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2003 FA Cup final

The 2003 FA Cup final was the 122nd final of the FA Cup, the world's oldest domestic football cup competition.[2] The final took place on Saturday 17 May 2003 at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, in front of a crowd of 73,726. It was the third consecutive year the final was played at the stadium, due to the ongoing reconstruction of Wembley Stadium, the final's usual venue. The 2003 final was the first to be played indoors; the roof was closed because of bad weather. The clubs contesting the final were Arsenal, the holders of the competition and Southampton. This was Arsenal's sixteenth appearance in a final to Southampton's fourth.

2003 FA Cup final
The match programme cover
Event2002–03 FA Cup
Date17 May 2003
VenueMillennium Stadium, Cardiff
Man of the MatchThierry Henry (Arsenal)
RefereeGraham Barber (Hertfordshire)
Attendance73,726
WeatherRainy
13 °C (55 °F)[1]
2002
2004

As Premier League clubs, Arsenal and Southampton entered the FA Cup in the third round, which meant each club needed to progress through five rounds to reach the final. Arsenal made a convincing start, they won their opening three rounds, but needed a sixth-round replay against Chelsea. By contrast, Southampton played one replay in the fourth round against Millwall. Arsenal entered the match as favourites and had beaten Southampton 6–1 nine days earlier in the league. Goalkeeper David Seaman captained Arsenal in the absence of the injured Patrick Vieira; it was to be Seaman's last appearance for the club. In defence for Southampton, Chris Baird made only his second competitive start. Chris Marsden captained the club in the absence of the injured club captain, Jason Dodd.

Arsenal began the match more effectively of the two and scored what proved to be the winning goal in the latter minutes of the first half – Freddie Ljungberg's rebounded goal effort was converted by Robert Pires. Midway through the second half, Southampton goalkeeper Antti Niemi was substituted, as he strained his calf muscle; he was replaced by Paul Jones. In stoppage time, striker James Beattie had his header cleared off the line by Ashley Cole, in what was the final chance for Southampton.

Arsenal's win made them the first team to retain the trophy since Tottenham Hotspur in 1982. They later played against league champions Manchester United in the 2003 FA Community Shield. Given Arsenal had already qualified for Europe via their league position, their UEFA Cup spot was awarded to runners-up Southampton.

Route to the final edit

Arsenal edit

Round Opposition Score
3rd Oxford United (h) 2–0
4th Farnborough Town (a) 5–1
5th Manchester United (a) 2–0
6th Chelsea (h) 2–2
Chelsea (a) 3–1
Semi-final Sheffield United (n) 1–0
Key: (h) = Home venue; (a) = Away venue; (n) = Neutral venue.

Arsenal entered the competition in the third round, receiving a bye as a Premier League club. Their opening match was a 2–0 home win against Oxford United on 4 January 2003.[3] Striker Dennis Bergkamp scored his 100th goal for the club and an own goal by defender Scott McNiven ensured progression to the next round.[4] Arsenal faced non-league side Farnborough Town; the match switched from Farnborough's ground at Cherrywood Road to Highbury due to concerns over safety.[5] Farnborough began the match as the home team and conceded the first goal, scored by Arsenal defender Sol Campbell in the 19th minute. They went down to ten men after Christian Lee was sent off for a professional foul in the 28th minute. Francis Jeffers scored twice before Rocky Baptiste added a consolation, beating Pascal Cygan for pace and despite having his first shot saved by goalkeeper Stuart Taylor, he managed to lift the ball over him and into the net. Lauren and Bergkamp each scored in the final 15 minutes to give Arsenal a 5–1 victory.[6]

Arsenal's fifth round match was away to league rivals Manchester United at Old Trafford on 16 February 2003. After Ryan Giggs missed the chance to score past an open goal, midfielder Edu gave Arsenal the lead through a free kick which took a deflection off David Beckham's shoulder. Striker Sylvain Wiltord scored the second goal of the match in the 52nd minute, running onto a pass from Edu and side-footing the ball past goalkeeper Fabien Barthez.[7] Arsenal captain Patrick Vieira said of the performance: "We knew when we lost here in the league that we had lost the battle in midfield. We had to put that right, and we did."[8] In the sixth round, Arsenal was drawn at home to Chelsea in a repeat of the previous season's final.[9] Chelsea defender John Terry put Chelsea ahead with a header from a set piece before Arsenal responded through Jeffers and Thierry Henry. Frank Lampard scored a late equaliser for the visiting team meaning the match was replayed at Stamford Bridge.[10] An own goal by Terry and a strike by Wiltord in the space of seven minutes during the replay gave Arsenal an early lead against Chelsea. Despite going down to ten men after Cygan was sent off and Terry scoring from a header, the away team scored a third goal through Lauren to ensure progression into the semi-finals.[11] In the semi-final against Sheffield United on 13 April 2003 at Old Trafford, Freddie Ljungberg scored the winning goal to help Arsenal reach their third successive FA Cup final appearance.[12] The match was best remembered for David Seaman's late save, which prevented Sheffield United from equalising.[13]

Southampton edit

Round Opposition Score
3rd Tottenham Hotspur (h) 4–0
4th Millwall (h) 1–1
Millwall (a) 2–1
5th Norwich City (h) 2–0
6th Wolverhampton Wanderers (h) 2–0
Semi-final Watford (n) 2–1
Key: (h) = Home venue; (a) = Away venue; (n) = Neutral venue.

