Encyclopedia > Football League Trophy

  Article Content

Football League Trophy

The Football League Trophy is the generic name of an English football competition for clubs in the lower divisions of the Football League, the official name of which is frequently changed to match changes in sponsors, and which is presently called the LDV Vans Trophy. It is frequently referred to as the Associate Members' Cup, though that name is now an anachronism as there is no longer a distinction between full and associate membership of the League.

The Trophy is currently contested by all Second and Third Division clubs and a number of invited teams from the Football Conference, and is played in a knockout (single elimination) format in North and South regional sections. The sectional winners play each other in the final at the Millennium Stadium due to the redevelopment of Wembley.

The competition for Third and Fourth (as they then were) Division clubs dates back to the 1983/4 season. Prior to that there had been a couple of different attempts to fill the gap in the calendar left by the collapse of the Anglo-Scottish Cup[?] in 1981.

Various attempts have been made to solve the problem of reducing the 48 lower-division clubs to a round power of two (which is required for a knockout tournament): often the first round of the cup was played in round-robin groups of three; at other times the more senior clubs have been given byes into the second round. The addition of 8 (rather than 16) teams from the Conference has not solved this problem.

External Link

http://jhick002.webspace.fish.co.uk/flt/



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
U.S. presidential election, 1804

... (162) Charles C. Pinckney[?] 14 Federalist Rufus King (14) Other elections: 1792, 1796, 1800, 1804, 1808, 1812, 1816 Source: U.S. Office of the Federal ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 41.2 ms