2012–13 FA Cup (original) (raw)

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Association football season

Football tournament season

2012–13 FA Cup

The Football Association Challenge Cup
Members of the Wigan Athletic executive with the FA Cup trophy
Tournament details
Country EnglandWales
Dates 11 August 2012 – 11 May 2013
Teams 758
Final positions
Champions Wigan Athletic (1st title)
Runner-up Manchester City
Tournament statistics
Matches played 156
Attendance 2,015,202 (12,918 per match)
Top goal scorer(s) Danny Hylton (8 goals)
2011–122013–14

The 2012–13 FA Cup was the 132nd season of the FA Cup, the main domestic cup competition in English football, and the oldest football knock-out competition in the world. It was sponsored by Budweiser for a second consecutive season,[1] thus the competition name was The FA Cup with Budweiser.

A total of 833 clubs applied to enter,[2] with 758 clubs being accepted into the competition.[3]The preliminary rounds commenced on 11 August 2012, with the first round proper played on 3 November 2012. The final was played on 11 May 2013 at Wembley Stadium in London between Manchester City and Wigan Athletic.[4][5] In what was described as the biggest upset since Wimbledon's win over Liverpool in the 1988 final,[6] Wigan defeated Manchester City 1–0 to claim the trophy for the first time in their history.

As a result, Wigan Athletic participated in the group stage of the following season's UEFA Europa League. Chelsea were the defending champions, having beaten Liverpool 2–1 in last season's final, but were eliminated in the semi-finals by Manchester City.

Three days after winning the cup, Wigan made history by becoming the first side to win the cup and be relegated in the same season, after they lost 4–1 to Arsenal.

Round Clubsremaining Clubsinvolved Winners fromprevious round New entriesthis round Leagues enteringat this round
First round 124 80 32 48 EFL League OneEFL League Two
Second round 84 40 40 none none
Third round 64 64 20 44 Premier LeagueEFL Championship
Fourth round 32 32 32 none none
Fifth round 16 16 16 none none
Quarter-finals 8 8 8 none none
Semi-finals 4 4 4 none none
Final 2 2 2 none none

The schedule for the 2012–13 FA Cup, as announced by the Football Association, is as follows:[7][8][9]

Round Main date Number of fixtures Clubs New entries this round Prize money
Extra preliminary round 11 August 2012 200 758 → 558 400: 359th–758th £1,000
Preliminary round 25 August 2012 166 558 → 392 132: 227th–358th £1,750
First round qualifying 8 September 2012 116 392 → 276 66: 161st–226th £3,000
Second round qualifying 22 September 2012 80 276 → 196 44: 117th–160th £4,500
Third round qualifying 6 October 2012 40 196 → 156 none £7,500
Fourth round qualifying 20 October 2012 32 156 → 124 24: 93rd–116th £12,500
First round proper 3 November 2012 40 124 → 84 48: 45th–92nd £18,000
Second round proper 1 December 2012 20 84 → 64 none £27,000
Third round proper 5 January 2013 32 64 → 32 44: 1st–44th £67,500
Fourth round proper 26 January 2013 16 32 → 16 none £90,000
Fifth round proper 16 February 2013 8 16 → 8 none £180,000
Sixth round proper 9–10 March 2013 4 8 → 4 none £360,000
Semi-finals 13–14 April 2013 2 4 → 2 none £900,000
Final 11 May 2013 1 2 → 1 none Runner-up £900,000Winner £1,800,000

All of the teams entering the competition that are not members of either the Premier League or the Football League had to compete in the qualifying rounds to win a place in the competition proper.

Teams from League One and League Two entered at this stage, along with the winners from the fourth round qualifying.

The draw was made on 21 October 2012 with ties to be played on 2–4 November 2012. Yate Town and Slough Town were the lowest-ranked teams left in the competition, both competing in level 8 of the English football league system.

Second round proper

[edit]

The draw for this round was made on 4 November 2012 with the ties played on the weekend of 1–2 December 2012.

Hastings United, from the seventh tier of English football, were the lowest-ranked team in the second round proper.

Bradford City accidentally fielded Curtis Good, who was ineligible to play, in a 1–1 draw against Brentford. The team was initially disqualified,[10] and Brentford declared the winners by walkover, but Bradford eventually made a successful appeal to the FA against expulsion and were fined £1,000 instead allowing the replay to go ahead.[11] Brentford would eventually dump Bradford City out of the cup after winning that replay.