Like Arsenal, as a Premier League club, Southampton received a bye into the third round. Their opening match was a 4–0 win against fellow league club Tottenham Hotspur. A goal by defender Michael Svensson and three from Jo Tessem, Anders Svensson and James Beattie in the second half was the second straight victory against Tottenham, having beaten them on New Year's Day in the league.[14] In the fourth round, Southampton was drawn at home to First Division club Millwall on 25 January 2003. The visitors took the lead through striker Steve Claridge but were denied victory. 90 seconds from the end of the match as Southampton striker Kevin Davies scored from a rebounded shot.[15] In the replay, midfielder Matthew Oakley scored twice for Southampton (one in both halves) either side of a Steven Reid equaliser for Millwall.[16]

Southampton's fifth round match was against Norwich City at home on 5 February 2003. Two goals in the space of three minutes, scored by Svensson and Tessem was enough to take the team into the quarter-finals.[17] Southampton defender Claus Lundekvam was pleased with the win and said following the match: "When you get to this stage in the competition you have to believe you can win it."[18] The club then faced Wolverhampton Wanderers at home in the following round. Former Wolves player Chris Marsden gave Southampton the lead right in the 56th minute and with nine minutes remaining of normal time, the team added a second goal when Jo Tessem's shot took a deflection off Paul Butler's legs to go inside the goal net.[19] The victory meant Southampton reached the semi-finals of the FA Cup for the first time in 17 years.[20] At Villa Park, Southampton played First Division team Watford on 13 April 2003. Brett Ormerod opened the scoring two minutes before half time and set up the second goal which saw the ball being taken over the line by Watford defender Paul Robinson. Despite Marcus Gayle scoring a late header to half the scoreline Southampton won the match.[21]

Pre-match edit

 
Sir Bobby Robson was the chief guest for the final, and presented the trophy to the winners

Arsenal was appearing in the final of the FA Cup for the sixteenth time. They had won the cup eight times previously (in 1930, 1936, 1950, 1971, 1979, 1993, 1998 and 2002) and had been beaten in the final seven times, the most recent in 2001. By comparison, Southampton made their fourth appearance in a FA Cup final. Their previous best was winning the cup in 1976, by beating opponents Manchester United.[22]

Both clubs received an allocation of approximately 25,000 tickets, with the remaining 25,000 being sent out to other clubs.[23] 17,500 of those tickets were available to Southampton season ticket holders.[24] Seat prices for the final exceeded £80, with the cheapest tickets available at £25.[24] Southampton was given the South Stand, which was the larger end of the stadium, whereas Arsenal was situated at the opposite end.[24] Although Southampton supporters were disappointed at the allocation share, chairman Rupert Lowe refused to criticise the FA's decision, by saying: "The reality is that too many people want to go and there are never enough tickets."[25] In the lead up to the final, the South Wales Echo reported that many tickets were being sold on the black market, for "20 times" the face-value price.[23]

Nine days before the final, the two clubs faced each other in a league match at Highbury (Arsenal's former stadium). With Arsenal unable to retain the title, having lost to Leeds United, manager Arsène Wenger rested several players, as did Southampton manager Gordon Strachan, whose team started without six of their first-choice eleven.[26] Winger Jermaine Pennant on his league debut scored a hat-trick, as did Pires, in a 6–1 win.[26] Strachan believed the result had little bearing on their chances of winning the cup, noting: "There is little pressure on Southampton to lift the trophy. We were not expected to reach the final and have already clinched a place in the UEFA Cup."[27]

The traditional Cup Final hymn, "Abide with Me" was sung by Tony Henry, an opera singer from South London.[28] Sir Bobby Robson was invited as the FA's chief guest for the final and performed several duties ordinarily reserved for royalty, such as presenting the trophy to the winning captain. Heavy rain on Friday night and forecasted showers in Cardiff meant the final would be the first to be played indoors; the stadium closed its retractable roof and floodlights were used to light up the ground.[29]

Match edit

Team selection edit

Vieira was ruled out of the match because of a knee injury during the FA Cup semi-final match against Sheffield United,[30] so Wenger named David Seaman as Arsenal's captain for the match. In a match widely anticipated as his final for the club.[31] With Campbell suspended and Cygan absent due to a thigh strain,[32] Wenger picked Oleh Luzhnyi to pair up with Martin Keown, who was rested the previous Sunday away against Sunderland. For Southampton, the major absentee was their striker Marian Pahars, who underwent a third operation to overcome a troubling knee injury.[33] Defender Chris Baird made his second competitive start for the club and Chris Marsden captained Southampton, given Jason Dodd's absence with an injury. Although both teams set up in a 4–4–2 formation, Bergkamp was positioned as a deep-lying forward behind Henry.[34]

