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1931 FA Cup final

The 1931 FA Cup final was a football match between West Bromwich Albion and Birmingham, played on 25 April 1931 at the original Wembley Stadium in London. The showpiece event was the final match of the 1930–31 staging of English football's primary cup competition, the Football Association Challenge Cup (better known as the FA Cup). The match was the 56th FA Cup Final, the ninth to be played at Wembley.

1931 FA Cup Final
Official programme
Event1930–31 FA Cup
Date25 April 1931
VenueWembley Stadium, London
RefereeArthur H. Kingscott (Derbyshire)
Attendance92,406
1930
1932

West Bromwich Albion were appearing in their seventh final, having won the cup on two previous occasions, whereas Birmingham were playing in the final for the first time. Albion won the match 2–1, with both of their goals scored by W. G. Richardson. Joe Bradford had equalised Richardson's opening goal, before Richardson put the Baggies ahead again sixty seconds later.

Route to the final edit

West Bromwich Albion edit

West Bromwich Albion
Round Opposition Score
3rd Charlton Athletic (h) 2–2
Charlton Athletic (a) 1–1
Charlton Athletic (n) 3–1
4th Tottenham Hotspur (h) 1–0
5th Portsmouth (a) 1–0
6th Wolverhampton Wanderers (h) 1–1
Wolverhampton Wanderers (a) 2–1
Semi-final Everton (n) 1–0

Birmingham and West Bromwich Albion were playing in the First Division and Second Division respectively, thus both entered the competition at the third round stage.

Albion began their cup campaign by drawing 2–2 at home against Charlton Athletic, with goals from Stan Wood and Teddy Sandford. The replay at The Valley also ended in a draw (1–1), and with extra time unable to separate the teams, a second replay was required at Villa Park, where goals from Joe Carter, Stan Wood and W. G. Richardson gave Albion a 3–1 victory. Wood also scored the only goal of the game in round four against Tottenham Hotspur to set up a fifth round tie with First Division Portsmouth, the only top division side that Albion faced en route to Wembley; W. G. Richardson's goal was enough to give Albion a 1–0 victory. The quarter-final stage saw Albion paired with local rivals Wolverhampton Wanderers, whom they had already beaten both home and away during the league season. After a 1–1 draw at The Hawthorns, Albion won the replay at Molineux 2–1, thanks to goals from W. G. Richardson and Stan Wood.[1]

In the semi-final at Old Trafford, Albion faced Everton, who at that time were 13 points clear at the top of the Second Division. Everton dominated the first half but were unable to score from any of the chances they created, and it was Albion who broke the deadlock ten minutes into the second half. Albion captain Tommy Glidden played the ball into the Everton penalty area from near the halfway line, and aided by a gust of wind it sailed past Everton goalkeeper Billy Coggins and into the net. The match was played in front of 69,241 spectators, setting a new attendance record for Old Trafford.[2]

Birmingham edit

Birmingham
Round Opposition Score
3rd Liverpool (a) 2–0
4th Port Vale (h) 2–0
5th Watford (h) 3–0
6th Chelsea (h) 2–2
Chelsea (a) 3–0
Semi-final Sunderland (n) 2–0

In the third round, Birmingham "won finely" at Anfield to defeat First Division opponents Liverpool 2–0, with goals from Ernie Curtis and Joe Bradford.[3][4] In the fourth, they repeated the scoreline at home to Port Vale of the Second Division, both goals scored by Bradford,[4] and went one better in the fifth, Bradford scoring once and Curtis, "in magnificent form", twice to eliminate Third Division South club Watford.[4][5]

Chelsea provided stiffer opposition for the Birmingham team, a number of whose players were still recovering from influenza, on a St Andrew's pitch treacherous after overnight sleet. The visitors had much the better of the first half. Alex Jackson gave them the lead, and, in blizzard conditions, George Mills appeared to have scored in a goalmouth scramble, only for the goal to be disallowed after the Birmingham players drew the referee's attention to his linesman who had flagged for the ball having gone out of play. Six minutes into the second half, the lead had changed hands. First George Briggs crossed for a Bradford header, then the same pair combined for Curtis to put Birmingham ahead. Birmingham's defence held out until a misplaced clearance by Bob Gregg allowed Jackie Crawford to equalise.[6] The replay at Chelsea's Stamford Bridge attracted a crowd of 74,365, then a ground record, with 6,000 locked out; spectators broke through the barriers and sat round the edge of the pitch. Briggs, in front of an empty goal, allowed a centre from Curtis to pass between his legs – "an amazing miss" – before Chelsea centre-half John Townrow sustained an injury which forced him to leave the field. Chelsea reorganised their personnel, but early in the second half, right-half Sid Bishop was hurt twice in quick succession, leaving him in a worse condition than Townrow and his team short of numbers – no substitutes were permitted – with players in unaccustomed positions. Though they held out well, a goal from Jack Firth and two from Bradford, the second of which scored from an offside position, gave Birmingham a 3–0 victory.[7]

