Football tournament season
2013 Chatham CupTournament details |
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Country | New Zealand |
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Venue(s) | English Park, Christchurch |
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Dates | 25 April 2013 – 15 September 2013 |
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Teams | 132 |
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Defending champions | Central United |
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Final positions |
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Champions | Cashmere Technical (3rd title) First win was as Christchurch Technical in 1948 |
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Runner-up | Waitakere City |
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Tournament statistics |
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Jack Batty Memorial Cup | Andy Pitman (Cashmere Technical) |
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The 2013 ASB Chatham Cup was New Zealand's 86th knockout football competition.[1]
The 2013 competition had a qualification round and four rounds proper, before quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final. Competition was run in three regions (Northern, Central, Southern) until the quarter-finals, from which stage the draw was open. In all, 132 teams entered the competition.[2]
The 2013 final
The final was played in front of a crowd of 2,000 spectators. Cashmere Technical took an early lead in the 5th minute when Julyan Collett was fouled in the penalty area and Danny Boys sent Waitakere City goalkeeper Eamon Goodin the wrong way. The lead was short lived when just 10 minutes later, Cashmere conceded their first and what would be their only goal of the whole campaign. Waitakere won a free kick 25 metres out and Jake Butler lined up his shot. It went straight into the defensive wall but from the rebound his follow up put the ball past Cashmere keeper Shaun Roberts. It didn't take long for Cashmere to restore there lead when Stu Kelly was rewarded for his hard work, slotting the ball home in the 23rd minute. From there both teams had their chances but the result was finally put beyond doubt in injury time when, spotting the keeper off his line, Dan Ede put in a deft long-range lob and the game finished 3–1.[3][4][5]
The Jack Batty Memorial Cup for the final's most valuable player was awarded to Cashmere Technical's Andy Pitman.[6]
Results
Qualification round
All fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website,[7] RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review,[9] and New Zealand Football.[10]
- Northern region
Puhoi Wolfpack v South Auckland Rangers 25 April 2013 | Puhoi Wolfpack | 2–1 | South Auckland Rangers | Puhoi Domain, Rodney |
14:00 | | | | |
Glen Eden United v Drury United 25 April 2013 | Glen Eden United | 0–4 | Drury United | Parrs Park, Auckland |
14:00 | | | | |
Tauranga Old Blues v West Hamilton United 25 April 2013 | Tauranga Old Blues | 6–1 | West Hamilton United | |
14:00 | | | | |
Te Awamutu v Whakatane Town 25 April 2013 | Te Awamutu | 0–4 | Whakatane Town | Te Awamutu Stadium, Te Awamutu |
14:00 | | | | |
AFC Fury v Morrinsville 25 April 2013 | AFC Fury | 5–0 | Morrinsville | |
14:00 | | | | |
- Central region
- Southern region
Central Pirates v Wakefield 25 April 2013 | Central Pirates | 3–1 | Wakefield | |
14:00 | | | | |
All teams listed below received byes to the first round.
- Northern: Air Force, Hukanui Rototuna, Navy, Papakura City, Pukekohe.
- Central: FC Western, Napier City Rovers, Inglewood, Palmerston North Marist, Red Sox Manawatu, Taradale, Wanganui City.
- Southern: FC Nelson, Nelson College, Richmond Athletic.
All teams listed below were seeded to the first round.
- Northern: Albany United, Claudelands Rovers, Eastern Suburbs, Fencibles, Forrest Hill Milford, Glenfield Rovers, Hibiscus Coast, Lynn Avon United, Mangere United, Manukau City, Melville United, Metro, Mt Albert Ponsonby, Ngaruawahia United, North Shore United, Onehunga Mangere United, Oratia United, Papatoetoe, Takapuna, Tauranga City United, Waiuku, Warkworth, Western Springs.
- Central: Brooklyn Northern United, Eastbourne, Greytown, Island Bay United, Kapiti Coast United, Lower Hutt City, Marist, Miramar Rangers, Naenae, North Wellington, Olympic, Petone, Seatoun, Stokes Valley, Stop Out, Tawa, Upper Hutt City, Victoria University, Wainuiomata, Wairarapa United, Waterside Karori, Wellington College, Wellington United, Western Suburbs.
- Southern: Coastal Spirit, FC Twenty 11, Grants Braes, Green Island, Halswell United, Melchester Rovers, Mosgiel, Nomads United, Northern, Northern Hearts, Old Boys, Otago University, Queens Park, Roslyn Wakari, Selwyn United, Southend United, Universities, Waihopai, Waimak United, Western AFC.
All teams listed below were seeded to the second round.