Report edit

 
Robert Pires scored the only goal of the final

Arsenal created their first chance inside 24 seconds of the match, when Ljungberg put Henry clear down the right-hand side.[35] The striker used his pace to get the better of Lundekvam, only to have his shot blocked by Southampton goalkeeper Antti Niemi.[35] Bergkamp's goal effort in the eighth minute was cleared off the line by full back Chris Baird, after Niemi fumbled Henry's initial shot.[35] Southampton fashioned their first opportunity in the 15th minute through a high cross; in spite of unsettling the Arsenal defence, the unmarked Svensson volleyed over the bar.[35] Baird moments after won the ball in midfield and curled a shot that left Seaman "scrambling across his goal to save". Seven minutes before the break, Arsenal went into the lead. Henry, receiving the ball from Parlour, slipped it into Bergkamp down the right. He in turn fed the ball to Ljungberg, whose shot was blocked. The ball rebounded in the direction of Pires, who took one touch to set himself and another to fire into the goal at the near post, despite Niemi getting a hand to the ball.[35] Arsenal missed further chances to extend their lead when a cross from the right by Henry was shot over the bar by Pires and from the same area, Bergkamp's "cross-cum-shot" was missed by Ljungberg.[36]

After the break, Southampton applied pressure and a poor clearance by Seaman invited a chance for Paul Telfer to shoot the ball from "35 yards out"; his pass found Ormerod, but was eventually intercepted by Luzhnyi.[37] Minutes after, Beattie failed to take advantage from Oakley's cross, as the ball drifted wide.[37] Arsenal regained possession and in the 52nd minute went close to doubling their lead.[38] In Southampton's penalty box, Bergkamp turned and beat Ormerod before curling a shot which Niemi palmed off; it fell to the feet of Ljungberg, who shot the ball into the side-netting.[38] Telfer misguided his header from a Southampton corner, before Niemi denied Henry again. In the 65th minute, Niemi injured himself, in an attempt to clear the ball and was replaced by substitute Paul Jones.[38] Both clubs made substitutions in the final third of the game, with Wiltord coming on for Bergkamp and Tessem replacing Svensson.[38] Ormerod's goal-bound effort was saved by Seaman with 10 minutes remaining of the match. In the fourth minute of injury time, Southampton earned themselves a corner.[38] Beattie's on-target header was cleared off the line by Ashley Cole and out for another corner, which Pires kicked out in the final action of the game.[38]

Details edit

Arsenal1–0Southampton
Pires   38' Report
Attendance: 73,726
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Arsenal
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Southampton
GK 1   David Seaman (c)
RB 12   Lauren
CB 5   Martin Keown   30'
CB 22   Oleh Luzhnyi
LB 3   Ashley Cole
RM 7   Robert Pires
CM 15   Ray Parlour
CM 19   Gilberto Silva
LM 8   Freddie Ljungberg
SS 10   Dennis Bergkamp   77'
CF 14   Thierry Henry   66'
Substitutes:
GK 13   Stuart Taylor
DF 28   Kolo Touré
MF 16   Giovanni van Bronckhorst
FW 11   Sylvain Wiltord   77'
FW 25   Nwankwo Kanu
Manager:
  Arsène Wenger
 
GK 14   Antti Niemi   66'
RB 32   Chris Baird   86'
CB 5   Claus Lundekvam
CB 11   Michael Svensson   90'
LB 3   Wayne Bridge
RM 33   Paul Telfer   60'
CM 8   Matthew Oakley
CM 12   Anders Svensson   75'
LM 4   Chris Marsden (c)   77'
CF 36   Brett Ormerod
CF 9   James Beattie   31'
Substitutes:
GK 1   Paul Jones   66'
DF 6   Paul Williams
DF 19   Danny Higginbotham
MF 29   Fabrice Fernandes   86'
FW 21   Jo Tessem   75'
Manager:
  Gordon Strachan

Man of the match

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.

Statistics edit

Statistic[40] Arsenal Southampton
Goals scored 1 0
Possession 59% 41%
Shots on target 7 4
Shots off target 5 10
Corner kicks 4 8
Fouls 10 18
Offsides 3 3
Yellow cards 2 4
Red cards 0 0

Post-match edit

In retaining the cup, Arsenal became the first team to do so since Tottenham Hotspur in 1982. Wenger commented after the game that his team "got the trophy we wanted" while Strachan was in admiration of Southampton's performance: "I'm very proud of the way they competed. I couldn't have asked for any more."[41] Keown said the FA Cup win was "the best ever" and Seaman felt the disappointment of losing out to Manchester United in the league spurred the team on.[41] Football pundits Alan Hansen, Peter Schmeichel and Mark Hughes unanimously agreed that Arsenal deserved to win the match.[42]

Arsenal's victory set up a Community Shield match against Manchester United, the winners of the 2002–03 Premier League. The FA Cup winners are awarded qualification into the UEFA Cup, but because Arsenal qualified for the UEFA Champions League via their league position, the UEFA Cup place was passed to Southampton, the runners-up.[43]

