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2008 Football League Cup final

2008 Football League Cup final

FieldValue
title2008 Football League Cup Final
imageLeague Cup Final 2008 Chelsea Spurs.jpg
image_size200
event[2007–08 Football League Cup](2007-08-football-league-cup)
team1Chelsea
team1score1
team2Tottenham Hotspur
team2score2
detailsAfter extra time
date24 February 2008
stadiumWembley Stadium
cityLondon
man_of_the_match1aJonathan Woodgate (Tottenham)
refereeMark Halsey (Lancashire)
attendance87,660
weatherPartly cloudy
13 °C
previous[2007](2007-football-league-cup-final)
next[2009](2009-football-league-cup-final)

13 °C The 2008 Football League Cup Final was a football match played on 24 February 2008. It was the first League Cup Final to be played at the new Wembley Stadium, and the first to be played in England since the old Wembley was demolished in 2000. The defending champions were Chelsea, who beat Arsenal in the 2007 Final at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium. The final was contested by Tottenham Hotspur, who beat Arsenal 6–2 on aggregate in the semi-final, and Chelsea, who beat Everton 3–1 on aggregate. Tottenham Hotspur defeated Chelsea 2–1, after extra time, winning their first trophy in nine years.

Chelsea took the lead in the 39th minute through a free kick from Didier Drogba. This goal made Drogba the first player to score in three League Cup Finals, having scored in 2005 and 2007. In the 68th minute, Tottenham were awarded a penalty after Wayne Bridge handled the ball; Dimitar Berbatov converted the spot-kick and equalised. Three minutes into extra time, Jonathan Woodgate headed a Jermaine Jenas free kick onto Petr Čech, who in turn pushed it straight back onto Woodgate's head to score the winning goal.

The win was important for Tottenham as not only did they end a 9-year trophy drought, but the win secured the club qualification for the following season's UEFA Cup, something they would not have achieved in the Premier League, as they finished 11th. This would be the last major trophy Tottenham would win for 17-years, until the club won the 2025 UEFA Europa League vs Manchester United. For Chelsea, it was the second of four competitions in which they would finish as runners-up that season, after they lost to Manchester United in the Community Shield and ended up finishing as runners-up to the same team in the Premier League and the UEFA Champions League. The two teams would meet again in the 2015 League Cup final, in which Chelsea beat Tottenham 2-0.

Road to Wembley

ChelseaRoundTottenhamOpponentScoreOpponentScore
Hull City (A)4–0Round 3Middlesbrough (H)2–0
Leicester City (H)4–3Round 4Blackpool (H)2–0
Liverpool (H)2–0Round 5Manchester City (A)2–0
Everton (H)2–1Semi-finalsArsenal (A)1–1
Everton (A)1–0Arsenal (H)5–1
Chelsea won 3–1 on aggregateTottenham Hotspur won 6–2 on aggregate

As Premier League teams involved in UEFA competitions, both Chelsea and Tottenham entered the League Cup in the third round. Tottenham received a home draw against Middlesbrough, while Chelsea were drawn away to Hull City. Chelsea won their tie 4–0; Scott Sinclair opened the scoring with his first goal for the club in the first half, while a brace from Salomon Kalou either side of another from Steve Sidwell completed the win. Meanwhile, second-half goals from Gareth Bale and Tom Huddlestone sent Tottenham through to the next round. Both teams were drawn at home in the fourth round; Chelsea would face Leicester City, while Tottenham would take on Blackpool. Chelsea had to come from behind twice to beat Leicester; Frank Lampard had given them a 2–1 half-time lead after Gareth McAuley's early goal for Leicester, but DJ Campbell and Carl Cort put the visitors in front with two goals in the space of five second-half minutes. Andriy Shevchenko equalised for Chelsea in the 87th minute, before Lampard completed his hat-trick – and the Chelsea victory – in the final minute of the match. For Tottenham, Robbie Keane opened the scoring in the first half against Blackpool; Pascal Chimbonda doubled the lead in the second half, and the away side were unable to find a response. Chelsea were drawn at home again for the quarter-finals, this time against Liverpool, while Tottenham faced an away tie against Manchester City. Tottenham took an early lead through Jermain Defoe in their quarter-final at the City of Manchester Stadium, but a red card for Didier Zokora in the 20th minute allowed City back into the game; however, Spurs secured victory and a place in the quarter-finals when Steed Malbranque scored in the 82nd minute. The next day, Chelsea had to wait almost an hour to open the scoring against Liverpool at Stamford Bridge, Frank Lampard scoring his fourth goal of the competition; Peter Crouch was sent off for the visitors a minute later, and Shevchenko confirmed the win in the final minute.

