1915 FA Cup final
Event | 1914–15 FA Cup | ||||||
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Date | 24 April 1915 | ||||||
Venue | Old Trafford, Manchester | ||||||
Referee | H. H. Taylor | ||||||
Attendance | 49,557 | ||||||
The 1915 FA Cup final took place on 24 April 1915 and was contested by
The match is one of the few FA Cup Finals that has acquired a name; the "Khaki Cup Final", owing to the large number of uniformed soldiers in attendance. However, the attendance of about 50,000 was lower than previous years as a result of wartime travel restriction and the mobilisation of large numbers of young men into the armed forces.
Road to the Final
Chelsea had the easiest start in the FA Cup competition, their first round match was with
Sheffield United defeated Blackpool, a second division side, in the first round and then made steady progress until round 4 where they met Oldham Athletic, who finished above them in the First Division that season, and they required a replay to finally defeat them. Sheffield United met Bolton Wanderers in the semi-final and Utley, the Blades' Captain, scored a rare goal.[1]
Sheffield UnitedHome teams listed first. Round 1: Blackpool 1–2 Sheffield United
Round 2: Sheffield United 1–0 Liverpool
Round 3: Sheffield United 1–0 Bradford
Round 4: Oldham Athletic 0–0 Sheffield United
Replay: Sheffield United 3–0 Oldham Athletic
Semi-final: Bolton Wanderers 1–2 Sheffield United
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ChelseaHome teams listed first. Round 1: Chelsea 1–1 Swindon Town
Replay: Chelsea 5–2 Swindon Town
Round 2: Chelsea 1–0 Arsenal
Round 3: Manchester City 0–1 Chelsea
Round 4: Chelsea 1–1 Newcastle
Replay: Newcastle 0–1 Chelsea
Semi-final: Everton 0–2 Chelsea
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Pre-match build-up
The favourites to win the match were Sheffield United. They had combined a successful FA Cup run with a strong
Chelsea were statistically the weaker side, whilst they had scored more goals than Sheffield United in the league, their defence was poor and they had conceded many more and lay in the relegation zone. They had however beaten several strong clubs away from home during the FA Cup competition and the programme noted that the underdogs had won on six occasions in the previous ten years.[1]
Chelsea also had injury problems:
Match programme
The official
The programme showed that both teams played a 2–3–5 formation and the Chelsea teamsheet listed Vivian Woodward and Laurence Abrams in addition to those who played in the match. Neither played in the match.
Match summary
As the score line suggests, the match was very much a one-sided affair. Chelsea adopted a gentlemanly "Drawing Room" style of play with attacks made up of zig-zag passes. These were broken up by an alert and cooperative Sheffield United defence.[3] The Sheffield United forwards, with their superior tactics, pace and fitness, had the run of the Chelsea half and only the excellent performance of Molyneux, in goal for Chelsea, saved them from further embarrassment. Contemporary reports[3] singled out Brelsford, Simmons and Utley of Sheffield United for their quality of their performances during the match and Logan, who made some unsuccessful attacks for Chelsea during the second half.
The first goal was scored by Simmons just before half-time. A ball in from the left hand side crossed over the Chelsea backs and Simmons, racing in from the right half, half-volleyed it into the top of the net. Some sources[4] suggest that Molyneux should have stopped this goal but others[3] state that he was let down by his defence in all three goals. Chelsea had their best chances just before half-time when they had two shots saved by Gough in the Blades' goal.
At some point Chelsea woes were added to when Harry Ford on the right wing was injured.[2]
Play was muted at the start of the second half as a thick fog descended over the pitch, preventing spectators from seeing any action on the opposite side of the pitch, though The Times[5] commented that they were not missing much. The final two goals were scored in the last ten minutes. A shot from Wally Masterman rebounded from the bar but Fazackerly headed it past the Chelsea keeper for United's second. Directly after this goal Joe Kitchen picked the ball up just inside the Chelsea half and passed two defenders. Molyneaux emerged from the Chelsea goal but Kitchen dodged him and placed the ball in the open net. At this point, before the final whistle, large numbers of the spectators began to leave.
The crowd included many men in uniform but a much larger contingent who, the
The cup was awarded by the Earl of Derby whose speech, largely drowned out by a noisy crowd of young supporters, noted that all present needed to join together and play "a sterner game for England".[3]
The Irwell Old Prize band provided the half time entertainment, playing a selection of tunes from around the British Isles. A collection was made during the match on behalf of the British Red Cross.[1]
Match details
Sheffield United | 3–0 | Chelsea |
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Simmons 36' Fazackerley 84' Kitchen 88' |
Sheffield United
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Chelsea
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Match rules
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Aftermath
In July 1915, the Football League put all players on amateur status and clubs were only allowed to pay expenses. Attendances at matches collapsed and as fuel for transport became scarce the national league was abandoned and football teams played in
Sheffield United held the FA Cup until it was contested again in 1920. They reached the final and won the cup again in 1925.
Chelsea did not reach the final again until 1967 and finally won it in 1970 at Old Trafford in a replay 55 years later.
References
- ^ a b c Unknown (1915). Cup Final Programme.
- ^ ISBN 0-7553-1466-2.
- ^ a b c d e "The Cup Final". Manchester Guardian. 26 April 1915. p. 9.
- ^ "fa-cupfinals.co.uk". fa-cupfinals.co.uk. Archived from the original on 27 December 2007. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
- ^ "The Cup Final". The Times. 26 April 1915.