The match was broadcast live in the United Kingdom by both the BBC and Sky Sports, with BBC One providing the free-to-air coverage and Sky Sports 1 being the pay-TV alternative.[44] BBC One held the majority of the viewership, with a peak audience of 9.6 million viewers (55.7% viewing share) watching at 16:50pm and the match averaged at 8.3 million (55%) – the highest audience for a FA Cup final in four years.[45] Coverage of the final began on the channel at 12:10pm and averaged 5.3 million (44.4%).[45] The Match of the Day coverage concluded at different times dependent on station, with the broadcast in Scotland ending 10 minutes before the main broadcast finished.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "History for Cardiff-Wales, United Kingdom". Weather Underground. Retrieved 4 January 2013.
  2. ^ "History of The FA Cup". TheFA.com. The Football Association. Retrieved 17 March 2012.
  3. ^ "Arsenal end Oxford dream". BBC Sport. 4 January 2003. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
  4. ^ Burnton, Simon (6 January 2003). "Bergkamp worthy of ton of respect". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
  5. ^ Bradley, Mark (9 January 2003). "Farnborough to switch cup tie". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
  6. ^ "Arsenal cruise through". BBC Sport. 25 January 2003. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
  7. ^ "Arsenal cruise past Man Utd". BBC Sport. 16 February 2003. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  8. ^ Wilson, Paul (16 February 2003). "Arsenal triumph as Giggs goes missing". The Observer. London. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  9. ^ "London giants collide". BBC Sport. 27 February 2003. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  10. ^ "Chelsea hold Arsenal". BBC Sport. 8 March 2003. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  11. ^ "Arsenal brush aside Chelsea". BBC Sport. 25 March 2003. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  12. ^ "Arsenal sink brave Blades". BBC Sport. 13 April 2003. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  13. ^ McCarra, Kevin (14 April 2003). "Super Seaman defies time and gravity to end Blades odyssey". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
  14. ^ "Saints thrash Spurs". BBC Sport. 4 January 2003. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  15. ^ "Last-gasp Saints deny Lions". BBC Sport. 25 January 2003. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  16. ^ "Saints tame Lions". BBC Sport. 13 February 2003. Retrieved 17 March 2012.
  17. ^ "Saints see off Norwich". BBC Sport. 5 February 2003. Retrieved 17 March 2012.
  18. ^ "Lundekvam eyes FA Cup glory". BBC Sport. 16 February 2003. Retrieved 17 March 2012.
  19. ^ Brodkin, Jon (10 March 2003). "Super Wolves softened up by old boy Marsden". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 17 March 2012.
  20. ^ "Saints tame Wolves". BBC Sport. 9 March 2003. Retrieved 17 March 2012.
  21. ^ Davies, Christopher (14 April 2003). "Ormerod destroys Watford dream". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  22. ^ Hayward, Paul (17 May 2003). "Saints marching on the giants". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  23. ^ a b "Touts selling tickets at 10 times value". South Wales Echo. Cardiff. 7 May 2003. p. 7.
  24. ^ a b c Leitch, Adam (26 April 2003). "25,000 tickets for Saints' Cardiff army". Daily Echo. Southampton.
  25. ^ Pratt, Harry (7 May 2003). "Lowe blasts ticket fiasco". Daily Star. London. p. 71.
  26. ^ a b Brodkin, Jon (8 May 2003). "Arsenal star in Cup dress rehearsal". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  27. ^ Strachan, Gordan (11 May 2003). "Price of victory may be lack of spectacle". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  28. ^ "Opera singer to kick off the FA Cup Final". South Wales Echo. Cardiff. 15 May 2003. p. 26.
  29. ^ Wiechula, Frank (18 May 2003). "FA Cup final: Day roof fell in on the Saints". The People. London. p. 6.
  30. ^ agencies, Staff and (14 April 2003). "Vieira fit for United showdown". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
  31. ^ Brodkin, Jon (16 May 2003). "Able Seaman is captain for final". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
  32. ^ Stammers, Steve (13 May 2003). "Wenger left with defence worries". Evening Standard. London. p. 63.
  33. ^ West, Lee (16 May 2003). "FA Cup countdown: Arsenal v Southampton". Daily Mirror. London. p. 68.
  34. ^ Winter, Henry (19 May 2003). "Arsenal counter friendly fire". The Daily Telegraph. London. p. B2.
  35. ^ a b c d e . AP Worldstream. Cardiff: Associated Press. 17 May 2003. Archived from the original on 11 June 2014. Retrieved 1 March 2013. (subscription required)
  36. ^ Wilson, Paul (18 May 2003). "Pires aim is true for muted Gunners". The Observer. London. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
  37. ^ a b "Arsenal 1, Southampton 0". Evening Gazette. Middlesbrough. 17 May 2003. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
  38. ^ a b c d e f MacLeary, John (17 May 2003). "Arsenal v Southampton: minute-by-minute". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
  39. ^ May, John (18 May 2003). "Henry's debt to Bergkamp". BBC Sport. Retrieved 23 April 2009.
  40. ^ Lipton, Martin (19 May 2003). "1–0 to the Arsenal ... At last ; Arsenal 1 Soton 0". Daily Mirror. London. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
  41. ^ a b "Keown hails 'best ever' win". BBC Sport. 17 May 2003. Retrieved 16 March 2012.
  42. ^ "Arsenal were worthy winners". BBC Sport. 17 May 2003. Retrieved 16 March 2012.
  43. ^ . Premier League. Archived from the original on 17 May 2014. Retrieved 4 January 2013.
  44. ^ "FA Cup final: Arsenal v Southampton". The Guardian. London. 17 May 2003. p. B3.
  45. ^ a b "Ratings – FA Cup's big gunners shoot to win on BBC1". Broadcast. London. 23 May 2003. Retrieved 4 January 2013.

