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1900–01 FA Cup

1900–01 FA Cup

FieldValue
title1900–01 FA Cup
countryEngland
Wales
defending_championsBury
winnersTottenham Hotspur
(1st title)
secondSheffield United
scoring_leaderSandy Brown (15 goals)
prev_season[1899–1900](1899-1900-fa-cup)
next_season[1901–02](1901-02-fa-cup)

Wales (1st title)

The 1900–01 FA Cup was the 30th season of the world's oldest association football competition, the Football Association Challenge Cup (more usually known as the FA Cup). The cup was won by Tottenham Hotspur of the Southern League, who defeated Sheffield United 3–1 in a replay after a 2–2 draw in the first game. This is the only occasion since the formation of The Football League in 1888 that a club from outside the League has won the cup.

Matches were scheduled to be played at the stadium of the team named first on the date specified for each round, which was always a Saturday. If scores were level after 90 minutes had been played, a replay would take place at the stadium of the second-named team later the same week. If the replayed match was drawn further replays would be held at neutral venues until a winner was determined. If scores were level after 90 minutes had been played in a replay, a 30-minute period of extra time would be played.

Calendar

The format of the FA Cup for the season had a preliminary round, five qualifying rounds, an intermediate round, three proper rounds, and the semi-finals and final.

RoundDate
Preliminary roundSaturday 22 September 1900
First round qualifyingSaturday 6 October 1900
Second round qualifyingSaturday 20 October 1900
Third round qualifyingSaturday 3 November 1900
Fourth round qualifyingSaturday 17 November 1900
Fifth round qualifyingSaturday 8 December 1900
Intermediate RoundSaturday 5 January 1901
First round properSaturday 9 February 1901
Second round properSaturday 23 February 1901
Third round properSaturday 23 March 1901
Semi-finalsSaturday 6 April 1901
FinalSaturday 20 April 1901

Intermediate round

Due to the increasing number of non-league clubs entering the competition at the turn of the 20th century, the Football Association introduced an Intermediate Round to the format to reduce the number of Football League teams commencing in the qualifying rounds.

The Intermediate Round was part of the competition proper and featured ten ties played between the winners from the fifth qualifying round, and ten teams given byes. Liverpool and Stoke from the First Division and Burslem Port Vale, Glossop, Grimsby Town, Newton Heath, New Brighton Tower and Woolwich Arsenal from the Second Division received byes to this round, as did Southern League teams Portsmouth and Bristol City.

The other Second Division sides had to gain entry to this round through the earlier qualifying rounds. Barnsley, Blackpool, Burton Swifts, Chesterfield, Gainsborough Trinity, Lincoln City, Middlesbrough, Stockport County and Walsall were all entered in the third qualifying round. Of these, only Chesterfield, Middlesbrough and Walsall reached the Intermediate Round. They were joined by non-league sides Darwen, Crewe Alexandra, Kettering, Bristol Rovers, Reading, Luton Town and West Ham United. Bristol Rovers and future Cup champions West Ham United were appearing in the competition proper for the first time.

The ten matches were played on 5 January 1901. The Reading v Bristol City tie went to a replay which was played in the following midweek. This rematch again resulted in a draw, so a second replay was played the following week at a neutral venue (Swindon Town's County Ground).

Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamDate
1**Chesterfield**3–0Walsall5 January 1901
2Darwen0–2**Woolwich Arsenal**5 January 1901
3**Kettering**1–0Crewe Alexandra5 January 1901
4**Stoke**1–0Glossop5 January 1901
5Reading1–1Bristol City5 January 1901
*Replay**Bristol City**0–0**Reading*9 January 1901
*Replay****Reading****2–1**Bristol City*14 January 1901
6Grimsby Town0–1**Middlesbrough**5 January 1901
7Burslem Port Vale1–3**New Brighton Tower**5 January 1901
8Luton Town1–2**Bristol Rovers**5 January 1901
9**Newton Heath**3–0Portsmouth5 January 1901
10West Ham United0–1**Liverpool**5 January 1901

First round proper

The first round proper contained sixteen ties between 32 teams. The remaining 16 of 18 Football League First Division sides were given a bye to this round, as were Small Heath, Burnley and Leicester Fosse of the Second Division and Southern League First Division clubs Southampton, Millwall Athletic and Tottenham Hotspur. They joined the ten teams who won in the intermediate round.

The matches were played on Saturday 9 February 1901. Four matches were drawn, with the replays taking place in the following midweek.

Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamDate
1Kettering1–1Chesterfield9 February 1901
*Replay**Chesterfield**1–2****Kettering***13 February 1901
2Southampton1–3**Everton**9 February 1901
3Stoke1–1Small Heath9 February 1901
*Replay****Small Heath****2–1**Stoke*13 February 1901
4**Reading**2–0Bristol Rovers9 February 1901
5**Notts County**2–0Liverpool9 February 1901
6**Nottingham Forest**5–1Leicester Fosse9 February 1901
7**Aston Villa**5–0Millwall Athletic9 February 1901
8The Wednesday0–1**Bury**9 February 1901
9**Bolton Wanderers**1–0Derby County9 February 1901
10**Wolverhampton Wanderers**5–1New Brighton Tower9 February 1901
11**Middlesbrough**3–1Newcastle United9 February 1901
12**West Bromwich Albion**1–0Manchester City9 February 1901
13Sunderland1–2**Sheffield United**9 February 1901
14Newton Heath0–0Burnley9 February 1901
*Replay****Burnley****7–1**Newton Heath*13 February 1901
15**Woolwich Arsenal**2–0Blackburn Rovers9 February 1901
16Tottenham Hotspur1–1Preston North End9 February 1901
*Replay**Preston North End**2–4****Tottenham Hotspur***13 February 1901

Second round proper

The eight Second Round matches were scheduled for Saturday 23 February 1901. There was one replay, between Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest, played in the following midweek.

Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamDate
1Notts County2–3**Wolverhampton Wanderers**23 February 1901
2Aston Villa0–0Nottingham Forest23 February 1901
*Replay**Nottingham Forest**1–3****Aston Villa***27 February 1901
3Bolton Wanderers0–1**Reading**23 February 1901
4**Middlesbrough**5–0Kettering23 February 1901
5**Small Heath**1–0Burnley23 February 1901
6**Sheffield United**2–0Everton23 February 1901
7Woolwich Arsenal0–1**West Bromwich Albion**23 February 1901
8**Tottenham Hotspur**2–1Bury23 February 1901

Third round proper

The four Third Round matches were scheduled for Saturday, 23 March 1901. Two replays were needed, played in the following midweek.

Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamDate
1Reading1–1Tottenham Hotspur23 March 1901
*Replay****Tottenham Hotspur****3–0**Reading*27 March 1901
2Wolverhampton Wanderers0–4**Sheffield United**23 March 1901
3Middlesbrough0–1**West Bromwich Albion**23 March 1901
4Small Heath0–0Aston Villa23 March 1901
*Replay****Aston Villa****1–0**Small Heath*27 March 1901

Semi-finals

The semi-final matches were both intended to be played on Saturday 6 April 1901. Sheffield United and Aston Villa played on this date, but drew their tie and had to replay it five days later; this next match finished in a 3–0 win for United. The other game, Tottenham Hotspur against West Bromwich Albion, was delayed until Monday 8 April and finished in a convincing win for Spurs.

;Replay


Final

Main article: 1901 FA Cup Final

Sandy Brown scored for Tottenham in the replay

The final took place on Saturday 20 April 1901 at Crystal Palace. Over 110,000 supporters attended the match. Fred Priest opened the scoring for Sheffield United after about 20 minutes. Sandy Brown headed an equalising goal for Spurs shortly afterwards and half time arrived with the score 1–1. Brown put Spurs ahead early in the second half, but, not to be denied, Sheffield United pressed strongly, and Walter Bennett headed an equaliser for the draw.

In the replay, Spurs became the first and only "non- (Football) league" side to win the FA Cup since the creation of the Football League when they beat United 3–1 before an attendance of 20,470 at Burnden Park, Bolton. John Cameron opened the scoring before centre forward Sandy Brown became the first player to score in every round. He netted both goals in the final as well as one in the replay for a total of 15 in the season's competition.

Match details

15:30 GMT Bennett

{{Football kitpattern_la =pattern_b =pattern_ra =pattern_so =leftarm = FFFFFFbody = FFFFFFrightarm = FFFFFFshorts = 000077socks = 000077title = Tottenham Hotspur{{Football kitpattern_la = _white_stripespattern_b = _whitestripespattern_ra = _white_stripespattern_so =leftarm = FF0000body = FF0000rightarm = FF0000shorts = 003377socks = 003377url=http://www.historicalkits.co.uk/English_Football_League/FA_Cup_Finals/1900-1909.htmltitle=FA Cup Final kits, 1900-1909access-date=2 December 2008archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080925084712/http://www.historicalkits.co.uk/English_Football_League/FA_Cup_Finals/1900-1909.htmlarchive-date=25 September 2008url-status=dead}}

Replay

15:00 GMT Smith
Brown

References

;General

References

  1. Soar, Phil. (1995). "Tottenham Hotspur The Official Illustrated History 1882–1995". Hamlyn.
  2. James M. Ross. (6 June 2008). "England FA Challenge Cup Finals". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
  3. Christopher Lyles. (5 January 2008). "FA Cup by numbers". The Daily Telegraph.
  4. Brown, Tony. (1994). "The Ultimate F.A. Cup Statistics Book". Association of Football Statisticians.
  5. [http://www.fa-cupfinals.co.uk/1901.html Match report at fa-cupfinals.co.uk] {{webarchive. link. (27 December 2007)
  6. "Sporting Chronicle - 1901 FA Cup Final".
  7. "FA Cup Final kits, 1900-1909".
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