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1998–99 Football League Cup


FieldValue
titleFootball League Cup
year1998–99
other_titlesLeague Cup
Worthington Cup
countryEngland
Wales
num_teams92
defending_championsChelsea
winnersTottenham Hotspur
count3
secondLeicester City
scoring_leaderGianluca Vialli
(6 goals)
prev_season1997–98
next_season1999–2000

Worthington Cup Wales (6 goals) The 1998–99 Football League Cup (known as the Worthington Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 39th staging of the Football League Cup, a knockout competition for England's top 92 football clubs.

The competition began on 11 August 1998, and ended with the final on 21 March 1999, held at Wembley Stadium.

The tournament was won by Tottenham Hotspur, who beat Leicester City 1–0 in the final, thanks to an Allan Nielsen goal in the last minute of normal time.

First round

The 72 First, Second and Third Division clubs compete from the First Round. Each section is divided equally into a pot of seeded clubs and a pot of unseeded clubs. Clubs' rankings depend upon their finishing position in the 1997–98 season.

Tie noHome team1(1st Leg)
(2nd Leg)
AggregateAway teamAfter extra time — Grimsby Town win on penaltiesAfter extra time — Hull City win on away goalsAfter extra time — Halifax Town win on penalties
1Barnet(2–1)
(0–5)
2–6Wolverhampton Wanderers
2Birmingham City(2–0)
(1–1)
3–1Millwall
3Blackpool(1–0)
(1–1)
2–1Scunthorpe United
4Bolton Wanderers(1–0)
(3–0)
4–0Hartlepool United
5Bradford City(1–1)
(1–0)
2–1Lincoln City
6Bristol City(4–0)
(3–4)
7–4Shrewsbury Town
7Bury(1–1)
(4–1)
5–2Burnley
8Cambridge United(1–0)
(1–1)
2–1Watford
9Exeter City(1–1)
(1–5)
2–6Ipswich Town
10Fulham(2–1)
(2–1)
4–2Cardiff City
11Grimsby Town(0–0)
(0–0)
0–0Preston North End
12Huddersfield Town(3–2)
(1–1)
4–3Mansfield Town
13Leyton Orient(1–1)
(2–1)
3–2Bristol Rovers
14Luton Town(2–3)
(3–1)
5–4Oxford United
15Macclesfield Town(3–1)
(0–1)
3–2Stoke City
16Northampton Town(2–1)
(1–1)
3–2Brighton & Hove Albion
17Notts County(0–2)
(1–7)
1–9Manchester City
18Oldham Athletic(3–2)
(0–2)
3–4Crewe Alexandra
19Peterborough United(1–1)
(0–2)
1–3Reading
20Plymouth Argyle(1–3)
(2–3)
3–6Portsmouth
21Port Vale(1–2)
(2–2)
3–4Chester City
22Rotherham United(0–1)
(0–2)
0–3Chesterfield
23Scarborough(0–1)
(0–3)
0–4Barnsley
24Sheffield United(3–1)
(2–2)
5–3Darlington
25Southend United(1–0)
(1–0)
2–0Gillingham
26Stockport County(2–2)
(0–0)
2–2Hull City
27Swansea City(1–1)
(0–1)
1–2Norwich City
28Swindon Town(2–1)
(0–2)
2–3Wycombe Wanderers
29Torquay United(1–1)
(1–2)
2–3Crystal Palace
30Tranmere Rovers(3–0)
(1–0)
4–0Carlisle United
31Walsall(0–0)
(1–3)
1–3QPR
32West Bromwich Albion(2–1)
(0–3)
2–4Brentford
33Wigan Athletic(1–0)
(1–0)
2–0Rochdale
34Wrexham(0–2)
(2–0)
2–2Halifax Town
35York City(0–2)
(1–2)
1–4Sunderland
36Bournemouth(2–0)
(2–3)
4–3Colchester United

1 Team at home in the 1st leg is denoted as the home team

Second round

The 36 winners from the First Round joined the 12 Premier League clubs not participating in European competition in Round Two. First leg matches were played on 15 and 16 September, second leg matches were played on 22 and 23 September.

