2010 Football League Championship play-off Final

2010 Football League Championship play-off Final
Event 2009–10 Football League Championship
Date 22 May 2010
Venue Wembley Stadium, London
Man of the Match Keith Southern (Blackpool)
Referee Andre Marriner (West Midlands)[1]
Attendance 82,244
Weather Sunny, 28 °C (82 °F)

The 2010 Football League Championship play-off Final was a football match played at Wembley Stadium in London on 22 May 2010 to decide the third team to be promoted from The Championship to the Premier League for the 2010–11 season.

The culmination of the 2010 Football League Championship play-offs saw Blackpool beat Cardiff City to earn promotion alongside the Championship champions Newcastle United and runners-up West Bromwich Albion. In the match, Blackpool twice came back from going a goal behind, before taking the lead for the first time just before half-time.[2] With no score from either team in the second half, the final result was 3–2 to Blackpool in normal time.[3]

Blackpool entered the play-offs having finished sixth in the 2009–10 Football League Championship, bottom of the play-off places, while Cardiff finished two places above in fourth. Blackpool reached the play-off final after a 6–4 aggregate semi-final victory over third-place finishers Nottingham Forest, while Cardiff in their semi-final beat fifth-placed Leicester City by virtue of a penalty shoot-out.

As a consequence of winning promotion, Blackpool's Bloomfield Road stadium, which has a capacity of just over 16,000, became the smallest stadium to host Premier League football. It also meant Blackpool returned to the top flight of English League football for the first time since the 1970–71 season, when they spent one season in the old First Division, finishing bottom.

Route to the final

Blackpool

Having finished in sixth in the Championship, just a point ahead of Swansea City, Blackpool just crept into the play-offs, where they were paired with third-placed Nottingham Forest. Despite going behind to a 13th-minute goal from Chris Cohen, Blackpool were able to come from behind to win the first leg at Bloomfield Road 2–1, thanks to a goal from Keith Southern and a penalty from Charlie Adam.[4]

They again went behind early in the second leg at the City Ground, this time to a goal from Robert Earnshaw, but a hat-trick from DJ Campbell – punctuated by another Earnshaw goal and one for Stephen Dobbie – was enough to put Blackpool through to the play-off final, despite a late goal from Dele Adebola, with an aggregate score of 6–4.[5]

Cardiff City

Cardiff City finished fourth in the Championship, three points behind Nottingham Forest and level with Leicester City in fifth. Cardiff's superior goal difference gave them the advantage over Leicester, and thus they would have home advantage in the second leg. The first leg at the Walkers Stadium was decided by a single goal from Cardiff's Peter Whittingham.[6]

In the second leg, Michael Chopra opened the scoring to double Cardiff's lead in the tie, but an equaliser on the day from Matty Fryatt and an own goal from Cardiff captain Mark Hudson levelled the tie at 2–2. Andy King then gave Leicester the lead on aggregate with a goal just after half-time. With just over 20 minutes to play in the tie, Cardiff were awarded a penalty, which Whittingham put away to level the scores again at 3–3. With the away goals rule not in effect in the Football League play-offs, the tie went to extra time. No further goals were scored in the additional 30 minutes, so the tie had to be settled by a penalty shoot-out. Both sides scored each of their first three kicks, before David Marshall saved a Panenka from Leicester's Yann Kermorgant, allowing Mark Kennedy to give Cardiff the lead. Marshall then saved from Martyn Waghorn to put Cardiff through to the final.[7]

Match details

22 May 2010
15:00 BST
Blackpool 3–2 Cardiff City
Adam  13'
Taylor-Fletcher  41'
Ormerod  45+1'
Report Chopra  9'
Ledley  37'
Blackpool
Cardiff City
GK 21England Matt Gilks
RB 31Republic of Ireland Séamus Coleman
CB 15England Alex Baptiste
CB 6 England Ian Evatt
LB 3 Scotland Stephen Crainey
RM 11Wales David Vaughan  90+2'
CM 4 England Keith Southern
LM 26Scotland Charlie Adam (c)
RW 19England DJ Campbell
LW 10England Brett Ormerod  60'
CF 12England Gary Taylor-Fletcher  53'
Substitutes:
GK 1 England Paul Rachubka
DF 24Wales Rob Edwards
MF 29Scotland Barry Bannan  90+2'
FW 7 Republic of Ireland Billy Clarke
FW 9 Republic of Ireland Ben Burgess  53'
FW 18Jamaica Jason Euell
FW 33Scotland Stephen Dobbie  60'
Manager:
England Ian Holloway
GK 1 Scotland David Marshall
RB 2 Scotland Kevin McNaughton  74'
CB 5 England Mark Hudson (c)
CB 23Wales Darcy Blake
LB 3Republic of Ireland Mark Kennedy
RM 11Scotland Chris Burke  58'
CM 10Republic of Ireland Stephen McPhail
CM 16Wales Joe Ledley
LM 7 England Peter Whittingham
CF 9 England Jay Bothroyd  15'
CF 8 England Michael Chopra
Substitutes:
GK 20Finland Peter Enckelman
DF 12Northern Ireland Tony Capaldi
DF 14Scotland Paul Quinn
DF 15Republic of Ireland Anthony Gerrard  74'
MF 17Nigeria Kelvin Etuhu  15'
MF 28England Aaron Wildig
FW 44Scotland Ross McCormack  58'
Manager:
England Dave Jones

Match officials

Match rules

  • 90 minutes
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level
  • Seven named substitutes, of which three may be used

Statistics

Statistic Blackpool Cardiff
Total shots 1211
Shots on target 65
Ball possession 56%44%
Corner kicks 56
Fouls committed 136
Offsides 23
Yellow cards 33
Red cards 00

Source: BBC Sport[3]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2010 Football League Championship play-off Final.
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Morris, Michael (15 May 2010). "Referee named for play off final". Cardiff City Mad. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
  2. Wilson, Steve (2010-05-22). "Championship play-off final: Blackpool v Cardiff live". The Daily Telegraph (London: Telegraph Media Group). Retrieved 2010-05-24.
  3. 1 2 Fletcher, Paul (22 May 2010). "Blackpool win to seal fairytale promotion". BBC Sport (British Broadcasting Corporation). Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  4. "Blackpool 2-1 Nottm Forest". BBC Sport (British Broadcasting Corporation). 8 May 2010. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
  5. "Nott'm Forest 3-4 Blackpool (agg 4-6)". BBC Sport (British Broadcasting Corporation). 11 May 2010. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
  6. Shuttleworth, Peter (9 May 2010). "Leicester 0-1 Cardiff". BBC Sport (British Broadcasting Corporation). Retrieved 7 July 2015.
  7. Shuttleworth, Peter (12 May 2010). "Cardiff 2-3 Leicester (agg 3-3)". BBC Sport (British Broadcasting Corporation). Retrieved 7 July 2015.
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