Teams from the Premier League and Football League Championship entered at this stage, along with the winners from the second round.[12]

The draw for the third round was made on 2 December 2012, with the ties played on the weekend of 5–6 January 2013.[13]

Luton Town's Alex Lawless won the player of the round award.[14] The results were as follows:

  1. Alex Lawless, Luton Town
  2. Danny Hylton, Aldershot Town
  3. Matthew Barnes-Homer, Macclesfield Town
  4. Liam Bridcutt, Brighton & Hove Albion
  5. Andrea Orlandi, Brighton & Hove Albion

Hastings United remained the lowest-ranked football team in the third round proper, competing in level 7 of the English football league system.

Fourth round proper

[edit]

The draw for the fourth round took place on 6 January 2013, with Macclesfield Town and Luton Town, both from the Conference National (5) remaining as the lowest-placed teams still in the competition.[15]

The draw for the fifth round took place on 27 January 2013, with Luton Town from the Conference National (5) remaining as the lowest-ranked team still in the Cup.[16]

The draw for the quarter-finals took place on 17 February 2013, with Barnsley, Millwall and Blackburn Rovers all from the Championship remaining as the lowest-ranked teams.[17]

The draw for the semi-finals took place on 10 March 2013, with Millwall from the Championship (2) remaining as the lowest-placed team still in the Cup. The draw was carried out by Edgar Davids and Graeme Le Saux at Wembley Stadium in London.[18]

Manchester City had already qualified for the 2013–14 UEFA Champions League based on their league position, therefore Wigan Athletic had already secured a place in the 2013–14 UEFA Europa League, regardless of whether they won or lost.

Danny Hylton (in red), playing for Aldershot Town, was the competition's top scorer with 8 goals.

As of 11 May 2013[21]

Rank Player Club Goals
1 England Danny Hylton Aldershot Town 8
2 Argentina Carlos Tevez Manchester City 5
3 Senegal Demba Ba Chelsea 4
Republic of Ireland Barry Corr Southend United
England Dean Cox Leyton Orient
England Clayton Donaldson Brentford
England Will Hatfield Accrington Stanley
Mexico Javier Hernández Manchester United
Republic of Ireland Dave Mooney Leyton Orient
England Scott Rendell Luton Town
England Matt Smith Oldham Athletic
England Marvin Sordell Bolton Wanderers

The domestic broadcasting rights for the competition were held by the free-to-air channel ITV and the subscription channel ESPN.[22] ITV has held the rights since 2008–09,[23] while ESPN gained FA Cup coverage from the 2010–11 season following the collapse of Setanta in the UK.[24] Under the Ofcom code of protected sporting events, the FA Cup Final must be broadcast live on UK terrestrial television.[25]

Round Date Teams Kick-off Channels
Digital TV
First Round 2 November Cambridge City vs Milton Keynes Dons 7:30pm ESPN
4 November Braintree Town vs Tranmere Rovers 12:30pm ITV Hub ITV1[a]
Dorchester Town vs Plymouth Argyle 4:30pm ESPN
13 November Braintree Town vs Tranmere Rovers 7:45pm ITV Hub ITV4
First Round (Replay) 12 November AFC Wimbledon vs York City 7:45pm ESPN
15 November Altrincham vs Burton Albion 7:45pm ESPN
Second Round 2 December Milton Keynes Dons vs AFC Wimbledon 12:30pm ITV Hub ITV1
Alfreton Town vs Leyton Orient 3:15pm ESPN
3 December Cheltenham Town vs Hereford United 7:45pm ESPN
Second Round (Replay) 12 December Mansfield Town vs Lincoln City 7:45pm ESPN
13 December Hastings United vs Harrogate Town 7:45pm ESPN
Third Round 5 January Brighton & Hove Albion vs Newcastle United 12:30pm ITV Hub ITV1
West Ham United vs Manchester United 5:15pm ITV Hub ITV1
6 January Swansea City vs Arsenal 1:30pm ESPN
Mansfield Town vs Liverpool 4:00pm ESPN
7 January Cheltenham Town vs Everton 7:45pm ESPN
Third Round (Replay) 16 January Arsenal vs Swansea City 7:30pm ESPN
Manchester United vs West Ham United 8:05pm ITV Hub ITV
Fourth Round 26 January Stoke City vs Manchester City 12:45pm ITV Hub ITV
Manchester United vs Fulham 4:30pm ESPN
27 January Brentford vs Chelsea 12:00pm ESPN
Leeds United vs Tottenham Hotspur 2:00pm ESPN
Oldham Athletic vs Liverpool 4:00pm ITV Hub ITV
Fourth Round (Replay) 12 February Leicester City vs Huddersfield Town 7:30pm ESPN
17 February Chelsea vs Brentford 12:00pm ITV Hub ITV
Fifth Round 16 February Luton Town vs Millwall 12:45pm ESPN
Oldham Athletic vs Everton 6:00pm ITV Hub ITV
17 February Manchester City vs Leeds United 2:00pm ESPN
Huddersfield Town vs Wigan Athletic 3:55pm ITV Hub ITV
18 February Manchester United vs Reading 8:00pm ESPN
Fifth Round (Replay) 26 February Everton v Oldham Athletic 7:45pm ITV Hub ITV
Sixth Round 9 March Everton vs Wigan Athletic 12:45pm ITV Hub ITV
Manchester City vs Barnsley 5:30pm ESPN
10 March Millwall vs Blackburn Rovers 2:00pm ESPN
Manchester United vs Chelsea 4:30pm ITV Hub ITV
Sixth Round (Replay) 13 March Blackburn Rovers vs Millwall 7:30pm ESPN
1 April Chelsea vs Manchester United 12:30pm ITV Hub ITV
Semi-Finals 13 April Millwall vs Wigan Athletic 5:15pm ESPN
14 April Chelsea v Manchester City 4:00pm ITV Hub ITV
Final 11 May Manchester City v Wigan Athletic 5:15pm ITV Hub ITV
ESPN
  1. ^ Braintree Town vs Tranmere Rovers was originally scheduled to be held on January 4th at 12:30pm on ITV but was postponed due to a waterlogged pitch, the game was rearranged for January 13th at 7:45pm but due to the postponement, it was moved to ITV4.

