1890 FA Cup final

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1890 FA Cup final
1890 FA Cup final official programme.jpg
The official match programme
Event 1889–90 FA Cup
Date29 March 1890
Venue Kennington Oval, London
Referee Major Francis Marindin
Attendance20,000
1889
1891

The 1890 FA Cup final was contested by Blackburn Rovers and The Wednesday at the Kennington Oval.

Contents

Report

Blackburn won 6–1 with goals scored by William Townley (3), Nat Walton, Jack Southworth and Joe Lofthouse. The Wednesday's goal was scored by Albert Mumford. Townley's hat-trick was the first in an FA Cup Final. The match was the 19th FA Cup Final and the fourth time that Blackburn had won the FA Cup.

Wednesday had been handicapped by captain Henry Winterbottom [1] being injured in the previous game against Grimsby Town and unable to play, replaced by Woolhouse of Sheffield F.C., and Billy Ingram was suffering from an illness which made it touch and go whether he would play; in the end, he did play, but was entirely ineffective. Smith was blamed for the first goal, after just six minutes, a Townley header from a Forrest free-kick which Smith "never appear[ed] to make any attempt to stop"; and also the second, a Walton long shot which Smith "entirely misjudged". In between Bennett missed a golden chance to equalise by heading an easy chance over the bar; Bennett also had a goal disallowed on the basis it had already gone out of play. Townley made it three after 38 minutes with a "magnificent shot" and Southworth made it 4 just before half-time. [2]

Wednesday's consolation after 53 minutes was credited to both Mumford and Bennett, but either way was a header from a Woolhouse cross, but soon after Townley completed his hat-trick after Smith parried a shot from Lofthouse, and Lofthouse himself made it six with a handful of minutes remaining after a Forrest corner found him unmarked.

Haydn Arthur Morley, who was Wednesday's captain in the final, earned his living as a solicitor. [3] The match was the last of seven consecutive and eight total finals officiated by Major Francis Marindin of the Royal Engineers, a veteran of the Crimean War. [4] The match set the record for the highest scoring FA Cup Final, later equalled by the 1953 final. [5] Blackburn's six goals remain the record for the most by one team in an FA Cup final, equalled by Bury in 1903 and by Manchester City in 2019.

Match

Blackburn Rovers 6–1 The Wednesday
Kennington Oval
Attendance: 20,000
Referee: Major Francis Marindin
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Blackburn Rovers
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The Wednesday [6]
GK Flag of England.svg Johnny Horne
DF Flag of England.svg James Southworth
DF Flag of Scotland.svg John Forbes
MF Flag of England.svg John Barton
MF Flag of Scotland.svg Geordie Dewar
MF Flag of England.svg Jimmy Forrest
FW Flag of England.svg Joe Lofthouse
FW Flag of Scotland.svg Harry Campbell
FW Flag of England.svg Jack Southworth
FW Flag of England.svg Nat Walton
FW Flag of England.svg William Townley
GK Flag of England.svg Jim Smith
DF Flag of England.svg Haydn Morley (c)
DF Flag of England.svg Teddy Brayshaw
MF Flag of England.svg Jack Dungworth
MF Flag of England.svg Billy Betts
MF Flag of England.svg George Waller
FW Flag of England.svg Billy Ingram
FW Flag of England.svg Harry Woolhouse
FW Flag of England.svg Micky Bennett
FW Flag of England.svg Albert Mumford
FW Flag of England.svg Tom Cawley

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References

  1. "The Wednesday team for the final". Sheffield Independent: 8. 25 March 1890.
  2. "The English Association Challenge Cup". Sheffield Independent: 7. 31 March 1890.
  3. The Solicitor's Journal. The Journal. 1953. p. 406.
  4. Patrick Barclay (2014). The Life and Times of Herbert Chapman: The Story of One of Football's Most Influential Figures. Hachette UK. ISBN   978-0-297-86851-4.
  5. Ross, James M. (6 August 2020). "England FA Challenge Cup Finals". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  6. English FA Cup Finalists 1890 - 1899