1966 FA Cup Final

The 1966 FA Cup Final was a football match played on 14 May 1966. It was contested by Everton and Sheffield Wednesday at Wembley. Everton were the first team since Bury FC in 1903 to reach an FA Cup Final without conceding a goal in the preceding rounds.

1966 FA Cup Final
Event1965–66 FA Cup
Date14 May 1966
VenueWembley Stadium, London
RefereeJack Taylor (Staffordshire)
Attendance100,000

Everton came back from 2-0 down to win 3–2 with goals by Mike Trebilcock (2) and Derek Temple. Jim McCalliog and David Ford scored the Owls' goals. Temple's winner came after an unfortunate slip by Gerry Young, when the ball squirmed under his foot, and Temple was able to run clear and slot the ball past goalkeeper Springett into the corner. Everton became only the second side ever, after Blackpool in 1953, to come from two goals behind to win the cup without the need of extra time, a feat which has not been repeated since. By contrast, Wednesday hold the unwanted record of being the only side ever to lose an FA Cup Final in normal time having held a two-goal lead and without the loss of a player to injury, Bolton in 1953 having been effectively reduced to nine fit men before losing their two-goal lead.

John Lennon and Paul McCartney of The Beatles both attended the match. Everton fan Eddie Cavanagh invaded the playing area and was pursued across the pitch by a policeman.[1]

This result meant the FA Cup was taken back to Goodison Park for the third time and the first time for 33 years, since the team which included Dixie Dean had won it in 1933.

Match details

Everton3–2Sheffield Wednesday
Trebilcock  59', 64'
Temple  74'
Report McCalliog  4'
Ford  57'
Attendance: 100,000
Everton
Sheffield Wednesday
1 Gordon West
2 Tommy Wright
3 Ray Wilson
4 Jimmy Gabriel
5 Brian Labone (c)
6 Brian Harris
7 Alex Scott
8 Mike Trebilcock
9 Alex Young
10 Colin Harvey
11 Derek Temple
Manager:
Harry Catterick
1 Ron Springett
2 Wilf Smith
3 Don Megson (c)
4 Peter Eustace
5 Sam Ellis
6 Gerry Young
7 Graham Pugh
8 John Fantham
9 Jim McCalliog
10 David Ford
11 John Quinn
Manager:
Alan Brown

Match rules

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Replay if scores still level.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.