1996 Football League Cup Final

1996 Football League Cup Final
Event 1995–96 Football League Cup
Date 24 March 1996
Venue Wembley Stadium, London
Man of the Match Andy Townsend[1] (Aston Villa)
Referee Robbie Hart (County Durham)[2]
Attendance 77,056[2]

The 1996 Football League Cup Final took place on 24 March 1996 at Wembley Stadium and was contested between Aston Villa and Leeds United. This was the 35th final and the 29th to be played at Wembley. Aston Villa had won the trophy two years earlier, while Leeds' last victory was in their only final appearance in 1968.

In the first half the teams were separated by a goal from Savo Milošević. After half-time, Leeds United tired and Aston Villa took advantage to eventually win 3–0. Goals from Ian Taylor and Dwight Yorke completed the scoring.[2] This was the beginning of the end for Leeds United manager Howard Wilkinson, as he was heckled by the clubs fans for his and the team's failure. However it was Villa's fifth success in the competition, at the time equalling the record set by Liverpool.

Road to Wembley

Aston Villa
Round 2 (1st leg)Aston Villa6–0Peterborough United
Round 2 (2nd leg)Peterborough United1–1Aston Villa
 (Aston Villa win 7–1 on aggregate)
Round 3Aston Villa2–0Stockport County
Round 4Aston Villa1–0Queens Park Rangers
Quarter-finalAston Villa1–0Wolverhampton Wanderers
Semi-final (1st leg)Arsenal2–2Aston Villa
Semi-final (2nd leg)Aston Villa 0–0Arsenal
 (2–2 on aggregate. Aston Villa advance on Away Goals)
Leeds United
Round 2 (1st leg)Leeds United0–0Notts County
Round 2 (2nd leg)Notts County2–3Leeds United
 (Leeds win 3–2 on aggregate)
Round 3Derby County0–1Leeds United
Round 4Leeds United2–1Blackburn Rovers
Quarter-finalLeeds United2–1Reading
Semi-final (1st leg)Birmingham City1–2Leeds United
Semi-final (2nd leg)Leeds United 3–0Birmingham City
 (Leeds United win 5–1 on aggregate)

Match details

24 March 1996
17:00
Aston Villa 3–0 Leeds United
Milošević  20'
Taylor  55'
Yorke  88'
Report
Wembley Stadium, London
Attendance: 77,056[2]
Referee: Robbie Hart (County Durham)[2]
Aston Villa
Leeds United
GK 1Australia Mark Bosnich
CB 4 England Gareth Southgate
CB 5 Republic of Ireland Paul McGrath
CB 6England Ugo Ehiogu
RWB2 England Gary Charles
LWB3England Alan Wright
CM 7 England Ian Taylor
CM 8 England Mark Draper
CM 11Republic of Ireland Andy Townsend (c)
CF 9 Serbia and Montenegro Savo Milošević
CF 10Trinidad and Tobago Dwight Yorke
Substitutes:
GK 13England Michael Oakes
DF 12 Republic of Ireland Steve Staunton
FW 14England Tommy Johnson
Manager:
England Brian Little
GK 1 England John Lukic
CB 5 South Africa Lucas Radebe  65'
CB 6 England David Wetherall
CB 12England John Pemberton
RWB2 Republic of Ireland Gary Kelly
LWB11Wales Gary Speed
CM 4 England Carlton Palmer
CM 22England Mark Ford  46'
CM 10Scotland Gary McAllister (c)
CF 7Scotland Andy Gray
CF 21Ghana Tony Yeboah
Substitutes:
DF 15Northern Ireland Nigel Worthington
FW 9 England Brian Deane  46'
FW 18Sweden Tomas Brolin  65'
Manager:
England Howard Wilkinson

Man of the match

Match rules

  • 90 minutes
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level
  • Three named substitutes, of which two may be used

References

  1. 1 2 "Alan Hardaker Trophy Winners". The Football League. 26 February 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Milosevic gives Villa a touch of magic". The Independent. 25 March 1996. Retrieved 8 May 2012.

External links

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