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The 2003 FA Cup final was the 122nd final of the FA Cup, the world's oldest domestic football cup competition. [2] The final took place on Saturday 17 May 2003 at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff , in front of a crowd of 73,726.
The 2002–03 FA Cup was the 122nd staging of the world's oldest cup competition, the FA Cup. The competition was won by Arsenal with a 1–0 victory in the final at the Millennium Stadium , Cardiff against Southampton , courtesy of a Robert Pires goal.
The Blackburn Rovers team which won the FA Cup in 1884. Team captain James Brown (front row, centre) holds the trophy.. The Football Association Challenge Cup, commonly known as the FA Cup, is a knockout competition in English football, organised by and named after The Football Association (the FA), the governing body of the sport in England.
2001 FA Cup Final; 2002 FA Cup Final; 2003 FA Cup Final; ... 2000-date Six Nations Championship; ... 2002 Power Cricket Cup [5]
2003 ICC Cricket World Cup Final The Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg Event 2003 ICC Cricket World Cup Australia India 359/2 234 50 overs 39.2 overs Australia won by 125 runs Date 23 March 2003 Venue Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg Player of the match Ricky Ponting (Aus) Umpires Steve Bucknor (WI) and David Shepherd (Eng) Attendance 34,000 [a] ← 1999 2007 → Cricket final The 2003 Cricket ...
17 June 2003 England Pakistan — 2–1 [3] 18 July 2003 Australia Bangladesh: 2–0 [2] 3–0 [3] 24 July 2003 England South Africa: 2–2 [5] — 20 August 2003 Pakistan Bangladesh: 3–0 [3] 5–0 [5] International tournaments Dates Tournament Winners 11 April 2003: TVS Cup Tri series India and South Africa: 10 May 2003: Bank Alfalah Cup New ...
Dates Tournament Winners 12 September 2002: 2002 ICC Champions Trophy India and Sri Lanka: 13 December 2002: 2002–03 VB Series Australia: 9 February 2003: 2003 Cricket World Cup Australia: 3 April 2003: Cherry Blossom Sharjah Cup Pakistan
Start date Home team Away team Results [Matches] Test ODI; 3 October 2003 Pakistan South Africa: 1–0 [2] 2–3 [5] 8 October 2003 India New Zealand: 0–0 [2] — 9 October 2003 Australia Zimbabwe: 2–0 [2] — 21 October 2003 Bangladesh England: 0–2 [2] 0–3 [3] 4 November 2003 Zimbabwe West Indies: 0–1 [2] 2–3 [5] 18 November 2003 ...