External links edit

  • Saints fans view at SaintsForever.com

2003, final, women, event, 2003, women, final, 122nd, final, world, oldest, domestic, football, competition, final, took, place, saturday, 2003, millennium, stadium, cardiff, front, crowd, third, consecutive, year, final, played, stadium, ongoing, reconstructi. For the women s event see 2003 FA Women s Cup final The 2003 FA Cup final was the 122nd final of the FA Cup the world s oldest domestic football cup competition 2 The final took place on Saturday 17 May 2003 at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff in front of a crowd of 73 726 It was the third consecutive year the final was played at the stadium due to the ongoing reconstruction of Wembley Stadium the final s usual venue The 2003 final was the first to be played indoors the roof was closed because of bad weather The clubs contesting the final were Arsenal the holders of the competition and Southampton This was Arsenal s sixteenth appearance in a final to Southampton s fourth 2003 FA Cup finalThe match programme coverEvent2002 03 FA CupArsenal Southampton1 0Date17 May 2003VenueMillennium Stadium CardiffMan of the MatchThierry Henry Arsenal RefereeGraham Barber Hertfordshire Attendance73 726WeatherRainy13 C 55 F 1 20022004 As Premier League clubs Arsenal and Southampton entered the FA Cup in the third round which meant each club needed to progress through five rounds to reach the final Arsenal made a convincing start they won their opening three rounds but needed a sixth round replay against Chelsea By contrast Southampton played one replay in the fourth round against Millwall Arsenal entered the match as favourites and had beaten Southampton 6 1 nine days earlier in the league Goalkeeper David Seaman captained Arsenal in the absence of the injured Patrick Vieira it was to be Seaman s last appearance for the club In defence for Southampton Chris Baird made only his second competitive start Chris Marsden captained the club in the absence of the injured club captain Jason Dodd Arsenal began the match more effectively of the two and scored what proved to be the winning goal in the latter minutes of the first half Freddie Ljungberg s rebounded goal effort was converted by Robert Pires Midway through the second half Southampton goalkeeper Antti Niemi was substituted as he strained his calf muscle he was replaced by Paul Jones In stoppage time striker James Beattie had his header cleared off the line by Ashley Cole in what was the final chance for Southampton Arsenal s win made them the first team to retain the trophy since Tottenham Hotspur in 1982 They later played against league champions Manchester United in the 2003 FA Community Shield Given Arsenal had already qualified for Europe via their league position their UEFA Cup spot was awarded to runners up Southampton Contents 1 Route to the final 1 1 Arsenal 1 2 Southampton 2 Pre match 3 Match 3 1 Team selection 3 2 Report 3 3 Details 3 4 Statistics 4 Post match 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksRoute to the final editSee also 2002 03 FA Cup Arsenal edit Round Opposition Score3rd Oxford United h 2 04th Farnborough Town a 5 15th Manchester United a 2 06th Chelsea h 2 2Chelsea a 3 1Semi final Sheffield United n 1 0Key h Home venue a Away venue n Neutral venue Arsenal entered the competition in the third round receiving a bye as a Premier League club Their opening match was a 2 0 home win against Oxford United on 4 January 2003 3 Striker Dennis Bergkamp scored his 100th goal for the club and an own goal by defender Scott McNiven ensured progression to the next round 4 Arsenal faced non league side Farnborough Town the match switched from Farnborough s ground at Cherrywood Road to Highbury due to concerns over safety 5 Farnborough began the match as the home team and conceded the first goal scored by Arsenal defender Sol Campbell in the 19th minute They went down to ten men after Christian Lee was sent off for a professional foul in the 28th minute Francis Jeffers scored twice before Rocky Baptiste added a consolation beating Pascal Cygan for pace and despite having his first shot saved by goalkeeper Stuart Taylor he managed to lift the ball over him and into the net Lauren and Bergkamp each scored in the final 15 minutes to give Arsenal a 5 1 victory 6 Arsenal s fifth round match was away to league rivals Manchester United at Old Trafford on 16 February 2003 After Ryan Giggs missed the chance to score past an open goal midfielder Edu gave Arsenal the lead through a free kick which took a deflection off David Beckham s shoulder Striker Sylvain Wiltord scored the second goal of the match in the 52nd minute running onto a pass from Edu and side footing the ball past goalkeeper Fabien Barthez 7 Arsenal captain Patrick Vieira said of the performance We knew when we lost here in the league that we had lost the battle in midfield We had to put that right and we did 8 In the sixth round Arsenal was drawn at home to Chelsea in a repeat of the previous season s final 9 Chelsea defender John Terry put Chelsea ahead with a header from a set piece before Arsenal responded through Jeffers and Thierry Henry Frank Lampard scored a late equaliser for the visiting team meaning the match was replayed at Stamford Bridge 10 An own goal by Terry and a strike by Wiltord in the space of seven minutes during the replay gave Arsenal an early lead against Chelsea Despite going down to ten men after