2009 Football League Trophy final explained

2009 Football League Trophy Final
Event:2008–09 Football League Trophy
Team1:Luton Town
Team1score:3
Team2:Scunthorpe United
Team2score:2
Details:after extra time
Date:5 April 2009
Stadium:Wembley Stadium
City:London
Man Of The Match1a:Kevin Nicholls (Luton Town)
Referee:Phil Crossley (Kent)
Attendance:55,378
Previous:2008
Next:2010

The 2009 Football League Trophy Final was the 26th final of the domestic football cup competition for teams from Football Leagues One and Two, the Football League Trophy. The final was played at Wembley Stadium in London on 5 April 2009, the second time that the final had been staged at the stadium since it was rebuilt. The match was contested between Luton Town and Scunthorpe United. Luton won the match 3–2 with Claude Gnakpa scoring the winner five minutes into extra-time.[1]

Luton's victory was a single positive note in an otherwise terrible season for the club. They started the season with a 30-point deduction imposed by the Football League and Football Association for various financial irregularities, despite the fact that these misdemeanours were carried out by the club's previous owners who had not been in charge since January 2008.[2] Despite accumulating enough points to mathematically remain in League Two, they were twelve points from safety when the final was played and were ultimately relegated out of the Football League.[3] They became the first club to win the Football League Trophy and suffer relegation from the Football League in the same season. As the competition is usually only contested by teams from Leagues One and Two, it was uncertain whether Luton could defend their trophy.[4] On 15 June 2009, Luton's request to play in the competition in 2009–10 was denied by the Football League.[5]

Background

Luton and Scunthorpe went into the match in vastly different positions. Scunthorpe were in the play-off positions in League One and hoping to secure both promotion to the Football League Championship and claim the Football League Trophy in the same season.[6] Luton, on the other hand, were bottom of The Football League and facing relegation into non-League football, having been given a 30-point deduction at the beginning of the season for financial irregularities. Both teams were playing in their first Football League Trophy final.

Match details

GK 1 Dean Brill
RB 15 Ed Asafu-Adjaye
CB 20 Michael Spillane
CB 6 George Pilkington
LB 11 Lewis Emanuel
RM 8 Kevin Nicholls (c)
CM 4 Keith Keane
CM 16
LM 14 Asa Hall
CF 18
CF 24
Substitutes:
GK 35 David Button
DF 2
DF 3 Sol Davis
DF 5 Ian Roper
FW 9
Manager:
Mick Harford
GK 1 Joe Murphy
RB 6 Cliff Byrne (c)
CB 26
CB 15 David Mirfin
LB 3 Marcus Williams
RM 7
CM 31 Henri Lansbury
CM 17 Grant McCann
LM 23
CF 10 Gary Hooper
CF 9 Paul Hayes
Substitutes:
GK 22 Josh Lillis
MF 16
MF 18
MF 24
FW 30 Ben May
Manager:
Nigel Adkins
width=50% valign=topMATCH OFFICIALS width=50% valign=topMATCH RULES
  • 90 minutes
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level
  • Five named substitutes, of which up to three may be used

Protests

During the match, many of Luton's 40,000 fans unfurled flags featuring the slogans "Thanks for Sweet FA" and "The FA & Football League – Killing Small Clubs Since 1992" in protest at the actions taken against the club from the footballing authorities.[7] Football League chairman Lord Mawhinney was widely booed, among other less savoury chants, for his part in the club's demise.[8]

Route to the final

See also: Football League Trophy 2008–09.

