Jump to content

Full Members' Cup: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
→‎Finals: cut out dets of 2 more finals as articles now created
No edit summary
Line 107: Line 107:
{{fs end}}
{{fs end}}


===1992: Nottingham Forest 3 Southampton 2===
===1992: Nottingham Forest 3 Southampton 2 (aet)===
<ref>{{cite book| title=In That Number – A post-war chronicle of Southampton FC |last= Holley |first= Duncan |coauthors= Chalk, Gary | publisher=[[Hagiology Publishing|Hagiology]] | year=2003 | isbn=0-9534474-3-X|page=301}}</ref>
<ref>{{cite book| title=In That Number – A post-war chronicle of Southampton FC |last= Holley |first= Duncan |coauthors= Chalk, Gary | publisher=[[Hagiology Publishing|Hagiology]] | year=2003 | isbn=0-9534474-3-X|page=301}}</ref>
{{Football team 1|team=[[Nottingham Forest F.C.|Nottingham Forest]]}}
{{Football team 1|team=[[Nottingham Forest F.C.|Nottingham Forest]]}}

Revision as of 16:01, 12 March 2011

The Full Members Cup was an association football cup competition held in English football from 1985 to 1992. It was also known under its sponsored names of the Simod Cup from 1987 to 1989 and the Zenith Data Systems Cup from 1989 to 1992.[1]

The competition was created after the Heysel Stadium disaster, when English clubs were banned from European competition, as an additional competition for clubs in the top two divisions[2] (but not the teams that would have qualified for Europe in 1985–86, as these played in the Super Cup instead). It was named as such because these clubs were Full Members of the Football League, with full voting rights; teams from the lower two divisions were Associate Members and were eligible for the Football League Trophy (then known as the Associate Members Cup). However, it was cancelled after seven seasons, when the Premier League arose from the old Football League First Division and reduced the Football League to three divisions.

Seven finals took place between 1986 and 1992. Blackburn Rovers and Reading FC were the only Second Division teams to win the Cup. Chelsea FC and Nottingham Forest won the trophy twice.

Participants

The competition was open to teams from the top two levels of the English leagues (Football League First Division and Football League Second Division) but not all eligible teams competed in the tournament. Details of numbers of teams competing in each of the seasons is provided below:[3]

1985/86: 21 teams – 5 from Division 1 (Chelsea, Coventry City, Manchester City, Oxford United, West Bromwich Albion) and 16 from Division 2 [note: the 6 teams that would have qualified for Europe were ineligible for the Full Members Cup as they played in the Super Cup tournament instead].

1986/87: 30 teams – 14 from Division 1 and 16 from Division 2

1987/88: 40 teams – 17 from Division 1 and all 23 from Division 2

1988/89: 40 teams – 16 from Division 1 and all 24 from Division 2

1989/90: 37 teams – 13 from Division 1 and all 24 from Division 2

1990/91: 39 teams – 15 from Division 1 and all 24 from Division 2

1991/92: 41 teams – 18 from Division 1 and 23 from Division 2 (all D2 teams entered except Sunderland)

Note: Four teams were in the First Division throughout the six seasons of the tournament but never entered the competition – Arsenal, Liverpool, Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur.

Finals

1986: Chelsea 5 Manchester City 4

See 1986 Full Members Cup Final for further details.

1987: Blackburn Rovers 1 Charlton Athletic 0

See 1987 Full Members Cup Final for further details.

1988: Reading 4 Luton Town 1

See 1988 Full Members Cup Final for further details.

