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2007 FA Cup final

The 2007 FA Cup final was played on Saturday, 19 May 2007 between Chelsea and Manchester United. It was the 126th FA Cup Final and the first to be played at the new Wembley Stadium.[1] Chelsea beat Manchester United 1-0 thanks to an extra-time goal from Didier Drogba,[2] completing a domestic cup double for the Blues in the 2006–07 season, as they had already won the League Cup Final in February. Manchester United were favourite for winning a double of their own as they had recently beaten Chelsea to the Premier League title two weeks earlier. The game was widely considered to be a disappointment by pundits and fans alike.[3][4][5] As a result of Manchester United and Chelsea having already been guaranteed qualification for the UEFA Champions League, the UEFA Cup entry for the FA Cup winner/runner-up went instead to the highest positioned Premier League team who had not already qualified for Europe: Bolton Wanderers.

2007 FA Cup final
Event2006–07 FA Cup
After extra time
Date19 May 2007
VenueWembley Stadium, London
Man of the MatchFrank Lampard (Chelsea)
RefereeSteve Bennett (Kent)
Attendance89,826
2006
2008

The match had an attendance of 89,826, the largest for an FA Cup Final since Wimbledon's famous 1–0 win over Liverpool in the 1988 final, when 98,203 attended. Chelsea became only the third club to complete the domestic cup double – Arsenal did it in 1993 and Liverpool in 2001. It was their fourth FA Cup triumph, and their first under the management of José Mourinho. They had won the last FA Cup final at the old Wembley Stadium seven years earlier.

Background edit

History edit

The match was the first time since 1986 that the FA Cup final had been contested between the winners and runners-up of the English league, and the first time ever that the Premier League champions and the League Cup winners from the same season had gone head to head in the final. Manchester United were aiming for their 12th FA Cup to extend their overall record as the most successful team in the competition's history, while Chelsea were playing for their fourth FA Cup overall. The last time Chelsea had played Manchester United in an FA Cup Final was in 1994, when Manchester United ran out 4–0 winners after a goalless first half. Ryan Giggs was the only player in the 2007 FA Cup Final who played back in 1994. Chelsea's assistant coach Steve Clarke played on that day for the Blues in 1994.[6]

Ryan Giggs was playing in his seventh FA Cup Final, equalling Roy Keane's post-war record, having played in the 1994, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2004 and 2005 finals. Chelsea were also the last club to win the FA Cup at the old Wembley Stadium, when they beat Aston Villa in the 2000 Final.

Chelsea continued the dominance of the so-called "Big Four", who had now won the last 12 finals in a row (Arsenal 4 wins, Manchester United 3, Chelsea 3, Liverpool 2), since Everton's 1995 victory over Manchester United. It was the eighth FA Cup Final in a row (Arsenal 4 appearances, Chelsea 2, Millwall 1, West Ham 1) involving a London club; the last Final not to involve a London club was Manchester United's 2–0 win over Newcastle United in the 1999 final.

Before the match, there was an official opening ceremony of the new stadium. This included the official opening by Prince William, a fly-past by The Red Arrows and a parade on the pitch of former winners at the old Wembley Stadium.

The full list was:

 
The new Wembley Stadium before the match

Recent meetings edit

Both league matches between the two clubs in the 2006–07 season finished as draws. On 26 November 2006 at Manchester United's Old Trafford ground, the match ended in a 1–1 stalemate, with the goals coming from Louis Saha and Ricardo Carvalho. The two clubs met again on 9 May 2007 in their penultimate league fixture at Stamford Bridge, but, with the league already having been sewn up the weekend before, both teams rested most of their major players and the match ended 0–0.