Cygan was sent off and Terry scoring from a header the away team scored a third goal through Lauren to ensure progression into the semi finals 11 In the semi final against Sheffield United on 13 April 2003 at Old Trafford Freddie Ljungberg scored the winning goal to help Arsenal reach their third successive FA Cup final appearance 12 The match was best remembered for David Seaman s late save which prevented Sheffield United from equalising 13 Southampton edit Round Opposition Score3rd Tottenham Hotspur h 4 04th Millwall h 1 1Millwall a 2 15th Norwich City h 2 06th Wolverhampton Wanderers h 2 0Semi final Watford n 2 1Key h Home venue a Away venue n Neutral venue Like Arsenal as a Premier League club Southampton received a bye into the third round Their opening match was a 4 0 win against fellow league club Tottenham Hotspur A goal by defender Michael Svensson and three from Jo Tessem Anders Svensson and James Beattie in the second half was the second straight victory against Tottenham having beaten them on New Year s Day in the league 14 In the fourth round Southampton was drawn at home to First Division club Millwall on 25 January 2003 The visitors took the lead through striker Steve Claridge but were denied victory 90 seconds from the end of the match as Southampton striker Kevin Davies scored from a rebounded shot 15 In the replay midfielder Matthew Oakley scored twice for Southampton one in both halves either side of a Steven Reid equaliser for Millwall 16 Southampton s fifth round match was against Norwich City at home on 5 February 2003 Two goals in the space of three minutes scored by Svensson and Tessem was enough to take the team into the quarter finals 17 Southampton defender Claus Lundekvam was pleased with the win and said following the match When you get to this stage in the competition you have to believe you can win it 18 The club then faced Wolverhampton Wanderers at home in the following round Former Wolves player Chris Marsden gave Southampton the lead right in the 56th minute and with nine minutes remaining of normal time the team added a second goal when Jo Tessem s shot took a deflection off Paul Butler s legs to go inside the goal net 19 The victory meant Southampton reached the semi finals of the FA Cup for the first time in 17 years 20 At Villa Park Southampton played First Division team Watford on 13 April 2003 Brett Ormerod opened the scoring two minutes before half time and set up the second goal which saw the ball being taken over the line by Watford defender Paul Robinson Despite Marcus Gayle scoring a late header to half the scoreline Southampton won the match 21 Pre match edit nbsp Sir Bobby Robson was the chief guest for the final and presented the trophy to the winnersArsenal was appearing in the final of the FA Cup for the sixteenth time They had won the cup eight times previously in 1930 1936 1950 1971 1979 1993 1998 and 2002 and had been beaten in the final seven times the most recent in 2001 By comparison Southampton made their fourth appearance in a FA Cup final Their previous best was winning the cup in 1976 by beating opponents Manchester United 22 Both clubs received an allocation of approximately 25 000 tickets with the remaining 25 000 being sent out to other clubs 23 17 500 of those tickets were available to Southampton season ticket holders 24 Seat prices for the final exceeded 80 with the cheapest tickets available at 25 24 Southampton was given the South Stand which was the larger end of the stadium whereas Arsenal was situated at the opposite end 24 Although Southampton supporters were disappointed at the allocation share chairman Rupert Lowe refused to criticise the FA s decision by saying The reality is that too many people want to go and there are never enough tickets 25 In the lead up to the final the South Wales Echo reported that many tickets were being sold on the black market for 20 times the face value price 23 Nine days before the final the two clubs faced each other in a league match at Highbury Arsenal s former stadium With Arsenal unable to retain the title having lost to Leeds United manager Arsene Wenger rested several players as did Southampton manager Gordon Strachan whose team started without six of their first choice eleven 26 Winger Jermaine Pennant on his league debut scored a hat trick as did Pires in a 6 1 win 26 Strachan believed the result had little bearing on their chances of winning the cup noting There is little pressure on Southampton to lift the trophy We were not expected to reach the final and have already clinched a place in the UEFA Cup 27 The traditional Cup Final hymn Abide with Me was sung by Tony Henry an opera singer from South London 28 Sir Bobby Robson was invited as the FA s chief guest for the final and performed several duties ordinarily reserved for royalty such as presenting the trophy to the winning captain Heavy rain on Friday night and forecasted showers in Cardiff meant the final would be the first to be played indoors the stadium closed its retractable roof and floodlights were used to light up the ground 29 Match editTeam selection edit Vieira was ruled out of the match because of a knee injury during the FA Cup semi final match against Sheffield United 30 so Wenger named David Seaman as Arsenal s captain for the match In a match widely anticipated as his final for the club 31 With Campbell suspended and Cygan absent due to a thigh strain 32 Wenger picked Oleh Luzhnyi to pair