Birmingham faced First Division Sunderland in the semi-final at Elland Road, Leeds. The Times predicted a "hard game" in which "the first goal ... may decide the result".[8] After half an hour Birmingham took the lead via a powerful shot by Curtis. Sunderland's players appealed in vain for the award of a penalty for handling the ball, their forwards failed to take numerous chances, and Birmingham's England international goalkeeper Harry Hibbs – described by Sunderland's Bobby Gurney as playing "an absolute blinder" – made some fine saves.[9][10] With three minutes left, Curtis's shot from a Bradford cross was blocked by Sunderland's goalkeeper, Bradford "rushed in to help his colleague and between them they scored the second goal".[9]

Build-up edit

Demand for cup final tickets far exceeded supply. West Bromwich Albion received 80,000 ticket applications from supporters but their allocation was only 7,500.[11] Those who were successful travelled to Wembley on one of several excursion trains along the GWR and LMS routes, or else by road.[12]

In the days leading up to the final, both teams made use of mid-week games to test players who were doubtful due to injury. Following Birmingham's reserve match against Huddersfield Town's reserves, George Briggs and Jimmy Cringan were pronounced fit to play in the final, but centre forward Joe Bradford's fitness was not decided until the Thursday morning. An injured knee had kept Bradford out of action since mid-March, and he played with the knee well bandaged during the match, which was played in front of "about 12,000" spectators at St Andrew's.[13] Full back Bert Trentham was a doubt for Albion, but came through the first half of their friendly against Headingly "quite satisfactorily".[14] The Birmingham team prepared for the final at Bushey, while the West Bromwich Albion team were based in Harrow. Both teams visited The Cenotaph in the week before the final, in order to lay wreaths.[15]

The clubs had met in the FA Cup on four previous occasions, with Albion victorious each time.[16][17] The first meeting of the two teams in the competition was in the 1885–86 semi-final, which was the furthest that Birmingham had progressed prior to their first FA Cup final in 1931.[15][18] Neither club had played a match at Wembley before,[19] though Albion had experienced success in the FA Cup, having appeared in the final on six previous occasions and having won the cup twice, in 1888 and 1892. The two goalkeepers for the 1931 final, Harold Pearson and Harry Hibbs, were cousins.[20] Pearson's father and Hibbs' uncle, Hubert Pearson, had kept goal for Albion during their last appearance in the final in 1912.[21] Birmingham outside forward Ernie Curtis had already gained a cup winners medal with Cardiff City in 1927, while the club's trainer Archie Taylor had played in the Barnsley team that defeated West Bromwich Albion in the 1912 final.[15]

Typical of the era was that the final had little effect on the weekend's Football League fixtures. Although the scheduled league matches of both finalists had been postponed, there were still nine First Division games and ten Second Division games played on the day of the final, as well as a full programme of matches in the Third Division North and South.[22][23]

Prior to kickoff, T. P. Ratcliff led the crowd in community singing, backed by the band of His Majesty's Welsh Guards. Songs included "Daisy Bell", "John Brown's Body" and "Poor Old Joe".[24]

Match edit

Summary edit

Both teams employed the formation typical of the era: two full backs, three half backs, comprising one centre-half and two wing-halves, and five forwards, comprising two outside forwards, two inside forwards and a centre-forward.

