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FA Cup 2008-09 | ||
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Region | ![]() ![]() | |
Number of teams | 762 | |
Defending champions | Portsmouth | |
Champions | Chelsea | |
Runner-up | Everton | |
Top goal scorer | Nicolas Anelka Craig Westcarr Robin van Persie Matty Fryatt Gary Hooper (4 goals) | |
2009-10 →
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The 2008–09 FA Cup was the 128th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition; The Football Association Challenge Cup, or FA Cup for short. A record 762 clubs were accepted for the competition; one club, South Normanton Athletic, folded before the fixtures were released, leaving 761 clubs to appear in the draw. Two more clubs, Brierley Hill & Withymoor and Stapenhill, folded after the draws for the early rounds were made, giving their opponents a walk-over.
The competition started on 16 August 2008 with the Extra Preliminary Round and concluded on 30 May 2009 with the Final, held at Wembley Stadium. Because winners Chelsea qualified for the 2009–10 UEFA Champions League by finishing 3rd in the 2008–09 Premier League, losing finalists Everton qualified for the play-off round of the 2009–10 UEFA Europa League. Because Everton also happened to qualify for a Europa League berth by finishing 5th in the Premier League, that berth was awarded to the 6th place team, whose berth (which was available because 2009–10 Football League Cup winners Manchester United qualified for the Champions League as Premier League winners) was in turn awarded to the 7th place team.
This season's competition saw the beginning of a new television contract for the tournament, with ITV and Setanta Sports taking over the domestic rights from the BBC and Sky Sports.
Calendar[]
Round | Main date | Number of fixtures | Clubs | New entries this round | Prize money | Player of the Round |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Extra Preliminary Round | 16 August 2008 | 203 | 761 → 558 | 406: 356th–761st | £750 | n/a |
Preliminary Round | 30 August 2008 | 166 | 558 → 392 | 129: 227th–355th | £1,500 | n/a |
First Round Qualifying | 13 September 2008 | 116 | 392 → 276 | 66: 161st–226th | £3,000 | Derren Ibrahim (Dartford) |
Second Round Qualifying | 27 September 2008 | 80 | 276 → 196 | 44: 117th–160th | £4,500 | Dean Lodge (Kingstonian) |
Third Round Qualifying | 11 October 2008 | 40 | 196 → 156 | none | £7,500 | Craig Davis (AFC Totton) |
Fourth Round Qualifying | 25 October 2008 | 32 | 156 → 124 | 24: 93rd–116th | £12,500 | Sam Hatton (AFC Wimbledon) |
First Round Proper | 8 November 2008 | 40 | 124 → 84 | 48: 45th–92nd | £20,000 | Jon Adams (AFC Telford United) |
Second Round Proper | 29 November 2008 | 20 | 84 → 64 | none | £30,000 | Lindon Meikle (Eastwood Town) |
Third Round Proper | 3 January 2009 | 32 | 64 → 32 | 44: 1st–44th | £75,000 | Nathan Tyson (Nottingham Forest) |
Fourth Round Proper | 24 January 2009 | 16 | 32 → 16 | none | £100,000 | Scott Parker (West Ham United) |
Fifth Round Proper | 14 February 2009 | 8 | 16 → 8 | none | £200,000 | Mikel Arteta (Everton) |
Sixth Round Proper | 7 March 2009 | 4 | 8 → 4 | none | £400,000 | Robin van Persie (Arsenal) |
Semi-Finals | 18 April 2009 19 April 2009 |
2 | 4 → 2 | none | Winners: £1,000,000 Losers: £500,000 |
Phil Jagielka (Everton) |
Final | 30 May 2009 | 1 | 2 → 1 | none | Winner: £2,000,000 Loser: £1,000,000 |
Qualifying Rounds[]
- Main article:FA Cup 2008–09 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[]
All of the 24 League One and 24 League Two teams entered at this round, along with the winners of the previous round, the fourth qualifying round. These 32 winners came from the following levels:
- 14 teams from Level 5 (Conference National)
- 9 from Level 6: 5 Conference North, 4 Conference South
- 6 from Level 7: 1 Northern Premier League, 2 Southern League, 3 Isthmian League
- 2 from Level 8: Curzon Ashton of the NPL North and Bury Town of the Southern League Midland
- 1 from Level 9: Leiston of the Eastern Counties League Premier Division
The draw for the First Round Proper took place on 26 October 2008. The matches were played between 7 and 9 November 2008.
