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2001 Football League Trophy Final
Event Football League Trophy 2000–01
Date 22 April 2001
Venue Millennium Stadium, Cardiff
Referee W.C.Burns
Attendance 25,654
2000
2002

The 2001 Football League Trophy Final (known as the LDV Vans Trophy for sponsorship reasons) was the 18th final of the domestic football cup competition for teams from Football League Second and Third Division, the Football League Trophy. It was the first League Trophy final played at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, previous such matches were played at Wembley and the new stadium was yet to be built. The match was contested by Port Vale and Brentford on 22 April 2001. Port Vale won the match 2–1 with Marc Bridge-Wilkinson and Steve Brooker the scorers.

Contents

[edit] Background

The 2001 Football League Trophy Final was the second such game for both clubs. Port Vale had defeated Stockport County 2-1 in 1993 and Brentford had lost 3-1 to Wigan Athletic in 1985. The year previous to Vale's original first title, rivals Stoke City had taken home the trophy. Stoke were the winners of the 2000 final, so a "keeping up with the Joneses" mindset gave Vale extra motivation to win in 2001, as well as providing them with something of a good omen.

Port Vale, based in Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent and London based Brentford had little reason to take note of each other before facing each other in the final. They had previously been restricted to league encounters and the final was the first cup fixture between the two clubs. Earlier in the 2000-01 season both games had finished as 1-1 draws; Widdrington and Owusu scoring at Vale Park, Evans and Bridge-Wilkinson the scorers at Griffin Park. Both clubs finished the season in mid-table; Vale in 11th and Brentford in 14th, just three points separating them after 46 games. All the evidence pointed to a close match.

[edit] Route to the final

Split between the North and South sections, Vale qualified for the final by being the last survivors from the north and Brentford qualified as the strongest team from the south.

The first round saw Port Vale breeze past Notts County 3-0 at Vale Park and Brentford defeated Second Division whipping-boys Oxford United 4-1 at Griffin Park.

In the second round Vale had a home fixture against the only non-league team in the competition - Chester City had suffered relegation from the Football League the previous season, they duly won 2-0. Brentford had a more tricky fixture; facing eventual Third Division champions Brighton & Hove Albion at the Withdean. Yet the fixture actually took place at Brentford's home ground, with the score 2-2 it took a penalty shootout to end the tie.

The area quarter-final was also favourable to Vale, they took apart Third Division strugglers Darlington 4-0 at Vale Park. Brentford had another away fixture, they beat Barnet at the Underhill Stadium.

Port Vale found their challenge in the area semi-finals, despite it being a home tie the fixture was actually played at the Britannia Stadium, against their rivals and last season's winners Stoke City. It took extra time to separate the teams, Michael Cummins put the Vale ahead before Nicky Mohan scored a late equalizer. A Marc Bridge-Wilkinson penalty in the 105th gave the Burslem club a night of celebration. The next day Brentford travelled to Vetch Field in Wales, where they neutered Swansea City with a 3-2 win.

The area finals were two-legged fixtures, Port Vale against Lincoln City and Brentford against Southend United. At Sincil Bank Bridge-Wilkinson and Naylor gave the Valiants and 2-0 victory. At Roots Hall Michael Dobson gave the Bees a 2-1 victory despite Spencer Whelan's best efforts. In the second leg the Vale Park fixture was goalless, Lincoln doing little to trouble Vale.[1] The Brentford game was rather more eventful, Ívar Ingimarsson and Lloyd Owusu scored Brentford's two goals to Southend's one- scored by Damon Searle.[2]

[edit] Match summary

[edit] First half

Brentford got off to a flying start; young Dobson out-jumping Brisco to head home a corner beyond the helpless Goodlad for a 3rd minute lead.

The tone of the game was set by Vale's dominant five man midfield, with Brammer the engine that drove the Valiants search for an equalizer, Brentford struggled to keep pace. It was Brammer who made the Vale's intentions clear; sending a long-range strike goal ward, only for it to be deflected wide.

Whereas Burton made the Brentford defence nervous from set pieces, misers Naylor, Brooker and Bridge-Wilkinson presented the danger from open play. On the 20 minute mark, Naylor pulled back a ball which Bridge-Wilkinson hooked wide. This was to prove their most dangerous movement of the half.

[edit] Second half

Not long after the restart Naylor's persistence in front of goal seemed to have paid off, yet he was deemed to be offside - whether the linesman made the right call was a topic of debate.

