1956 Fa Cup Final

Related Essays

  • Real Estate Investing Why Property Outshines the Rest Property's phenomenal leveraging power When I tell people that property is not just as good as other investments, not just a littl...
  • Analysing The Performance Of The English Premier League Analyzing the Performance of the English F.A. Premier League With an Econometric Frontier Model CARLOS PESTANA BARROS Technical University of Lisbon STEPHANIE LEA...
  • Toy Retailing In India Identification of locations for the toy retail venture between Reliance and Hamleys Table of Content: 1. Introduction 4 2. Problem Definition 4 3. Review of Liter...
  • David Beckham Bio David Robert Joseph Beckham OBE (born May 2, 1975) is an English footballer born in Leytonstone, London. He is a midfielder for Real Madrid and captain of the Eng...
  • Pele American National Soccer Hall of Fame. Spotted by the renowned football star, Medardo 'Lalo' Olea, Pelé began playing for Santos Futebol Clube at just 15 and his ...

1956 Fa Cup Final

1956 FA Cup Final
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
1956 FA Cup Final
Winner
Manchester City
Runner Up
Birmingham City
Score
3–1
Date
5 May 1956
Venue
Wembley Stadium

The 1956 FA Cup Final was the final match of the 1955–56 staging of English football's primary cup competition, the Football Association Challenge Cup, better known as the FA Cup. The showpiece event was contested between Manchester City and Birmingham City at Wembley Stadium in London on Saturday 5 May 1956. Two-time winners Manchester City were appearing in their sixth final, whereas Birmingham City were seeking to win the competition for the first time, having lost their only previous final in 1931.

Each club needed to win five matches to reach the final. Manchester City's victories were close affairs, each settled by the odd goal, and they needed a replay to defeat fifth-round opponents Liverpool. Birmingham City made more comfortable progress: they scored eighteen goals while conceding only two, and won each match at the first attempt despite being drawn to play on their opponents' ground in every round. They became the first team to reach an FA Cup final without playing at home.

Birmingham entered the match as favourites, in a contest billed as a contrast of styles. Watched by a crowd of 100,000 and a television audience of five million, Manchester City took an early lead through Joe Hayes, but Noel Kinsey equalised midway through the first half. Second half goals from Jack Dyson and Bobby Johnstone gave Manchester City a 3–1 victory. The match is best remembered for the heroics of Manchester City goalkeeper, Bert Trautmann, who continued playing despite breaking a bone in his neck in a collision with Birmingham's Peter Murphy.

View Full Essay

  • Submitted by: testman123456
  • Date Submitted: 11/26/2008 10:38 AM
  • Category: Social Issues
  • Words: 277
  • Pages: 2
  • Views: 225
  • Popularity Rank: 7019

View Full Essay

Want More?

Thousands of students trust PeerPapers.com for help with their writing. Shouldn't you?

Join Now