In the sixth minute, Bob Gregg headed Jimmy Cringan's free kick past the stranded West Bromwich Albion goalkeeper, but the linesman flagged Gregg offside and the goal was disallowed; newspaper reports suggest the decision was incorrect.[25][26] Albion took the lead after 24 minutes when Joe Carter received the ball from Tommy Glidden and took it almost to the by-line before crossing it. As W. G. Richardson attempted a shot he fell, but Birmingham's Ned Barkas inadvertently touched the ball back to him and away from his goalkeeper, and Richardson was able to recover sufficiently to steer it home.[25][26] Joe Bradford and Johnny Crosbie both missed good chances for Birmingham before half-time.[27]

In the second half, after Albion had failed to take several chances, Birmingham equalised.[28] Bradford controlled a long ball, pivoted and shot past Pearson from 25 yards.[27] But the lead did not last. Straight from the restart, Carter, W. G. Richardson and Teddy Sandford took the ball directly down the field. George Liddell sliced his attempted clearance, which left the ball at Richardson's feet, and the forward had an easy task to beat Hibbs from close range.[25][26][27]

Details edit

West Bromwich Albion2–1Birmingham
W. G. Richardson   25', 58' (Report) Bradford   57'
Attendance: 92,406
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
West Bromwich Albion
 
 
 
 
 
 
Birmingham

Post-match edit

 
The Albion team display the FA Cup at Paddington Station after their victory in the final

The match was reported in that evening's Sports Argus, which was produced in a special run on blue paper in place of the normal pink. Copies of the newspaper were flown down to the London hotels of both teams after the match.[29]

Birmingham's players, together with their wives, club officials, civic representatives and survivors of the 1886 semi-final, attended a dinner at the Russell Hotel after the match. Speaking afterwards, Archie Taylor admitted that the better side had won, that Albion set out to play the game properly, and that "our boys never settled down; they found the ball red-hot and could not hold it". The following day players and wives took a coach trip to the seaside at Brighton,[30] and on Monday afternoon returned to Birmingham by train, to be met by the Lord Mayor and by cheering crowds lining the roads from the station up to the Council House. Albion's players visited Madame Tussauds, where waxworks of the two captains were on display, and some took their wives shopping, before taking the train home.[31]

Trains arrived from London every quarter-hour until 5 a.m., to be met by buses which ran all night to various parts of the city, to make the journey home as easy as possible for the estimated 28,000 travelling supporters. The Birmingham Mail was impressed by their behaviour: "in a great local clash, in which one set of supporters had necessarily to face disappointment, there appeared to be no frayed tempers and little evidence of over-indulgence."[32] The Mail's editorial highlighted the Birmingham players' reaction to the disallowed goal as illustrative of the sportsmanship of both sets of players: "there was no swarming round the official in the clamorous and excited manner so often seen in League games, but just a quiet and philosophic acceptance of the ruling and the position."[33]

In the week following their victory in the final, West Bromwich Albion still had two remaining league fixtures to complete. They beat Stoke City 1–0 away in mid-week before a 3–2 win at home to Charlton Athletic on the following Saturday confirmed the club's promotion to the First Division. The "double" of winning the FA Cup and promotion in the same season has not been achieved before or since.

This would be the last time the FA Cup was won by a team from outside the top flight of English football until 42 years later when Sunderland beat Leeds in the 1973 FA Cup Final.

Teddy Sandford, who played on the winning side, is believed to have been the last surviving player from the game when he died in May 1995 at the age of 84.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

