2004 FA Cup Final

2004 FA Cup Final
Event 2003–04 FA Cup
Date 22 May 2004
Venue Millennium Stadium, Cardiff
Man of the Match Ruud van Nistelrooy (Manchester United)[1]
Referee Jeff Winter (North Yorkshire)
Attendance 71,350
2003
2005

The 2004 FA Cup Final was the 123rd final the FA Cup and the fourth final to be played at the Millennium Stadium, the Welsh national stadium in Cardiff, due to the ongoing reconstruction of the usual venue, London's Wembley Stadium. The match took place on 22 May 2004 and it was contested by Manchester United, who had finished third in the Premier League that season, and Millwall, who had finished tenth in Division One.

Manchester United secured a record eleventh FA Cup victory with a headed goal from Cristiano Ronaldo and a brace from Ruud van Nistelrooy which included a penalty kick.[2] In contrast, it was Millwall's first appearance in a final of either the FA Cup or the Football League Cup.

At the trophy presentation afterward, the Manchester United players wore shirts labelled "Davis 36" in memory of midfielder Jimmy Davis, who wore United shirt number 36, and who had died in a car crash in August 2003.[3]

The match was refereed by Jeff Winter. Roger Green and Tony East were Winter's assistants and Matt Messias was the fourth official.

Contents

Background

Manchester United were appearing in their sixteenth FA Cup final and had won it on ten of their previous fifteen appearances. Two of these victories had yielded a League and FA Cup double (in 1994 and 1996) and in 1999 they had won the FA Cup as part of an unprecedented treble of Premier League, Champions League and FA Cup wins.

For Millwall, 2004 was their first appearance in an FA Cup final, however they had reached the semi-finals on three prior occasions, in (1900, 1903 and 1937). Their appearance in the 1937 semi-final was notable as Millwall were the first team in the old Division Three to reach that round. They also became only the second team from outside the top flight of English football to reach the final since 1982, and the first team from outside the Premier League since its foundation in 1992.

Match

Teams

Manchester United started with the eleven that they had relied on for most of the season, with Tim Howard playing in goal; a back four comprised of Gary Neville, Wes Brown, Mikaël Silvestre and John O'Shea; Cristiano Ronaldo and Ryan Giggs giving the width as wide men in a 4–4–1–1 formation, with Roy Keane and Darren Fletcher sitting in central midfield; and Ruud van Nistelrooy up front, supported by Paul Scholes. Roy Carroll became only the second goalkeeper to be brought on as a substitute in an FA Cup final.

The Millwall team had been badly weakened by injuries and suspensions to key players, including Kevin Muscat and Danny Dichio, so had to utilise an unfamiliar 4–5–1 formation which included player-manager Dennis Wise playing in midfield for the last time before retiring. Wise's appearance came sixteen years after his first FA Cup final with Wimbledon in 1988. It also turned out to be the last competitive game in a Millwall shirt for Australian midfielder Tim Cahill, who would move to Everton during the summer. Despite being injured and unable to keep goal for Millwall in the final, Wise insisted that Tony Warner, the club's first-choice goalkeeper, be presented with a runners-up medal because if he had been fit he would have played in the final.

Curtis Weston beat a 125-year record, previously held by James F. M. Prinsep of Clapham Rovers, by coming on as a substitute to replace Wise, thereby becoming the youngest-ever player to appear in an FA Cup final. Weston's age was 17 years 119 days, beating Prinsep's age of 17 years and 245 days by 126 days.

Summary

Millwall's game plan was to get men behind the ball, defending deep and attempt to hit Manchester United on the break, but they were unable to attempt this often as United dominated most of the proceedings. United's early chances fell to Paul Scholes, who had some long-range efforts at goal — one fizzed just wide while another was tipped away by The Lions' goalkeeper Andy Marshall. Scholes was presented with an opportunity on the six-yard line when a rabona cross from Cristiano Ronaldo found him unmarked. The midfielder seemed as surprised by the cross as everyone else and completely missed the ball with his attempted hooked shot.

Millwall's only chance of the first half came when Paul Ifill broke down the right-hand side of the pitch and arrowed in towards the penalty area, only to have his shot blocked. They looked to have survived the first half with the scoresheet intact until a decisive moment on 44 minutes. Roy Keane played in Gary Neville as he moved into the penalty area, and the right-back chipped a cross back across the box. Millwall player-manager Dennis Wise waited for the ball to arrive, but in doing so, he allowed Ronaldo to steal in and plant a firm header past Marshall, to give United a 1—0 lead going into the break.

