:2003–04 FA Cup

{{Infobox football tournament season

| title = FA Cup

| year = 2003–04

| other_title =

| image =

| imagesize =

| caption =

| country = England
Wales

| num_teams =

| champions = Manchester United

| count = 11

| runner-up = Millwall

| matches =

| goals =

| top goal scorer = Garry Barnes Scott Taylor
Ruud van Nistelrooy
(6 goals)

| player =

| prevseason = 2002–03

| nextseason = 2004–05

}}

File:Principality_Stadium_May_3,_2016.jpg , site of the cup final]]

The 2003–04 FA Cup was the 123rd staging of England and the world's oldest football competition, the FA Cup. The competition began on 23 August 2003, with the lowest-ranked of the entrants competing in the Extra preliminary round. In the third round, the clubs from the Premiership and Division One competed in the competition for the first time.

The semi-finals were staged at neutral venues and, like the final, would not be replayed in the event of a draw. The competition culminated with the cup final at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff for a fourth year in a row, since Wembley Stadium was still in the rebuilding process. The cup was won by Manchester United for a record 11th time, with a 3–0 victory over Millwall from Division One.

The appearance in the cup final by Millwall, a Level 2 team, marked the first time in 12 years that a team outside Level 1 of the English football pyramid appeared in the final game.

Calendar

class="wikitable"

! Round !! Date (weekend of) !! Matches !! width=100 | Clubs !! width=100 | Prize money

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| Extra preliminary round

Saturday 23 August 200373661 → 588£500
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| Preliminary round

Saturday 30 August 2003182588 → 406£1,000
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| First round qualifying

Saturday 20 September 2003124406 → 282£2,250
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| Second round qualifying

Saturday 27 September 200384282 → 198£3,750
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| Third round qualifying

Saturday 11 October 200342198 → 156£5,000
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| Fourth round qualifying

Saturday 25 October 200332156 → 124£10,000
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| First round proper

Saturday 8 November 200340124 → 84£16,000
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| Second round proper

Saturday 6 December 20032084 → 64£24,000
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| Third round proper

Saturday 3 January 20043264 → 32£40,000
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| Fourth round proper

Saturday 24 January 20041632 → 16£60,000
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| Fifth round proper

Saturday 14 February 2004816 → 8£120,000
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| Sixth round proper

Saturday 6 March 200448 → 4£300,000
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| Semi-finals

Saturday 3 April 200424 → 2£900,000
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| Final

Saturday 22 May 200412 → 1£1,000,000

Qualifying rounds

All participating clubs that were not members of the Premier League or Football League entered the competition in the qualifying rounds to secure one of 32 places available in the first round proper.

The winners from the fourth qualifying round were Stalybridge Celtic, Lancaster City, Grantham Town, Chester City, Whitby Town, Shrewsbury Town, Burton Albion, Telford United, Scarborough, Gainsborough Trinity, Accrington Stanley, Northwich Victoria, Bradford Park Avenue, Shildon, Histon, Stevenage Borough, Barnet, Farnborough Town, Grays Athletic, Weston-super-Mare, Boreham Wood, Aldershot Town, Thurrock, Hereford United, Bishop's Stortford, Salisbury City, Ford United, Canvey Island, Hornchurch, Woking, Crawley Town and Gravesend & Northfleet.

Histon, Thurrock and Hornchurch were appearing in the competition proper for the first time. Of the others, Accrington Stanley and Weston-super-Mare had last featured at this stage in 1993–94, Bishop's Stortford had last done so in 1986-87, Grantham Town had last done so in 1975-76, Bradford Park Avenue had last done so in 1970-71 and Shildon had last done so in 1961-62.

{{for|all qualifying round results|2003–04 FA Cup qualifying rounds}}

First round proper

This round is the first in which Football League teams from Second and Third Division compete with non-league teams. Luton Town's Adrian Forbes and Sheffield Wednesday's Adam Proudlock netted hat tricks. Shildon, of the Northern League at level 8 of the English football pyramid, was the lowest ranked team in the round.

