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2006 Football League Cup Final

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2006 Football League Cup Final
Event Football League Cup 2005–06
Date 26 February 2006
Venue Millennium Stadium, Cardiff
Referee Alan Wiley (Staffordshire)
Attendance 66,866
2005
2007

The 2006 Carling Cup Final was played between Manchester United and Wigan Athletic on 26 February 2006. Manchester United won the match comfortably, by four goals to nil. Louis Saha and Cristiano Ronaldo both scored one goal, and Wayne Rooney scored twice. For the trophy presentation, the Manchester United players wore special shirts reading "For You Smudge", referring to Alan Smith, who had broken his left leg during a recent FA Cup match against Liverpool.[1] Wigan goalkeeper Mike Pollitt picked up a nasty hamstring injury during the match, which cut short a dream cup final for the journeyman player, having started his career with the Red Devils.

Contents

[edit] Match details

26 February 2006
15:00
Manchester United 4 – 0 Wigan Athletic Millennium Stadium, Cardiff
Attendance: 66,866
Referee: Alan Wiley (Staffordshire)
Rooney Goal 33' Goal 61'
Saha Goal 55'
Ronaldo Goal 59'
Report
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Manchester United
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Wigan Athletic
MANCHESTER UNITED:
GK 19 Flag of the Netherlands Edwin van der Sar
RB 2 Flag of England Gary Neville (c)
CB 6 Flag of England Wes Brown Substituted off in the 83rd minute 83'
CB 5 Flag of England Rio Ferdinand
LB 27 Flag of France Mikaël Silvestre Substituted off in the 83rd minute 83'
RM 7 Flag of Portugal Cristiano Ronaldo Booked in the 60th minute 60' Substituted off in the 73rd minute 73'
CM 22 Flag of Ireland John O'Shea
CM 11 Flag of Wales Ryan Giggs
LM 13 Flag of South Korea Park Ji-Sung
SS 8 Flag of England Wayne Rooney
CF 9 Flag of France Louis Saha
Substitutes:
GK 1 Flag of the United States Tim Howard
DF 3 Flag of France Patrice Evra Substituted on in the 83rd minute 83'
DF 15 Flag of Serbia and Montenegro Nemanja Vidić Substituted on in the 83rd minute 83'
MF 23 Flag of England Kieran Richardson Substituted on in the 73rd minute 73'
FW 10 Flag of the Netherlands Ruud van Nistelrooy
Manager:
Flag of Scotland Alex Ferguson
WIGAN ATHLETIC:
GK 12 Flag of England Michael Pollitt Substituted off in the 14th minute 14'
RB 2 Flag of France Pascal Chimbonda
CB 16 Flag of the Netherlands Arjan de Zeeuw (c) Booked in the 45th minute 45'
CB 6 Flag of Switzerland Stéphane Henchoz Substituted off in the 62nd minute 62'
LB 26 Flag of England Leighton Baines
RM 21 Flag of England Jimmy Bullard
CM 11 Flag of Ireland Graham Kavanagh Substituted off in the 72nd minute 72'
CM 19 Flag of Austria Paul Scharner
LM 20 Flag of Scotland Gary Teale
CF 7 Flag of Senegal Henri Camara
CF 30 Flag of Grenada Jason Roberts
Substitutes:
GK 1 Flag of Australia John Filan Substituted on in the 14th minute 14'
DF 4 Flag of England Matt Jackson
MF 8 Flag of Sweden Andreas Johansson
MF 23 Flag of Switzerland Reto Ziegler Substituted on in the 72nd minute 72'
FW 10 Flag of Scotland Lee McCulloch Substituted on in the 62nd minute 62'
Manager:
Flag of England Paul Jewell

MATCH RULES

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

[edit] Road to Cardiff

[edit] Manchester United

Round 3[2] Manchester United 4–1 Barnet
Round 4 Manchester United 3–1 West Bromwich Albion
Round 5 Birmingham City 1–3 Manchester United
Semi-final (1st leg) Blackburn Rovers 1–1 Manchester United
Semi-final (2nd leg) Manchester United 2–1 Blackburn Rovers
  (Man Utd won 3–2 on aggregate)

[edit] Wigan Athletic

Round 3[2] Wigan Athletic 2–0 Bournemouth
Round 4 Wigan Athletic 1–0 Watford
Round 5 Wigan Athletic 2–0 Bolton Wanderers
Semi-final (1st leg) Wigan Athletic 1–0 Arsenal
Semi-final (2nd leg) Arsenal 2–1 Wigan Athletic
  (2–2 on aggregate. Wigan Athletic won on away goals)

[edit] References

  1. ^ "'For You Smudge'". vitalfootball.co.uk. 27 February 2006. http://www.manchesterunited.vitalfootball.co.uk/article.asp?a=11193. Retrieved on 10 May 2007. 
  2. ^ a b Clubs in the Premier League receive a bye to the second or third round

[edit] External links

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