1938 FA Cup final explained

1938 FA Cup final
Event:1937–38 FA Cup
Team1:Preston North End
Team1score:1
Team2:Huddersfield Town
Team2score:0
Details:After extra time
Date:30 April 1938
Stadium:Wembley Stadium
City:London
Referee:A. Jewell (London)
Attendance:93,497
Previous:1937
Next:1939

The 1938 FA Cup final was contested by Preston North End and Huddersfield Town at Wembley Stadium. Preston, losing finalists the previous year, won by a single goal. This was their second win in the competition.

Background

After 29 minutes of extra time it was still 0 - 0 and BBC commentator Thomas Woodrooffe said "if there's a goal scored now, I'll eat my hat". Seconds later, Preston were awarded a penalty, from which George Mutch scored the winning goal; Woodrooffe kept his promise, though it was one made of cake and marzipan.[1] [2] Bill Shankly (who played in that game for the Preston side) recalls that special moment in his autobiography from 1976: "The ball hit the bar, which was square then, took the paint off it, screamed into the middle of the goal and ran down the back of the net." And then adds: "The paint is on the ball to this day. I saw it again in 1971, when Liverpool reached the final and played Arsenal. When we were preparing for Wembley, Tommy Smith, who was the Preston captain in 1938, came to the training ground at Melwood and showed the ball to his namesake, Tommy Smith, the Liverpool captain in 1971."[3]

This was the first FA Cup final to be broadcast on television, by the BBC. It was a repeat of the 1922 FA Cup Final. This time the scores were reversed but once again a penalty was needed to separate the two sides.[4] [5]

Three of the players who participated in the final (Andy Beattie and Bill Shankly of Preston and Eddie Boot of Huddersfield) would all manage Huddersfield within 20 years of this final.

The last surviving member of the winning team was Bobby Beattie, who died in September 2002 at the age of 86.

Match details

1 George Holdcroft
2 Frank Gallimore
3 Andy Beattie
4 Bill Shankly
5 Tom Smith (c)
6 Bob Batey
7 Dickie Watmough
8 George Mutch
9 Bud Maxwell
10 Bobby Beattie
11 Hugh O'Donnell
Manager:
James Taylor (acting)
1 Bob Hesford
2 Benny Craig
3 Reg Mountford
4 Ken Willingham
5 Alf Young (c)
6 Eddie Boot
7 Joe Hulme
8 Jimmy Isaac
9 Willie MacFadyen
10 Bobby Barclay
11 Pat Beasley
Manager:
Clem Stephenson
width=50% valign=topMatch rules
  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Replay if scores still level.

Road to Wembley

Huddersfield Town

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: War and the Media: Reportage and Propaganda, 1900-2003. Mark Connelly & David Welch. I.B. Tauris. 2005. 1-860-64959-9. 141.
  2. News: The Joy of Six: FA Cup final goals. Scott Murray. 13 May 2011. The Guardian. 29 December 2016.
  3. Book: Shankly: My Story. John Roberts & Bill Shankly. Trinity Mirror Sport Media. 2009. 978-1906802066.
  4. Book: Soccer For Dummies. Thomas Dunmore & Scott Murray. 27. 978-1-118-51065-0. John Wiley & Sons. 2013.
  5. Book: NHK Broadcasting Studies, Issue 2. Nihon Hōsō Kyōkai, NHK Hōsō Bunka Chōsa Kenkyūjo. NHK Broadcasting Culture Research Institute. 2003. 132.