2009 Football League Cup final

The 2009 Football League Cup Final was the final match of the 2008–09 Football League Cup, the 49th season of the Football League Cup, a football competition for the 92 teams in the Premier League and The Football League. The match was played at Wembley Stadium on 1 March 2009, and was contested by Tottenham Hotspur, who won the competition in 2008, and Manchester United,[3] who last won the competition in 2006. The two joint-top goalscorers played for each of the finalists. Roman Pavlyuchenko of Tottenham Hotspur, who scored in every match in which he played in the tournament up to the final, and Manchester United's Carlos Tevez; both players had six goals each.

2009 Football League Cup Final
Event2008–09 Football League Cup
After extra time
Manchester United won 4–1 on penalties
Date1 March 2009
VenueWembley Stadium, London
Man of the MatchBen Foster (Manchester United)[1]
RefereeChris Foy (Merseyside)
Attendance88,217
WeatherMostly cloudy
11 °C (52 °F)[2]
2008
2010

Manchester United won 4–1 on penalties, after the match ended as a goalless draw in normal time. United converted all four of their penalties, while Tottenham missed two of their three. It was only the second time that the League Cup Final had been decided by a penalty shootout.[4]

The man of the match was Manchester United goalkeeper Ben Foster, who became the first goalkeeper since Jerzy Dudek in 2003 to win the Alan Hardaker Award.[5]

Retrospectively, the result of this game would have significant implications for the following season's UEFA Europa League. In winning the tournament, the qualifying spot for the League Cup went to the seventh-placed team in the Premier League by default, as Manchester United would later win the League and therefore qualified for the UEFA Champions League. Fulham, who finished seventh in the league, went on to progress to the final of the 2009–10 Europa League. Had Tottenham won the League Cup, they would have qualified in Fulham's place.

Road to Wembley

Manchester UnitedRoundTottenham Hotspur
OpponentResultOpponentResult
Middlesbrough (H)3–1Third round[6]Newcastle United (A)2–1
Queens Park Rangers (H)1–0Fourth roundLiverpool (H)4–2
Blackburn Rovers (H)5–3Fifth roundWatford (A)2–1
Derby County0–1 (A)Semi-finalBurnley4–1 (H)
4–2 (H)2–3 (A)
Manchester United won 4–3 on aggregateTottenham Hotspur won 6–4 on aggregate

Match

Team selection

Sir Alex Ferguson promised before the game that he would give places in the Manchester United starting line-up to the young players who had played a part in getting them to the final, with Darron Gibson in the centre of midfield and Danny Welbeck up front.[7] He also said he would make several changes from the team that drew away to Internazionale in the Champions League earlier in the week, citing the need to rotate players in the modern game.[7] Goalkeeper Ben Foster, who had played in the fifth round against Blackburn Rovers and the second leg of the semi-final against Derby County, expressed a desire to play in the final as a way of making up for an injury-beset previous 12 months.[8]

Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp named Heurelho Gomes as his goalkeeper for the final, despite the Brazilian having made several high-profile errors, as the club's number-one 'keeper, Carlo Cudicini, was cup-tied; Cudicini was signed from Chelsea during the January transfer window and had appeared for the Blues in the League Cup earlier in the season.[9] Defender Jonathan Woodgate, who scored the winning goal in the 2008 final, suffered a head wound in a 2–1 win over Hull City the week before the game; he declared himself fit the next day, but was ultimately left out of the squad.[10] Striker Roman Pavlyuchenko, however, was selected for the game, despite his earlier fears that he might miss out if Redknapp opted to play Darren Bent as a lone striker;[11] in the end, Pavlyuchenko and Bent started together up front.

Details

Manchester United
Tottenham Hotspur
GK12 Ben Foster
RB22 John O'Shea  57'  76'
CB5 Rio Ferdinand (c)
CB23 Jonny Evans
LB3 Patrice Evra
RM7 Cristiano Ronaldo  67'
CM28 Darron Gibson  91'
CM18 Paul Scholes  108'
LM17 Nani
CF19 Danny Welbeck  56'
CF32 Carlos Tevez
Substitutes:
GK29 Tomasz Kuszczak
DF15 Nemanja Vidić  76'
DF42 Richard Eckersley
MF8 Anderson  56'
MF11 Ryan Giggs  91'
MF13 Park Ji-sung
MF34 Rodrigo Possebon
Manager:
Sir Alex Ferguson
GK1 Heurelho Gomes
RB22 Vedran Ćorluka
CB20 Michael Dawson
CB26 Ledley King (c)
LB32 Benoît Assou-Ekotto
RM7 Aaron Lennon  102'
CM8 Jermaine Jenas  98'
CM4 Didier Zokora
LM14 Luka Modrić
CF10 Darren Bent
CF9 Roman Pavlyuchenko  65'
Substitutes:
GK27 Ben Alnwick
DF3 Gareth Bale  98'
DF16 Chris Gunter
MF5 David Bentley  102'
MF6 Tom Huddlestone
MF19 Adel Taarabt
MF24 Jamie O'Hara  65'
Manager:
Harry Redknapp

Match officials

Man of the match

Match rules

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

Statistics

StatisticManchester UnitedTottenham Hotspur
Total shots2312
Shots on target107
Ball possession53%47%
Corner kicks94
Fouls committed1216
Offsides22
Yellow cards30
Red cards00

Source: ESPN[13]

References