up with Martin Keown who was rested the previous Sunday away against Sunderland For Southampton the major absentee was their striker Marian Pahars who underwent a third operation to overcome a troubling knee injury 33 Defender Chris Baird made his second competitive start for the club and Chris Marsden captained Southampton given Jason Dodd s absence with an injury Although both teams set up in a 4 4 2 formation Bergkamp was positioned as a deep lying forward behind Henry 34 Report edit nbsp Robert Pires scored the only goal of the finalArsenal created their first chance inside 24 seconds of the match when Ljungberg put Henry clear down the right hand side 35 The striker used his pace to get the better of Lundekvam only to have his shot blocked by Southampton goalkeeper Antti Niemi 35 Bergkamp s goal effort in the eighth minute was cleared off the line by full back Chris Baird after Niemi fumbled Henry s initial shot 35 Southampton fashioned their first opportunity in the 15th minute through a high cross in spite of unsettling the Arsenal defence the unmarked Svensson volleyed over the bar 35 Baird moments after won the ball in midfield and curled a shot that left Seaman scrambling across his goal to save Seven minutes before the break Arsenal went into the lead Henry receiving the ball from Parlour slipped it into Bergkamp down the right He in turn fed the ball to Ljungberg whose shot was blocked The ball rebounded in the direction of Pires who took one touch to set himself and another to fire into the goal at the near post despite Niemi getting a hand to the ball 35 Arsenal missed further chances to extend their lead when a cross from the right by Henry was shot over the bar by Pires and from the same area Bergkamp s cross cum shot was missed by Ljungberg 36 After the break Southampton applied pressure and a poor clearance by Seaman invited a chance for Paul Telfer to shoot the ball from 35 yards out his pass found Ormerod but was eventually intercepted by Luzhnyi 37 Minutes after Beattie failed to take advantage from Oakley s cross as the ball drifted wide 37 Arsenal regained possession and in the 52nd minute went close to doubling their lead 38 In Southampton s penalty box Bergkamp turned and beat Ormerod before curling a shot which Niemi palmed off it fell to the feet of Ljungberg who shot the ball into the side netting 38 Telfer misguided his header from a Southampton corner before Niemi denied Henry again In the 65th minute Niemi injured himself in an attempt to clear the ball and was replaced by substitute Paul Jones 38 Both clubs made substitutions in the final third of the game with Wiltord coming on for Bergkamp and Tessem replacing Svensson 38 Ormerod s goal bound effort was saved by Seaman with 10 minutes remaining of the match In the fourth minute of injury time Southampton earned themselves a corner 38 Beattie s on target header was cleared off the line by Ashley Cole and out for another corner which Pires kicked out in the final action of the game 38 Details edit 17 May 200315 00 BSTArsenal1 0SouthamptonPires nbsp 38 ReportMillennium Stadium CardiffAttendance 73 726Referee Graham Barber Hertfordshire nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Arsenal nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp SouthamptonGK 1 nbsp David Seaman c RB 12 nbsp LaurenCB 5 nbsp Martin Keown nbsp 30 CB 22 nbsp Oleh LuzhnyiLB 3 nbsp Ashley ColeRM 7 nbsp Robert PiresCM 15 nbsp Ray ParlourCM 19 nbsp Gilberto SilvaLM 8 nbsp Freddie LjungbergSS 10 nbsp Dennis Bergkamp nbsp 77 CF 14 nbsp Thierry Henry nbsp 66 Substitutes GK 13 nbsp Stuart TaylorDF 28 nbsp Kolo ToureMF 16 nbsp Giovanni van BronckhorstFW 11 nbsp Sylvain Wiltord nbsp 77 FW 25 nbsp Nwankwo KanuManager nbsp Arsene Wenger nbsp GK 14 nbsp Antti Niemi nbsp 66 RB 32 nbsp Chris Baird nbsp 86 CB 5 nbsp Claus LundekvamCB 11 nbsp Michael Svensson nbsp 90 LB 3 nbsp Wayne BridgeRM 33 nbsp Paul Telfer nbsp 60 CM 8 nbsp Matthew OakleyCM 12 nbsp Anders Svensson nbsp 75 LM 4 nbsp Chris Marsden c nbsp 77 CF 36 nbsp Brett OrmerodCF 9 nbsp James Beattie nbsp 31 Substitutes GK 1 nbsp Paul Jones nbsp 66 DF 6 nbsp Paul WilliamsDF 19 nbsp Danny HigginbothamMF 29 nbsp Fabrice Fernandes nbsp 86 FW 21 nbsp Jo Tessem nbsp 75 Manager nbsp Gordon StrachanMan of the match Thierry Henry Arsenal 39 Match officials Assistant referees Nigel Miller County Durham Keith Stroud Hampshire Fourth official Mike Dean Cheshire Match rules 90 minutes 30 minutes of extra time if necessary Penalty shootout if scores still level Five named substitutes Maximum of three substitutions Statistics edit Statistic 40 Arsenal SouthamptonGoals scored 1 0Possession 59 41 Shots on target 7 4Shots off target 5 10Corner kicks 4 8Fouls 10 18Offsides 3 3Yellow cards 2 4Red cards 0 0Post match editIn retaining the cup Arsenal became the first team to do so since Tottenham Hotspur in 1982 Wenger commented after the game that his team got the trophy we wanted while Strachan was in admiration of Southampton s performance I m very proud of the way they competed I couldn t have asked for any more 41 Keown said the FA Cup win was the best ever and Seaman felt the disappointment of losing out to Manchester United in the league spurred the team on 41 Football pundits Alan Hansen Peter Schmeichel and Mark Hughes unanimously agreed that Arsenal deserved to win the match 42 Arsenal s victory set up a Community Shield match against Manchester United the winners of the 2002 