2009–10 FA Cup explained

FA Cup
Year:2009–10
Country:England
Wales
Num Teams:762
Champions:Chelsea F.C.
Count:6
Runner-Up:Portsmouth
Top Goal Scorer:John Carew (6 goals)
Prevseason:2008–09
Nextseason:2010–11

The 2009–10 FA Cup (known as The FA Cup sponsored by E.ON for sponsorship reasons) was the 129th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition; the FA Cup. As in the previous year, 762 clubs were accepted for the competition.[1] One club, Newcastle Blue Star, folded before the fixtures were released. As they were scheduled to enter the competition in the first round qualifying, their opponents in this round received a walkover.

The competition commenced on 15 August 2009 with the Extra preliminary round and concluded on 15 May 2010 with the Final, held at Wembley Stadium. The final was contested by 2009 winners Chelsea and 2008 winners Portsmouth. Originally, the winners were to qualify for the play-off round of the 2010–11 UEFA Europa League. However, as Chelsea won the 2009–10 Premier League (and did not need the FA Cup winners' berth), and Portsmouth failed to apply for a UEFA licence for the 2010–11 season in time (making them ineligible to compete in UEFA competitions), the berth was given to Liverpool, the seventh-placed team in the Premier League. Chelsea won 1–0 in the final to retain the trophy.

Teams

Round Clubs
remaining
Clubs
involved
Winners from
previous round
New entries
this round
Leagues entering at this round
762 406 none 406 Levels 9 and 10 in football league pyramid
559 334 203 131 Northern Premier League Division One North
Northern Premier League Division One South
Southern Football League Division One Midlands
Southern Football League Division One South & West
Isthmian League Division One North
Isthmian League Division One South
392 232 167 65 Northern Premier League Premier Division
Southern Football League Premier Division
Isthmian League Premier Division
Second round qualifying276 160 116 44 Conference North
Conference South
Third round qualifying196 80 80 none none
Fourth round qualifying156 64 40 24 Conference National
First round proper124 80 32 48 Football League One
Football League Two
Second round proper84 40 40 none none
64 64 20 44 Premier League
Football League Championship
32 32 32 none none
16 16 16 none none
8 8 8 none none
4 4 4 none none
2 2 2 none none

Calendar

The calendar for the 2009–10 FA Cup, as announced by The Football Association:[2]

Round Main date Number of fixtures width=100 Clubs !New entries this round Prize money[3] Player of the Round
15 August 2009 203 762 → 559 406: 357th–762nd £750
29 August 2009 167 559 → 392 131: 226th–356th £1,500
12 September 2009 116 392 → 276 65: 161st–225th £3,000 Bobby Traynor (Kingstonian)[4]
26 September 2009 80 276 → 196 44: 117th–160th £4,500 Mark Danks (Northwich Victoria)[5]
10 October 2009 40 196 → 156 none £7,500 Adam Webster (Hinckley United)[6]
24 October 2009 32 156 → 124 24: 93rd–116th £12,500 Danny Kedwell (AFC Wimbledon)[7]
7 November 2009 40 124 → 84 48: 45th–92nd £18,000 Richard Brodie (York City)[8]
28 November 2009 20 84 → 64 none £27,000 Leon Legge (Brentford)[9]
2 January 2010 32 64 → 32 44: 1st–44th £67,500 Jermaine Beckford (Leeds United)[10]
23 January 2010 16 32 → 16 none £90,000 Jermaine Beckford (Leeds United)[11]
13 February 2010 8 16 → 8 none £180,000 Gareth Bale (Tottenham Hotspur)[12]
6 March 2010 4 8 → 4 none £360,000 Frédéric Piquionne (Portsmouth)[13]
10–11 April 2010 2 4 → 2 none Winners: £900,000
Losers: £450,000
Didier Drogba (Chelsea)[14]
15 May 2010 1 2 → 1 none Winner: £1,800,000
Loser: £900,000

Qualifying rounds

See main article: 2009–10 FA Cup qualifying rounds.

All of the teams that entered the competition, but were not members of the Premier League or The Football League, had to compete in the qualifying rounds.

