1993–94 FA Cup
Tournament details | |
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Country | England |
Final positions | |
Champions | Manchester United |
Runner-up | Chelsea |
The 1993–94 FA Cup was the 113th staging of the world and England's oldest cup competition, the Football Association Cup or FA Cup. The competition overall was won by Manchester United for the first time since 1990, with a 4–0 thrashing of Chelsea.
The first round started in November 1993 for teams from divisions 2 and 3. The teams form the Premier League and division 1 joined at the third round. For more information on the preliminary rounds and qualifying competition for this year's FA Cup, see the FA Cup archives on the FA website.
Calendar
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First round proper
The first round matches were played on the weekend beginning 13 November 1993.
Second round proper
The second round matches were played on the weekend beginning 4 December 1993.
Tie no | Home team | Score | Away team |
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1 | Chester City | 2–0 | Hull City |
2 | AFC Bournemouth | 1–1 | Nuneaton Borough |
replay | Nuneaton Borough | 0–1 | AFC Bournemouth |
3 | Bath City | 2–1 | Hereford United |
4 | Burnley | 4–1 | Rochdale |
5 | Yeovil Town | 0–2 | Bromsgrove Rovers |
6 | Walsall | 1–1 | Scunthorpe United |
replay | Scunthorpe United | 0–0 | Walsall |
Scunthorpe United won 7–6 on penalties | |||
7 | Crewe Alexandra | 2–1 | Macclesfield Town |
8 | Lincoln City | 1–3 | Bolton Wanderers |
9 | Shrewsbury Town | 0–1 | Preston North End |
10 | Stockport County | 5–1 | Halifax Town |
11 | Wycombe Wanderers | 1–0 | Cambridge United |
12 | Kidderminster Harriers | 1–0 | Woking |
13 | Brentford | 1–3 | Cardiff City |
14 | Plymouth Argyle | 2–0 | Gillingham |
15 | Carlisle United | 3–1 | Stalybridge Celtic |
16 | Port Vale | 1–0 | Huddersfield Town |
17 | Torquay United | 0–1 | Sutton United |
18 | Wigan Athletic | 1–0 | Scarborough |
19 | Leyton Orient | 1–1 | Exeter City |
replay | Exeter City | 2–2 | Leyton Orient |
Exeter City won 5–4 on penalties | |||
20 | Crawley Town | 1–2 | Barnet |
Third round proper
The third round matches were played on the weekend beginning 8 January 1994.
Fourth round proper
The fourth round matches were played on the weekend beginning 29 January 1994.
Tie no | Home team | Score | Away team |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Notts County | 1–1 | West Ham United |
replay | West Ham United | 1–0 | Notts County |
2 | Bolton Wanderers | 2–2 | Arsenal |
replay | Arsenal | 1–3 | Bolton Wanderers |
3 | Grimsby Town | 1–2 | Aston Villa |
4 | Ipswich Town | 3–0 | Tottenham Hotspur |
5 | Stockport County | 0–4 | Bristol City |
6 | Newcastle United | 1–1 | Luton Town |
replay | Luton Town | 2–0 | Newcastle United |
7 | Kidderminster Harriers | 1–0 | Preston North End |
8 | Norwich City | 0–2 | Manchester United |
9 | Plymouth Argyle | 2–2 | Barnsley |
replay | Barnsley | 1–0 | Plymouth Argyle |
10 | Oldham Athletic | 0–0 | Stoke City |
replay | Stoke City | 0–1 | Oldham Athletic |
11 | Chelsea | 1–1 | Sheffield Wednesday |
replay | Sheffield Wednesday | 1–3 | Chelsea |
12 | Wimbledon | 2–1 | Sunderland |
13 | Cardiff City | 1–0 | Manchester City |
14 | Port Vale | 0–2 | Wolverhampton Wanderers |
15 | Charlton Athletic | 0–0 | Blackburn Rovers |
replay | Blackburn Rovers | 0–1 | Charlton Athletic |
16 | Oxford United | 2–2 | Leeds United |
replay | Leeds United | 2–3 | Oxford United |
Fifth round proper
The fifth round matches were played on the weekend beginning 19 February 1994.
Tie no | Home team | Score | Away team |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Bristol City | 1–1 | Charlton Athletic |
replay | Charlton Athletic | 2–0 | Bristol City |
2 | Bolton Wanderers | 1–0 | Aston Villa |
3 | Wolverhampton Wanderers | 1–1 | Ipswich Town |
replay | Ipswich Town | 1–2 | Wolverhampton Wanderers |
4 | Kidderminster Harriers | 0–1 | West Ham United |
5 | Oldham Athletic | 1–0 | Barnsley |
6 | Wimbledon | 0–3 | Manchester United |
7 | Cardiff City | 1–2 | Luton Town |
8 | Oxford United | 1–2 | Chelsea |
Sixth round proper
Oldham Athletic reached the FA Cup semi-finals for the second time in five seasons, where they would meet their opponents from 1990 – Manchester United.
Luton reached their first semi-final since 1988 at the expense of West Ham United, where they would take on Chelsea.
Bolton | 0–1 | Oldham Athletic |
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Beckford 84' |
Manchester United | 3–1 | Charlton |
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Hughes 46' Kanchelskis 71', 75' |
Leaburn |
Chelsea | 1–0 | Wolves |
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Peacock |
West Ham | 0–0 | Luton |
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Semi-finals
The semi-final paired Premier League leaders and defending champions Manchester United with relegation-threatened Oldham Athletic - a repeat of the 1990 semi-final. Wembley Stadium was the venue for this match, which was still goalless after 90 minutes. Oldham took the lead in extra time through Neil Pointon, and held their lead the 119th minute, when a late equaliser by Mark Hughes forced a replay. The two sides met at Maine Road for the replay, which United won 4–1 to end their opposition's hopes of a first-ever FA Cup final, and move closer to winning the double.
The other semi-final paired Premier League side Chelsea with Division One side Luton Town, with both sides looking for glory in the cup after disappointing league campaigns. Like the other semi-final the following day, this match was played at Wembley. Chelsea went through with Gavin Peacock scoring twice in a 2-0 win, to reach their first FA Cup final for 24 years.
Chelsea | 2–0 | Luton Town |
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Peacock 13', 48' | Report |
Manchester United | 1 – 1 (a.e.t) | Oldham Athletic |
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Hughes 120' | Pointon 106' |
Replay
Manchester United | 4–1 | Oldham Athletic |
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Irwin 10' Kanchelskis 15' Robson 62' Giggs 67' |
Report | Pointon 40' |
FA Cup Final
Two penalties by Eric Cantona as well as late goals by Mark Hughes and Brian McClair gave Manchester United a 4–0 triumph over Chelsea after the deadlock was still unbroken at half-time, and saw them become only the sixth club in history to win The Double.
Chelsea
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Manchester United
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Media coverage
For the sixth consecutive season in the United Kingdom, the BBC were the free to air broadcasters while Sky Sports were the subscription broadcasters.[citation needed]