  • Ties were played over the weekend of 8 November 2003.

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
Tie no

!Home team

!Score

!Away team

1Lincoln City (4)3–1Brighton & Hove Albion (3)
2Peterborough United (3)2–0Hereford United (5)
3Oldham Athletic (3)3–0Carlisle United (4)
4Cheltenham Town (4)3–1Hull City (4)
5Yeovil Town (4)4–1Wrexham (3)
6Macclesfield Town (4)3–0Boston United (4)
7Grays Athletic (6)1–2Aldershot Town (5)
8Scarborough (5)1–0Doncaster Rovers (4)
9Barnet (5)2–2Stalybridge Celtic (6)
replayStalybridge Celtic (6)0–2Barnet (5)
10Blackpool (3)4–0Boreham Wood (7)
11Wycombe Wanderers (3)4–1Swindon Town (3)
12Lancaster City (6)1–2Cambridge United (4)
13Woking (5)3–1Histon (7)
14AFC Bournemouth (3)1–0Bristol Rovers (4)
15Stevenage Borough (5)2–1Stockport County (3)
16Grantham Town (6)1–2Leyton Orient (4)
17Thurrock (6)1–1Luton Town (3)
replayLuton Town (3)3–1Thurrock (6)
18Northampton Town (4)3–2Plymouth Argyle (3)
19Tranmere Rovers (3)3–2Chesterfield (3)
20Hornchurch (6)2–0Darlington (4)
21Scunthorpe United (4)2–1Shrewsbury Town (5)
22Torquay United (4)1–2Burton Albion (5)
23Accrington Stanley (5)1–0Huddersfield Town (4)
24Grimsby Town (3)1–0Queens Park Rangers (3)
25Notts County (3)7–2Shildon (8)
26Brentford (3)7–1Gainsborough Trinity (6)
27Kidderminster Harriers (4)2–1Northwich Victoria (5)
28Southend United (4)1–1Canvey Island (6)
replayCanvey Island (6)2–3Southend United (4)
29York City (4)1–2Barnsley (3)
30Port Vale (3)2–2Ford United (6)
replayFord United (6)1–2Port Vale (3)
31Mansfield Town (4)6–0Bishop's Stortford (6)
32Sheffield Wednesday (3)4–0Salisbury City (7)
33Farnborough Town (5)0–1Weston-super-Mare (6)
34Chester City (5)0–1Gravesend & Northfleet (5)
35Telford United (5)3–2Crawley Town (6)
36Colchester United (3)1–0Oxford United (4)
37Bradford Park Avenue (6)2–5Bristol City (3)
38Bury (4)1–2Rochdale (4)
39Swansea City (4)3–0Rushden & Diamonds (3)
40Hartlepool United (3)4–0Whitby Town (6)

Second round proper

Ties were played over the weekend of 6 December 2003. Mansfield's Liam Lawrence showed how interested Championship and premiership clubs were with him by netting a hat trick. Step 6 sides Weston-super-Mare, from the Southern League Premier Division, and Hornchurch, from the Isthmian League Premier Division, were the lowest-ranked teams in the round.