General
  • McOwan, Gavin (2002). The Essential History of West Bromwich Albion. Headline. ISBN 0-7553-1146-9.
  • Matthews, Tony (1995). Birmingham City: A Complete Record. Derby: Breedon Books. ISBN 978-1-85983-010-9.
  • Matthews, Tony (2007). West Bromwich Albion: The Complete Record. Breedon Books. ISBN 978-1-85983-565-4.
  • Morris, Peter (1965). West Bromwich Albion: Soccer in the Black Country. Heinemann.
  • Thraves, Andrew, ed. (1994). The History of the Wembley FA Cup Final. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-83407-6.
Specific
  1. ^ McOwan p. 228
  2. ^ McOwan pp. 48–49.
  3. ^ "Other F.A. Cup Matches". The Times. 12 January 1931. p. 5.
  4. ^ a b c Matthews (1995) p. 173.
  5. ^ "F.A. Cup. Draw For Sixth Round". The Times. 17 February 1931. p. 6.
  6. ^ "Drawn Match At Birmingham". The Times. 2 March 1931. p. 6.
  7. ^ "Chelsea Beaten. A Day Of Misfortunes". The Times. 5 March 1931. p. 7.
  8. ^ "Association Football. To-Day's Matches". The Times. 14 March 1931. p. 5.
  9. ^ a b "Birmingham's Fine Defence. Sunderland Miss Their Chances". The Times. 16 March 1931. p. 6.
  10. ^ Matthews (1995) p. 18.
  11. ^ Morris pp. 85–86.
  12. ^ "The final for the F.A. Cup". Birmingham Post. 25 April 1931. p. 10.
  13. ^ "Birmingham and their injured players – Last night's satisfactory trial". Birmingham Post. 23 April 1931. p. 10.
  14. ^ "A test for Trentham – Albion back in game at West Bromwich". Birmingham Post. 23 April 1931. p. 10.
  15. ^ a b c "Ready for the cup final". Birmingham Post. 24 April 1931. p. 8.
  16. ^ McOwan pp. 188–227.
  17. ^ Birmingham were known as Small Heath Alliance for the first of these four matches and Small Heath for the second and third.
  18. ^ Matthews (2007) p. 393.
  19. ^ McOwan p. 49.
  20. ^ Matthews, Tony (2005). The Who's Who of West Bromwich Albion. Breedon Books. p. 173. ISBN 1-85983-474-4.
  21. ^ Collett, Mike (2003). The Complete Record of The FA Cup. p. 37. ISBN 1-899807-19-5.
  22. ^ "To-Day's Matches". Birmingham Post. 25 April 1931. p. 10.
  23. ^ "Results/fixtures – 25-04-1931". soccerbase.com. Racing Post. Retrieved 14 January 2009.
  24. ^ Adrian Chiles (presenter) (2005). Full Throstle: The Official History of West Bromwich Albion (DVD). Manchester, England: Paul Doherty International. Event occurs at 0:29:30. Cat No. WBADVD05. Retrieved 10 February 2009.
  25. ^ a b c "The Cup. Victory Of West Bromwich, A Triumph Of Youth". The Times. 27 April 1931. p. 5.
  26. ^ a b c The Daily Mail match report, reproduced in Thraves, pp. 24–25.
  27. ^ a b c Matthews (1995), p. 19.
  28. ^ "Albion's Cup". Birmingham Mail. 25 April 1931. p. 12.
  29. ^ Morris p. 85.
  30. ^ "Not Downhearted". Birmingham Mail. 27 April 1931. p. 10.
  31. ^ "Cup Finalists' Return". Birmingham Mail. 27 April 1931. p. 12.
  32. ^ "Railways' Triumph". Birmingham Mail. 27 April 1931. p. 9.
  33. ^ "Day By Day: Spirit Of The Final". Birmingham Mail. 27 April 1931. p. 8.