First round proper

Teams from Leagues One and Two entered at this stage, along with the winners from the Fourth round qualifying. The draw was made on 25 October 2009 with ties played in the week beginning 6 November 2009.

Lowestoft Town and Paulton Rovers of the eighth tier were the lowest ranked teams left in the competition at this stage, but both failed to make it through to the second round.

Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamAttendance
1Gillingham (3)3–0Southend United (3)4,605
2Grimsby Town (4)0–2Bath City (6)2,103
3Gateshead (5)2–2Brentford (3)1,150
replayBrentford (3)5–2Gateshead (5)1,960
4Chesterfield (4)1–3AFC Bournemouth (4)3,277
5AFC Telford United (6)1–3Lincoln City (4)2,809
6Stockport County (3)5–0Tooting & Mitcham United (7)3,076
7Burton Albion (4)3–2Oxford City (7)2,207
8Barrow (5)2–1Eastleigh (6)1,655
9Oldham Athletic (3)0–2Leeds United (3)5,552
10Cambridge United (5)4–0Ilkeston Town (6)2,395
11York City (5)3–2Crewe Alexandra (4)3,070
12Wycombe Wanderers (3)4–4Brighton & Hove Albion (3)2,749
replayBrighton & Hove Albion (3)2–0Wycombe Wanderers (3)3,383
13Hereford United (4)2–0Sutton United (7)1,713
14Nuneaton Town (7)0–4Exeter City (3)2,452
15Bristol Rovers (3)2–3Southampton (3)6,646
16Carlisle United (3)2–2Morecambe (4)4,181
replayMorecambe (4)0–1Carlisle United (3)3,307
17Forest Green Rovers (5)1–1Mansfield Town (5)1,149
replayMansfield Town (5)1–2Forest Green Rovers (5)2,496
18Oxford United (5)1–0Yeovil Town (3)6,144
19Paulton Rovers (8)0–7Norwich City (3)2,070
20Swindon Town (3)1–0Woking (6)4,805
Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamAttendance
21Port Vale (4)1–1Stevenage Borough (5)3,999
replayStevenage Borough (5)0–1Port Vale (4)2,894
22Luton Town (5)3–3Rochdale (4)3,167
replayRochdale (4)0–2Luton Town (5)1,982
23Bromley (6)0–4Colchester United (3)4,242
24Accrington Stanley (4)2–1Salisbury City (5)1,379
25Millwall (3)4–1AFC Wimbledon (5)9,453
26Stourbridge (7)0–1Walsall (3)2,014
27Shrewsbury Town (4)0–1Staines Town (6)3,359
28Wealdstone (7)2–3Rotherham United (4)1,638
29Torquay United (4)3–1Cheltenham Town (4)2,370
30Barnet (4)3–1Darlington (4)1,654
31Notts County (4)2–1Bradford City (4)4,213
32Huddersfield Town (3)6–1Dagenham & Redbridge (4)5,858
33Milton Keynes Dons (3)1–0Macclesfield Town (4)4,868
34Rushden & Diamonds (5)3–1Hinckley United (6)1,540
35Northwich Victoria (6)1–0Charlton Athletic (3)2,153
36Aldershot Town (4)2–0Bury (4)2,519
37Wrexham (5)1–0Lowestoft Town (8)2,402
38Hartlepool United (3)0–1Kettering Town (5)2,645
39Tranmere Rovers (3)1–1Leyton Orient (3)3,180
replayLeyton Orient (3)0–1Tranmere Rovers (3)1,518
40Northampton Town (4)2–1Fleetwood Town (6)3,077

Second round proper

The matches took place on 28 and 29 November 2009 and involved the 40 winning teams from the previous round.

Bath City and Staines Town from the Conference South, and Northwich Victoria from the Conference North (6th tier) were the lowest ranked teams left at this stage, but none made it through to the third round.

Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamAttendance
1Northwich Victoria (6)1–3Lincoln City (4)3,544
2Northampton Town (4)2–3Southampton (3)4,858
3Hereford United (4)0–1Colchester United (3)2,225
4Tranmere Rovers (3)0–0Aldershot Town (4)3,742
replayAldershot Town (4)1–2Tranmere Rovers (3)4,060
5Kettering Town (5)1–1Leeds United (3)4,837
replayLeeds United (3)5–1Kettering Town (5)10,670
6Gillingham (3)1–0Burton Albion (4)4,996
7Wrexham (5)0–1Swindon Town (3)3,011
8Brighton & Hove Albion (3)3–2Rushden & Diamonds (5)3,638
9Rotherham United (4)2–2Luton Town (5)3,210
replayLuton Town (5)3–0Rotherham United (4)2,518
10Milton Keynes Dons (3)4–3Exeter City (3)4,867
Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamAttendance
11Brentford (3)1–0Walsall (3)2,611
12Carlisle United (3)3–1Norwich City (3)3,946
13Accrington Stanley (4)2–2Barnet (4)1,501
replayBarnet (4)0–1Accrington Stanley (4)1,288
14Oxford United (5)1–1Barrow (5)6,082
replayBarrow (5)3–1Oxford United (5)2,754
15AFC Bournemouth (4)1–2Notts County (4)6,082
16Stockport County (3)0–4Torquay United (4)1,690
17Cambridge United (5)1–2York City (5)3,505
18Bath City (6)1–2Forest Green Rovers (5)3,325
19Port Vale (4)0–1Huddersfield Town (3)5,311
20Staines Town (6)1–1Millwall (3)2,753
replayMillwall (3)4–0Staines Town (6)3,452

† – After extra time

Third round proper

The draw was held on Sunday 29 November 2009 at Wembley Stadium. Premier League and Football League Championship teams entered at this stage, joining the winners from the previous round and completing the entrants. The majority of fixtures took place on 2 and 3 January 2010, with snow postponing several matches until mid-January.

Barrow, Forest Green Rovers, Luton Town and York City from the Conference National (5th tier) were the only non-league teams left at this stage, but none made it through to the fourth round.

Manchester United were knocked out in the third round for the first time since they lost to AFC Bournemouth in 1984, when they lost to third-tier rivals Leeds United. It was also Manchester United's first defeat to a lower league side since defeat at Bournemouth. They were joined by rivals and fellow 'Big Four' club Liverpool, who lost at home to second-flight Reading in a replay.

Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamAttendance
1Tottenham Hotspur (1)4–0Peterborough United (2)35,862
2Brentford (3)0–1Doncaster Rovers (2)2,883
3Middlesbrough (2)0–1Manchester City (1)12,474
4Stoke City (1)3–1York City (5)15,586
5Notts County (4)2–1Forest Green Rovers (5)4,389
6Huddersfield Town (3)0–2West Bromwich Albion (2)13,472
7Sheffield United (2)1–1Queens Park Rangers (2)11,461
replayQueens Park Rangers (2)2–3Sheffield United (2)5,780
8Milton Keynes Dons (3)1–2Burnley (1)11,816
9Chelsea (1)5–0Watford (2)40,912
10Nottingham Forest (2)0–0Birmingham City (1)20,975
replayBirmingham City (1)1–0Nottingham Forest (2)9,399
11Preston North End (2)7–0Colchester United (3)7,621
12West Ham United (1)1–2Arsenal (1)25,549
13Aston Villa (1)3–1Blackburn Rovers (1)25,453
14Portsmouth (1)1–1Coventry City (2)11,214
replayCoventry City (2)1–2Portsmouth (1)7,097
15Sunderland (1)3–0Barrow (5)25,190
16Wigan Athletic (1)4–1Hull City (1)5,335
17Everton (1)3–1Carlisle United (3)31,196
Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamAttendance
18Sheffield Wednesday (2)1–2Crystal Palace (2)8,690
19Tranmere Rovers (3)0–1Wolverhampton Wanderers (1)7,476
20Blackpool (2)1–2Ipswich Town (2)7,332
21Fulham (1)1–0Swindon Town (3)19,623
22Torquay United (4)0–1Brighton & Hove Albion (3)4,028
23Scunthorpe United (2)1–0Barnsley (2)5,457
24Southampton (3)1–0Luton Town (5)18,786
25Bristol City (2)1–1Cardiff City (2)7,289
replayCardiff City (2)1–0Bristol City (2)6,731
26Reading (2)1–1Liverpool (1)23,656
replayLiverpool (1)1–2Reading (2)31,063
27Millwall (3)1–1Derby County (2)10,531
replayDerby County (2)1–1Millwall (3)7,183
Derby County won 5 – 3 on penalties
28Plymouth Argyle (2)0–0Newcastle United (2)16,451
replayNewcastle United (2)3–0Plymouth Argyle (2)15,805
29Leicester City (2)2–1Swansea City (2)12,307
30Bolton Wanderers (1)4–0Lincoln City (4)11,193
31Accrington Stanley (4)1–0Gillingham (3)1,322
32Manchester United (1) 0–1Leeds United (3)74,526