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
Tie no

!Home team

!Score

!Away team

1Northampton Town (4)4–1Weston-super-Mare (6)
2Rochdale (4)0–2Luton Town (3)
3Colchester United (3)1–0Aldershot Town (5)
4Macclesfield Town (4)1–1Cambridge United (4)
replayCambridge United (4)2–2Macclesfield Town (4)
colspan=5|Macclesfield Town won 4–2 on penalties
5Peterborough United (3)3–2Grimsby Town (3)
6Bristol City (3)0–0Barnsley (3)
replayBarnsley (3)2–1Bristol City (3)
7Oldham Athletic (3)2–5Blackpool (3)
8Burton Albion (5)0–1Hartlepool United (3)
9Gravesend & Northfleet (5)1–2Notts County (3)
10Telford United (5)3–0Brentford (3)
11Woking (5)0–3Kidderminster Harriers (4)
12Hornchurch (6)0–1Tranmere Rovers (3)
13Yeovil Town (4)5–1Barnet (5)
14AFC Bournemouth (3)1–1Accrington Stanley (5)
replayAccrington Stanley (5)0–0AFC Bournemouth (3)
colspan=5|Accrington Stanley won 5–3 on penalties
15Cheltenham Town (4)3–1Leyton Orient (4)
16Port Vale (3)0–1Scarborough (5)
17Wycombe Wanderers (3)1–1Mansfield Town (4)
replayMansfield Town (4)3–2Wycombe Wanderers (3)
18Southend United (4)3–0Lincoln City (4)
19Scunthorpe United (4)2–2Sheffield Wednesday (3)
replaySheffield Wednesday (3)0–0Scunthorpe United (4)
colspan=5|Scunthorpe United won 3–1 on penalties
20Swansea City (4)2–1Stevenage Borough (5)

Third round proper

This round marks the point at which First Division and Premier League (top-flight) teams enter the competition. Matches were played on the weekend of Saturday, 3 January 2004, with replays on 13 January and 14 January. The draw included three clubs from the Football Conference (Step 5): Telford United, Scarborough and Accrington Stanley.

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
Tie no

!Home team

!Score

!Away team

1Preston North End (2)3–3Reading (2)
replayReading (2)1–2Preston North End (2)
2Southampton (1)0–3Newcastle United (1)
3Watford (2)2–2Chelsea (1)
replayChelsea (1)4–0Watford (2)
4Yeovil Town (4)0–2Liverpool (1)
5Gillingham (2)3–2Charlton Athletic (1)
6Nottingham Forest (2)1–0West Bromwich Albion (2)
7Aston Villa (1)1–2Manchester United (1)
8Crewe Alexandra (2)0–1Telford United (5)
9Middlesbrough (1)2–1Notts County (3)
10Sunderland (2)1–0Hartlepool United (3)
11Everton (1)3–1Norwich City (2)
12Ipswich Town (2)3–0Derby County (2)
13Tranmere Rovers (3)1–1Bolton Wanderers (1)
replayBolton Wanderers (1)1–2Tranmere Rovers (3)
14Tottenham Hotspur (1)3–0Crystal Palace (2)
15Manchester City (1)2–2Leicester City (1)
replayLeicester City (1)1–3Manchester City (1)
16Kidderminster Harriers (4)1–1Wolverhampton Wanderers (1)
replayWolverhampton Wanderers (1)2–0Kidderminster Harriers (4)
17Fulham (1)2–1Cheltenham Town (4)
18Barnsley (3)0–0Scunthorpe United (4)
replayScunthorpe United (4)2–0Barnsley (3)
19Northampton Town (4)1–1Rotherham United (2)
replayRotherham United (2)1–2Northampton Town (4)
20Coventry City (2)2–1Peterborough United (3)
21Portsmouth (1)2–1Blackpool (3)
22Bradford City (2)1–2Luton Town (3)
23Millwall (2)2–1Walsall (2)
24Wimbledon (2)1–1Stoke City (2)
replayStoke City (2)0–1Wimbledon (2)
25Southend United (4)1–1Scarborough (5)
replayScarborough (5)1–0Southend United (4)
26Mansfield Town (4)0–2Burnley (2)
27Cardiff City (2)0–1Sheffield United (2)
28Leeds United (1)1–4Arsenal (1)
29Wigan Athletic (2)1–2West Ham United (2)
30Birmingham City (1)4–0Blackburn Rovers (1)
31Swansea City (4)2–1Macclesfield Town (4)
32Accrington Stanley (5)0–0Colchester United (3)
replayColchester United (3)2–1Accrington Stanley (5)

Fourth round proper

Ties played during the weekend of 24 January 2004, with replays on 3 February and 4 February. Telford United and Scarborough were again the lowest-ranked teams in the draw and, by this stage, were also the last non-league clubs left in the competition.