† – After extra time
‡ – Grays' replay with Carlisle was abandoned the first time it was played after 20 minutes because of floodlight failure with Grays leading 1–0.
Blyth Spartans, Droylsden and Histon beat teams from two levels higher. Kettering Town were the fourth non-league team to beat a league club. Curzon Ashton were the only club to beat a team from four levels higher, beating Exeter City.
Second Round Proper[]
The draw for the Second Round Proper took place on 9 November 2008 and involved the 40 winning teams from the First Round Proper. These were from the following levels:
- 13 from Level 3 (League One)
- 14 from Level 4 (League Two)
- 7 from Level 5 (Conference National)
- 4 from Level 6 (all Conference North)
- 1 from Level 7 (Eastwood Town of the Northern Premier League Premier Division)
- 1 from Level 8 (Curzon Ashton of the Northern Premier League North)
The draw was conducted by Lawrie Sanchez and Ray Parlour. Matches in the Second Round Proper were played over the weekend of 29 November 2008, with the exception of the match between Crewe Alexandra and Carlisle United, which was played on 2 December, due to the abandonment of the first game between Carlisle United and Grays Athletic in the First Round.
† – After extra time
‡ – Droylsden's first visit to Chesterfield was abandoned at half time due to fog.
6 non-league clubs beat league clubs: Leeds United lost to Histon, while League Two clubs lost to Eastwood Town, Blyth Spartans, Barrow, Forest Green Rovers and Kettering Town.
Third Round Proper[]
The draw for the Third Round Proper took place on 30 November 2008. The draw was carried out by Sir Trevor Brooking and Ray Clemence at Soho Square. The 20 Premier League and 24 Championship teams enter at this stage, along with the 20 winners of the Second Round Proper. These 20 teams came from the following levels:
- 9 from Level 3 (League One)
- 3 from Level 4 (League Two)
- 6 from Level 5 (Conference National)
- 1 from Level 6 (Blyth Spartans of the Conference North)
- 1 from Level 7 (Eastwood Town of the Northern Premier League Premier Division)
The matches were played between 2 January and 5 January 2009, with the exception of the ties between Birmingham City and Wolverhampton Wanderers, Histon and Swansea City, Cheltenham Town and Doncaster Rovers, and Leyton Orient and Sheffield United, which were postponed until 13 January 2009.
† – After extra time
Torquay United were the only team to beat a team from 3 levels higher, while Hartlepool United were the only team to beat a team from 2 levels higher.
Fourth Round Proper[]
The draw for the Fourth Round of the FA Cup was held on 4 January 2009. It comprised teams from the following levels:
- 15 from the Premier League
- 13 from the Championship
- 2 from League One
- 0 from League Two
- 2 from the Conference National
The draw was conducted by Roberto Di Matteo and Dave Beasant.
A technical error during ITV's broadcast of the Everton–Liverpool replay meant that millions of viewers missed Dan Gosling's winner for Everton late in extra time. Coverage of the match was temporarily interrupted by advertisements, only for viewers to see Everton's players celebrating upon the restoration of the feed. ITV received thousands of complaints about the mistake, with many viewers questioning ITV's ability to broadcast live football, especially given their £275 million contract with the Football Association. ITV has subsequently apologised for the error.
† – After extra time
Fifth Round Proper[]
The draw for the Fifth Round Proper was held on 25 January 2009. It comprised 10 teams from the Premier League and 6 from the Championship, and was conducted by Gary Mabbutt and Gary Pallister. The Fifth Round matches were played on the weekend of 14 February 2009, with the exception of the tie between Arsenal and Burnley, after Arsenal's Fourth Round replay with Cardiff City was postponed due to snow. The match was played on 8 March 2009.
