2003 FA Cup final
Event | FA Cup 2002–03 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||||
Date | 17 May 2003 | ||||||
Venue | Millennium Stadium, Cardiff | ||||||
Man of the Match | Thierry Henry (Arsenal) | ||||||
Referee | Graham Barber (Hertfordshire) | ||||||
Attendance | 73,726 | ||||||
The 2003 FA Cup Final saw the holders Arsenal, beat Southampton. The match took place on Saturday, 17 May 2003 at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff and ended 1–0 with a 38th minute goal by Robert Pirès separating the sides.
It was the third consecutive year the final was played at the Millennium Stadium, due to the ongoing reconstruction of Wembley Stadium, the final's usual venue. There were 73,726 spectators at the game and due to poor weather conditions, the game was effectively played indoors.
Arsenal had won the FA Cup on eight previous occasions (1930, 1936, 1950, 1971, 1979, 1993, 1998, and 2002). Three of these wins had yielded a League / FA Cup "double" (1971, 1998, and 2002), and one win yielded an FA Cup/League Cup "cup double" (1993). Southampton had won the FA Cup on one previous occasion (1976), and reached the final in 1900 and 1902. The 2002–03 season saw Arsenal finish second and Southampton eighth in the Premier League.
The two Premiership matches played between the clubs that season resulted in a home win each time. Southampton had beaten Arsenal 3–2 at St. Mary's Stadium on 23 November, with James Beattie (2) and Agustin Delgado scoring for the home side. On 7 May, Arsenal won 6–1, with Jermaine Pennant and Robert Pirès both scoring hat-tricks, although both teams fielded weakened sides for this match.
Goalkeeper David Seaman captained Arsenal in the absence of the injured Patrick Vieira. It was to be his last appearance for the club. In defence for Southampton, Chris Baird made only his second competitive start, having made his debut in March. Chris Marsden captained Southampton in the absence of the injured club captain, Jason Dodd. It was the first FA Cup Final in which a goalkeeper came on as a substitute - Paul Jones replacing the injured Antti Niemi.
Graham Barber from Tring, Hertfordshire was the referee, with Nigel Miller and Keith Stroud as his assistants, and Mike Dean as the fourth official.
Arsenal had finished second in the Premier League that season, but had led the table by eight points as recently as 2 March and a loss of form during the final weeks of the season had ended their hopes of a unique fourth double as well as the chance of becoming the first club to win the double in successive seasons.
Match details
Arsenal | 1 – 0 | Southampton |
---|---|---|
Pirès 38' | Report |
Arsenal
|
Southampton
|
|
|
MATCH OFFICIALS
MAN OF THE MATCH
|
MATCH RULES
|
Road to Cardiff
ArsenalHome teams listed first. Round 3: Arsenal 2–0 Oxford United (Dennis Bergkamp, Scott McNiven (o.g.)) Round 4: Farnborough Town 1–5 Arsenal [2] (Sol Campbell, Francis Jeffers (2), Dennis Bergkamp, Lauren) Round 5: Manchester United 0–2 Arsenal (Edu, Sylvain Wiltord) Round 6: Arsenal 2–2 Chelsea (Francis Jeffers, Thierry Henry)
Semi-final: Arsenal 1–0 Sheffield United (Fredrik Ljungberg)
|
SouthamptonHome teams listed first. Round 3: Southampton 4–0 Tottenham Hotspur (Michael Svensson, Jo Tessem, Anders Svensson, James Beattie) Round 4: Southampton 1–1 Millwall (Kevin Davies)
Round 5: Southampton 2–0 Norwich City (Anders Svensson, Jo Tessem) Round 6: Southampton 2–0 Wolverhampton Wanderers (Chris Marsden, Paul Butler (o.g.)) Semi-final: Watford 1–2 Southampton (Brett Ormerod, Paul Robinson (o.g.))
|
- Both clubs received a bye to round three.
Notes
- ^ May, John (18 May 2003). "Henry's debt to Bergkamp". BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 23 April 2009.
- ^ Played at Highbury
External links
- Game facts at soccerbase.com
- Match Report at thefa.com
- Saints fans view at SaintsForever.com