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
Tie no

!Home team

!Score

!Away team

1Burnley (2)3–1Gillingham (2)
2Liverpool (1)2–1Newcastle United (1)
3Nottingham Forest (2)0–3Sheffield United (2)
4Wolverhampton Wanderers (1)1–3West Ham United (2)
5Luton Town (3)0–1Tranmere Rovers (3)
6Everton (1)1–1Fulham (1)
replayFulham (1)2–1Everton (1)
7Scarborough (5)0–1Chelsea (1)
8Ipswich Town (2)1–2Sunderland (2)
9Manchester City (1)1–1Tottenham Hotspur (1)
replayTottenham Hotspur (1)3–4Manchester City (1)
10Northampton Town (4)0–3Manchester United (1)
11Coventry City (2)1–1Colchester United (3)
replayColchester United (3)3–1Coventry City (2)
12Portsmouth (1)2–1Scunthorpe United (4)
13Arsenal (1)4–1Middlesbrough (1)
14Birmingham City (1)1–0Wimbledon (2)
15Telford United (5)0–2Millwall (2)
16Swansea City (4)2–1Preston North End (2)

The match between Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester City was particularly notable. Tottenham led the match 3–0 at half-time but Manchester City turned the match around in the second half to win 4–3, with Jon Macken scoring the winning goal in the 90th minute. This was despite Manchester City having one less player on the pitch during the second half after Joey Barton was red carded during the half-time interval.{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/fa_cup/3447235.stm |title=Tottenham 3–4 Man City |publisher=BBC Sport |date=4 February 2009 |access-date=12 June 2009}}

Fifth round proper

  • Matches played weekend of 14 and 15 February 2004
  • Three replays played week commencing 22 and 25 February 2004.
  • Four non-Premiership sides progressed to the quarter-finals.
  • Division Two sides Colchester United and Tranmere Rovers were the lowest-ranked teams in the draw.

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
Tie no

!Home team

!Score

!Away team

!Attendance

1Liverpool (1)1–1Portsmouth (1)34,669
replayPortsmouth (1)1–0Liverpool (1)19,529
2Sunderland (2)1–1Birmingham City (1)24,966
replayBirmingham City (1)0–2Sunderland (2)25,645
3Sheffield United (2)1–0Colchester United (3)17,074
4Tranmere Rovers (3)2–1Swansea City (4)12,215
5Fulham (1)0–0West Ham United (2)14,705
replayWest Ham United (2)0–3Fulham (1)27,934
6Manchester United (1)4–2Manchester City (1)67,228
7Millwall (2)1–0Burnley (2)10,420
8Arsenal (1)2–1Chelsea (1)38,136

Sixth round proper

  • Matches played on the weekend of Saturday, 6 March 2004.
  • Two Division One sides progressed to the semi-finals, while another was eliminated at this stage.
  • Division Two side Tranmere Rovers was again the lowest-ranked team in the draw and was only eliminated by First Division Millwall after a replay.

{{football box

|date=6 March 2004

|time=12:30

|team1=Manchester United (1)

|score=2–1

|report=[https://archive.today/20130103001626/http://soccernet.espn.go.com/report?id=142724&league=ENG.FA&cc=5739 Report]

|team2=Fulham (1)

|goals1=Van Nistelrooy {{goal|25||62}}

|goals2=Malbranque {{goal|23|pen.}}

|stadium=Old Trafford, Manchester

|attendance=67,614

|referee=Rob Styles}}

----

{{football box

|date=6 March 2004

|time=18:00

|team1=Portsmouth (1)

|score=1–5

|report=[https://web.archive.org/web/20080626223555/http://soccernet.espn.go.com/report?id=142741&league=ENG.FA&cc=5739 Report]

|team2=Arsenal (1)