External links edit

1931, final, football, match, between, west, bromwich, albion, birmingham, played, april, 1931, original, wembley, stadium, london, showpiece, event, final, match, 1930, staging, english, football, primary, competition, football, association, challenge, better. The 1931 FA Cup final was a football match between West Bromwich Albion and Birmingham played on 25 April 1931 at the original Wembley Stadium in London The showpiece event was the final match of the 1930 31 staging of English football s primary cup competition the Football Association Challenge Cup better known as the FA Cup The match was the 56th FA Cup Final the ninth to be played at Wembley 1931 FA Cup FinalOfficial programmeEvent1930 31 FA CupWest Bromwich Albion Birmingham2 1Date25 April 1931VenueWembley Stadium LondonRefereeArthur H Kingscott Derbyshire Attendance92 406 19301932 West Bromwich Albion were appearing in their seventh final having won the cup on two previous occasions whereas Birmingham were playing in the final for the first time Albion won the match 2 1 with both of their goals scored by W G Richardson Joe Bradford had equalised Richardson s opening goal before Richardson put the Baggies ahead again sixty seconds later Contents 1 Route to the final 1 1 West Bromwich Albion 1 2 Birmingham 2 Build up 3 Match 3 1 Summary 3 2 Details 4 Post match 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksRoute to the final editSee also 1930 31 FA Cup West Bromwich Albion edit West Bromwich Albion Round Opposition Score 3rd Charlton Athletic h 2 2 Charlton Athletic a 1 1 Charlton Athletic n 3 1 4th Tottenham Hotspur h 1 0 5th Portsmouth a 1 0 6th Wolverhampton Wanderers h 1 1 Wolverhampton Wanderers a 2 1 Semi final Everton n 1 0 Birmingham and West Bromwich Albion were playing in the First Division and Second Division respectively thus both entered the competition at the third round stage Albion began their cup campaign by drawing 2 2 at home against Charlton Athletic with goals from Stan Wood and Teddy Sandford The replay at The Valley also ended in a draw 1 1 and with extra time unable to separate the teams a second replay was required at Villa Park where goals from Joe Carter Stan Wood and W G Richardson gave Albion a 3 1 victory Wood also scored the only goal of the game in round four against Tottenham Hotspur to set up a fifth round tie with First Division Portsmouth the only top division side that Albion faced en route to Wembley W G Richardson s goal was enough to give Albion a 1 0 victory The quarter final stage saw Albion paired with local rivals Wolverhampton Wanderers whom they had already beaten both home and away during the league season After a 1 1 draw at The Hawthorns Albion won the replay at Molineux 2 1 thanks to goals from W G Richardson and Stan Wood 1 In the semi final at Old Trafford Albion faced Everton who at that time were 13 points clear at the top of the Second Division Everton dominated the first half but were unable to score from any of the chances they created and it was Albion who broke the deadlock ten minutes into the second half Albion captain Tommy Glidden played the ball into the Everton penalty area from near the halfway line and aided by a gust of wind it sailed past Everton goalkeeper Billy Coggins and into the net The match was played in front of 69 241 spectators setting a new attendance record for Old Trafford 2 Birmingham edit Birmingham Round Opposition Score 3rd Liverpool a 2 0 4th Port Vale h 2 0 5th Watford h 3 0 6th Chelsea h 2 2 Chelsea a 3 0 Semi final Sunderland n 2 0 In the third round Birmingham won finely at Anfield to defeat First Division opponents Liverpool 2 0 with goals from Ernie Curtis and Joe Bradford 3 4 In the fourth they repeated the scoreline at home to Port Vale of the Second Division both goals scored by Bradford 4 and went one better in the fifth Bradford scoring once and Curtis in magnificent form twice to eliminate Third Division South club Watford 4 5 Chelsea provided stiffer opposition for the Birmingham team a number of whose players were still recovering from influenza on a St Andrew s pitch treacherous after overnight sleet The visitors had much the better of the first half Alex Jackson gave them the lead and in blizzard conditions George Mills appeared to have scored in a goalmouth scramble only for the goal to be disallowed after the Birmingham players drew the referee s attention to his linesman who had flagged for the ball having gone out of play Six minutes into the second half the lead had changed hands First George Briggs crossed for a Bradford header then the same pair combined for Curtis to put Birmingham ahead Birmingham s defence held out until a misplaced clearance by Bob Gregg allowed Jackie Crawford to equalise 6 The replay at Chelsea s Stamford Bridge attracted a crowd of 74 365 then a ground record with 6 000 locked out spectators broke through the barriers and sat round the edge of the pitch Briggs in front of an empty goal allowed a centre from Curtis to pass between his legs an amazing miss before Chelsea centre half John Townrow sustained an injury which forced him to leave the field Chelsea reorganised their personnel but early in the second half right half Sid Bishop was hurt twice in quick succession leaving him in a worse condition than Townrow and his team short of numbers no substitutes were permitted with players in unaccustomed positions Though they held out well a goal from Jack Firth and two from Bradford the second of which scored from an offside