History Daily - The First F.A. Cup Final
Episode Date: March 16, 2026March 16, 1872. After years of wrangling over the rules of football, the first F.A. Cup final is held in London. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more. History Daily is a ...co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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Hey, therelhan
there's
vanhoja
Marry ens.
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S-Marget
It's the
afternoon
of March
16th
1872
on a
soccer field
in London
England
24-year-old
Morton
Bats
sprints
down the
line
kicking
up mud
behind him
the crowd
urges him
forward
but instead
Morton cuts inside, trying to shake a trailing defender and creates some space.
Ahead, his teammate Walpole Gidal glides past two defenders.
Walpole is known as the Prince of Dribblers and the brown leather ball seems glued to his feet as he runs.
It's 15 minutes into the final match of a new tournament, the Football Association Cup.
Morton and Walpole's team, The Wanderers, are going up against the Royal Engineers,
and the 2,000 people surrounding the field cheer boisterously.
Because of the expensive one-shilling entry, only a privileged crowd has turned out,
and Morton recognizes many of them as old schoolmates from Harrow.
But he can't stop to say hello.
Instead, Morton backs up Walpole as he closes in on goal.
But in a last-ditch effort, a defender slides through, sending Walpole crashing into the mud,
and the ball skittering loose across the wet grass.
It bobbles toward Morton, who stops it with a tanned leather cleat.
He glances up, the angle is tight, and the defenders are,
are charging. This might be his only chance. The crowd holds its breath as Morton swings his leg
back and strikes the ball as hard as he can. It flies off the turf, arrowing past muddy defenders
and straight into the corner of the goal. The crowd roars as Morton pumps his fist into the air.
In the first ever F.A. Cup final, the Wanderers have taken the lead. As Morton Betts walks away
from the goal, he receives a congratulatory slap on the back from his captain, Charles W.
you Alcock. But Charles isn't just captain. He's also secretary of the Football Association and the
architect of the entire tournament. And whether they win or lose today, Charles and his players will
have made history by playing in the very first F.A. Cup final on March 16th, 1872. Hey,
therel, there's been a lot hoaxed-a-huh. Hey, there's been. Okay, no, who'd you
then you're
We are not
Nutsuioi
Yeah, ha.
No,
where do you
then?
No, S-Marketist
Tieth.
Elam
Rueh
From Noiser
in Airship,
I'm Lindsay Graham
and this is
History Daily.
History is made
every day.
On this podcast
every day,
we tell the true
stories of the
people and events
that shaped our world.
Today is
March 16th,
1872,
the first
FA Cup final.
It's February
26th, 1866.
at the Freemason's Tavern in London, five years before the first F.A. Cup final.
24-year-old Charles W. Alcock leans across a heavy oak table.
The pub is loud, and it's hard to make out exactly what the men next to him are saying.
They're all senior members of the Football Association.
But if what Charles is hearing is right, that may not be the case for much longer.
At the head of the table, the president of the association laments their ongoing failure to codify the laws of football,
into one coherent rulebook.
For centuries, the game was little more than an excuse for a mass brawl,
with hundreds of players scrapping over an inflated pig's bladder.
But in recent decades, more rules were introduced to the game.
Still, every town and school has its own unique laws,
which meant that almost every time two teams met,
there had to be some negotiation about what rules to use.
No one had tried to establish a nationwide code
until the Football Association was founded in 1863 to hammer out the defense.
definitive universal rulebook. But consensus has proved impossible to find. Debates have raged over
the same three issues, handling the ball, scoring, and the method of tackling. A rift formed between
two factions, and when compromised between them proved impossible, those who favored the rugby
school rules walked away to form their own union, leaving the fractured F.A. in their wake. Now,
the president of the association is proposing the unthinkable, dissolving the organization entirely.
But Charles refuses to concede.
He loves football.
He runs his own club known as the Wanderers because they lack a permanent home
and instead play their matches wherever they can.
He's dedicated to the sport and not prepared to let the F.A. die.
So he clinks his glass and the table falls silent, all eyes turning to him.
Once he has their attention, Charles proposes a shift in strategy.
Instead of trying to make everyone everywhere play the same way,
they should focus their efforts on England's elite private schools.
Charles himself attended Harrow, one of the most expensive institutions in the country.
That's where he learned to play and love football himself.
He believes that if the F.A. can convince Harrow and other similar schools to adopt a common rulebook,
that code will filter down into other communities, gradually creating the universal game they all want.