|goals1=Sheringham {{goal|90}}

|goals2=Henry {{goal|25||50}}
Ljungberg {{goal|43||57}}
Touré {{goal|45}}

|stadium=Fratton Park, Portsmouth

|attendance=20,137

|referee=Jeff Winter }}

----

{{football box

|date=7 March 2004

|time=13:00

|team1=Millwall (2)

|score=0–0

|report=[https://web.archive.org/web/20080626223600/http://soccernet.espn.go.com/report?id=143371&league=ENG.FA&cc=5739 Report]

|team2=Tranmere Rovers (3)

|goals1=

|goals2=

|stadium=The Den, Bermondsey, London

|attendance=16,404

|referee=Neale Barry }}

----

{{football box

|date=7 March 2004

|time=16:05

|team1=Sunderland (2)

|score=1–0

|report=[https://web.archive.org/web/20080626223605/http://soccernet.espn.go.com/report?id=143382&league=ENG.FA&cc=5739 Report]

|team2=Sheffield United (2)

|goals1=Tommy Smith {{goal|15}}

|goals2=

|stadium=Stadium of Light, Sunderland

|attendance=37,115

|referee=Steve Dunn }}

=Replay=

{{football box

|date=16 March 2004

|time=19:45

|team1=Tranmere Rovers (3)

|score=1–2

|report=[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/fa_cup/3508054.stm Report]

|team2=Millwall (2)

|goals1=Jones {{goal|41}}

|goals2=Cahill {{goal|11}}
Harris {{goal|15}}

|stadium=Prenton Park, Tranmere, Birkenhead

|attendance=15,510

|referee=Uriah Rennie }}

Semi-finals

  • Matches played on the weekend of Saturday, 3 April 2004.
  • Two teams from Division 1 featured in the semi-finals (Millwall and Sunderland) who faced each other. The other tie was an all-Premiership affair between Manchester United and Arsenal, held at Villa Park.
  • Both games were played at neutral venues.

{{football box

|date=3 April 2004

|time=12:00

|team1=Arsenal (1)

|score=0–1

|report=[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/fa_cup/3571955.stm Report]

|team2=Manchester United (1)

|goals1=

|goals2=Scholes {{goal|32}}

|stadium=Villa Park, Birmingham

|attendance=39,939

|referee=Graham Barber (Hertfordshire)

}}

----

{{football box

|date=4 April 2004

|time=13:00

|team1=Sunderland (2)

|score=0–1

|report=[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/fa_cup/3571953.stm Report]

|team2=Millwall (2)

|goals1=

|goals2=Cahill {{goal|26}}

|stadium=Old Trafford, Manchester

|attendance=56,112

|referee=Paul Durkin (Dorset)

}}

Final

{{Main article|2004 FA Cup final}}

Manchester United won the game and lifted the trophy for the 11th time in their history (a competition record) with a 3–0 victory over a Millwall side who were the first team from outside the top flight to reach the FA Cup final in 12 years.

{{football box

|date=22 May 2004

|time=15:00 BST

|team1=Manchester United

|score=3–0

|team2=Millwall (2)

|report=[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/fa_cup/3725063.stm (Report)]

|goals1=Ronaldo {{goal|43}}
Van Nistelrooy {{goal|65|pen.|81}}

|goals2=

|stadium=Millennium Stadium, Cardiff

|attendance=71,350

|referee=Jeff Winter (County Durham) }}

Media coverage

In the United Kingdom, the BBC were the free to air broadcasters for the third consecutive season while Sky Sports were the subscription broadcasters for the sixteenth consecutive season.{{citation needed|date=May 2015}}

The matches shown live on the BBC were:

The matches shown live on Sky Sports were:

References

{{Reflist}}

{{FA Cup seasons}}

{{2003–04 in English football}}

{{2003–04 in European football (UEFA)}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:2003-04 FA Cup}}

Category:FA Cup seasons

FA Cup