position gave Birmingham a 3 0 victory 7 Birmingham faced First Division Sunderland in the semi final at Elland Road Leeds The Times predicted a hard game in which the first goal may decide the result 8 After half an hour Birmingham took the lead via a powerful shot by Curtis Sunderland s players appealed in vain for the award of a penalty for handling the ball their forwards failed to take numerous chances and Birmingham s England international goalkeeper Harry Hibbs described by Sunderland s Bobby Gurney as playing an absolute blinder made some fine saves 9 10 With three minutes left Curtis s shot from a Bradford cross was blocked by Sunderland s goalkeeper Bradford rushed in to help his colleague and between them they scored the second goal 9 Build up editDemand for cup final tickets far exceeded supply West Bromwich Albion received 80 000 ticket applications from supporters but their allocation was only 7 500 11 Those who were successful travelled to Wembley on one of several excursion trains along the GWR and LMS routes or else by road 12 In the days leading up to the final both teams made use of mid week games to test players who were doubtful due to injury Following Birmingham s reserve match against Huddersfield Town s reserves George Briggs and Jimmy Cringan were pronounced fit to play in the final but centre forward Joe Bradford s fitness was not decided until the Thursday morning An injured knee had kept Bradford out of action since mid March and he played with the knee well bandaged during the match which was played in front of about 12 000 spectators at St Andrew s 13 Full back Bert Trentham was a doubt for Albion but came through the first half of their friendly against Headingly quite satisfactorily 14 The Birmingham team prepared for the final at Bushey while the West Bromwich Albion team were based in Harrow Both teams visited The Cenotaph in the week before the final in order to lay wreaths 15 The clubs had met in the FA Cup on four previous occasions with Albion victorious each time 16 17 The first meeting of the two teams in the competition was in the 1885 86 semi final which was the furthest that Birmingham had progressed prior to their first FA Cup final in 1931 15 18 Neither club had played a match at Wembley before 19 though Albion had experienced success in the FA Cup having appeared in the final on six previous occasions and having won the cup twice in 1888 and 1892 The two goalkeepers for the 1931 final Harold Pearson and Harry Hibbs were cousins 20 Pearson s father and Hibbs uncle Hubert Pearson had kept goal for Albion during their last appearance in the final in 1912 21 Birmingham outside forward Ernie Curtis had already gained a cup winners medal with Cardiff City in 1927 while the club s trainer Archie Taylor had played in the Barnsley team that defeated West Bromwich Albion in the 1912 final 15 Typical of the era was that the final had little effect on the weekend s Football League fixtures Although the scheduled league matches of both finalists had been postponed there were still nine First Division games and ten Second Division games played on the day of the final as well as a full programme of matches in the Third Division North and South 22 23 Prior to kickoff T P Ratcliff led the crowd in community singing backed by the band of His Majesty s Welsh Guards Songs included Daisy Bell John Brown s Body and Poor Old Joe 24 Match editSummary edit Both teams employed the formation typical of the era two full backs three half backs comprising one centre half and two wing halves and five forwards comprising two outside forwards two inside forwards and a centre forward In the sixth minute Bob Gregg headed Jimmy Cringan s free kick past the stranded West Bromwich Albion goalkeeper but the linesman flagged Gregg offside and the goal was disallowed newspaper reports suggest the decision was incorrect 25 26 Albion took the lead after 24 minutes when Joe Carter received the ball from Tommy Glidden and took it almost to the by line before crossing it As W G Richardson attempted a shot he fell but Birmingham s Ned Barkas inadvertently touched the ball back to him and away from his goalkeeper and Richardson was able to recover sufficiently to steer it home 25 26 Joe Bradford and Johnny Crosbie both missed good chances for Birmingham before half time 27 In the second half after Albion had failed to take several chances Birmingham equalised 28 Bradford controlled a long ball pivoted and shot past Pearson from 25 yards 27 But the lead did not last Straight from the restart Carter W G Richardson and Teddy Sandford took the ball directly down the field George Liddell sliced his attempted clearance which left the ball at Richardson s feet and the forward had an easy task to beat Hibbs from close range 25 26 27 Details edit 25 April 193115 00 BSTWest Bromwich Albion2 1BirminghamW G Richardson nbsp 25 58 Report Bradford nbsp 57 Wembley Stadium LondonAttendance 92 406Referee Arthur H Kingscott Derbyshire nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp West Bromwich Albion nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Birmingham GK nbsp Harold Pearson DF nbsp George Shaw DF nbsp Bert Trentham MF nbsp Tommy Magee MF nbsp Bill Richardson MF nbsp Jimmy Edwards FW nbsp Tommy Glidden c FW nbsp Joe Carter FW nbsp W G Richardson FW nbsp Teddy Sandford FW nbsp Stan Wood Secretary Manager Fred Everiss GK nbsp Harry Hibbs DF nbsp George Liddell DF nbsp Ned Barkas c MF nbsp Jimmy Cringan MF nbsp George Morrall MF nbsp Alec Leslie