Football League Group Cup

The Football League Group Cup was a short-lived football competition which first took place during the 1981–1982 season. For English clubs it was a replacement for the Anglo-Scottish Cup, which had been discontinued due to the withdrawal of Scottish League clubs. For the 1982–83 season it was renamed as the Football League Trophy.[1]

Football League Group Cup
A Football League Group Cup game between Reading (blue and white) and Oxford United (yellow and blue) at Reading's Elm Park in August 1981.
StatusCancelled
GenreSporting event
Date(s)Began in August
FrequencyAnnual
CountryUK
Inaugurated1981–1982 (1981–1982)
Most recent1982–1983 (1982–1983)

It is considered as the forerunner of the Associate Members' Cup (which later became renamed as the Football League Trophy, and has had various sponsored names), which commenced from the 1983–84 season,[1] although some sources regard the Football League Group Cup as the same as the later League Trophy tournaments.[2][3]

Format

In each season there were 32 participants, split into eight regional groups of four teams each, with three round-robin games played by each side. The eight group winners qualified for the quarter finals, and the knockout stages were played as a single leg, with the game going to extra time and penalties if necessary. The final was played on the home ground of one of the two teams.[4]

1981–82

Participants

The following 32 sides played in the competition, and these are sub-divided according to the League division they played in that season.[4]

The tournament was won by Grimsby Town, who defeated Wimbledon 3–2 in the final at Blundell Park[2] on Tuesday 6 April 1982.[4]

1982–83

Participants

The following 32 sides played in the competition, and these are sub-divided according to the League division they played in that season.[5]

  • Football League First Division: Norwich City, Watford
  • Football League Second Division: Crystal Palace, Grimsby Town, Shrewsbury Town
  • Football League Third Division: Bournemouth, Bradford City, Brentford, Chesterfield, Exeter City, Lincoln City, Millwall, Newport County, Orient, Oxford United, Reading, Sheffield United, Southend United (13 teams)
  • Football League Fourth Division: Aldershot, Bristol City, Chester, Colchester United, Halifax Town, Hartlepool United, Hull City, Mansfield Town, Northampton Town, Peterborough United, Scunthorpe United, Torquay United, Tranmere Rovers, Wimbledon (14)

Final

The tournament was won by Millwall, who defeated Lincoln City 3–2 in the final at Sincil Bank[2] on Wednesday 20 April 1983.[5]

Millwall line-ups

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

Millwall
No. Position Player
1 GK Paul Sansome
2 DF Keith Stevens
3 DF David Stride
4 MF Lawrie Madden
5 DF Sam Allardyce
6 DF Paul Roberts
7 MF Andy Massey
8 FW Dean Neal
9 FW David Martin
10 MF Paul Robinson
11 MF Alan McLeary
sub FW Teddy Sheringham
sub DF Nicky Coleman
sub FW Roger Wynter
sub MF John Neal
sub GK Tony Ashby

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.