† – After extra time

Fourth round proper

The draw was held on Sunday 3 January 2010 at Wembley Stadium. Fixtures took place over the weekend of 23 and 24 January 2010.[15]

Accrington Stanley and Notts County from League Two (4th tier) were the lowest ranked teams left at this stage; Accrington Stanley did not proceed further, whilst Notts County defeated Wigan Athletic in a replay at the DW Stadium.

Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamAttendance
1Southampton (3)2–1Ipswich Town (2)20,446
2Reading (2)1–0Burnley (1)12,910
3Derby County (2)1–0Doncaster Rovers (2)11,316
4Cardiff City (2)4–2Leicester City (2)10,961
5Stoke City (1)3–1Arsenal (1)19,735
6Notts County (4)2–2Wigan Athletic (1)9,073
replayWigan Athletic (1)0–2Notts County (4)5,519
7Scunthorpe United (2)2–4Manchester City (1)8,861
8West Bromwich Albion (2)4–2Newcastle United (2)16,102
9Everton (1)1–2Birmingham City (1)30,875
10Accrington Stanley (4)1–3Fulham (1)3,712
11Bolton Wanderers (1)2–0Sheffield United (2)14,572
12Portsmouth (1)2–1Sunderland (1)10,315
13Preston North End (2)0–2Chelsea (1)23,119
14Aston Villa (1)3–2Brighton & Hove Albion (3)39,725
15Wolverhampton Wanderers (1)2–2Crystal Palace (2)14,449
replayCrystal Palace (2)3–1Wolverhampton Wanderers (1)10,282
16Tottenham Hotspur (1)2–2Leeds United (3)35,750
replayLeeds United (3)1–3Tottenham Hotspur (1)37,704

Fifth round proper

The draw was conducted by Geoff Thomas and Stephanie Moore MBE on Sunday 24 January 2010 at Wembley Stadium. Fixtures took place over the weekend of 13 and 14 February 2010.[16] Notts County from the Football League Two (4th tier) were the lowest-ranked team left at this stage, but they went out 4–0 to Premier League side Fulham.

Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamAttendance
1Crystal Palace (2)2–2Aston Villa (1)20,486
replayAston Villa (1)3–1Crystal Palace (2)31,874
2Manchester City (1)1–1Stoke City (1)28,019
replayStoke City (1)3–1Manchester City (1)21,813
3Derby County (2)1–2Birmingham City (1)21,043
4Bolton Wanderers (1)1–1Tottenham Hotspur (1)13,596
replayTottenham Hotspur (1)4–0Bolton Wanderers (1)31,436
5Chelsea (1)4–1Cardiff City (2)40,827
6Fulham (1)4–0Notts County (4)16,132
7Reading (2)2–2West Bromwich Albion (2)18,008
replayWest Bromwich Albion (2)2–3Reading (2)13,985
8Southampton (3)1–4Portsmouth (1)31,385

† – After extra time

Sixth round proper

The draw was conducted by former England striker Luther Blissett and TV presenter Tim Lovejoy on 14 February 2010 at Football Association headquarters at Wembley Stadium. Fixtures took place over the weekend of 6 and 7 March 2010.[17] Reading from the Championship (2nd tier) were the lowest ranked team left at this stage.