The others around the table agree to give the idea a shot, and Charles soon writes to Harrow,
Eaton College, Charterhouse, and Westminster. He makes sure the version of the game he suggests is
familiar to the schools. That way, players at different institutions will only need to make minor
adjustments before they can start arranging games with each other. This new set of rules becomes known as
association, and quickly the word association gets shortened and corrupted into soccer, and momentum for
the sport builds rapidly. With more and more teams adopting the FAA rulebook, the organization's
executive committee expands, and in February 1870, Charles is appointed its secretary and treasurer. It's the
ideal choice to push the game forward. He's well-known in sporting circles, not just as a soccer
player, but as an enthusiastic cricketer as well. And that connection helps Charles secure a venue
for the first-ever international soccer match. The Kennington Oval in South London is home of the Surrey
Cricket Club, but Charles manages to convince them to host an England versus Scotland soccer match.
He's convinced that the clash between the old neighbors and rivals will capture the public
imagination, but there's a problem. The FAA rulebook hasn't spread much out of England. There
aren't many Scottish footballers around. So Charles recruits players from London and includes anyone
who boasts even vague ties to Scotland. And despite this charade, the game in March 1870 is a huge
success. A closely fought tie sparks a call for a rematch, and that November, the two teams meet
again. This time, the Scottish team manages to field three real Scotland-born players,
But the roster remains a point of ridicule.
One player is deemed eligible because his cousin married a Scott.
This second match ends with a narrow win for the English team,
but the real victory is Charles' though.
His stunt has become a huge success, but he's not satisfied yet.
To keep soccer growing, he needs to think bigger.
So on July 20, 1871, he will propose a new nationwide tournament,
open to every club in the land.
The Football Association will eagerly approve the plan,
and the FA Cup will be born.
Hey, therel,
there's been vanhoja
Juomatuttuia.
Uh,
he's not ever seenned
not quite you're
so,
we're not newtus joomie
yeah, ha,
no,
what do you know
S-Marketist
Tieth
Elamon Rocaucah
Morgat
It's the afternoon
of November 11th,
1871
and Barn Elms Park
London
four months after
Charles W. Alcock
proposed a new tournament
for the Football Association.
29-year-old Percy Weston glares angrily at his players.
They huddle around him in a shivering circle, stamping the hard turf, their frozen hands
tucked into their armpits.
It's halftime in Barnes Football Club's first FAA Cup appearance, and as captain, Percy
is laying into his team.
Their opponents are a team made of government clerks and are missing three players.
Yet despite this advantage, Percy's men have failed to take the lead.
So when play begins in the second half, Percy decides to take matters into his home
hands. He controls the muddy, bobbling ball and drives straight at the civil service defenders.
He sidesteps one only to collide with another, and with no teammates in sight, he just manages
to shield the ball before wriggling free, swinging his cleat, and hoping for the best.
With the help of gust of wind, the ball swerves through the air, clips the defender's hand,
ricochets off another player's knee, and trickles through the wooden posts for a goal.
The match ends with a barn's victory, the first and the football association.
Association's new tournament. But elsewhere, the competition has become a logistical nightmare.
Only four of the seven first-round matches even take place, with teams based outside London,
like Glasgow's Queens Park, unable to afford the cost of travel. So the FAA is forced to give the
Scottish team an automatic place in the semi-final. But it's still not enough to keep the tournament
going. As competition progresses, more teams are given buys, so that by February 1872 only
four teams remain. Glasgow Queens Park will play Wanderers, and Crystal Palace will face the
Royal Engineers for a place in the first-ever F-A-Cup Final. Having finally raised enough money
to travel down from Scotland, Queens Park arrives to face Charles Alcock's Wanderers on March 5,
1872, but the game ends without a goal. Charles proposes 30 minutes of extra time, but the
Queens Park players refuse. They want a rematch later and depart London for their long.
journey back to Glasgow. The lack of goals continues in the other semifinal, where the Royal Engineers
and Crystal Palace grind out another scoreless tie. The dramatic sporting spectacle Charles imagined
is turning out to become a dud. But luckily, the rematch between the Royal Engineers and Crystal
Palace is more exciting. The Royal Engineers score three goals without reply to book their place in the
final. The other semifinal rematch is scheduled for the same day, but it never goes ahead. The players from
Glasgow Queens Park have decided they can't afford another trip to London and withdraw from the
competition. That means the wanderers automatically progress to the final. And despite all the chaos
and disappointment of the earlier rounds, Charles Alcock now has the chance to create history
to become the first captain to lift the F.A. Cup. So on March 16, 1872, he leads his wanderers
out onto the Kennington Oval Cricket Ground. On paper, the Royal Engineers look to be a far better team. They've
put together a string of convincing victories to reach the final.
