2000 FA Cup final explained

2000 FA Cup final
Event:1999–2000 FA Cup
Team1:Chelsea
Team1score:1
Team2:Aston Villa
Team2score:0
Date:20 May 2000
Stadium:Wembley Stadium
City:London
Man Of The Match1a:Dennis Wise (Chelsea)
Referee:Graham Poll (Hertfordshire)
Attendance:78,217[1]
Previous:1999
Next:2001

The 2000 FA Cup final was the 119th final of the FA Cup, and the 72nd (excluding replays) and last to be played at the old Wembley Stadium. It took place on 20 May 2000 and was contested between Chelsea and Aston Villa, the latter making its first FA Cup Final appearance since winning it in 1957.

Chelsea won 1–0 to secure their second FA Cup in four years, and their third in all. The goal was scored midway through the second half by Roberto Di Matteo, who had also scored in the 1997 final.

Wembley Stadium closed five months later, and was subsequently rebuilt. The FA Cup Final was played at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff for the next six years, before returning to Wembley in 2007.

Road to Wembley

Third Round
Hull City1–6Chelsea
Fourth RoundChelsea2–0Nottingham Forest
Fifth RoundChelsea2–1Leicester City
Sixth RoundChelsea5–0Gillingham
Semi-FinalNewcastle United1–2Chelsea
(at Wembley Stadium)
Third Round
Aston Villa2–1Darlington
Fourth RoundAston Villa1–0Southampton
Fifth RoundAston Villa3–2Leeds United
Sixth RoundEverton1–2Aston Villa
Semi-FinalBolton Wanderers0–0Aston Villa
(at Wembley Stadium)
Aston Villa won 4–1 on penalties

Match

Summary

Following a poor quality first half in which few chances were created, the match was brighter in the second, with Chelsea generally having the better of the play. George Weah missed several chances and Dennis Wise had a goal disallowed for offside, while Villa's Gareth Southgate headed wide. On 73 minutes, Roberto Di Matteo scored what proved to be the winning goal, capitalising on an error from Villa goalkeeper David James to put the ball in the net from close range. James came roaring off his line to deal with Zola's free-kick from the left, he fumbled the ball against Gareth Southgate's chest with Di Matteo blasting the rebound into the roof of the net. Villa could not get back in the match, their best chance falling to Benito Carbone, but his tame shot did not test Ed de Goey in goal.

Details

GK 1 Ed de Goey
RB 15
CB 6 Marcel Desailly
CB 5 Frank Leboeuf
LB 3 Celestine Babayaro
DM 7 Didier Deschamps
CM 16 Roberto Di Matteo
CM 11 Dennis Wise (c)
AM 8
CF 25
CF 31
Substitutes:
GK 23 Carlo Cudicini
CB 26 John Terry
LB 34
CM 20
CF 19
Manager:
Gianluca Vialli
GK 1 David James
DF 24 Mark Delaney
DF 5 Ugo Ehiogu
DF 4 Gareth Southgate (c)
DF 15
DF 3
MF 6
MF 10 Paul Merson
MF 7
MF 18
FW 9 Dion Dublin
Substitutes:
GK 39 Peter Enckelman
DF 31 Jlloyd Samuel
MF 26
MF 17
FW 12
Manager:
John Gregory
width=50% valign=topMan of the match width=50% valign=topMatch rules
  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Penalty shootout if scores still level.
  • Five named substitutes
  • Maximum of 3 substitutions.

Statistics

width=100 width=70 Chelseawidth=70 Aston Villa
Goal attempts 5 11
Corner kicks 2 3
Fouls committed 17 14
Offsides 5 2
Yellow cards 3 2
Red cards 0 0
Source: The People[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Colin . Malam . Chelsea 1 Aston Villa 0 . The Telegraph . 21 May 2000 . 10 May 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20071024025807/http://www.fa-cupfinals.co.uk/2000.htm . 24 October 2007 .
  2. News: Steve. Bates. VIALLI'S SO DI-LIGHTED; Chelsea 1 Aston Villa 0 . The People . 21 May 2000 . 10 May 2012.