2011–12 FA Cup


The 2011–12 FA Cup was the 131st season of the world's oldest football knock-out competition, the FA Cup. The closing date for applications was 1 April 2011, and saw 825 clubs apply to enter. On 8 July 2011, the FA announced that 763 clubs had been accepted, which remains, as of 2016-17, the record number of entrants. The final was played on 5 May 2012 at Wembley Stadium. Chelsea won their 4th title in 6 years, and seventh overall, with a 2-1 victory over Liverpool.
This is the first season that the tournament is sponsored by Budweiser. The defending champions, Manchester City, were defeated 3–2 by their rivals Manchester United in the Third Round.
The competition was overshadowed by the collapse of Bolton Wanderers midfielder Fabrice Muamba during their Sixth Round match with Tottenham Hotspur. Muamba went into cardiac arrest on the pitch and, following failed attempts to resuscitate him, was taken to the London Chest Hospital, where he went on to recover despite his heart stopping for over 75 minutes. The match was subsequently abandoned. On 27 March the match was replayed, with Tottenham winning 3–1. Muamba attended the final to congratulate Chelsea.
The winners of the competition would have earned a place in the group stage of the 2012–13 UEFA Europa League. However, since Chelsea went on to win the 2011–12 UEFA Champions League, they qualified for the 2012–13 UEFA Champions League as the title holders. The FA Cup berth for European qualification was not exercised as runners-up Liverpool had already won that season's League Cup and Tottenham Hotspur, the fourth-place finishers in the Premier League, lost their Champions League spot at the expense of sixth-placed Chelsea, as no association was allowed more than four entrants in the competition at the time and so were compensated by UEFA with a place in the Europa League group stage.

Teams

Calendar

The calendar for the 2011–12 FA Cup, as announced by The Football Association:
RoundMain dateNumber of fixturesClubsNew entries this roundPrize money
Extra Preliminary Round20 August 2011204763 → 559408: 356th–763rd£750
Preliminary Round3 September 2011167559 → 392130: 226th–355th£1,500
First Round Qualifying17 September 2011116392 → 27665: 161st–225th£3,000
Second Round Qualifying1 October 201180276 → 19644: 117th–160th£4,500
Third Round Qualifying15 October 201140196 → 156none£7,500
Fourth Round Qualifying29 October 201132156 → 12424: 93rd–116th£12,500
First Round Proper12 November 201140124 → 8448: 45th–92nd£18,000
Second Round Proper3 December 20112084 → 64none£27,000
Third Round Proper7 January 20123264 → 3244: 1st–44th£67,500
Fourth Round Proper28 January 20121632 → 16none£90,000
Fifth Round Proper18 February 2012816 → 8none£180,000
Sixth Round Proper17 March 201248 → 4none£360,000
Semi-finals14–15 April 201224 → 2noneLosers £450,000
Winners £900,000
Final5 May 201212 → 1noneRunner-up £900,000
Winner £1,800,000

Qualifying rounds

All of the teams that entered the competition and were not members of the Premier League or the Football League had to compete in the qualifying rounds.

First round proper

Teams from Leagues One and Two entered at this stage, along with the winners from the fourth round qualifying. The draw was made on 30 October 2011 and ties were played on the weekend of 12–13 November 2011. Redbridge, from the 8th tier of English football, were the lowest ranked football team to make it through to the first round proper.
The other nominees were: Adam Watkins, Nahki Wells, Jamie Vardy and George Williams.

Second round proper

The winners of the First Round matches advanced to this stage. The draw was made on 13 November 2011 with the ties played on the weekend of 3–4 December 2011.
Redbridge, from the 8th tier of English football, were the lowest ranked football team to make it to the Second Round Proper.
The other nominees were: Matt Tubbs, Jamie Tolley, Matt Ritchie and Jon Nurse.

Third round proper

The winners of the second round matches played alongside all twenty teams from the Barclays Premier League and all twenty four teams from the Championship. The draw was made on 4 December 2011, with the ties scheduled to be played on 6, 7, 8, and 9 January 2012. Salisbury City, from the sixth tier, were the lowest ranked club in the Third Round Proper.
The other nominees were: Adrian Cieslewicz, Matt Phillips, Matt Ritchie and Arnaud Mendy.

Fourth round proper

The winners of the third round played in this round. The draw was made on 8 January 2012, with the ties scheduled to be played on the weekend of 28–29 January 2012. The lowest ranked clubs that participated in this round were Crawley Town and Swindon Town, from the fourth tier.
The other nominees were: Jed Steer, Jermaine Beckford, Robin van Persie and Matt Tubbs.

Fifth round proper

The winners of the fourth round matches progressed to this round. The draw was made live on ITV1 and ESPN on 29 January 2012, with the ties scheduled to be played on the weekend of 18–19 February 2012. Crawley Town were the lowest-ranked team in the fifth round for the second season running and the only club remaining from the fourth tier of the English league system.
The other nominees were: Colin Doyle, Mark Roberts, Curtis Davies and David Nugent.

Sixth round proper

The draw for the sixth round took place on 19 February 2012 following the match between Stevenage and Tottenham Hotspur. Ties were played on the weekend of 17–18 March. Leicester City were the lowest-ranked team in the sixth round, and were the only club remaining from the second tier of the English league system.
The other nominees were: Tim Cahill, Stewart Downing, Fernando Torres and Ádám Bogdán

Semi-finals

Ties were played on the weekend of 14–15 April. All four semi-final teams were from the Premier League, and both semi-finals were local derbies, with a London derby between Tottenham Hotspur and Chelsea, and a Merseyside derby between Liverpool and Everton both played at Wembley Stadium.
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Final

Top scorers

Correct as of 5 May 2012.
PositionPlayerClubGoals
1 Jermaine BeckfordLeicester City6
2 Ched EvansSheffield United5
2 Matt TubbsCrawley Town5
4 Juan MataChelsea4
4 Adam BoyesBarrow4
4 Darius HendersonMillwall4
4 Jeff HughesNotts County4
4 Matthew PhillipsBlackpool4
4 RamiresChelsea4
4 Andy CarrollLiverpool4
10 Luis SuárezLiverpool3
10 Jermain DefoeTottenham Hotspur3
10 Clint DempseyFulham3
10 Lewis GrabbanRotherham United3
10 Dean BowditchMilton Keynes Dons3
10 Jon NurseDagenham & Redbridge3
10 Jamie VardyFleetwood Town3
10 Andy MorrellWrexham3
10 Stefan BrownAFC Totton3

Media coverage

From the first round proper onwards, selected matches from the FA Cup are broadcast live both in the UK and Ireland by ESPN and ITV, while S4C broadcast in Wales. ESPN broadcast 25 live games including the final while ITV broadcast 17 live games also including the final and the draws for the next round. S4C, in Welsh.
These matches were broadcast live on television in the UK.
Welsh language channel S4C broadcast live coverage of selected matches involving a Welsh club, which were two Wrexham matches. Their first round proper match at Cambridge United and their third round proper replay at home to Brighton & Hove Albion. Those were the only FA Cup matches that S4C broadcast.
International broadcasters
CountryBroadcaster
Tring Sport
Prime
Sportsnet World
France Télévisions
SKY Italia
Eredivisie Live
Russia 2 & Sport-1