1952 FA Cup Final

1952 FA Cup Final
Event 1951–52 FA Cup
Date 3 May 1952
Venue Wembley Stadium, London
Referee Arthur Ellis (Halifax)
Attendance 100,000

The 1952 FA Cup Final was the final match of the 1951–52 staging of the Football Association Challenge Cup (better known as the FA Cup), English football's main cup competition. The match was contested by Newcastle United and Arsenal at Wembley Stadium in London on Saturday 3 May 1952. It was hitherto only the second time that an FA Cup Final had been played in the month of May; 1937 being the first. Newcastle were appearing in their 11th final in total and their second successive final, while it was Arsenal's sixth final and their second in three years.

Match facts

Newcastle United 1–0 Arsenal
G. Robledo  84' (Report)
Attendance: 100,000
Referee: Arthur Ellis
Newcastle United
Arsenal
GK1Scotland Ronnie Simpson
RB2England Bobby Cowell
LB3Northern Ireland Alf McMichael
RH4England Joe Harvey (c)
CH5Scotland Frank Brennan
LH6Chile Ted Robledo
OR7England Tommy Walker
IR8Wales Billy Foulkes
CF9England Jackie Milburn
IL10Chile George Robledo
OL11Scotland Bobby Mitchell
Manager:
England Stan Seymour
GK1England George Swindin
RB2Wales Wally Barnes
LB3England Lionel Smith
RH4Scotland Alex Forbes
CH5Wales Ray Daniel
LH6England Joe Mercer (c)
OR7England Freddie Cox
IR8Scotland Jimmy Logie
CF9England Cliff Holton
IL10England Doug Lishman
OL11England Don Roper
Manager:
England Tom Whittaker

Match summary

Arsenal played Newcastle United with several recovering players rushed back into the first team; Walley Barnes was taken off injured with a twisted knee after 35 minutes (no substitutes were allowed then), and ten-man Arsenal suffered further injuries to Holton, Roper and Daniel, so that by the end of the match they had only seven fit players on the pitch;[1] with the numerical advantage in their favour, Newcastle won 1–0 with a goal from George Robledo. The goal scored by Robledo was drawn by a young John Lennon, who included it in the artwork of his album Walls and Bridges in 1974.[2]

References

  1. Soar & Tyler (2005). The Official Illustrated History of Arsenal. p. 99.
  2. Molina, Paula (4 April 2016). "Jorge Robledo, el futbolista chileno inmortalizado en un disco de John Lennon". BBC Mundo (in Spanish). Retrieved 25 April 2017.
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