The second half began similarly to the first, with Manchester United passing the ball around freely. They went 2–0 up when Ryan Giggs went on a run into the Millwall box. He was challenged by David Livermore and referee Jeff Winter adjudged the challenge to be a foul; he pointed straight to the penalty spot although subsequent television replays suggested that Livermore won the ball in the challenge. Ruud van Nistelrooy scored the penalty kick with a shot into the top-corner to the goalkeeper's right. United now held a comfortable advantage and Millwall struggled to find a way back into the match. United's defence kept Neil Harris and Tim Cahill at bay, and the Red Devils eventually scored a third when Giggs went on a run down the left and crossed for Van Nistelrooy to tap in from three yards out, and, as television replays showed, in an offside position.

Millwall had a chance near the end when substitute Mark McCammon almost found a way through United's defence, while Scholes had a late effort for the Reds, before Curtis Weston replaced Wise for his record-breaking appearance as the youngest player in an FA Cup final. The match finished 3—0 to Manchester United, their eleventh success in the FA Cup.

Match details

22 May 2004
15:00 BST
Manchester United 3 – 0 Millwall Millennium Stadium, Cardiff
Attendance: 71,350
Referee: Jeff Winter (North Yorkshire)
Ronaldo  44'
Van Nistelrooy  65' (pen.)81'
Report
Manchester United
Millwall
MANCHESTER UNITED:
GK 14 Tim Howard 84'
RB 2 Gary Neville
CB 6 Wes Brown
CB 27 Mikaël Silvestre
LB 22 John O'Shea
RM 7 Cristiano Ronaldo 84'
CM 24 Darren Fletcher 84'
CM 16 Roy Keane (c)
LM 11 Ryan Giggs
SS 18 Paul Scholes
CF 10 Ruud van Nistelrooy
Substitutes:
GK 13 Roy Carroll 84'
DF 3 Phil Neville
MF 8 Nicky Butt 84'
MF 19 Eric Djemba-Djemba
FW 20 Ole Gunnar Solskjær 84'
Manager:
Alex Ferguson
MILLWALL:
GK 33 Andy Marshall
RB 25 Marvin Elliott
CB 2 Matthew Lawrence (c)
CB 12 Darren Ward
LB 3 Robbie Ryan 74'
RM 7 Paul Ifill
CM 19 Dennis Wise 48' 89'
CM 8 David Livermore
LM 26 Peter Sweeney
SS 4 Tim Cahill
CF 9 Neil Harris 75'
Substitutes:
GK 13 Willy Guéret
DF 27 Alan Dunne
MF 37 Barry Cogan 74'
MF 11 Curtis Weston 89'
FW 23 Mark McCammon 75'
Player-Manager:
Dennis Wise

MATCH OFFICIALS

MATCH RULES

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Penalty shootout if scores still level.
  • Five named substitutes
  • Maximum of three substitutions.

Route to the final

Manchester United

Home teams listed first.

Round 3: Aston Villa 1–2 Manchester United

Round 4: Northampton Town 0–3 Manchester United

Round 5: Manchester United 4–2 Manchester City

Round 6: Manchester United 2–1 Fulham

 

Semi-final: Arsenal 0–1 Manchester United (at Villa Park)

Millwall

Home teams listed first.

Round 3: Millwall 2–1 Walsall

Round 4: Telford United 0–2 Millwall

Round 5: Millwall 1–0 Burnley

Round 6: Millwall 0–0 Tranmere Rovers

Replay: Tranmere Rovers 1–2 Millwall

Semi-final: Sunderland 0–1 Millwall (at Old Trafford)

References

  1. ^ "FA Cup final clockwatch". BBC Sport (British Broadcasting Corporation). 22 May 2004. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/fa_cup/3738415.stm. Retrieved 22 March 2011. 
  2. ^ "Man Utd win FA Cup". BBC Sport (British Broadcasting Corporation). 22 May 2004. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/fa_cup/3725063.stm. Retrieved 26 January 2010. 
  3. ^ "Players remember Davis". BBC Sport. 22 May 2004. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/fa_cup/3739335.stm.