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Football Wiki
2019 FA WSL Cup Final
After extra time
Manchester City won 4–2 on penalties
Event2018–19 FA WSL Cup
Date23 February 2019 (2019-02-23)
VenueBramall Lane, Sheffield
Player of the MatchCaroline Weir
RefereeLucy Oliver
Attendance2,424
2018
2020

The 2019 FA WSL Cup Final was the eighth final of the FA WSL Cup, England's secondary cup competition for women's football teams and its primary league cup tournament. It took place on the 23 February 2019, at Bramall Lane, contested by Arsenal and Manchester City, the only two teams to have ever won the tournament.

Arsenal had competed in all but one of the previous finals, winning five. Manchester City had appeared in three of the last four, securing the trophy twice. The final was a rerun of the 2018 final, which was won by Arsenal by a goal to nil, while both teams also met in the final in 2014 when Manchester City won by the only goal.

Route to the final[]

Round Opposition Score
GS West Ham United (H) 3–1
GS Lewes (A) 9–0
GS Charlton Athletic (H) 5–0
GS Millwall Lionesses (A) 3–1
QF Birmingham City (H) 2–1
SF Manchester United (H) 2–1
Key: (H) = Home venue; (A) = Away venue; (N) = Neutral venue.

Arsenal[]

Drawn again - as with the previous season - against mostly second-tier opposition, plus WSL mid-table side West Ham United, Arsenal improved on their second-place finish in the 2017–18 group stage with a dominating series of results to top their group having secured all twelve points, the high note being an away 9–0 win over Lewes in which both Kim Little and Vivianne Miedema scored hattricks.

The quarter-finals saw Arsenal paired with Birmingham City, a team only a few paces behind in the WSL title race with three previous WSL Cup final appearances to their names, including two against Arsenal. A tight match saw Birmingham take the lead, but an injury time goal from Miedema would ultimately settle the tie in Arsenal's favour.

The semi-final matched Arsenal against the resurrected Manchester United, who had been performing beyond their second division status all season. An all-Manchester final was prevented, however, as Arsenal took control of the match to seal their place with two more goals from Miedema.

Round Opposition Score
GS Birmingham City (A) (p) 0–0 (p)
GS Leicester City Women (H) 4–0
GS Bristol City (A) 3–0
GS Sheffield United (H) 6–0
GS Aston Villa (A) 4–0
QF Brighton & Hove Albion (H) 7–1
SF Chelsea (A) 2–0
Key: (H) = Home venue; (A) = Away venue; (N) = Neutral venue.

Manchester City[]

In the group stages, Manchester City again found themselves matched with title challengers Birmingham City, along with Bristol City and three Championship sides, playing one more game than Arsenal by virtue of the increased number of teams competing in the tournament compared with the previous season. Their campaign began slowly as they were only able to prevail against Birmingham City on penalties, meaning they would only take two points out of a possible three. With the toughest match already out of the way, they would go on to win all of their remaining games, scoring 17 goals and conceding none in the process.

Their quarter-final against Brighton & Hove Albion would prove to be their highest-scoring in the cup competition, with an initially slow match bursting into life in the closing stages as four goals were scored after the 85th minute. The match drew extra journalistic attention as it came barely 24 hours after Manchester City's men's team had themselves scored nine goals in their own League Cup tie.

Manchester City's place in the final would ultimately be assured by the work of Nikita Parris, who scored both goals as they defeated the reigning WSL champions Chelsea, giving them their fourth finals appearance in the previous five competitions.

Match[]

Details[]

23 February 2019
12:15 GMT (UTC+00:00)
Arsenal 0–0
(a.e.t.)
Manchester City Bramall Lane
Attendance: 2,424
Referee: Lucy Oliver
Report
  Penalties  
Little
Williamson Missed
van de Donk Missed
Bloodworth
2–4 Stanway
Missed Hemp
Emslie
Houghton
Beckie
Arsenal
Manchester City
GK 1 Flag of Netherlands Sari van Veenendaal
DF 6 Flag of England Leah Williamson
DF 16 Flag of Republic of Ireland Louise Quinn
DF 4 Flag of Denmark Janni Arnth Substituted off in the 69th minute 69'
MF 7 Flag of Netherlands Daniëlle van de Donk
MF 10 Flag of Scotland Kim Little (c)
MF 20 Flag of Netherlands Dominique Bloodworth Booked in the 58th minute 58'
MF 2 Flag of Denmark Katrine Veje Substituted off in the 71st minute 71'
FW 23 Flag of England Beth Mead
FW 15 Flag of Republic of Ireland Katie McCabe
FW 17 Flag of Scotland Lisa Evans
Substitutes:
GK 18 Flag of France Pauline Peyraud-Magnin
MF 24 Flag of England Ava Kuyken
FW 29 Flag of England Amelia Hazard Substituted on in the 71st minute 71'
MF 33 Flag of Portugal Ana Caterina Albuquerque
FW 11 Flag of Netherlands Vivianne Miedema Substituted on in the 69th minute 69'
Manager:
Flag of Australia Joe Montemurro
GK 1 Flag of England Karen Bardsley
DF 4 Flag of England Gemma Bonner
DF 6 Flag of England Steph Houghton (c)
DF 5 Flag of Scotland Jennifer Beattie
DF 3 Flag of England Demi Stokes
MF 25 Flag of Belgium Tessa Wullaert Substituted off in the 65th minute 65'
MF 19 Flag of Scotland Caroline Weir Substituted off in the 118th minute 118'
MF 8 Flag of England Jill Scott
MF 24 Flag of England Keira Walsh
FW 17 Flag of England Nikita Parris Booked in the 82nd minute 82' Substituted off in the 105th minute 105'
FW 12 Flag of England Georgia Stanway Booked in the 40th minute 40'
Substitutes:
GK 26 Flag of England Ellie Roebuck
FW 9 Flag of Germany Pauline Bremer
FW 11 Flag of Canada Janine Beckie Substituted on in the 65th minute 65'
FW 15 Flag of England Lauren Hemp Substituted on in the 105th minute 105'
DF 20 Flag of Republic of Ireland Megan Campbell
FW 22 Flag of Scotland Claire Emslie Substituted on in the 118th minute 118'
DF 23 Flag of England Abbie McManus
Manager:
Flag of England Nick Cushing

Player of the match:
Caroline Weir (Manchester City) Match officials

  • Assistant referees:
  • Fourth official:

Match rules

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
  • Seven named substitutes.
  • Maximum of three substitutions.

Template:2018–19 in English women's football

Women's football in England
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