In the semi-finals, which would be played over two legs, Tottenham were drawn against their North London rivals Arsenal for the second season in a row, while Chelsea were paired with Everton, the city rivals of their opponents in the previous round. Tottenham were held in their first leg at the Emirates Stadium, thanks to a deflected goal by Theo Walcott; after Jermaine Jenas opened the scoring for Spurs in the first half, Walcott equalised when the ball ricocheted back off him in the midst of a challenge by Lee Young-pyo before looping over Tottenham goalkeeper Radek Černý. In the second leg at White Hart Lane, there was no doubt about the result, as Tottenham ran out 5–1 winners, their first victory over Arsenal in any competition since November 1999. Jenas was again on the scoresheet inside three minutes, before an own goal from Nicklas Bendtner gave Spurs a 2–0 half-time lead; Robbie Keane and Aaron Lennon doubled their advantage before Arsenal scored their first goal through Emmanuel Adebayor, but Malbranque scored in the final minute to secure a 6–2 aggregate victory. Chelsea took the advantage in the first leg of their semi-final at Stamford Bridge despite John Obi Mikel's red card thanks to an own goal by Joleon Lescott in second-half injury time; Shaun Wright-Phillips opened the scoring midway through the first half, but Yakubu equalised in the 64th minute, only for Lescott to head a cross from Wright-Phillips into his own net. In the second leg at Goodison Park, Joe Cole scored the only goal of the game in the 69th minute, giving Chelsea a 3–1 aggregate victory and sending them to their third League Cup final in the last four seasons.

Match

Details

Woodgate

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ISR Avram Grant
ESP Juande Ramos

|}

Statistics

The Tottenham players celebrate after having won their first trophy in nine years.
ChelseaTottenham
Total shots17
Shots on target11
Ball possession52%
Corner kicks10
Fouls committed17
Offsides3
Yellow cards2
Red cards0

Source: ESPN

Notes

  • Didier Drogba's goal made him the all-time leading scorer in League Cup Finals with four. He also became the first player to score in three League Cup finals and the first to score in three consecutive English domestic cup finals.

References

References

  1. Stevenson, Jonathan. (24 February 2008). "Tottenham 2-1 Chelsea". British Broadcasting Corporation.
  2. "Local Weather".
  3. (17 December 2009). "League Cup Fixtures". [[BBC Sport]].
  4. (25 February 2007). "Chelsea 2–1 Arsenal". [[BBC Sport]].
  5. Sanghera, Mandeep. (22 January 2008). "Tottenham 5–1 Arsenal". [[BBC Sport]].
  6. Chowdhury, Saj. (23 January 2008). "Everton 0–1 Chelsea". [[BBC Sport]].
  7. (18 September 2007). "Arsenal to host Newcastle in cup".
  8. Cheese, Caroline. (26 September 2007). "Hull 0-4 Chelsea".
  9. (26 September 2007). "Tottenham 2-0 Middlesbrough".
  10. (29 September 2007). "Coventry to meet West Ham in cup".
  11. (31 October 2007). "Chelsea 4-3 Leicester".
  12. (31 October 2007). "Tottenham 2-0 Blackpool".
  13. (3 November 2007). "Chelsea draw Reds in Carling Cup".
  14. (18 December 2007). "Man City 0-2 Tottenham".
  15. Sanghera, Mandeep. (19 December 2007). "Chelsea 2-0 Liverpool".
  16. (19 December 2007). "Arsenal & Spurs face cup showdown".
  17. Fletcher, Paul. (9 January 2008). "Arsenal 1-1 Tottenham".
  18. Sanghera, Mandeep. (22 January 2008). "Tottenham 5-1 Arsenal".
  19. Fletcher, Paul. (9 January 2008). "Chelsea 2-1 Everton".
  20. Chowdhury, Saj. (23 January 2008). "Everton 0-1 Chelsea".
  21. (29 January 2008). "Carling Cup officials announced". [[The Football League]].
  22. (26 February 2012). "Alan Hardaker Trophy Winners". The Football League.
  23. (24 February 2008). "Tottenham 2-1 Chelsea: Woody nods winner". ESPN Inc..
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