Road to Wembley edit

Chelsea Round Manchester United
Macclesfield Town [L2]
H
6–1
Lampard 16', 41', 51' (pen.)
Wright-Phillips 68'
Mikel 82'
Carvalho 86'
Third Round Aston Villa [P]
H
2–1
Larsson 55'
Solskjær 90'
Nottingham Forest [L1]
H
3–0
Shevchenko 9'
Drogba 18'
Mikel 45'
Fourth Round Portsmouth [P]
H
2–1
Rooney 77', 83'
Norwich City [C]
H
4–0
Wright-Phillips 39'
Drogba 51'
Essien 90'
Shevchenko 90'
Fifth Round Reading [P]
H
1–1
Carrick 45'
Replay Reading [P]
A
3–2
Heinze 2'
Saha 4'
Solskjær 6'
Tottenham Hotspur [P]
H
3–3
Lampard 22', 71'
Kalou 86'
Sixth Round Middlesbrough [P]
A
2–2
Rooney 23'
Ronaldo 68' (pen.)
Tottenham Hotspur [P]
A
2–1
Shevchenko 55'
Wright-Phillips 61'
Replays Middlesbrough [P]
H
1–0
Ronaldo 76' (pen.)
Blackburn Rovers [P]
Old Trafford, Manchester
2–1 (a.e.t.)
Lampard 16'
Ballack 109'
Semi-finals Watford [P]
Villa Park, Birmingham
4–1
Rooney 7', 66'
Ronaldo 28'
Richardson 82'
  • Both clubs received a bye to the Third Round.
  • In square brackets is a letter that represents the opposition's division
    • [P] = Premier League
    • [C] = Championship
    • [L1] = Football League One
    • [L2] = Football League Two

Match edit

Summary edit

 
The two teams line up prior to kick-off.

The opening twenty minutes of the game were marked by cautious play and a lack of creativity from both teams, until Didier Drogba produced the game's first noticeable attempt on goal by hammering a shot wide from thirty yards. It took a further ten minutes for another shot, this time from Chelsea's Frank Lampard who forced a save from Edwin van der Sar. Wayne Rooney was twice called offside for Manchester United in the first half, but it was the closest the Red Devils came to any kind of chance.

At half time, Chelsea manager José Mourinho made a like-for-like substitution, bringing on Dutch winger Arjen Robben for Joe Cole. A minute after the restart, Rooney produced the most exciting action to that moment, dribbling round two Chelsea defenders before aiming a powerful shot towards goal, but Petr Čech managed to make a convincing save. Rooney set off on another run ten minutes later, carrying the ball a good sixty yards towards goal only to be tackled by the last Chelsea defender, Wayne Bridge. Ryan Giggs then flashed a volley barely two feet over the bar from close range after a cross from Paul Scholes, who picked up the game's first booking a minute later after fouling Lampard. From the resulting free kick, Drogba curled the ball around the Manchester United wall and off the outside of the near post. Rooney set off on another dangerous run soon after, dribbling round both John Terry and Michael Essien before having the ball taken off his feet by Čech.

 
Chelsea players collect the trophy, presented by Prince William

With neither side doing enough to score in normal time, the game went into extra time for the third consecutive FA Cup Final. Manchester United's best chance of the game fell to Giggs from only three yards out after Rooney slid a pass across goal, but the Welshman could not get proper contact on his shot and Čech got down to make the save. Giggs appealed for a goal, claiming that the ball had crossed the line in Čech's arms, but the linesman did not flag and referee Steve Bennett waved play on. Television replays appeared to show that the ball had just crossed the line, but only after Giggs's momentum had pushed Čech backwards into his own goal.[7] After the game, Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson claimed that Giggs had been fouled by Essien just before he took his shot.[8]

The deadlock was finally broken after 116 minutes when Drogba played a one-two with Lampard on the edge of the box after receiving the ball from Mikel John Obi, and prodded the ball past the onrushing van der Sar and into the net. Chelsea picked up three more bookings in the last few minutes as they tried to halt a late Manchester United comeback, but Drogba's goal proved to be the last chance of the game as Mourinho's side held on to win the first ever FA Cup Final at the new Wembley Stadium.

Match details edit

Chelsea1–0 (a.e.t.)Manchester United
Drogba   116'
Attendance: 89,826
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Chelsea
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Manchester United
GK 1   Petr Čech
RB 20   Paulo Ferreira   120'
CB 5   Michael Essien
CB 26   John Terry (c)
LB 18   Wayne Bridge
DM 4   Claude Makélélé   83'
CM 12   Mikel John Obi
CM 8   Frank Lampard
RW 24   Shaun Wright-Phillips   93'
LW 10   Joe Cole   45'
CF 11   Didier Drogba
Substitutes:
GK 23   Carlo Cudicini
DF 3   Ashley Cole   120'   108'
MF 16   Arjen Robben   45'   108'
MF 19   Lassana Diarra
FW 21   Salomon Kalou   119'   93'
Manager:
  José Mourinho
 