  2. ^ "FA Partners". The Football Association.

  3. ^ "940 entries received". The Football Association.

  4. ^ "List of 758 clubs accepted". The Football Association.

  5. ^ "The FA Cup Season 2012–13 Round Dates". The Football Association. 29 June 2012.

  6. ^ "2013 FA Cup Final: As it happened". BBC Sport. 11 May 2013. Retrieved 15 May 2013.

  7. ^ "Wigan Athletic stun Manchester City to win the FA Cup for the first time in their history – on this day in 2013". Sporting Life. Press Association. 11 May 2020. Archived from the original on 4 October 2021. Retrieved 25 January 2024.

  8. ^ "FA Cup Round Dates". TheFA.com. The Football Association. 6 July 2012. Retrieved 15 July 2012.

  9. ^ "FA Cup Round Dates". The FA.

  10. ^ "FA Cup Schedule 2012/13". facupfootball.co.uk. Archived from the original on 14 January 2013.

  11. ^ "Bradford Removed From FA Cup". The FA. Retrieved 7 December 2012.

  12. ^ "FA Cup: Bradford City win appeal against expulsion". BBC Sport. 12 December 2012. Retrieved 12 December 2012.

  13. ^ "FA Cup third round draw – as it happened". The Guardian. 2 December 2012. Retrieved 13 March 2013.

  14. ^ "FA Cup third round draw: West Ham host Manchester United as holders Chelsea face Southampton". The Daily Telegraph. 2 December 2012. Retrieved 13 March 2013.

  15. ^ "The website for the English football association, the Emirates FA Cup and the England football team".

  16. ^ "Chelsea & Man City face tough 4th round away trips". ESPN. 6 January 2013. Archived from the original on 12 March 2014. Retrieved 13 March 2013.

  17. ^ "Giant-killers Oldham to face Everton in FA Cup fifth round". BBC Sport. 27 January 2013. Retrieved 13 March 2013.

  18. ^ "Manchester clubs kept apart in draw but United may meet Chelsea". TheGuardian.com. 17 February 2013.

  19. ^ "Manchester City await Man Utd or Chelsea". BBC Sport. 10 March 2013. Retrieved 13 March 2013.

  20. ^ Hunter, Andy; Jackson, Jamie (16 April 2013). "Fans hit out after FA Cup final is confirmed for late kick-off". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 17 October 2015. Retrieved 16 April 2013.

  21. ^ "Marriner takes charge of final". The Football Association. 17 April 2013. Archived from the original on 19 April 2014. Retrieved 12 May 2013.

  22. ^ "2012/2013 FA Cup Top Scorers". World Football. Retrieved 21 February 2016.

  23. ^ "ITV to continue showing FA Cup and England home games in £90m deal". The Guardian. 16 January 2012.

  24. ^ "Snatch of day re-run as ITV wins FA Cup". The Guardian. 31 March 2007.

  25. ^ "ESPN secures FA Cup rights from 2010–11 season". ESPN Soccernet. 24 September 2010. Archived from the original on 15 December 2009.

  26. ^ "Code on Sports and Other Listed and Designated Events" (PDF). Ofcom.