03 Premier League The FA Cup winners are awarded qualification into the UEFA Cup but because Arsenal qualified for the UEFA Champions League via their league position the UEFA Cup place was passed to Southampton the runners up 43 The match was broadcast live in the United Kingdom by both the BBC and Sky Sports with BBC One providing the free to air coverage and Sky Sports 1 being the pay TV alternative 44 BBC One held the majority of the viewership with a peak audience of 9 6 million viewers 55 7 viewing share watching at 16 50pm and the match averaged at 8 3 million 55 the highest audience for a FA Cup final in four years 45 Coverage of the final began on the channel at 12 10pm and averaged 5 3 million 44 4 45 The Match of the Day coverage concluded at different times dependent on station with the broadcast in Scotland ending 10 minutes before the main broadcast finished See also edit2003 Football League Cup Final 2003 FA Trophy FinalReferences edit History for Cardiff Wales United Kingdom Weather Underground Retrieved 4 January 2013 History of The FA Cup TheFA com The Football Association Retrieved 17 March 2012 Arsenal end Oxford dream BBC Sport 4 January 2003 Retrieved 12 March 2012 Burnton Simon 6 January 2003 Bergkamp worthy of ton of respect The Guardian London Retrieved 12 March 2012 Bradley Mark 9 January 2003 Farnborough to switch cup tie The Guardian Retrieved 12 March 2012 Arsenal cruise through BBC Sport 25 January 2003 Retrieved 12 March 2012 Arsenal cruise past Man Utd BBC Sport 16 February 2003 Retrieved 13 March 2012 Wilson Paul 16 February 2003 Arsenal triumph as Giggs goes missing The Observer London Retrieved 13 March 2012 London giants collide BBC Sport 27 February 2003 Retrieved 13 March 2012 Chelsea hold Arsenal BBC Sport 8 March 2003 Retrieved 13 March 2012 Arsenal brush aside Chelsea BBC Sport 25 March 2003 Retrieved 13 March 2012 Arsenal sink brave Blades BBC Sport 13 April 2003 Retrieved 13 March 2012 McCarra Kevin 14 April 2003 Super Seaman defies time and gravity to end Blades odyssey The Guardian London Retrieved 12 March 2012 Saints thrash Spurs BBC Sport 4 January 2003 Retrieved 13 March 2012 Last gasp Saints deny Lions BBC Sport 25 January 2003 Retrieved 13 March 2012 Saints tame Lions BBC Sport 13 February 2003 Retrieved 17 March 2012 Saints see off Norwich BBC Sport 5 February 2003 Retrieved 17 March 2012 Lundekvam eyes FA Cup glory BBC Sport 16 February 2003 Retrieved 17 March 2012 Brodkin Jon 10 March 2003 Super Wolves softened up by old boy Marsden The Guardian London Retrieved 17 March 2012 Saints tame Wolves BBC Sport 9 March 2003 Retrieved 17 March 2012 Davies Christopher 14 April 2003 Ormerod destroys Watford dream The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 18 March 2012 Hayward Paul 17 May 2003 Saints marching on the giants The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 18 March 2012 a b Touts selling tickets at 10 times value South Wales Echo Cardiff 7 May 2003 p 7 a b c Leitch Adam 26 April 2003 25 000 tickets for Saints Cardiff army Daily Echo Southampton Pratt Harry 7 May 2003 Lowe blasts ticket fiasco Daily Star London p 71 a b Brodkin Jon 8 May 2003 Arsenal star in Cup dress rehearsal The Guardian London Retrieved 18 March 2012 Strachan Gordan 11 May 2003 Price of victory may be lack of spectacle The Guardian London Retrieved 18 March 2012 Opera singer to kick off the FA Cup Final South Wales Echo Cardiff 15 May 2003 p 26 Wiechula Frank 18 May 2003 FA Cup final Day roof fell in on the Saints The People London p 6 agencies Staff and 14 April 2003 Vieira fit for United showdown The Guardian Retrieved 12 April 2021 Brodkin Jon 16 May 2003 Able Seaman is captain for final The Guardian London Retrieved 12 March 2012 Stammers Steve 13 May 2003 Wenger left with defence worries Evening Standard London p 63 West Lee 16 May 2003 FA Cup countdown Arsenal v Southampton Daily Mirror London p 68 Winter Henry 19 May 2003 Arsenal counter friendly fire The Daily Telegraph London p B2 a b c d e Arsenal leads Southampton 1 0 at half time of FA Cup final AP Worldstream Cardiff Associated Press 17 May 2003 Archived from the original on 11 June 2014 Retrieved 1 March 2013 subscription required Wilson Paul 18 May 2003 Pires aim is true for muted Gunners The Observer London Retrieved 1 March 2013 a b Arsenal 1 Southampton 0 Evening Gazette Middlesbrough 17 May 2003 Retrieved 1 March 2013 a b c d e f MacLeary John 17 May 2003 Arsenal v Southampton minute by minute The Guardian Retrieved 1 March 2013 May John 18 May 2003 Henry s debt to Bergkamp BBC Sport Retrieved 23 April 2009 Lipton Martin 19 May 2003 1 0 to the Arsenal At last Arsenal 1 Soton 0 Daily Mirror London Retrieved 23 February 2013 a b Keown hails best ever win BBC Sport 17 May 2003 Retrieved 16 March 2012 Arsenal were worthy winners BBC Sport 17 May 2003 Retrieved 16 March 2012 Who qualifies to play in Europe Premier League Archived from the original on 17 May 2014 Retrieved 4 January 2013 FA Cup final Arsenal v Southampton The Guardian London 17 May 2003 p B3 a b Ratings FA Cup s big gunners shoot to win on BBC1 Broadcast London 23 May 2003 Retrieved 4 January 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to FA Cup Final 2003 Saints fans view at SaintsForever com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2003 FA Cup final amp oldid 1210334166, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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