But Charles has an ace up his sleeve.
Walpole the doll is one of the best players in the country,
the man they call the Prince of Dribblers,
and if the Wanderers can just pass in the ball, they might stand a chance.
But once play begins, even getting a hold of the ball proves difficult.
Right from the start, the engineers dominate,
with intricate passing that carves the Wanderers wide open.
Charles men are just clinging on,
and it seems only a matter of time before they concede.
But then Charles and his players get a stroke of good luck.
A crunching tackle leaves an engineer with a fractured collarbone.
With no substitutes allowed, the injured player retreats off the field,
leaving the engineers a man down.
The wanderers are quick to exploit this unexpected advantage.
Winning back the ball more easily now, they feed it to Walpole Vidal.
He dances his way through the engineer's ranks.
The last-ditch tackle halts has run,
but the ball spills perfectly to Morton Betts,
who lined up his shot and hammers at home.
During the rest of the match, the wanderers push for a second goal,
but the opposing goalkeeper is equal to every strike.
With the clock ticking down, the engineers mount a late rally, but it's too late.
The officials wave their handkerchiefs to signal the end of the match,
and Charles's team has done it, winning the first ever FAA Cup 1 to 0.
A few weeks later, inside a lavish restaurant in central London,
their victory is toasted in style.
As the winning captain, Charles Alcock is presented with the cup.
It's just a small silver trophy, but it marks the beginning of something far greater.
In the years to come, the F.A. Cup will get bigger and bigger.
And soccer itself will grow and spread too, expanding far beyond the playing fields of England's elite schools
to become the most popular sport in the world.
There's been.
Eh, there's been one.
Well, who you then are you?
We're not newtos juomie.
Yeah, ha. No, what you're doing then?
Well, S-Market, of Tiet.
Elamon Roca.
S-Market.
It's April 28, 1923 at the Empire Stadium in Wembley, London, 51 years after the first F.A. Cup final.
25-year-old David Jack intercepts the ball and quickly swivels.
He doesn't look for a pass.
The roaring walls of fans surrounding the field means he can barely even think straight.
All he can see is his opponent's goal, and he quickly lines up a shot.
Today is the first F-A-Cup final to be held at the new home of English soccer, Wembley.
But the match almost didn't go ahead.
This stadium was only finished a few days ago, and the organizers underestimated how many people would show up.
In the end, more than 200,000 tried to get into the stadium, and for a time they spilled onto the field, making it impossible for the game to start.
Police on horseback eventually managed to clear them, but the final was delayed by 45 minutes.
But now, in the spring sunshine, David Jack is making up for lost time.
He unleashes a shot so fierce that for a moment the vast crowd is silent, just watching.
Then the ball thunders into the goal and the spectators erupt.
The roar echoes around the stadium like nothing David has ever heard before.
It makes him feel like a giant.
And with confidence flooding through him, his team coasts to a victory.
51 years after Charles Alcock's Wanderers won the first F.A. Cup, it's the turn of David and his team Bolton Wanderers to lift the trophy.
Charles himself is long dead, but his legacy is plain to see today. As F.A. secretary, he standardized the rules of soccer and paved the way for a truly national game.
And although just 15 teams competed in the first F.A. Cup in 1872, now more than 500 from across England enter the tournament
every year. The game was once shaped by the elite, but has been seized by the working class
and teams from industrial cities like Sheffield, Birmingham, and Bolton, who dominate
the game in the 1920s. The F.A. Cup will remain woven into the fabric of English sporting life
throughout the 20th century and beyond. It will inspire competitions in other nations, and between
them as well, creating a blueprint for tournaments from the FIFA World Cup to the Olympics.
It will also be the stage for some of the most dramatic and memorable moments in the history. It will also be the
stage for some of the most dramatic and memorable moments in the history of soccer, but it all
began with a small crowd of spectators at a cricket ground in South London on March 16, 1872.
Next on History Daily, March 17, 1861. After more than a decade of revolutionary violence,
the unified kingdom of Italy is born. From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily,
hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham. Audio editing by Mohamed Shazim.
Sound design by Molly Bond.
Music by Throne.
This episode is written and researched by Angus Gavin McCarr.
Edited by William Simpson.
Managing producer Emily Burr.
Executive producers are William Simpson for airship
and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
There's been one-honaututty.
Eh, eh, I don't know.
No, who you then are then?
We are not new-to-juomia.
Yeah.
No, where do you're newtest?
Well, S-Market, of, Tiette.
Elam is rawca.