Semi-finals

The draw was conducted by David Ginola and Jason Cundy at Wembley Stadium on Sunday, 7 March 2010.[18] Both matches took place at Wembley Stadium over the weekend of 10 and 11 April.[19]

Final

See main article: 2010 FA Cup final. The final was played on 15 May 2010 at Wembley Stadium, London

Top scorers

[20]

RankPlayerClubGoals
1 John CarewAston Villa6
2 Jermaine BeckfordLeeds United5
Jermain DefoeTottenham Hotspur
4 Ricardo FullerStoke City4
Chris MartinNorwich City
Roman PavlyuchenkoTottenham Hotspur
Daniel SturridgeChelsea

Media coverage

In the United Kingdom, ITV were the sole network broadcasters for the season as subscription broadcasters Setanta Sports entered administration and ceased operations before the start of the season. S4C broadcast in Wales, The Football Association streamed select games live on its website for free.

The matches shown live on ITV were:

Paulton Rovers 0–7 Norwich City (R1)

Northwich Victoria 1–0 Charlton Athletic (R1)

Rochdale 0–2 Luton Town (R1 Replay)

Northwich Victoria 1–3 Lincoln City (R2)

Kettering Town 1–1 Leeds United (R2)

Leeds United 5–1 Kettering Town (R2 Replay)

Reading 1–1 Liverpool (R3)

Manchester United 0–1 Leeds United (R3)

West Ham United 1–2 Arsenal (R3)

Coventry City 1–2 Portsmouth (R3 Replay)

Liverpool 1–2 Reading (R3 Replay)

Preston North End 0–2 Chelsea (R4)

Tottenham Hotspur 2–2 Leeds United (R4)

Stoke City 3–1 Arsenal (R4)

Scunthorpe United 2–4 Manchester City (R4)

Crystal Palace 3–1 Wolverhampton Wanderers (R4 Replay)

Leeds United 1–3 Tottenham Hotspur (R4 Replay)

Southampton 1–4 Portsmouth (R5)

Manchester City 1–1 Stoke City (R5)

Bolton Wanderers 1–1 Tottenham Hotspur (R5)

Crystal Palace 2–2 Aston Villa (R5)

Stoke City 3–1 Manchester City (R5 Replay)

Portsmouth 2–0 Birmingham City (QF)

Fulham 0–0 Tottenham Hotspur (QF)

Reading 2–4 Aston Villa (QF)

Chelsea 2–0 Stoke City (QF)

Tottenham Hotspur 3–1 Fulham (QF Replay)

Aston Villa 0–3 Chelsea (SF)

Tottenham Hotspur 0–2 Portsmouth (SF)

Chelsea 1–0 Portsmouth (Final)

The matches shown live on S4C were:

Bristol City 1–1 Cardiff City (R3)

Cardiff City 1–0 Bristol City (R3 Replay)

Chelsea 4–1 Cardiff City (R5)

The matches shown live on the website of The Football Association were:

Oldham Athletic 0–2 Leeds United (R1)

Millwall 4–1 AFC Wimbledon (R1)

Stevenage 0–1 Port Vale (R1 Replay)

Carlisle United 3–1 Norwich City (R2)

Millwall 4–0 Staines Town (R2 Replay)

Tranmere Rovers 0–1 Wolverhampton Wanderers (R3)

Bristol City 1–1 Cardiff City (R3)

Reading 1–0 Burnley (R4)

Chelsea 4–1 Cardiff City (R5)

Tottenham Hotspur 4–0 Bolton Wanderers (R5 Replay)

International broadcasters

CountryBroadcaster
Tring Sport
Prime
Setanta Sports
France Télévisions
SKY Italia