GK 1   Edwin van der Sar
RB 6   Wes Brown
CB 5   Rio Ferdinand
CB 15   Nemanja Vidić   84'
LB 4   Gabriel Heinze
RM 24   Darren Fletcher   92'
CM 18   Paul Scholes   58'
CM 16   Michael Carrick   112'
LM 7   Cristiano Ronaldo
SS 11   Ryan Giggs (c)   112'
CF 8   Wayne Rooney
Substitutes:
GK 29   Tomasz Kuszczak
DF 3   Patrice Evra
DF 22   John O'Shea   112'
MF 14   Alan Smith   105'   92'
FW 20   Ole Gunnar Solskjær   112'
Manager:
  Sir Alex Ferguson

Match officials

Match rules

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

Statistics edit

 
The Chelsea players celebrate
Chelsea Manchester United
Total shots 18 12
Shots on target 4 4
Ball possession 50% 50%
Corner kicks 1 6
Fouls committed 18 18
Offsides 0 5
Yellow cards 4 3
Red cards 0 0

Source: ESPN[10]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Bose, Mihir (16 October 2006). . The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 8 April 2008. Retrieved 22 April 2010.
  2. ^ "FA Cup final – Chelsea 1–0 Man Utd". BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 19 May 2007. from the original on 24 May 2007. Retrieved 19 May 2007.
  3. ^ "BBC pundits on the FA Cup final". BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 19 May 2007. Retrieved 1 January 2010.
  4. ^ Wilson, Paul (20 May 2007). "The two best teams in England but not much to shout about". London: Guardian Unlimited. Retrieved 22 April 2010.
  5. ^ "Most Boring Cup Final in History". BBC 606 Fans forum. Retrieved 20 May 2007.
  6. ^ "Where are they now?". BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 19 May 2007. from the original on 23 May 2007. Retrieved 19 May 2007.
  7. ^ Doyle, Paul (19 May 2007). "Minute-by-minute report". Guardian Unlimited. London. Retrieved 22 April 2010.
  8. ^ . Football365.com. Archived from the original on 21 May 2007. Retrieved 20 May 2007.
  9. ^ "Bennett chosen for Final". TheFA.com. The Football Association. Archived from the original on 9 April 2008. Retrieved 19 April 2007.
  10. ^ . ESPNsoccernet. ESPN Inc. 19 May 2008. Archived from the original on 13 September 2007. Retrieved 6 May 2012.

