1952 FA Cup final explained

1952 FA Cup final
Event:1951–52 FA Cup
Team1:Newcastle United
Team1score:1
Team2:Arsenal
Team2score:0
Date:3 May 1952
Stadium:Wembley Stadium
City:London
Referee:Arthur Ellis (Halifax)
Attendance:100,000
Previous:1951
Next:1953

The 1952 FA Cup final was the final match of the 1951–52 staging of the Football Association Challenge Cup (better known as the FA Cup), English football's main cup competition. The match was contested by Newcastle United and Arsenal at Wembley Stadium in London on 3 May 1952. It was hitherto only the second time that an FA Cup Final was played in May; 1937 being the first. Newcastle appeared in their 11th final in total and their second successive final, while it was Arsenal's sixth final and their second in three years.__TOC__

Match facts

GK 1 Ronnie Simpson
RB 2 Bobby Cowell
LB 3 Alf McMichael
RH 4 Joe Harvey (c)
CH 5 Frank Brennan
LH 6 Ted Robledo
OR 7 Tommy Walker
IR 8 Billy Foulkes
CF 9 Jackie Milburn
IL 10 George Robledo
OL 11 Bobby Mitchell
Manager:
Stan Seymour
GK 1 George Swindin
RB 2 Walley Barnes
LB 3 Lionel Smith
RH 4 Alex Forbes
CH 5 Ray Daniel
LH 6 Joe Mercer (c)
OR 7 Freddie Cox
IR 8 Jimmy Logie
CF 9 Cliff Holton
IL 10 Doug Lishman
OL 11 Don Roper
Manager:
Tom Whittaker

Match summary

Arsenal played Newcastle United with several recovering players rushed back into the first team; Walley Barnes was taken off injured with a twisted knee after 35 minutes (no substitutes were allowed then), and ten-man Arsenal suffered further injuries to Holton, Roper and Daniel, so that by the end of the match they had only seven fit players on the pitch;[1] with the numerical advantage in their favour, Newcastle won 1–0 with a goal from George Robledo. The goal scored by Robledo was drawn by a young John Lennon, who included it in the artwork of his album Walls and Bridges in 1974.[2]

Broadcasting

Despite late efforts to overturn the decision by a minority of its members, The FA Council banned the BBC from televising the game,[3] leaving those who could not attend, with only updates on the first half on BBC radio before the second half was described live to listeners. To date this remains the last cup final not to be broadcast live on television, although the game was filmed by newsreel for showing that evening in cinemas. The BBC instead broadcast a cricket match between Worcestershire and the touring Indians.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Soar & Tyler. 2005. The Official Illustrated History of Arsenal. 99.
  2. News: Molina. Paula. Jorge Robledo, el futbolista chileno inmortalizado en un disco de John Lennon. 25 April 2017. BBC Mundo. 4 April 2016. es.
  3. News: Daily Mirror . 3 May 1952 . 1 . Sorry, the answer is no . Tom . Phillips.
  4. Web site: Programme Index . BBC . 11 August 2021 . live. https://web.archive.org/web/20141017203640/http://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/schedules/bbctv/1952-05-03 . 17 October 2014 .