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: FA Cup Entries – accepted . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 1 July 2009 . 1 July 2009 .
  2. News: FA Cup Round Dates . https://archive.today/20090618141451/http://www.thefa.com/TheFACup/FACompetitions/TheFACup/NewsAndFeatures/2009/FACupRoundDates0910.aspx . dead . 18 June 2009 . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 6 June 2009 . 3 July 2009 .
  3. News: FA Cup – Payments to Clubs . https://web.archive.org/web/20090406082624/http://www.thefa.com/TheFACup/FACompetitions/TheFACup/FACupPages/FACupPrizeFund20082009.aspx . dead . 6 April 2009 . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 10 October 2009.
  4. News: Traynor tops FA Cup poll . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 23 September 2009 . 27 September 2009 .
  5. News: Five-goal Danks tops Cup poll . https://archive.today/20091121065752/http://www.thefa.com/TheFACup/FACompetitions/TheFACup/NewsAndFeatures/2009/2RQ_POTR_Danks.aspx . dead . 21 November 2009 . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 6 October 2009 . 28 October 2009 .
  6. News: Webster's reward . https://archive.today/20091121070444/http://www.thefa.com/TheFACup/FACompetitions/TheFACup/NewsAndFeatures/2009/Webster_reward.aspx . dead . 21 November 2009 . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 20 October 2009 . 8 November 2009 .
  7. News: Kedwell takes the vote . https://archive.today/20091121065809/http://www.thefa.com/TheFACup/FACompetitions/TheFACup/NewsAndFeatures/2009/KedwellPOTR4RQ.aspx . dead . 21 November 2009 . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 4 November 2009 . 8 November 2009 .
  8. News: Brodie bunch . https://archive.today/20091128235653/http://www.thefa.com/TheFACup/FACompetitions/TheFACup/NewsAndFeatures/2009/POTR-1RP-251109.aspx . dead . 28 November 2009 . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 25 November 2009 . 25 November 2009 .
  9. News: Wembley beckons for Leon . https://archive.today/20100113190002/http://www.thefa.com/TheFACup/FACompetitions/TheFACup/NewsAndFeatures/2009/LeggePOTR2RP.aspx . dead . 13 January 2010 . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 16 December 2009 . 19 December 2009 .
  10. News: Jermaine man. https://archive.today/20110606032053/http://www.thefa.com/TheFACup/FACompetitions/TheFACup/NewsAndFeatures/2010/BeckfordPOTR3RP.aspx . dead . 6 June 2011 . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 12 January 2010 . 13 January 2010 .
  11. News: It's Beckford again . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 4 February 2010 . 14 February 2010 .
  12. News: Bale claims public vote . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 1 March 2010 . 1 March 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100310055245/http://www.thefa.com/TheFACup/FACompetitions/TheFACup/NewsAndFeatures/2010/BalePOTR5RP.aspx . 10 March 2010 . dead .
  13. News: Frederic is Piq of the polls . https://archive.today/20100417150351/http://www.thefa.com/TheFACup/FACompetitions/TheFACup/NewsAndFeatures/2010/PiquionnePOTR6RP . dead . 17 April 2010 . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 25 March 2010 . 25 March 2010 .
  14. News: Didier do well . TheFA.com . The Football Association . 28 April 2010 . 15 May 2010 .
  15. News: Leeds to face Tottenham after FA Cup fourth-round draw . BBC Sport . BBC . 3 January 2010 . 4 January 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100104052533/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/fa_cup/8438681.stm. 4 January 2010 . live.
  16. News: Cardiff take on Chelsea in FA Cup . BBC Sport . BBC . 24 January 2010 . 14 February 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100127203629/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/fa_cup/8477608.stm. 27 January 2010 . live.
  17. News: Holders Chelsea to face Man City or Stoke in FA Cup . BBC Sport . BBC . 14 February 2010 . 14 February 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100218052433/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/fa_cup/8515386.stm. 18 February 2010 . live.
  18. Web site: Chelsea to face Villa in FA Cup . 7 March 2009 . BBC Sport . 24 March 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100309053253/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/fa_cup/8554580.stm. 9 March 2010 . live.
  19. Web site: FA reveals Cup semi-final dates . 10 March 2009 . BBC Sport . 24 March 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100325055544/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/fa_cup/8560307.stm. 25 March 2010 . live.
  20. Web site: 2009/2010 FA Cup Top Scorers . World Football . 23 February 2016 .