1896 FA Cup Final

1896 FA Cup Final
Event 1895–96 FA Cup
Date 18 April 1896
Venue Crystal Palace, London
Referee William Simpson
Attendance 48,836

The 1896 FA Cup Final was won by The Wednesday at the Crystal Palace, in a victory over Wolverhampton Wanderers.

Tournament format

Clubs competed for a new trophy, which remains the oldest surviving FA Cup trophy, although it was retired from use in 1910.[1]

The Final

The Wednesday players posing with the trophy

Fred Spiksley became the star of the show in this Cup Final, scoring the two goals that gave the Wednesday a 2–1 win. Within the first minute, a run by Harry Davis, the outside-right, set up Spiksley to slot home the first. David Black soon equalised for Wolves with a cunning hook close to the post. Spiksley however smashed a shot against the upright which bounced into the goal and then out again. The referee gave a goal. The score stayed the same till the final whistle to give Wednesday their first FA Cup win.

The Wolves goalkeeper Tennant had been injured during the buildup to the winning goal and was dazed as the ball crashed off his bar, bounced down and back out and did not realise a goal had been given. At the end of the game, he walked up to Jack Earp, the Wednesday captain and asked, "When's the replay?", to which he received the reply "There is no replay old man! We won by two goals to one as you will see when we take the medals!". "But how? for only one shot passed me!". Replied a confused Tennant.

Match details

The Wednesday 2–1 Wolverhampton Wanderers
Spiksley  1'  18' Black  8'
Crystal Palace, London
Attendance: 48,836
Referee: William Simpson
The Wednesday
Wolverhampton Wanderers [2]
GKEngland Jimmy Massey
DFEngland Jack Earp (c)
DFEngland Ambrose Langley
MFEngland Harry Brandon
MFEngland Tommy Crawshaw
MFScotland Bob Petrie
FWScotland Archie Brash
FWScotland Alec Brady
FWScotland Laurie Bell
FREngland Harry Davis
FLEngland Fred Spiksley
Manager:
England Arthur Dickinson
GKEngland Billy Tennant
DFEngland Dickie Baugh (c)
DFScotland Tommy Dunn
MDEngland Billy Owen
MDEngland Billy Malpass
MDEngland Hill Griffiths
FWEngland Jack Tonks
FWEngland Charlie Henderson
FWEngland Billy Beats
FREngland Harry Wood
FLScotland David Black
Manager:
England Jack Addenbrooke

Route to the Final

The Wednesday

Round 1: Southampton St. Mary's 2–3 The Wednesday

Round 2: The Wednesday 2–1 Sunderland

Quarter-final: The Wednesday 4–0 Everton

Semi-final: The Wednesday 1–1 Bolton Wanderers

(at Goodison Park)
  • Replay: Bolton Wanderers 1–3 The Wednesday
(at the Town Ground, Nottingham)

Wolverhampton Wanderers

Round 1: Notts County 2–2 Wolverhampton Wanderers

  • Replay: Wolverhampton Wanderers 4–3 Notts County

Round 2: Wolverhampton Wanderers 2–0 Liverpool

Quarter-final: Wolverhampton Wanderers 3–0 Stoke City

Semi-final: Wolverhampton Wanderers 2–1 Derby County

(at Villa Park)

References

  1. "Birmingham City Supremo, David Gold, Delivers Oldest Surviving FA Cup To The National Football Museum". the National Football Museum. Archived from the original on 21 June 2006. Retrieved 2006-08-09.
  2. FA Cup Final kits, 1890–1899
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