2019 Chatham Cup Explained

Chatham Cup
Year:2019
Country:New Zealand
Num Teams:133
Dates:
Defending Champions:Birkenhead United
Champions:Napier City Rovers
Runner-Up:Melville United
Player Label:Jack Batty Trophy
Player:Sho Goto
Prevseason:2018
Nextseason:2021

The 2019 Chatham Cup (known as the ISPS Handa Chatham Cup for sponsorship reasons)[1] is New Zealand's 92nd annual knockout football competition.

The 2019 competition will have a preliminary round and four rounds proper before quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final.[2]

Results

Preliminary round

Matches were played on Saturday 20 April, Monday 22 April and Anzac Day, Thursday 25 April.

Northern Region
Central Region
Mainland Region
Southern RegionAll teams listed below received byes to the first round.
  • Northern Region: Eastern Suburbs, Central United, North Shore United, Onehunga Sports, Western Springs, Birkenhead United, Melville United, East Coast Bays, Hamilton Wanderers, Manukau United, Glenfield Rovers, Waitakere City, Bay Olympic, Mt Albert-Ponsonby, Forrest Hill-Milford United, Three Kings United, Takapuna, Ellerslie, Bucklands Beach, Tauranga City, Waitemata, Waiheke United, Fencibles United, Hibiscus Coast, Claudelands Rovers, Manurewa, Uni-Mount Bohemian Celtic, Cambridge, Albany United, Franklin United, Greenhithe Catimba, Metro, Oratia United, Onehunga Mangere United, Navy, Papatoetoe, Papakura City
  • Central Region: Napier City Rovers, Napier Marist, North End, Palmerston North Marist, New Plymouth Rangers
  • Capital Region: Western Suburbs, Brooklyn Northern United, Wellington Marist, Waterside Karori, Island Bay United, Kapiti Coast United, Lower Hutt City, Miramar Rangers, Naenae, North Wellington, Otaki Purutaitama, Upper Hutt City, Petone, Seatoun, Stokes Valley, Stop Out, Tawa, Victoria University, Wainuiomata, Wairarapa United, Wellington Olympic, Wellington United
  • Mainland Region: Nelson Suburbs, Tahuna, Central SC, FC Nelson, Cashmere Technical, Western, Coastal Spirit, Ferrymead Bays, Selwyn United, Nomads United, FC Twenty 11, Halswell United, Burwood, Waimakiriri United
  • Southern Region: Mosgiel, Otago University, Queenstown, Wanaka, Roslyn Wakari, Green Island, Caversham, Dunedin Technical, Northern, Queen's Park, Old Boys, Thistle (Timaru), Northern Hearts

    Round 1

    Round 1 matches took place between 10 and 12 May 2019.[3]

    Northern Region
    Central / Capital Region
    Mainland Region
    Southern RegionAll teams listed below received byes to the second round.
  • Northern Region: Glenfield Rovers, North Shore United, Manukau United, Melville United, Birkenhead United, Western Springs, East Coast Bays, Hamilton Wanderers, Onehunga Sports, Central United, Eastern Suburbs, Waitakere City
  • Capital Region: Lower Hutt City, North Wellington, Western Suburbs, Waterside Karori

    Round 2

    All matches were played on Queen's Birthday weekend 31 May-3 June 2019.[4]

    Northern Region
    Capital / Central Region
    Mainland Region
    Southern Region

    Round 3

    All matches were played on the weekend of 15–16 June 2019.[6]

    Northern Region
    Central / Capital Region
    Mainland
    Southern Region

    Round 4

    All matches were played on the weekend of 6–7 July 2019.[7]

    Northern Region
    Capital / Central Region
    Mainland / Southern Region

    Quarter-finals

    The quarter-finals were played on the weekend of 3–4 August 2019.[8]

    Semi-finals

    The semi-finals were played on the weekend of 24–25 August 2019.[9]

    Final

    The final was played on 8 September 2019.[10]

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: ISPS Handa a new funding partner. New Zealand Football. 8 December 2016. 25 June 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170611165138/http://www.nzfootball.co.nz/nz-football-announce-isps-handa-as-a-funding-partner/. 11 June 2017. dead.
    2. Web site: Match details locked in for cups. New Zealand Football. 16 April 2018. 3 May 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210503200521/https://www.nzfootball.co.nz/newsarticle/75710. dead.
    3. Web site: Match details locked in for cups. New Zealand Football. 7 May 2019.
    4. Web site: Match details confirmed for cups. New Zealand Football. 20 May 2019. 8 August 2019. 15 August 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190815025640/https://www.nzfootball.co.nz/newsarticle/77048. dead.
    5. Web site: Mosgiel forfeit Chatham Cup match . . 11 June 2019 .
    6. Web site: Third round match details confirmed. New Zealand Football. 11 June 2019. 8 August 2019. 8 August 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190808211856/https://www.nzfootball.co.nz/newsarticle/78013. dead.
    7. Web site: Cup details locked in . . 25 June 2019 . 13 August 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190813031938/https://www.nzfootball.co.nz/newsarticle/78585 . dead .
    8. Web site: Match details confirmed in cups . . 17 July 2018 . 13 August 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190813031937/https://www.nzfootball.co.nz/newsarticle/79454 . dead .
    9. Web site: Semi-final details locked in . . 9 August 2018 . 13 August 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190813031940/https://www.nzfootball.co.nz/newsarticle/80617 . dead .
    10. Web site: Cup finals bring top football . . 6 September 2019 . 11 October 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191011003745/https://www.nzfootball.co.nz/newsarticle/81722 . dead .