External links edit

    2007, final, women, event, 2007, women, final, played, saturday, 2007, between, chelsea, manchester, united, 126th, final, first, played, wembley, stadium, chelsea, beat, manchester, united, thanks, extra, time, goal, from, didier, drogba, completing, domestic. For the women s event see 2007 FA Women s Cup final The 2007 FA Cup final was played on Saturday 19 May 2007 between Chelsea and Manchester United It was the 126th FA Cup Final and the first to be played at the new Wembley Stadium 1 Chelsea beat Manchester United 1 0 thanks to an extra time goal from Didier Drogba 2 completing a domestic cup double for the Blues in the 2006 07 season as they had already won the League Cup Final in February Manchester United were favourite for winning a double of their own as they had recently beaten Chelsea to the Premier League title two weeks earlier The game was widely considered to be a disappointment by pundits and fans alike 3 4 5 As a result of Manchester United and Chelsea having already been guaranteed qualification for the UEFA Champions League the UEFA Cup entry for the FA Cup winner runner up went instead to the highest positioned Premier League team who had not already qualified for Europe Bolton Wanderers 2007 FA Cup finalEvent2006 07 FA CupChelsea Manchester United1 0After extra timeDate19 May 2007VenueWembley Stadium LondonMan of the MatchFrank Lampard Chelsea RefereeSteve Bennett Kent Attendance89 826 20062008 The match had an attendance of 89 826 the largest for an FA Cup Final since Wimbledon s famous 1 0 win over Liverpool in the 1988 final when 98 203 attended Chelsea became only the third club to complete the domestic cup double Arsenal did it in 1993 and Liverpool in 2001 It was their fourth FA Cup triumph and their first under the management of Jose Mourinho They had won the last FA Cup final at the old Wembley Stadium seven years earlier Contents 1 Background 1 1 History 1 2 Recent meetings 2 Road to Wembley 3 Match 3 1 Summary 3 2 Match details 3 3 Statistics 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksBackground editHistory edit The match was the first time since 1986 that the FA Cup final had been contested between the winners and runners up of the English league and the first time ever that the Premier League champions and the League Cup winners from the same season had gone head to head in the final Manchester United were aiming for their 12th FA Cup to extend their overall record as the most successful team in the competition s history while Chelsea were playing for their fourth FA Cup overall The last time Chelsea had played Manchester United in an FA Cup Final was in 1994 when Manchester United ran out 4 0 winners after a goalless first half Ryan Giggs was the only player in the 2007 FA Cup Final who played back in 1994 Chelsea s assistant coach Steve Clarke played on that day for the Blues in 1994 6 Ryan Giggs was playing in his seventh FA Cup Final equalling Roy Keane s post war record having played in the 1994 1995 1996 1999 2004 and 2005 finals Chelsea were also the last club to win the FA Cup at the old Wembley Stadium when they beat Aston Villa in the 2000 Final Chelsea continued the dominance of the so called Big Four who had now won the last 12 finals in a row Arsenal 4 wins Manchester United 3 Chelsea 3 Liverpool 2 since Everton s 1995 victory over Manchester United It was the eighth FA Cup Final in a row Arsenal 4 appearances Chelsea 2 Millwall 1 West Ham 1 involving a London club the last Final not to involve a London club was Manchester United s 2 0 win over Newcastle United in the 1999 final Before the match there was an official opening ceremony of the new stadium This included the official opening by Prince William a fly past by The Red Arrows and a parade on the pitch of former winners at the old Wembley Stadium The full list was Peter McParland Aston Villa goalscorer 1957 Roy Hartle Bolton Wanderers right back 1958 Charlie Thomson Nottingham Forest goalkeeper 1959 Bill Slater Wolverhampton Wanderers captain 1960 Bobby Smith Tottenham Hotspur goalscorer 1961 Cliff Jones Tottenham Hotspur winger 1962 Denis Law Manchester United goalscorer 1963 Sir Geoff Hurst West Ham United goalscorer 1964 Ian St John Liverpool goalscorer 1965 Derek Temple Everton goalscorer 1966 Dave Mackay Tottenham Hotspur captain 1967 Graham Williams West Bromwich Albion captain 1968 Mike Summerbee Manchester City winger 1969 Ron Harris Chelsea captain 1970 Frank McLintock Arsenal captain 1971 Peter Lorimer Leeds United winger 1972 Jim Montgomery Sunderland goalkeeper 1973 Ray