1930 FA Cup Final

1930 FA Cup Final
Event 1929–30 FA Cup
Date 26 April 1930
Venue Wembley Stadium, Middlesex
Referee T. Crew (Leicester)
Attendance 92,499

The 1930 FA Cup Final was contested by Arsenal and Huddersfield Town at Wembley Stadium. Arsenal won 2–0, with goals from Alex James and Jack Lambert. As a result, Arsenal won their first FA Cup after a defeat in their FA Cup final debut in 1927.

Background

The 1930 Final was the first Cup Final in which both teams entered the pitch side-by-side, in honour of Arsenal manager Herbert Chapman, who had also managed Huddersfield in the 1920s.[1]

Arsenal came into the game following a 6–6 draw at Leicester City, the highest-scoring draw in English top-flight history, five days prior. Dave Halliday, who scored four of Arsenal's goals that game, was omitted from the Cup Final squad in favour of Jack Lambert.[2]

The 1930 FA Cup Final is remembered for the Graf Zeppelin passing over the stadium at the start of the second half. The Zeppelin was, at the time, the largest airship ever and was around 776 ft in length.[3][1]

After first being broadcast on BBC Radio in 1928, the 1930 final was the first for which a fee was paid for the rights.[4]

Arsenal's Bill Seddon, who died in January 1993 at the age of 91, was the last surviving player to appear in the game.

Match details

Arsenal 2–0 Huddersfield Town
James  16'
Lambert  88'
(Report)
Attendance: 92,499
Referee: T. Crew (Leicester)
Arsenal
Huddersfield Town
GK1England Charlie Preedy
RB2England Tom Parker (c)
LB3England Eddie Hapgood
RH4England Alf Baker
CB5England Bill Seddon
LH6Wales Bob John
OR7England Joe Hulme
IR8England David Jack
CF9England Jack Lambert
IL10Scotland Alex James
OL11England Cliff Bastin
Manager:
England Herbert Chapman
GK1England Hugh Turner
RB2England Roy Goodall
LB3England Bon Spence
RH4England Jimmy Naylor
CH5England Tom Wilson (c)
LH6England Austen Campbell
OR7Scotland Alex Jackson
IR8England Bob Kelly
CF9England Harry Davies
IL10England Harry Raw
OL11England Billy Smith
Manager:
England Clem Stephenson

Match rules

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Replay if scores still level.

Road to Wembley

References

  1. 1 2 Scott Murray & Rowan Walker (2008). Day of the Match: A History of Football in 365 Days. Pan Macmillan. p. 121. ISBN 0-752-22678-9.
  2. Tony Matthews (2005). Football Oddities. The History Press. ISBN 0-752-49376-0.
  3. Steve Tongue (2016). Turf Wars: A History of London Football. Pitch Publishing. ISBN 1-785-31248-0.
  4. Stefan Szymanski, Andrew S. Zimbalist (2006). National Pastime: How Americans Play Baseball and the Rest of the World Plays Soccer. Brookings Institution Press. p. 154. ISBN 0-815-78259-4.
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