Luton Town

Round 1 (South)received bye
Round 2 (South)Luton Town2–2Brentford
 (Luton Town won 4–3 on penalties)
Quarter-finals (South)Walsall0–1Luton Town
Semi-finals (South)Luton Town1–0Colchester United
Final (South, 1st leg)Brighton & Hove Albion0–0Luton Town
Final (South, 2nd leg)Luton Town1–1Brighton & Hove Albion
 (1–1 on aggregate. Luton Town won 4–3 on penalties)

Scunthorpe United

Round 1 (North)Scunthorpe United2–1Notts County
Round 2 (North)Scunthorpe United2–1Grimsby Town
Quarter-finals (North)Scunthorpe United1–0Rochdale
Semi-finals (North)Scunthorpe United2–1Tranmere Rovers
Final (North, 1st leg)Scunthorpe United2–0Rotherham United
Final (North, 2nd leg)Rotherham United0–1Scunthorpe United
 (Scunthorpe United won 3–0 on aggregate)

Post-match

Luton manager Mick Harford paid tribute to his players, saying "the players knew when they came to the club that they could be non-League players next season. They put their necks on the line. Today their camaraderie, spirit and togetherness was there for all to see." He also praised the "special" Luton fans, saying "They've had it tough down the years, with [the club] being in and out of administration and having sanctions put upon them. We have the second-highest league attendance in League Two and the highest away following, and they've turned out again today."[9]

Scunthorpe manager Nigel Adkins congratulated Luton on their victory but also lamented his own side's shortcomings, saying after the match "Credit to Luton. I congratulate Mick Harford, but we have to learn from this negative experience and use it in a positive way. I will make sure [the players] will remember this because it's not nice... We will draw a line under it and make sure we come back to Wembley in the play-off final – and make sure we win."

Luton were relegated on 13 April 2009, only a week after their Football League Trophy victory. Their relegation was confirmed when they could only manage a draw against Chesterfield, while the only club they could catch, Grimsby Town, won against Notts County.[10] Cliff Byrne secured a place in the League One play-offs for Scunthorpe at the expense of Tranmere Rovers with a goal two minutes from the end of their final game.[11] They returned to Wembley for the League One play-off final and won promotion in May, beating Millwall 3–2.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Luton 3–2 Scunthorpe . . . 5 April 2009 . 14 May 2009.
  2. News: Luton to face 30-points deduction . BBC Sport . British Broadcasting Corporation . 10 July 2008 . 14 May 2009.
  3. News: Mike . Stafford . Luton get the last laugh with victory in the 'Paint Pot final' . . 5 April 2009 . 14 May 2009.
  4. Web site: Luton hope to defend trophy even if relegated . ESPN Soccernet . . 6 April 2009 . 14 May 2009 . 26 May 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110526014807/http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=634643&&cc=5739 . dead .
  5. News: Luton consider Trophy ban appeal. BBC Sport. 15 June 2009. 3 January 2010.
  6. Web site: 2009-03-28, Scunthorpe 3–0 Colchester . Scunthorpe United . 14 May 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090505112536/http://www.scunthorpe-united.co.uk/page/MatchReport/0%2C%2C10442~44994%2C00.html . 5 May 2009 . live .
  7. News: David . McVay . Defiant Luton celebrates trophy win with final protest . Telegraph Online . . 5 April 2009 . 14 May 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090607040106/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/leagues/leagueone/scunthorpe/5111031/Defiant-Luton-celebrates-trophy-win-with-final-protest.html. 7 June 2009 . dead.
  8. Web site: Tom . Dart . Luton Town find pot of gold at last . Times Online . . 6 May 2009 . 14 May 2009 . London.
  9. News: Harford praises Luton's character . BBC Sport . British Broadcasting Corporation . 5 April 2009 . 14 May 2009.
  10. Web site: Mike . Stafford . Football League round-up . The Guardian . 13 April 2009 . 14 May 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090416042223/http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2009/apr/13/football-league-luton-town-relegation. 16 April 2009 . live.
  11. News: Bob . Williams . Cliff Byrne secures play-off spot for Scunthorpe . Telegraph Online . The Daily Telegraph . 2 May 2009 . 14 May 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090506064553/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/leagues/leagueone/5264569/Cliff-Byrne-secures-play-off-spot-for-Scunthorpe-United.html. 6 May 2009 . dead.