Tie noHome team1(1st Leg)
(2nd Leg)
AggregateAway team
1Bristol City(1–1)
(0–2)
1–3Crewe Alexandra
2Coventry City(1–0)
(4–0)
5–0Southend United
3Derby County(1–1)
(1–0)
2–1Manchester City
4Leicester City(3–0)
(3–1)
6–1Chesterfield
5Middlesbrough(2–0)
(1–1)
3–1Wycombe Wanderers
6Norwich City(1–0)
(3–2)
4–2Wigan Athletic
7Q.P.R.(0–2)
(0–1)
0–3Charlton Athletic
8Sheffield Wednesday(0–1)
(1–1)
1–2Cambridge United
9Barnsley(3–0)
(1–1)
4–1Reading
10Blackpool(2–1)
(1–3)
3–4Tranmere Rovers
11Bolton Wanderers(3–1)
(3–2)
6–3Hull City
12Bournemouth(1–1)
(2–1)
3–2Wolverhampton Wanderers
13Brentford(2–3)
(2–3)
4–6Tottenham Hotspur
14Bury(3–0)
(1–2)
4–2Crystal Palace
15Fulham(1–1)
(1–0)
2–1Southampton
16Halifax Town(1–2)
(1–3)
2–5Bradford City
17Huddersfield Town(1–1)
(1–2)
2–3Everton
18Ipswich Town(2–1)
(2–4)
4–5Luton Town
19Leyton Orient(1–5)
(0–0)
1–5Nottingham Forest
20Macclesfield Town(0–3)
(0–6)
0–9Birmingham City
21Northampton Town(2–0)
(0–1)
2–1West Ham
22Portsmouth(2–1)
(1–4)
3–5Wimbledon
23Sheffield United(2–1)
(0–2)
2–3Grimsby Town
24Sunderland(3–0)
(1–0)
4–0Chester City

1 Team at home in the 1st leg is denoted as the home team

Third round

The 24 winners from the Second Round joined the 8 Premiership clubs participating in European competition in Round Three. Matches were played on 27 and 28 October.

Tie noHome teamScoreAway teamDateAfter extra time — Bolton Wanderers win 3–1 on penaltiesAfter extra time — Nottingham Forest win 4–3 on penalties
1Barnsley2–1Bournemouth27 October 1998
2Charlton Athletic1–2Leicester City27 October 1998
3Liverpool3–1Fulham27 October 1998
4Luton Town2–0Coventry City27 October 1998
5Northampton Town1–3Tottenham Hotspur27 October 1998
6Norwich City1–1Bolton Wanderers27 October 1998
7Nottingham Forest3–3Cambridge United27 October 1998
8Sunderland2–1Grimsby Town27 October 1998
9Tranmere Rovers0–1Newcastle United27 October 1998
10Birmingham City1–2Wimbledon28 October 1998
11Chelsea4–1Aston Villa28 October 1998
12Crewe Alexandra0–1Blackburn Rovers28 October 1998
13Derby County1–2Arsenal28 October 1998
14Leeds United1–0Bradford City28 October 1998
15Manchester United2–0Bury28 October 1998
16Middlesbrough2–3Everton28 October 1998

Fourth round

Matches were played on 10 and 11 November.

Kennedy

Scales
Nielsen


Vialli
Poyet

(a.e.t.) 4–5p

Parker


(a.e.t.) 2–4p

Quarter-finals

The four matches were played on 1, and 2 December.

Bridges
McCann

Hughes


Ginola

Semi-finals

The semi-final draw was made in December 1998 after the conclusion of the quarter finals. Unlike the other rounds, the semi-final ties were played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The first leg matches were played on 26 and 27 January 1999, the second leg matches were played on 16 and 17 February 1999. It was a narrow victory for Tottenham Hotspur and Leicester City at the expense of Wimbledon and Sunderland, respectively, giving Tottenham the first chance of their major trophy–and place in Europe–for eight years, while Leicester had reached their second final in three seasons.

First leg


Second leg

Tottenham Hotspur win 1-0 on aggregate

Leicester City win 3-2 on aggregate

Final

The 1999 Worthington Cup Final was played on 21 March 1999 and was contested between Tottenham Hotspur and Leicester City at Wembley Stadium. Tottenham won the match 1–0 thanks to a last minute Allan Nielsen header.

References

References

  1. (1999-03-22). "Nielsen nicks it for Spurs". BBC Sport.
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