Tie no | Home team | Score | Away team | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sheffield United | 1 – 1 | Hull City | 22,283 |
replay | Hull City | 2 – 1 | Sheffield United | 17,239 |
2 | Watford | 1 – 3 | Chelsea | 16,851 |
3 | West Ham United | 1 – 1 | Middlesbrough | 33,658 |
replay | Middlesbrough | 2 – 0 | West Ham United | 15,602 |
4 | Blackburn Rovers | 2 – 2 | Coventry City | 15,053 |
replay | Coventry City | 1 – 0 | Blackburn Rovers | 22,793 |
5 | Derby County | 1 – 4 | Manchester United | 32,103 |
6 | Swansea City | 1 – 1 | Fulham | 16,573 |
replay | Fulham | 2 – 1 | Swansea City | 12,316 |
7 | Everton | 3 – 1 | Aston Villa | 35,439 |
8 | Arsenal | 3 – 0 | Burnley | 57,454 |
Sixth Round Proper[]
The draw for the Sixth Round Proper was held on 15 February 2009. It comprised 7 teams from the Premier League and Coventry City from the Championship. It was conducted by Frank McLintock and Graeme Souness. The matches were played on the weekend of 7 March 2009,
7 March 2009 12:30 GMT |
Coventry City | 0 – 2 | Chelsea | Ricoh Arena, Coventry Attendance: 31,407 Referee: Steve Bennett (Kent) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Report | Drogba ![]() Alex ![]() |
7 March 2009 17:15 GMT |
Fulham | 0 – 4 | Manchester United | Craven Cottage, London Attendance: 24,662 Referee: Mike Dean (Cheshire) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Report | Tévez ![]() Rooney ![]() Park ![]() |
17 March 2009 19:45 GMT |
Arsenal | 2 – 1 | Hull City | Emirates Stadium, London Attendance: 55,641 Referee: Mike Riley (West Yorkshire) |
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Van Persie ![]() Gallas ![]() |
Report | Barmby ![]() |
8 March 2009 16:00 GMT |
Everton | 2 – 1 | Middlesbrough | Goodison Park, Liverpool Attendance: 37,856 Referee: Mark Halsey (Lancashire) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fellaini ![]() Saha ![]() |
Report | Wheater ![]() |
Semi-Finals[]
The draw for the semi-finals was held on 8 March 2009, and was conducted by Bob Wilson and Joe Royle. The semi-final matches were played at Wembley Stadium, on the weekend of 18 April 2009. Unlike the previous rounds, replays were not held if a match ended as a draw; if necessary, extra time was added and a penalty shoot-out was held immediately after the match.
18 April 2009 17:15 BST |
Arsenal | 1 – 2 | Chelsea | Wembley Stadium, London Attendance: 88,103 Referee: Martin Atkinson (West Yorkshire) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Walcott ![]() |
Report | Malouda ![]() Drogba ![]() |
19 April 2009 16:00 BST |
Manchester United | 0 – 0 (a.e.t.) |
Everton | Wembley Stadium, London Attendance: 88,141 Referee: Mike Riley (West Yorkshire) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Report |
Penalties | |||
Berbatov ![]() Ferdinand ![]() Vidić ![]() Anderson ![]() |
2 – 4 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Final[]
- Main article:2009 FA Cup Final
30 May 2009 15:00 BST |
Chelsea | 2 – 1 | Everton | Wembley Stadium, London Attendance: 89,391 Referee: Howard Webb (South Yorkshire) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Drogba ![]() Lampard ![]() |
Saha ![]() |
Top scorers[]
The top scorers in the 2008–09 FA Cup (First Round Proper and onwards) are as follows:
Rank | Scorer | Club | Goals |
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1 | ![]() |
Chelsea | 4 |
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Leicester City | 4 | |
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Scunthorpe United | 4 | |
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Arsenal | 4 | |
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Kettering Town | 4 | |
6 | ![]() |
Middlesbrough | 3 |
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Chelsea | 3 | |
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Gillingham | 3 | |
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Leeds United | 3 | |
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Chelsea | 3 | |
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Port Vale | 3 | |
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Arsenal | 3 | |
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Sheffield United | 3 | |
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Wycombe Wanderers | 3 | |
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Derby County | 3 | |
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Fulham | 3 | |
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Chelsea | 3 | |
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Rochdale | 3 | |
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Chesterfield | 3 | |
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Peterborough United | 3 | |
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Aston Villa | 3 | |
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Tottenham Hotspur | 3 | |
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Swansea City | 3 | |
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Burnley | 3 |