Date:
Venue:
Competition: FA Cup 3rd Round.
Score:
Scorers:
Attendance: 22,009
Teams:
Referee: Mr A. D’Urso (Billericay).
This game
was seen by some as the one which started the rapid decline of Leeds United
from being the top team in the EPL and favourites for
the FA Cup into a team and club that would be relegated and almost out of
existence in the short space of less than two seasons.
The ugly face of football
reared its unwanted head once again in this game as ten-man Leeds were dumped
out of the FA Cup in a controversial afternoon in South Wales. A goal just
three minutes from time by defender Scott Young was good enough to give the Bluebirds
a shock 2-1 victory over the EPL leaders. However, it was the appalling scenes
from the terraces both during and after the game which overshadowed
Football-wise for the
neutral this was a classic FA Cup encounter complete with a sucker-punch
underdog victory. Two divisions and fifty-four places separated the two teams
before kick-off but Cardiff’s pumped up players produced the game of their
lives to come away with a quite sensational victory.
Roared on by their
vociferous support it was
Just when it seemed that
everything was going wrong for
For a short while it
silenced the home crowd, but their appetites for a Cup shock were soon revitalised as the Bluebirds hit right back. First they saw
tricky striker Earnshaw head over from just two yards
out, and then they got the goal their endeavour
deserved. Alan Smith pulled down Andy Legg on his way to goal and up stepped
Robbie Fowler did see a low
drive easily saved by Neil Alexander before he then flashed another effort over
the bar, but at the other end another great strike from Graham Kavanagh was blocked by Michael Duberry’s
outstretched foot.
It was Smith’s sixth career
sending off and his second of the season for violent conduct, which resulted in
him receiving a four match ban, but it had looked an extremely harsh decision.
The extra man was always going to make life difficult and ten minutes into the
second half
United attempted to take
the sting out of the affair, content to platy a passing game and keeping the
home side very much at arms length. Their patience in pressing the attack
button saw them create very little. Mark Viduka
missed a perfect chance when an Ian Harte
up-and-under set him free, but with the goal at his mercy he delayed the shot
for too long and allowed Scott Young to make a fantastic clearing tackle from
behind in the area.
That, however, was not the
start of a concerted push for a winner by
Match Action:
Nigel Martyn is
beaten by Graham Kavanagh’s free-kick
Scott Young beats Nigel Martyn
for the winner
Michael Duberry,
Jonathan Woodgate, David Batty and Ian Harte show their despair as Scott Young beats Nigel Martyn to give
City a last minute victory
Jonathan Woodgate and
Danny Mills are in disbelief and Nigel Martyn still spreadeagled
Mark Viduka watches as Scott Young beats Nigel Martyn Scott Young
celebrates the winner
Mark Viduka holds off
Spencer Prior to score David Batty stops Robert Earnshaw in his tracks
Robbie Fowler rounds Spencer Prior
Lee Bowyer and Willie Boland fight for possession
Alan Smith tackles Willie Boland
David
O’Leary confronts the fourth official as Alan Smith goes off
Alan Smith is sent off Alan Smith takes the long walk Danny
Mills abuses Andy Legg for diving
Players:
Mark Viduka scored
for
A bad tackle ended
Ferdinand’s game for the
Nigel Martyn was
given little help by Michael
Duberry joined Jonathan Woodgate
in central Alan
Smith was sent off
his wall
defence after
Neil Alexander was in the
Spencer
Prior and Scott Young were paired in central defence Robert Earnshaw and Gavin Gordon were
the strikers
Mark Bonner,
Willie Boland, Graham Kavanagh and Paul Bryson were
the
Leo Fortune-West was the used substitute Leyton Maxwell, and Rhys Weston
were unused substitutes
as were Josh Low and Jason Bowen