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Date: 9 April 1881: Venue: Kennington Oval, London: Referee: William Peirce Dix: Attendance: 4,000 [1] ← 1880. 1882 → . The 1881 FA Cup final was contested by Old ...
The Football Association Challenge Cup, commonly known as the FA Cup, is a knockout competition in English football, organised by and named after The Football Association (the FA). It is the oldest existing football competition in the world, [1] having commenced in the 1871–72 season. [2] The tournament is open to all clubs in the top 10 ...
1882–83 →. The 1881–82 Football Association Challenge Cup was the 11th staging of the FA Cup, England's oldest football tournament. Seventy-three teams entered, eleven more than last season, although five of the seventy-three never actually played a match.
1881–82 →. The 1880–81 Football Association Challenge Cup was the tenth staging of the FA Cup, England's oldest football tournament. Sixty-two teams entered, eight more than the previous season, although four of the sixty-two never played a match.
For the 1880–81 FA Cup, he pledged his loyalty to the Old Etonians, but only played in two matches before the final. The second was the 2–1 win at Stafford Road [8] which put the Etonians into the final, against the Old Carthusians, and he retained his place for the game at half-back, but was anonymous in a 3–0 defeat. [9]
His final recorded match was for the Old Carthusians against the Old Westminsters at Vincent Square in December 1880, scoring once in a 2–1 win. [14] By the 1881–82 FA Cup Keith-Falconer had stepped back to being the nominated umpire for the Old Carthusians.
The 1981–82 FA Cup was the 101st season of the world's oldest football knockout competition, The Football Association Challenge Cup, or FA Cup for short. The competition culminated with the FA Cup Final, held at Wembley Stadium, London on 22 May 1982. The match was contested by two London clubs, Tottenham Hotspur and Queens Park Rangers, with ...
1882 FA Cup final. The 1882 FA Cup final was contested by Old Etonians and Blackburn Rovers at the Kennington Oval. Old Etonians won 1–0, the only goal scored, according to most reports, by William Anderson, [1] although another, questionably, gives Reginald Macaulay. It was the last final to be won by one of the Southern "gentleman amateur ...