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1954 FA Cup final

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1954 FA Cup Final
Event1953–54 FA Cup
Date1 May 1954
VenueWembley Stadium, London
1953
1955

The 1954 FA Cup Final was a football match between West Bromwich Albion and Preston North End, played on 1 May 1954 at the original Wembley Stadium in London. It was the final match of the 1953–54 staging of English football's primary cup competition, the Football Association Challenge Cup (better known as the FA Cup). The match was the 73rd FA Cup Final and the 26th to be played at Wembley.

West Bromwich Albion were appearing in their ninth final, having won the cup on three previous occasions, while Preston had won the competition twice and were playing in the final for the sixth time. The two clubs had met in one final before in 1888, with Albion winning 2–1 on that occasion; in this match, Albion won 3–2. Ronnie Allen opened the scoring but Preston soon equalised through Angus Morrison. Preston then took the lead through Charlie Wayman although the goal was probably offside. Allen equalised from the penalty spot before a late goal from Frank Griffin secured the cup for Albion for the fourth time. This capped off the club's greatest ever season as they also finished second in the table, agonisingly losing out on 'the double' to Black Country rivals Wolverhampton Wanderers.

The last surviving member of the winning team, Ray Barlow, died in March 2012 at the age of 85. As of November 2015, Tommy Docherty is the only surviving player from the match.

Background

Memorabilia from the final on display at the National Football Museum in Preston.

Both clubs were members of the First Division, West Bromwich Albion having finished as runners-up during the 1953–54 league season and Preston North End 11th. Albion were victorious in both league matches between the two sides, winning 2–0 at Deepdale and 3–2 at The Hawthorns.[1] The teams had met on six previous occasions in the FA Cup. Albion had won four of those ties, including the 1886–87 semi-final and 1888 final, while Preston were victorious in the semi-finals of 1888–89 and 1936–37.[2]

Route to the final

West Bromwich Albion

West Bromwich Albion
Round Opposition Score
3rd Chelsea (h) 1–0
4th Rotherham United (h) 4–0
5th Newcastle United (h) 3–2
6th Tottenham Hotspur (h) 3–0
Semi-final Port Vale (n) 2–1

As a First Division club, West Bromwich Albion entered the FA Cup at the third round stage. They began their 61st FA Cup campaign at home against Chelsea, whom they beat 1–0 thanks to an own goal by Ron Greenwood.[3] Their next cup match saw Albion defeat Rotherham United 4–0, in what was the first ever meeting between the two sides in any competition. Johnny Nicholls scored two of the goals and Ronnie Allen and Reg Ryan one each.[4] A hat-trick from Ronnie Allen gave Albion a 3–2 win against Newcastle United in round five in a thrilling match. The game was played in front of 61,088 spectators, the highest attendance at The Hawthorns for 16 years. An estimated 20,000 more were locked out.[5] Albion were then drawn at home for the fourth round in succession; this time Tottenham Hotspur were the visitors as the competition reached the quarter-final stage. A free-kick by Ray Barlow and two goals from Johnny Nicholls resulted in a 3–0 West Bromwich Albion victory.[6]

Staffordshire rivals and Third Division North leaders Port Vale were the opposition in the semi-final, which was played at the neutral venue of Villa Park in front of a near 70,000 crowd. Vale's Albert Leake opened the scoring before the break, but Albion equalised just after the hour when Jimmy Dudley's cross evaded the Vale goalkeeper Ray King and ended up in the net. Ronnie Allen, playing against his former team, scored the winning goal for Albion from a penalty kick, following a foul on George Lee.[7] leading to scenes of wild celebration from the Albion supporters.

Match details

West Bromwich Albion3–2Preston North End
Allen 21' 63' (pen.)
Griffin 87'
(Report) Morrison 22'
Wayman 51'
Attendance: 100,000 approx.
Referee: A. Luty
West Bromwich Albion
Preston North End
GK 1 England Jim Sanders
RB 2 England Joe Kennedy
LB 3 England Len Millard (c)
RH 4 Scotland Jimmy Dudley
CH 5 England Jimmy Dugdale
LH 6 England Ray Barlow
OR 7 England Frank Griffin
IR 8 Republic of Ireland Reg Ryan
CF 9 England Ronnie Allen
IL 10 England Johnny Nicholls
OL 11 England George Lee
Manager:
England Vic Buckingham
GK 1 England George Thompson
RB 2 Scotland Willie Cunningham
LB 3 England Joe Walton
RH 4 Scotland Tommy Docherty
CH 5 Australia Joe Marston
LH 6 Scotland Willie Forbes
OR 7 England Tom Finney
IR 8 England Bobby Foster
CF 9 England Charlie Wayman
IL 10 Scotland Jimmy Baxter
OL 11 Scotland Angus Morrison
Manager:
Scotland Scot Symon

References

Specific
  1. ^ McOwan, Gavin (2002). The Essential History of West Bromwich Albion. Headline. p. 245. ISBN 0-7553-1146-9.
  2. ^ Matthews, Tony; Mackenzie, Colin (1987). Albion! A Complete Record of West Bromwich Albion 1879–1987. Breedon Books. pp. 157–164. ISBN 0-907969-23-2.
  3. ^ Matthews (2004) pp. 62–63.
  4. ^ Matthews (2004) pp. 68–69.
  5. ^ Matthews (2004) pp. 74–75.
  6. ^ Matthews (2004) pp. 82–83.
  7. ^ Matthews (2004) pp. 88–89.
General