As Reading won the competition the same season in which they were relegated they were not eligible to defend the tournament the following season.[1]

1989: Nottingham Forest 4 Everton 3 (aet)

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

Nottingham Forest
No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK England ENG Steve Sutton
2 DF England ENG Brian Laws
3 DF England ENG Stuart Pearce
4 MF England ENG Des Walker
5 DF Scotland SCO Terry Wilson
6 MF England ENG Steve Hodge
7 MF Ireland EIR Tommy Gaynor
8 MF England ENG Neil Webb
9 FW England ENG Nigel Clough
10 FW England ENG Lee Chapman 2
11 MF England ENG Garry Parker 2
12 (sub) DF England ENG Steve Chettle
14 (sub) MF England ENG Franz Carr
Manager England ENG Brian Clough
Everton
No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Wales WAL Neville Southall
2 DF England ENG Neil McDonald
3 DF Wales WAL Pat Van Den Hauwe
4 DF Wales WAL Kevin Ratcliffe
5 DF England ENG Dave Watson
6 MF England ENG Paul Bracewell
7 MF England ENG Trevor Steven
8 MF Scotland SCO Pat Nevin
9 FW Scotland SCO Graeme Sharp 1
10 FW England ENG Tony Cottee { 2
11 MF Ireland EIR Kevin Sheedy
sub MF Scotland SCO Stuart McCall
Manager England ENG Colin Harvey

1990: Chelsea 1 Middlesbrough 0

See 1990 Full Members Cup Final for further details.

1991: Crystal Palace 4 Everton 1 (aet)

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

Crystal Palace
No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK England ENG Nigel Martyn
2 DF England ENG John Humphrey
3 DF England ENG Richard Shaw
4 MF England ENG Andy Gray
5 DF Wales WAL Eric Young
6 DF England ENG Andy Thorn
7 MF England ENG John Salako 113'
8 MF England ENG Geoff Thomas 67'
9 FW England ENG Mark Bright
10 FW England ENG Ian Wright 101,115'
11 MF England ENG Alan Pardew
sub DF Ireland EIR Eddie McGoldrick
sub FW England ENG Garry Thompson
Manager England ENG Steve Coppell
Everton
No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Wales WAL Neville Southall
2 DF England ENG Neil McDonald
3 DF England ENG Andy Hinchcliffe
4 DF England ENG Martin Keown
5 DF England ENG Dave Watson
6 MF Ireland EIR Mike Milligan
7 MF Poland POL Robert Warzycha 69'
8 MF Scotland SCO Stuart McCall
9 FW England ENG Mike Newell
10 FW England ENG Tony Cottee
11 MF Ireland EIR Kevin Sheedy
Sub DF Wales WAL Kevin Ratcliffe
Sub MF Scotland SCO Pat Nevin
Manager England ENG Howard Kendall

1992: Nottingham Forest 3 Southampton 2 (aet)

[4] Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

Nottingham Forest
No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Wales WAL Andy Marriott
2 DF England ENG Gary Charles
3 DF England ENG Stuart Pearce
4 DF England ENG Des Walker
5 DF England ENG Darren Wassall
6 MF Ireland EIR Roy Keane
7 MF England ENG Gary Crosby
8 MF Scotland SCO Scot Gemmill 15,112'
9 FW England ENG Nigel Clough
10 FW England ENG Teddy Sheringham
11 FW Northern Ireland NIR Kingsley Black 45'
Sub DF England ENG Steve Chettle
Manager England ENG Brian Clough
Southampton
No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK England ENG Tim Flowers
2 DF Ireland EIR Jeff Kenna
3 DF England ENG Francis Benali
4 MF Wales WAL Barry Horne
5 DF England ENG Kevin Moore 70'
6 DF England ENG Neil Ruddock
7 MF England ENG Matthew Le Tissier 64'
8 MF England ENG Glenn Cockerill
9 FW England ENG Alan Shearer
10 FW Northern Ireland NIR Iain Dowie
11 MF England ENG Terry Hurlock
Manager England ENG Ian Branfoot

References

  1. ^ a b Full Members Cup overview and finals at FCHD
  2. ^ Rob Maul (20 February 2005). "Caught in Time: Blackburn Rovers win Full Members Cup, 1987". Sunday Times. Retrieved 9 November 2010.
  3. ^ Old Cup Competitions/Full Members Cup at Statto.com
  4. ^ Holley, Duncan (2003). In That Number – A post-war chronicle of Southampton FC. Hagiology. p. 301. ISBN 0-9534474-3-X. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)