
LONDON
Holders Arsenal and
Aston Villa clash in the FA Cup final at Wembley Stadium on Saturday,
when the last major honour of the English season will be handed out.
Here, AFP Sports selects five of the best finals from the world's oldest and most famous domestic cup tournament:
Even
with his team-mate Stan Mortensen grabbing a hat-trick, the performance
of Blackpool's Stanley Matthews stole the show in a thrilling match
that has gone down in history as the 'Matthews Final'. The veteran
England winger inspired the Seasiders to come back and claim victory
after they had fallen 3-1 behind in the 55th minute with a superb
display that is still regarded as one of the best to grace the final.
Having finished on the losing side in the 1948 and 1951 finals, victory
was doubly — if not triply — sweet for Matthews.
Arsenal 3 Manchester United 2, 1978-79
Manchester
United were comprehensively outplayed for 85 minutes as Liam Brady
pulled the strings for Arsenal, who surged into a two-goal lead thanks
to first-half strikes from Brian Talbot and Frank Stapleton. When Gordon
McQueen bundled home an 85th-minute goal for United it looked like
little more than a consolation, but remarkably Sammy McIlroy ended a
mazy run with a cool finish to equalise in the 88th minute. However,
that was not the end of the drama as Arsenal's shattered players picked
themselves off the turf and launched one last attack, which saw Brady
cross to the far post for Alan Sunderland to slide in an 89th-minute
winner.
Tottenham Hotspur 3 Manchester City 2, 1980-81 (replay)
Tottenham's
Ricky Villa scored arguably the greatest cup final goal to seal his
side's dramatic victory under the Wembley floodlights. Villa had feared
he would be dropped for the replay after putting in a disappointing
performance in the first match, which had finished 1-1. But, having gone
2-1 down in the 50th minute, Spurs levelled through Garth Crooks in the
70th minutes before Argentine midfielder Villa wrote his name into FA
Cup folklore with his second strike of the game, which came at the end
of a mesmerising run through City's defence.
Coventry City 3 Tottenham Hotspur 2, 1986-87
Another
great Wembley comeback, this time pulled off by an underdog Coventry
side, saw Tottenham defender Gary Mabbutt's day transform from a dream
into a nightmare. The centre-back had put his side 2-1 ahead just before
the break following his team-mate Clive Allen's early opener and Dave
Bennett's swift equaliser. But after Keith Houchen's flying second-half
header forced extra time, the unfortunate Mabbutt saw the ball fly off
him and into his own net, gifting the cup to Coventry.
Liverpool 3 West Ham United 3 (Liverpool won 3-1 on penalties), 2005-06
Liverpool
captain Steven Gerrard almost single-handedly won the cup for Rafael
Benitez's team. The Reds trailed West Ham 2-0 and 3-2 during 90 minutes,
but extended the contest thanks to a stunning stoppage-time strike from
Gerrard for his second goal of the game. Jose Reina then made three
saves in the penalty shoot-out as Liverpool won the trophy for the
second time at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium, which staged the final for
six years while Wembley was rebuilt.