1921 FA Cup final

1921 FA Cup final
Official match programme
Event1920–21 FA Cup
Date23 April 1921
VenueStamford Bridge, London
RefereeJ. Davies (Rainhill)
Attendance72,805

The 1921 FA Cup final was contested by Tottenham Hotspur and Wolverhampton Wanderers, which at the time was a Football League Second Division club, at Stamford Bridge. Spurs won by a single goal, scored by Jimmy Dimmock, eight minutes into the second half. The cup was presented to Tottenham Hotspur by King George V.

George Edmonds, who played on the losing side, was the last surviving player from the game. He died in December 1989 at the age of 96.

Route to the final

Tottenham Hotspur

Round Opposition Score Venue
1st Bristol Rovers 6–2 White Hart Lane (h)
2nd Bradford City 4–0 White Hart Lane (h)
3rd Southend United 4–1 The Kursaal (a)
Quarter-final Aston Villa 1–0 White Hart Lane (h)
Semi-final Preston North End 2–1 Hillsborough (n)

Tottenham's Cup run began with a comfortable 6–2 home win against Bristol Rovers, and they then beat Bradford City 4–0 with Jimmy Seed scoring a hat-trick.[1] In the third round, Tottenham fell behind to Third Division Southend United, but Jimmy Cantrell equalised. Bert Smith then conceded a penalty, but Southend's Albert Fairclough missed and Tottenham scored three times in the second half to go through 4–1.[2]

In the quarter-finals Tottenham faced the Cup holders Aston Villa, who had eliminated them at the same stage the previous year. On this occasion Tottenham reversed the scoreline to win 1–0, with the decisive goal scored in the first half by Jimmy Banks. In the semi-finals against another First Division team, Preston North End, at Hillsborough, Sheffield, Tottenham had two goals disallowed in the first half. Bert Bliss then scored twice and although Preston pulled a goal back late in the game when Tommy Clay scored an own goal, Tottenham held on to win 2–1 and reach the final.[2]

Wolverhampton Wanderers

Round Opposition Score Venue
1st Stoke 3–2 Molineux (h)
2nd Derby County 1–1 Baseball Ground (a)
(replay) Derby County 1–0 Molineux (h)
3rd Fulham 1–0 Craven Cottage (a)
Quarter-final Everton 1–0 Goodison Park (a)
Semi-final Cardiff City 0–0 Anfield (n)
(replay) Cardiff City 3–1 Old Trafford (n)

Pre-match

Tottenham's Scottish manager, Peter McWilliam, had been in the Newcastle United team that won the FA Cup in 1910 and lost three previous finals.[1]

Match

Match details

Tottenham Hotspur1–0Wolverhampton Wanderers
Dimmock 53'
Attendance: 72,805
Referee: J. Davies (Rainhill)
Tottenham Hotspur
Wolverhampton Wanderers
GK Alex Hunter
DF Tommy Clay
DF Bob McDonald
MF Bert Smith
MF Charlie Walters
MF Arthur Grimsdell (c)
FW Jimmy Banks
FW Jimmy Seed
FW Jimmy Cantrell
FW Bert Bliss
FW Jimmy Dimmock
Manager:
Peter McWilliam
GK Noel George
DF Maurice Woodward
DF George Marshall
MF Val Gregory (c)
MF Joe Hodnett
MF Alf Riley
FW Tancy Lea
FW Frank Burrill
FW George Edmonds
FW Arthur Potts
FW Sammy Brooks
Manager:
Jack Addenbrooke

Post-match

Jimmy Seed went on to win the Cup as a manager with Charlton Athletic in 1947.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Collett, Mike (1993). The Guinness Record of the FA Cup. Enfield: Guinness. ISBN 0851125387.
  2. ^ a b Goodwin, Bob (2011). Tottenham Hotspur: The Complete Record. DB Publishing. ISBN 9781859838464.

Match report at www.fa-cupfinals.co.uk

External media
Topical Budget film of the match
British Pathé film of the match