlton Athletic (H)4–0
GS Brighton & Hove Albion (A) 0–0 (p)
GS Bristol City (H)7–0
GS London Bees (H)9–0
QF Reading (H)1–0
SF Manchester City (H)2–1
Key: (H) = Home venue; (A) = Away venue.

Arsenal

Arsenal topped their League Cup Group for the second consecutive season, doing so by winning four of their five games; against second-tier teams London City Lionesses, Charlton Athletic and London Bees as well as FA WSL relegation battlers Bristol City. The only team to stop Arsenal from winning in the Group Stage was fellow WSL side Brighton & Hove Albion who earned themselves a goalless draw before the Seagulls also took the extra available point by winning the ensuing penalty shootout 4–2. Arsenal finished the Group Stage without conceding a goal.

The quarter-finals saw Arsenal drawn at home to Reading as their strong defensive record continued, seeing off the midtable WSL side 1–0 thanks to a late Kim Little strike. The semi-final matched Arsenal against defending League Cup champions and fellow WSL title-challengers Manchester City. A 2–0 Arsenal lead at half-time was halved in the 60th minute as Gemma Bonner scored the first goal Arsenal had conceded in the competition but the Gunners held on for the win, sending them to their third consecutive final.

RoundOppositionScore
GS West Ham United (H)2–0
GS Crystal Palace (A)3–0
GS Lewes (A)2–1
GS Tottenham Hotspur (H)5–1
GS Reading (A) 1–1 (p)
QF Aston Villa (H)3–1
SF Manchester United (A)1–0
Key: (H) = Home venue; (A) = Away venue.

Chelsea

Chelsea topped their League Cup Group for the third consecutive season, and, like Arsenal, progressed with 13 points after winning four of the five games and drawing a fifth before losing the penalty shootout. They beat two WSL teams and two second-tier teams by way of West Ham United, Tottenham Hotspur, Crystal Palace and Lewes before Reading forced a 1–1 draw. The Royals won the extra point 4–2 on penalties.

In the quarter-finals, Chelsea were drawn at home to Aston Villa, one of two Championship teams to progress to the knockout stage. Chelsea ran out comfortable 3–1 winners. The Blues' place in their first League Cup final was ultimately assured by a sole Maren Mjelde goal as Chelsea once again narrowly beat newly-promoted Manchester United 1–0 in the semi-final, a repeat of the scoreline when the teams had first met in the league in November 2019.

Match

Details

Arsenal 1–2 Chelsea
  • Williamson Soccerball shade.svg85'
Report
City Ground , West Bridgford, Nottinghamshire
Attendance: 6,743
Referee: Helen Conley
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Arsenal
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Chelsea
GK1 Flag of Austria.svg Manuela Zinsberger
DF16 Flag of Ireland.svg Louise Quinn
DF17 Flag of Scotland.svg Lisa Evans
DF22 Flag of Austria.svg Viktoria Schnaderbeck
DF15 Flag of Ireland.svg Katie McCabe Yellow card.svg 81'
MF6 Flag of England.svg Leah Williamson
MF14 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Jill Roord
MF7 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Daniëlle van de Donk
MF8 Flag of England.svg Jordan Nobbs (c)
FW11 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Vivianne Miedema
FW19 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Caitlin Foord
Substitutes:
GK18 Flag of France.svg Pauline Peyraud-Magnin
MF20 Flag of Germany.svg Leonie Maier
MF26 Flag of England.svg Ruby Grant
MF27 Flag of England.svg Melisa Filis
DF30 Flag of England.svg Ruby Mace
Manager:
Flag of Australia (converted).svg Joe Montemurro
GK30 Flag of Germany.svg Ann-Katrin Berger
DF18 Flag of Norway.svg Maren Mjelde
DF4 Flag of England.svg Millie Bright
DF16 Flag of Sweden.svg Magdalena Eriksson (c)Yellow card.svg 59'
DF25 Flag of Sweden.svg Jonna Andersson
MF5 Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg Sophie Ingle
MF10 Flag of South Korea.svg Ji So-yun Sub off.svg 75'
MF11 Flag of Norway.svg Guro Reiten
FW9 Flag of England.svg Bethany England
FW20 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Sam Kerr Sub off.svg 90+3'
FW22 Flag of Scotland.svg Erin Cuthbert Yellow card.svg 77'
Substitutes:
GK28 Flag of England.svg Carly Telford
DF2 Flag of Norway.svg Maria Thorisdottir Sub on.svg 75'
DF3 Flag of England.svg Hannah Blundell
MF7 Flag of England.svg Jessica Carter
DF21 Flag of England.svg Deanna Cooper
FW23 Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg Ramona Bachmann
MF24 Flag of England.svg Drew Spence Sub on.svg 90+3'
Manager:
Flag of England.svg Emma Hayes

Player of the match:
Ann-Katrin Berger

Match officials

Assistant referees:
Helen Edwards
Magda Golba


Fourth official:
Stacey Pearson

Match rules

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
  • Seven named substitutes.
  • Maximum of three substitutions.

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References

  1. "Conti Cup final comes to The City Ground on Saturday". www.nottinghamforest.co.uk.
  2. "Chelsea Women v Arsenal Women: Continental League Cup final". BBC Sport. 28 February 2020.
  3. Aluko, Eni (27 February 2020). "Continental Cup final gives an unloved competition a fascinating climax". The Guardian.