FW nbsp George Briggs FW nbsp Johnny Crosbie FW nbsp Joe Bradford FW nbsp Bob Gregg FW nbsp Ernie Curtis Manager Leslie KnightonPost match edit nbsp The Albion team display the FA Cup at Paddington Station after their victory in the final The match was reported in that evening s Sports Argus which was produced in a special run on blue paper in place of the normal pink Copies of the newspaper were flown down to the London hotels of both teams after the match 29 Birmingham s players together with their wives club officials civic representatives and survivors of the 1886 semi final attended a dinner at the Russell Hotel after the match Speaking afterwards Archie Taylor admitted that the better side had won that Albion set out to play the game properly and that our boys never settled down they found the ball red hot and could not hold it The following day players and wives took a coach trip to the seaside at Brighton 30 and on Monday afternoon returned to Birmingham by train to be met by the Lord Mayor and by cheering crowds lining the roads from the station up to the Council House Albion s players visited Madame Tussauds where waxworks of the two captains were on display and some took their wives shopping before taking the train home 31 Trains arrived from London every quarter hour until 5 a m to be met by buses which ran all night to various parts of the city to make the journey home as easy as possible for the estimated 28 000 travelling supporters The Birmingham Mail was impressed by their behaviour in a great local clash in which one set of supporters had necessarily to face disappointment there appeared to be no frayed tempers and little evidence of over indulgence 32 The Mail s editorial highlighted the Birmingham players reaction to the disallowed goal as illustrative of the sportsmanship of both sets of players there was no swarming round the official in the clamorous and excited manner so often seen in League games but just a quiet and philosophic acceptance of the ruling and the position 33 In the week following their victory in the final West Bromwich Albion still had two remaining league fixtures to complete They beat Stoke City 1 0 away in mid week before a 3 2 win at home to Charlton Athletic on the following Saturday confirmed the club s promotion to the First Division The double of winning the FA Cup and promotion in the same season has not been achieved before or since This would be the last time the FA Cup was won by a team from outside the top flight of English football until 42 years later when Sunderland beat Leeds in the 1973 FA Cup Final Teddy Sandford who played on the winning side is believed to have been the last surviving player from the game when he died in May 1995 at the age of 84 citation needed See also edit1930 31 in English footballReferences editGeneral McOwan Gavin 2002 The Essential History of West Bromwich Albion Headline ISBN 0 7553 1146 9 Matthews Tony 1995 Birmingham City A Complete Record Derby Breedon Books ISBN 978 1 85983 010 9 Matthews Tony 2007 West Bromwich Albion The Complete Record Breedon Books ISBN 978 1 85983 565 4 Morris Peter 1965 West Bromwich Albion Soccer in the Black Country Heinemann Thraves Andrew ed 1994 The History of the Wembley FA Cup Final London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 83407 6 Specific McOwan p 228 McOwan pp 48 49 Other F A Cup Matches The Times 12 January 1931 p 5 a b c Matthews 1995 p 173 F A Cup Draw For Sixth Round The Times 17 February 1931 p 6 Drawn Match At Birmingham The Times 2 March 1931 p 6 Chelsea Beaten A Day Of Misfortunes The Times 5 March 1931 p 7 Association Football To Day s Matches The Times 14 March 1931 p 5 a b Birmingham s Fine Defence Sunderland Miss Their Chances The Times 16 March 1931 p 6 Matthews 1995 p 18 Morris pp 85 86 The final for the F A Cup Birmingham Post 25 April 1931 p 10 Birmingham and their injured players Last night s satisfactory trial Birmingham Post 23 April 1931 p 10 A test for Trentham Albion back in game at West Bromwich Birmingham Post 23 April 1931 p 10 a b c Ready for the cup final Birmingham Post 24 April 1931 p 8 McOwan pp 188 227 Birmingham were known as Small Heath Alliance for the first of these four matches and Small Heath for the second and third Matthews 2007 p 393 McOwan p 49 Matthews Tony 2005 The Who s Who of West Bromwich Albion Breedon Books p 173 ISBN 1 85983 474 4 Collett Mike 2003 The Complete Record of The FA Cup p 37 ISBN 1 899807 19 5 To Day s Matches Birmingham Post 25 April 1931 p 10 Results fixtures 25 04 1931 soccerbase com Racing Post Retrieved 14 January 2009 Adrian Chiles presenter 2005 Full Throstle The Official History of West Bromwich Albion DVD Manchester England Paul Doherty International Event occurs at 0 29 30 Cat No WBADVD05 Retrieved 10 February 2009 a b c The Cup Victory Of West Bromwich A Triumph Of Youth The Times 27 April 1931 p 5 a b c The Daily Mail match report reproduced in Thraves pp 24 25 a b c Matthews 1995 p 19 Albion s Cup Birmingham Mail 25 April 1931 p 12 Morris p 85 Not Downhearted Birmingham Mail 27 April 1931 p 10 Cup Finalists Return Birmingham Mail 27 April 1931 p 12 Railways Triumph Birmingham Mail 27 April 1931 p 9 Day By Day Spirit Of The Final Birmingham Mail 27 April 1931 p 8 External links editMatch report at www fa cupfinals co uk FA Cup Final lineups Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1931 FA Cup final amp oldid 1164291893, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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