Clemence Liverpool goalkeeper 1974 Alan Taylor West Ham United goalscorer 1975 Lawrie McMenemy Southampton manager 1976 Lou Macari Manchester United forward 1977 Kevin Beattie Ipswich Town defender 1978 Frank Stapleton Arsenal goalscorer 1979 Sir Trevor Brooking West Ham United goalscorer 1980 Ricardo Villa and Steve Perryman Tottenham Hotspur midfielder and captain 1981 Glenn Hoddle Tottenham Hotspur goalscorer 1982 Arthur Albiston Manchester United defender 1983 Trevor Steven Everton midfielder 1984 nbsp The new Wembley Stadium before the match Norman Whiteside Manchester United goalscorer 1985 Ian Rush Liverpool goalscorer 1986 Keith Houchen Coventry City goalscorer 1987 Lawrie Sanchez Wimbledon goalscorer 1988 John Barnes Liverpool midfielder 1989 Lee Martin Manchester United goalscorer 1990 Terry Venables and Gary Mabbutt Tottenham Hotspur manager and captain 1991 Michael Thomas Liverpool goalscorer 1992 Ian Wright Arsenal goalscorer 1993 Mark Hughes Manchester United goalscorer 1994 Neville Southall Everton goalkeeper 1995 Gary Pallister Manchester United defender 1996 Dennis Wise Chelsea captain 1997 David Seaman Arsenal goalkeeper 1998 Peter Schmeichel Manchester United goalkeeper 1999 Marcel Desailly Chelsea defender 2000 Recent meetings edit Both league matches between the two clubs in the 2006 07 season finished as draws On 26 November 2006 at Manchester United s Old Trafford ground the match ended in a 1 1 stalemate with the goals coming from Louis Saha and Ricardo Carvalho The two clubs met again on 9 May 2007 in their penultimate league fixture at Stamford Bridge but with the league already having been sewn up the weekend before both teams rested most of their major players and the match ended 0 0 Road to Wembley editChelsea Round Manchester United Macclesfield Town L2 H6 1 Lampard 16 41 51 pen Wright Phillips 68 Mikel 82 Carvalho 86 Third Round Aston Villa P H2 1 Larsson 55 Solskjaer 90 Nottingham Forest L1 H3 0 Shevchenko 9 Drogba 18 Mikel 45 Fourth Round Portsmouth P H2 1 Rooney 77 83 Norwich City C H4 0 Wright Phillips 39 Drogba 51 Essien 90 Shevchenko 90 Fifth Round Reading P H1 1 Carrick 45 Replay Reading P A3 2 Heinze 2 Saha 4 Solskjaer 6 Tottenham Hotspur P H3 3 Lampard 22 71 Kalou 86 Sixth Round Middlesbrough P A2 2 Rooney 23 Ronaldo 68 pen Tottenham Hotspur P A2 1 Shevchenko 55 Wright Phillips 61 Replays Middlesbrough P H1 0 Ronaldo 76 pen Blackburn Rovers P Old Trafford Manchester2 1 a e t Lampard 16 Ballack 109 Semi finals Watford P Villa Park Birmingham4 1 Rooney 7 66 Ronaldo 28 Richardson 82 Both clubs received a bye to the Third Round In square brackets is a letter that represents the opposition s division P Premier League C Championship L1 Football League One L2 Football League TwoMatch editSummary edit nbsp The two teams line up prior to kick off The opening twenty minutes of the game were marked by cautious play and a lack of creativity from both teams until Didier Drogba produced the game s first noticeable attempt on goal by hammering a shot wide from thirty yards It took a further ten minutes for another shot this time from Chelsea s Frank Lampard who forced a save from Edwin van der Sar Wayne Rooney was twice called offside for Manchester United in the first half but it was the closest the Red Devils came to any kind of chance At half time Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho made a like for like substitution bringing on Dutch winger Arjen Robben for Joe Cole A minute after the restart Rooney produced the most exciting action to that moment dribbling round two Chelsea defenders before aiming a powerful shot towards goal but Petr Cech managed to make a convincing save Rooney set off on another run ten minutes later carrying the ball a good sixty yards towards goal only to be tackled by the last Chelsea defender Wayne Bridge Ryan Giggs then flashed a volley barely two feet over the bar from close range after a cross from Paul Scholes who picked up the game s first booking a minute later after fouling Lampard From the resulting free kick Drogba curled the ball around the Manchester United wall and off the outside of the near post Rooney set off on another dangerous run soon after dribbling round both John Terry and Michael Essien before having the ball taken off his feet by Cech nbsp Chelsea players collect the trophy presented by Prince William With neither side doing enough to score in normal time the game went into extra time for the third consecutive FA Cup Final Manchester United s best chance of the game fell to Giggs from only three yards out after Rooney slid a pass