2000 Football League Cup final

The 2000 Football League Cup Final was played between Leicester City, in their third final appearance in four years, and First Division side Tranmere Rovers at Wembley Stadium on 27 February 2000. It was the 34th and last League Cup Final to be played at the original Wembley Stadium.[1] Leicester won 2–1 to become the last team to win the League Cup at the old Wembley.[2][3][4]

2000 Football League Cup Final
Match programme cover
Event1999–2000 Football League Cup
Date27 February 2000
VenueWembley Stadium, London
Man of the MatchMatt Elliott (Leicester City)
RefereeAlan Wilkie (Durham)
Attendance74,313
1999
2001

Road to the final edit

Leicester City edit

Round 2, 1st leg: Crystal Palace 3–3 Leicester City

Round 2, 2nd leg: Leicester City 4–2 Crystal Palace

Round 3: Leicester City 2–0 Grimsby Town

Round 4: Leicester City 0–0 Leeds United (Leicester won 4–2 on penalties)

Quarter-final: Leicester City 3–3 Fulham (Leicester won 3–0 on penalties)

Semi-final, 1st leg: Aston Villa 0–0 Leicester City

Semi-final, 2nd leg: Leicester City 1–0 Aston Villa

Tranmere Rovers edit

Round 1, 1st leg: Blackpool 2–1 Tranmere Rovers

Round 1, 2nd leg: Tranmere Rovers 3–1 Blackpool

Round 2, 1st leg: Tranmere Rovers 5–1 Coventry City

Round 2, 2nd leg: Coventry City 3–1 Tranmere Rovers

Round 3: Tranmere Rovers 2–0 Oxford United

Round 4: Tranmere Rovers 4–0 Barnsley

Quarter-final: Tranmere Rovers 2–1 Middlesbrough

Semi-final, 1st leg: Bolton Wanderers 0–1 Tranmere Rovers

Semi-final, 2nd leg: Tranmere Rovers 3–0 Bolton Wanderers

Match summary edit

Scott Taylor's successful tackle on Robbie Savage forced the ball out for a corner, and Matt Elliott headed home Leicester's first goal courtesy of a Steve Guppy cross from the right. Leicester came close to scoring a second goal in the 60th minute when Emile Heskey passed the ball to an unmarked Muzzy Izzet in the penalty box, who hesitated and his shot flew wide of the goal. Referee Alan Wilkie later suffered an injury in the right leg in the 62nd minute, and was stretchered off. Phil Richards, the fourth official, was brought on to replace him.[5]

Clint Hill picked up his second booking and was sent off after a deliberate foul on Heskey in the 63rd minute. Several Tranmere players protested but the decision stood. Tranmere, down to ten men, rallied and their persistence paid off when they equalised in the 77th minute when a fine header found its way to an unmarked David Kelly who, after narrowly escaping Matt Elliott's attempted tackle, shot low to the left past goalkeeper Tim Flowers. Yet, just three minutes later, Elliott scored another towering header from another Guppy corner kick from the right, and the League Cup went to Leicester.[6]

Match details edit

Leicester City2–1Tranmere Rovers
Elliott   29', 81' Report Kelly   77'
Attendance: 74,313
Referee: Alan Wilkie (Durham)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Leicester City
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tranmere Rovers
GK 1   Tim Flowers
CB 3   Frank Sinclair
CB 18   Matt Elliott (c)
CB 4   Gerry Taggart
RWB 29   Stefan Oakes   77'
LWB 11   Steve Guppy
CM 14   Robbie Savage  
CM 6   Muzzy Izzet
CM 7   Neil Lennon
CF 27   Tony Cottee   89'
CF 9   Emile Heskey
Substitutes:
GK 22   Pegguy Arphexad
DF 15   Phil Gilchrist
MF 37   Theodoros Zagorakis
MF 24   Andy Impey   77'
FW 20   Ian Marshall   89'
Manager:
  Martin O'Neill
GK 13   Joe Murphy
RB 30   Reuben Hazell
CB 5   Dave Challinor (c)  
CB 6   Clint Hill   9'   63'
LB 33   Gareth Roberts
RM 14   Andy Parkinson   66'
CM 15   Gary Jones
CM 11   Nick Henry
LM 7   Alan Mahon
CF 9   David Kelly
CF 10   Scott Taylor
Substitutes:
GK 1   John Achterberg
DF 31   Steve Yates   66'
DF 3   Andy Thompson
FW 16   Alan Morgan
FW 29   Michael Black
Manager:
  John Aldridge

Man of the Match:
Matt Elliott (Leicester City)

Assistant referees:
Paul Armstrong (Berkshire)
Wendy Toms
Fourth official:
Phil Richards (Lancashire)

Match rules

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

References edit

  1. ^ Ross, James M. (29 April 2021). "England - Football League Cup Finals". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Archived from the original on 29 June 2012. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
  2. ^ "Where are they now? Leicester City's 2000 League Cup winners". fourfourtwo. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  3. ^ "Leicester set sights on Europe". BBC Sport. 27 February 2000. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  4. ^ Johnston, Neil (14 May 2021). "Leicester City: The inside story of La Manga and the Foxes last cup final". BBC Sport. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
  5. ^ "Leicester triumph at Wembley". BBC Sport. 27 February 2000. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  6. ^ "Leicester 2 - 1 Tranmere". Guardian. 27 February 2000. Retrieved 27 April 2017.