2023 EFL Cup final

The 2023 EFL Cup final was the final of the 2022–23 EFL Cup. It was played between Manchester United and Newcastle United at Wembley Stadium in London on 26 February 2023.[4] This was Newcastle's first final since the 1999 FA Cup final, in which Manchester United defeated them 2–0.

2023 EFL Cup final
Wembley Stadium hosted the match
Event2022–23 EFL Cup
Date26 February 2023 (2023-02-26)
VenueWembley Stadium, London
Man of the MatchCasemiro (Manchester United)[1]
RefereeDavid Coote (Nottinghamshire)[2]
Attendance87,306[3]
2022
2024

Newcastle were aiming to end one of the longest trophy droughts in English football,[5] with their last major honour being the 1968–69 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup.[6] However, the scoreline from 1999 was repeated, as Manchester United won their first competitive trophy since 2017.[7]

Both clubs were allocated 867 tickets in safe standing areas of Wembley, making this the first major domestic English men's final in nearly 35 years to allow supporters to stand.[8] On the morning of the final, the Met Police estimated at least 100,000 Newcastle United fans, with and without tickets, were in and around Wembley.[9]

Route to the final

Manchester United

RoundOppositionScore
3Aston Villa (H)4–2
4Burnley (H)2–0
QFCharlton Athletic (H)3–0
SFNottingham Forest (A)3–0
Nottingham Forest (H)2–0
Key: (H) = Home; (A) = Away

As a Premier League club involved in the 2022–23 UEFA Europa League, Manchester United received a bye into the third round where they were drawn at home to fellow Premier League club Aston Villa with the match played at Old Trafford on 10 November. Manchester United won 4–2 with goals from Anthony Martial, Marcus Rashford, Bruno Fernandes and Scott McTominay, while the two goals for Villa came from Ollie Watkins and an own goal by Diogo Dalot.[10] In the fourth round, Manchester United were drawn at home again to EFL Championship club Burnley, who are currently managed by former Manchester City player Vincent Kompany, with the match played on 21 December. Manchester United won 2–0 with goals from Christian Eriksen and Rashford.[11] In the quarter-finals, Manchester United were drawn at home to EFL League One club Charlton Athletic with the match played on 10 January 2023. United won 3–0 with goals from Antony and two from Rashford.[12] In the semi-final, which was played over two legs, United were drawn against Nottingham Forest with the first-leg away at the City Ground on 25 January. United took a 3–0 lead with goals from Rashford, Wout Weghorst and Fernandes.[13] The reverse fixture was played at Old Trafford on 1 February, with Manchester United winning 2–0 (5–0 on aggregate) with goals from Martial and Fred.[14]

Newcastle United

RoundOppositionScore
2Tranmere Rovers (A)2–1
3Crystal Palace (H)0–0 (3–2 p.)
4Bournemouth (H)1–0
QFLeicester City (H)2–0
SFSouthampton (A)1–0
Southampton (H)2–1
Key: (H) = Home; (A) = Away

As a Premier League club not involved in any UEFA competitions, Newcastle United entered the cup in the second round where they were drawn away to EFL League Two club Tranmere Rovers, with the match played at Prenton Park on 24 August 2022. Newcastle won 2–1 with goals from club captain Jamaal Lascelles and Chris Wood, after Elliott Nevitt had given Tranmere the lead.[15] In the third round, they were drawn at home to fellow Premier League club Crystal Palace, with the match played at St James' Park on 9 November. The tie ended as a 0–0 draw after 90 minutes, so a penalty shoot-out was used to determine the outcome, with Newcastle winning 3–2 as Wood, Kieran Trippier and Joelinton converted their penalties for the home side, while Sven Botman and Bruno Guimarães missed theirs. Will Hughes and Joel Ward converted their penalties for Palace, with club captain Luka Milivojević, Jean-Philippe Mateta and Malcolm Ebiowei all having theirs saved by Nick Pope.[16] In the fourth round, Newcastle were drawn at home once more to another Premier League club in Bournemouth, with the match played on 20 December. Newcastle won 1–0 with an own goal from Adam Smith. The match saw Newcastle manager Eddie Howe face his former club.[17] In the quarter-finals, Newcastle were drawn at home for the third consecutive round against Leicester City, with the match played on 10 January 2023. Newcastle won 2–0 with goals from Dan Burn and Joelinton.[18] In the semi-finals, which were played over two legs, Newcastle were drawn against Southampton, who had eliminated Manchester City in the previous round, with the first-leg played away at St Mary's Stadium on 24 January. Newcastle took a 1–0 lead in the tie with a goal from Joelinton.[19] The second-leg was played at St James' Park on 31 January, with Newcastle winning 2–1 (3–1 on aggregate) with two goals from Sean Longstaff and a consolation goal for Southampton from Ché Adams. On 18 February, Newcastle goalkeeper Pope was sent off against Liverpool in a 2–0 home loss and missed the final against Manchester United.[20] Back-up goalkeeper Martin Dúbravka was cup-tied due to appearing for the final opponents on loan in the earlier rounds, making third-choice Loris Karius to make his club debut in the showpiece.[21]

Match

Details

Manchester United2–0Newcastle United
Report
Manchester United[22]
Newcastle United[22]
GK1 David de Gea  84'
RB20 Diogo Dalot  9'  46'
CB19 Raphaël Varane
CB6 Lisandro Martínez  90+6'
LB23 Luke Shaw  90+1'
CM18 Casemiro  87'
CM17 Fred  37'  69'
RW21 Antony  83'
AM8 Bruno Fernandes (c)
LW10 Marcus Rashford  88'
CF27 Wout Weghorst  69'
Substitutes:
GK22 Tom Heaton
DF2 Victor Lindelöf
DF5 Harry Maguire  88'
DF12 Tyrell Malacia
DF29 Aaron Wan-Bissaka  46'
MF15 Marcel Sabitzer  69'
MF39 Scott McTominay  69'
FW25 Jadon Sancho  83'
FW49 Alejandro Garnacho
Manager:
Erik ten Hag
GK18 Loris Karius
RB2 Kieran Trippier (c)
CB5 Fabian Schär  90+6'
CB4 Sven Botman  67'
LB33 Dan Burn
DM39 Bruno Guimarães  78'
CM36 Sean Longstaff  46'
CM7 Joelinton  45+6'
RW24 Miguel Almirón  90+1'
LW10 Allan Saint-Maximin  78'
CF9 Callum Wilson  90+1'
Substitutes:
GK29 Mark Gillespie
DF6 Jamaal Lascelles
DF11 Matt Ritchie  90+1'
DF13 Matt Targett
DF19 Javier Manquillo
MF23 Jacob Murphy  78'
MF28 Joe Willock  78'
MF32 Elliot Anderson  90+1'
FW14 Alexander Isak  46'
Manager:
Eddie Howe

Man of the Match:
Casemiro (Manchester United)[1]

Assistant referees:[2][failed verification]
Nick Hopton (Derbyshire)
Tim Wood (Gloucestershire)
Fourth official:[2][failed verification]
Simon Hooper (Wiltshire)
Reserve assistant referee:[2][failed verification]
Nick Greenhalgh (Lancashire)
Video assistant referee:[2][failed verification]
Peter Bankes (Liverpool)
Assistant video assistant referee:[2][failed verification]
Eddie Smart (Birmingham)

Match rules[23]

  • 90 minutes
  • 30 minutes of extra time if necessary
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level
  • Nine named substitutes
  • Maximum of five substitutions, with a sixth allowed in extra time[note 1]

Notes

References

External links