However Brentford could not rely on help from the officials for long and on the 76th minute, when Powell brought down Naylor on the edge of the area, the referee signalled for a penalty. Bridge-Wilkinson converted, sending Gottskalksson the wrong way.

Seven minutes later and the Burslem club had the lead; Naylor won the ball from Mahon deep in the Brentford half. He squared the ball to Brooker, who struck his shot sweetly, leaving Vale 2-1 up on 83 minutes.

Brentford then piled on the pressure and had numerous late chances; the first falling to substitute McCammon whose first touch of the game was a poor header that could have found the net if it was well placed. The last kick of the game could have taken it to extra time, however Owusu headed wide from Gottskálksson's overhead kick- the Brentford goalkeeper doing more than making up the numbers in the Vale box during the last seconds of injury time.

Fair credit to Port Vale who deserved it - we were disappointing and we didn't play well.
Ray Lewington[3]

[edit] Post-match

The game was one rare glimpse of glory for Port Vale, instead of signalling a return to the happy days they enjoyed under John Rudge it was a rare high point before relegation to League Two in 2007-08. In 2006-07 Brentford finished bottom of League One before being crowned champions of League Two in 2008-09.

The trophy was Brian Horton's only major honour at Port Vale, his five year reign with his resignation in February in 2004, after disagreements with the board over both his contract and the playing budget. After an unsuccessful two years as manager of Macclesfield Town he joined the staff at Hull City, who soon found themselves playing top-flight football. The match was Ray Lewington last in charge at Brentford, he left for Watford, becoming their manager the next year. After being sacked from Watford in 2005 he joined the staff at Fulham.

The young Marc Bridge-Wilkinson continued to impress at Vale Park and since leaving in 2004 continued to be a player in demand, following the final he spent the next seven seasons in League One. Steve Brooker also departed in 2004, spending 2004 to 2009 at Bristol City he has also been a top performer in League One. Brentford's Michael Dobson stayed at Griffin Park until 2006, he played for Walsall from 2006 to 2008, leaving the game at the age of 27 to set up his own business.

[edit] Match details

22 April 2001
15:00 BST
Port Vale 2 – 1 Brentford Millennium Stadium, Cardiff
Attendance: 25,654
Referee: W.C.Burns
Bridge-Wilkinson Goal 76' (pen.)
Brooker Goal 83'
(Report) Dobson Goal 3'
Port Vale
Brentford
PORT VALE:
GK 1 England Mark Goodlad
DF 2 England Matt Carragher (c)
DF 6 England Sagi Burton
DF 5 England Michael Walsh
MF 19 England Alex Smith
MF 8 Republic of Ireland Michael Cummins
MF 15 England Marc Bridge-Wilkinson
MF 17 England Neil Brisco
MF 4 England Dave Brammer Booked
FW 25 England Steve Brooker
FW 10 England Tony Naylor
Substitutes:
GK 12 Republic of Ireland Dean Delaney
DF 3 England Allen Tankard
DF 11 England Tommy Widdrington
MF 23 England Michael Twiss
FW 9 Finland Ville Viljanen
Manager:
England Brian Horton
BRENTFORD:
GK 17 Iceland Ólafur Gottskálksson
DF 5 England Darren Powell Booked
DF 23 England David Theobald Booked
DF 19 England Paul Gibbs
DF 25 England Michael Dobson
DF 15 Iceland Ívar Ingimarsson
MF 8 England Gavin Mahon
MF 12 England Martin Rowlands
MF 7 Wales Paul Evans (c)
FW 9 Ghana Lloyd Owusu
FW 10 England Scott Partridge
Substitute:
GK 31 England Paul Smith
DF 32 England Jay Lovett
MF 14 Republic of Ireland Tony Folan
MF 26 England Mark Williams Substituted on in the 88th minute 88'
FW 29 Barbados Mark McCammon Substituted on in the 89th minute 89'
Manager:
England Ray Lewington

MATCH RULES

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
  • Maximum of 3 substitutions.

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Port Vale's route to Cardiff". BBC Sport. 18 April 2001. http://news.bbc.co.uksport1hifootball1281326.stm. Retrieved 25 June 2009. 
  2. ^ "Brentford's route to Cardiff". BBC Sport. 18 April 2001. http://news.bbc.co.uksport1hifootball1280427.stm. Retrieved 25 June 2009. 
  3. ^ "Vale vault Brentford to lift Vans trophy". BBC Sport. 22 April 2001. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/1289338.stm. Retrieved 25 June 2009. 



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