1986 Chatham Cup

1986 Chatham Cup
Dates first leg: October 5, 2012; second leg: October 12, 1986
Championship venue first leg: Fuji Film Stadium, North Shore
second leg: Links Road Ground, Mount Maunganui
Champions North Shore United (6th title)
Runners-up Mount Maunganui
Championship match score 4 – 2 (aggregate)
Jack Batty Memorial Cup Duncan Cole, North Shore United

The 1986 Chatham Cup was the 59th annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand.

Up to the last 16 of the competition, the cup was run in three regions (northern, central, and southern). In a change to previous years, National League teams received a bye until Round Three (the final 64 stage) of the competition, one round earlier than previously. In all, 143 teams took part in the competition. Note: Different sources give different numberings for the rounds of the competition: some start round one with the beginning of the regional qualifications; others start numbering from the first national knock-out stage. The former numbering scheme is used in this article.

The 1986 final

Unlike previous years, the final was held over two legs, home and away. This format proved unpopular, and was abandoned after three years, with the cup reverting to a single final format in 1989. In the final North Shore United became the first six-times winner of the Chatham Cup.

The first leg was held at North Shore United's Fuji Film Stadium. The game was not a particularly memorable one, although it did have its moments, notably a penalty miss from the home side. This would have evened the tie up, as Mount Maunganui gained a lead halfway through the first half via a Tony Ferris goal. This proved to be the only goal of the match.

The second leg in Mount Maunganui was a more high-scoring and open game. Kevin Hagan opened the scoring for Shore after just five minutes. Mount Maunganui fought back to equalise through Grant Proudman halfway through the first spell, but Shore's Darren McClennan restored their lead before half time and - thanks to the away goals rule - put them on track for the trophy. Away goals were not to be needed, however, as both Kim Wright (after 65 minutes) and Brian McKeown (87 minutes) added to North Shore's tally, taking them to an aggregate 4-2 win.[1]

The Jack Batty Memorial Trophy for player of the final was awarded to Duncan Cole of North Shore United.[2]

Results

Third Round


Canterbury University 2 – 3 Invercargill Thistle


Caversham 4 – 2 Western (Christchurch)


Christchurch Rangers 0 – 1 Queens Park (Invercargill)


Kawerau Town 3 – 6 Howick


Levin United 5 – 1 Riverside (Palmerston North)


Lynndale (Auckland) 0 – 3 Mount Maunganui


Massey University 2 – 1 Wellington Olympic


Naenae 0 – 3 Napier City Rovers


North Wellington 1 – 3 Waterside (Wellington)


Onehunga-Mangere United 3 – 1 Waikato Unicol


Oratia United 2 – 1 AFC Waikato (Hamilton)


Otara Rangers 0 – 7 Papatoetoe


Petone 4 – 1 Manawatu United (Palmerston North)


Red Sox (Palmerston North) 1 – 9 Gisborne City


South Canterbury United (Timaru) 0 – 3 Shamrock (Christchurch)


Takapuna City 5 – 3 Rotorua Suburbs


Waihopai (Invercargill) 0 – 2 Christchurch Technical


Whangarei City 1 – 1* University Cowan (Auckland)

* Won on penalties by University Cowan (4-3)

Fourth Round


Nelson United 6 – 1 Levin United


Waterside 0 – 1 Massey University

Fifth Round


Massey University 1 – 5 Lower Hutt City


Shamrock 2 – 2 (aet)* Christchurch Technical
QEII Stadium
Referee: L Billcliff

* Won on penalties by Nelson United (11-10), Christchurch Technical (4-3), and Papatoetoe (4-3).

Sixth Round

Semi-finals

Final

October 5, 1986
North Shore United 0 – 1 Mount Maunganui
Ferris
Fuji Film Stadium, North Shore
Referee: D. Fellows

October 12, 1986
Mount Maunganui 1 – 4 North Shore United
Proudman Hagan, McClennan, Wright, McKeown
Links Road Ground, Mount Maunganui
Referee: D. Fellows

North Shore United won 4-2 on aggregate.


References

  1. Hilton, T. (1991) An association with soccer. Auckland: The New Zealand Football Association. ISBN 0-473-01291-X. p. 80
  2. Hilton, T. (1991) An association with soccer. Auckland: The New Zealand Football Association. ISBN 0-473-01291-X. p. 177
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