across goal but the Welshman could not get proper contact on his shot and Cech got down to make the save Giggs appealed for a goal claiming that the ball had crossed the line in Cech s arms but the linesman did not flag and referee Steve Bennett waved play on Television replays appeared to show that the ball had just crossed the line but only after Giggs s momentum had pushed Cech backwards into his own goal 7 After the game Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson claimed that Giggs had been fouled by Essien just before he took his shot 8 The deadlock was finally broken after 116 minutes when Drogba played a one two with Lampard on the edge of the box after receiving the ball from Mikel John Obi and prodded the ball past the onrushing van der Sar and into the net Chelsea picked up three more bookings in the last few minutes as they tried to halt a late Manchester United comeback but Drogba s goal proved to be the last chance of the game as Mourinho s side held on to win the first ever FA Cup Final at the new Wembley Stadium Match details edit 19 May 200715 00 BSTChelsea1 0 a e t Manchester UnitedDrogba nbsp 116 Report Wembley Stadium LondonAttendance 89 826Referee Steve Bennett Kent 9 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Chelsea nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Manchester United GK 1 nbsp Petr Cech RB 20 nbsp Paulo Ferreira nbsp 120 CB 5 nbsp Michael Essien CB 26 nbsp John Terry c LB 18 nbsp Wayne Bridge DM 4 nbsp Claude Makelele nbsp 83 CM 12 nbsp Mikel John Obi CM 8 nbsp Frank Lampard RW 24 nbsp Shaun Wright Phillips nbsp 93 LW 10 nbsp Joe Cole nbsp 45 CF 11 nbsp Didier Drogba Substitutes GK 23 nbsp Carlo Cudicini DF 3 nbsp Ashley Cole nbsp 120 nbsp 108 MF 16 nbsp Arjen Robben nbsp 45 nbsp 108 MF 19 nbsp Lassana Diarra FW 21 nbsp Salomon Kalou nbsp 119 nbsp 93 Manager nbsp Jose Mourinho nbsp GK 1 nbsp Edwin van der Sar RB 6 nbsp Wes Brown CB 5 nbsp Rio Ferdinand CB 15 nbsp Nemanja Vidic nbsp 84 LB 4 nbsp Gabriel Heinze RM 24 nbsp Darren Fletcher nbsp 92 CM 18 nbsp Paul Scholes nbsp 58 CM 16 nbsp Michael Carrick nbsp 112 LM 7 nbsp Cristiano Ronaldo SS 11 nbsp Ryan Giggs c nbsp 112 CF 8 nbsp Wayne Rooney Substitutes GK 29 nbsp Tomasz Kuszczak DF 3 nbsp Patrice Evra DF 22 nbsp John O Shea nbsp 112 MF 14 nbsp Alan Smith nbsp 105 nbsp 92 FW 20 nbsp Ole Gunnar Solskjaer nbsp 112 Manager nbsp Sir Alex Ferguson Match officials Assistant referees Peter Kirkup Northamptonshire Dave Bryan Lincolnshire Fourth official Howard Webb Sheffield amp Hallamshire Match rules 90 minutes 30 minutes of extra time if necessary Penalty shoot out if scores still level Five named substitutes Maximum of three substitutions Statistics edit nbsp The Chelsea players celebrate Chelsea Manchester United Total shots 18 12 Shots on target 4 4 Ball possession 50 50 Corner kicks 1 6 Fouls committed 18 18 Offsides 0 5 Yellow cards 4 3 Red cards 0 0 Source ESPN 10 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to FA Cup Final 2007 2007 League Cup Final 2006 07 FA Cup 2006 07 League CupReferences edit Bose Mihir 16 October 2006 Wembley to host 2007 FA Cup final The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 8 April 2008 Retrieved 22 April 2010 FA Cup final Chelsea 1 0 Man Utd BBC Sport British Broadcasting Corporation 19 May 2007 Archived from the original on 24 May 2007 Retrieved 19 May 2007 BBC pundits on the FA Cup final BBC Sport British Broadcasting Corporation 19 May 2007 Retrieved 1 January 2010 Wilson Paul 20 May 2007 The two best teams in England but not much to shout about London Guardian Unlimited Retrieved 22 April 2010 Most Boring Cup Final in History BBC 606 Fans forum Retrieved 20 May 2007 Where are they now BBC Sport British Broadcasting Corporation 19 May 2007 Archived from the original on 23 May 2007 Retrieved 19 May 2007 Doyle Paul 19 May 2007 Minute by minute report Guardian Unlimited London Retrieved 22 April 2010 Giggs bemoans the goal that wasn t Football365 com Archived from the original on 21 May 2007 Retrieved 20 May 2007 Bennett chosen for Final TheFA com The Football Association Archived from the original on 9 April 2008 Retrieved 19 April 2007 Chelsea FA Cup Winners 2007 ESPNsoccernet ESPN Inc 19 May 2008 Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 6 May 2012 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to FA Cup Final 2007 FA Cup Finals Match Report Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2007 FA Cup final amp oldid 1157962737, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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