- Northern: Bay Olympic, Birkenhead United, Central United, East Coast Bays, Ellerslie, Hamilton Wanderers, Manurewa, Onehunga Sports, Three Kings United, Waitakere City.
- Southern: Cashmere Technical, Caversham, Dunedin Technical, Ferrymead Bays.
Round 1
All fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website,[7] RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review[9] and New Zealand Football.[10]
- Northern region
Old Blues v Hukanui Rototuna 11/12 May 2013 | Old Blues | 5–1 | Hukanui Rototuna | |
Whakatane Town v Fury 11/12 May 2013 | Whakatane Town | 1–4 | Fury | |
- Central region
Eastbourne v Naenae 11/12 May 2013 | Eastbourne | 0–3 | Naenae | Bishop Park, Lower Hutt |
Inglewood v Wanganui City 11/12 May 2013 | Inglewood | 5–1 | Wanganui City | |
- Southern region
Central Pirates v Nelson 11/12 May 2013 | Central Pirates | 2–1 | Nelson | |
*both sides used unregistered players and were disqualified
Round 2
All fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website,[7] RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review[9] and New Zealand Football.[10]
- Northern region
- Central region
Inglewood v Tawa 1 June 2013 | Inglewood | 2–3 | Tawa | |
- Southern region
Waimakariri United v 1 June 2013 | Waimakariri United | WBD* | | |
Note: * Canterbury University and FC Twenty where both disqualified in the previous round after each team used unregistered players |
Round 3
All fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website,[7] RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review[9] and New Zealand Football.[10]
- Northern region
- Central region
- Southern region
Round 4
All fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website,[7] RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review[9] and New Zealand Football.[10]
- Northern region
- Central region
- Southern region
Quarter-finals
All fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website,[7] RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review[9] and New Zealand Football.[10]
Semi-finals
All fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website,[7] RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review[9] and New Zealand Football.[10]
Final
All fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website,[7] RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review[9] and New Zealand Football.[10] Team lists and numbers taken from NZ Football on YouTube.[11]
| | | GK | 22 | Shaun Roberts | | | DF | 3 | Daniel Terris | | | DF | | Nick Wortelboer | | | DF | 5 | Dan Schwarz | | | MF | 6 | Tom Schwarz | 57' | | MF | 7 | Julyan Collett | 35' | 75' | MF | 8 | Stuart Kelly | 41' | 87' | MF | 16 | Cory Mitchell | | | MF | 18 | Shawn O'Brien | | 82' | FW | 19 | Andy Pitman (c) | 66' | | FW | 33 | Danny Boys | | | Substitutes: | | 4 | James Price | | | | 10 | Dan Ede | | 82' | | 11 | Jamie Smith | | 87' | | 12 | Andrew Barton | | 75' | Manager: | John Brown | | | | | | GK | 1 | Eamon Goodin | | | DF | 2 | Matthew Chatterton | | | DF | 3 | Tim Myers | | | DF | 5 | Sam Redwood | | | MF | 7 | Imraan Shah | | 81' | MF | 9 | Rory Turner | | | MF | 10 | Denver MacDonald | | | MF | 11 | Roy Krishna (c) | | | MF | 14 | Kodai Hayashi | | | FW | 17 | Jake Butler | | 68' | FW | 18 | Jack Caunter | | | Substitutes: | | 4 | John Muchirahondo | | | | 12 | Kario Pavic | | | | 13 | Meneua Fakasega | | 81' | | 16 | Joseph Turagabeci | | | Manager: | Colin Tuaa | |
References
- ^ "ASB Chatham Cup Overview". New Zealand Football. Archived from the original on 26 September 2013. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
- ^ "ASB Chatham Cup set to celebrate 90 years of glory". New Zealand Football. Archived from the original on 24 June 2013. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
- ^ Ruane, Jeremy (15 September 2013). "Cup Glory For Cashmere - After 65 Years". The Ultimate NZ Soccer Website. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
- ^ Smith, Tony (15 September 2013). "Cashmere Technical end Canterbury's wait". The Press. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
- ^ "Soccer: Cashmere end Canterbury Cup drought". The New Zealand Herald. 15 September 2013. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
- ^ Smith, Tony (17 September 2013). "Pitman in line for another award". Stuff. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Ruane, Jeremy. "2013 Chatham Cup". The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Capital Football Season Review 2013" (PDF). Capital Football. p. 68. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "ASB Chatham Cup 2013". Archived from the original on 20 April 2013. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
- ^ 2013 ASB Chatham Cup Final Cashmere Technical v Waitakere City (Television production). New Zealand Football. 19 September 2013. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
External links
- Archive of ASB Chatham Cup Website
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#Cancelled as only 12 teams registered *Cancelled due to WWII †Cancelled due to COVID-19 |