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Page "Tony Adams (footballer)" ¶ 40
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FA and Community
Overall, Chelsea have won four league titles, seven FA Cups, four League Cups and four FA Community Shields.
The FA Cup winners also qualify for the single-match FA Community Shield against the Premier League Champions.
! scope = row | FA Charity Shield / FA Community Shield
Manchester United has won many trophies in English football, including a record 19 league titles, a record 11 FA Cups, four League Cups and a record 19 FA Community Shields.
* FA Community Shield
In the 1980s Spurs won several trophies: the FA Cup twice, FA Community Shield and the UEFA Cup in 1984.
; FA Community Shield
With Arsenal, he won four top flight division titles, three FA Cups, two Football League Cups, a UEFA Cup Winners ' Cup, and three FA Community Shields.
* FA Community Shield: 1991 ( shared ), 1998, 1999
* FA Community Shield
* FA Community Shield: 2006 ; Runner-up 2002
The Football Association Community Shield ( formerly the Charity Shield ) is English football's annual match contested between the champions of the previous Premier League season and the holders of the FA Cup at Wembley Stadium.
While still an honour in the English game, the Community Shield has markedly lower status than the Premier League, FA Cup or even the League Cup.
Prior to the 2008 FA Community Shield, Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson summarised his opinion of the competition: " It's always a game we never quite use as a do or die thing ; we use it as a barometer for fitness ".
Huyton contains many amateur football teams at both junior and senior level, but only one FA Charter Standard Club, which is Paramount Community Football Club.
# REDIRECT FA Community Shield
* FA Charter Standard Community Club Award
Liverpool went on to win the FA Community Shield against Manchester United and UEFA Super Cup against Bayern Munich.

FA and Shield
It hosted the FA Cup Final from 1920 to 1922, has held ten FA Cup semi-finals ( most recently in 1978 ), ten FA Charity Shield matches ( the last in 1970 ), and three England international matches, the last in 1932 ; it was also the venue for an unofficial Victory International in 1946.
The following season began with victory in the first ever Charity Shield and ended with the club's first FA Cup title.
* FA Charity Shield: ( runner-up ): 1970
On 7 August 1993, he presented Manchester United with the FA Charity Shield, which they won on penalties against Arsenal at Wembley Stadium.
* FA Charity Shield
* FA Charity Shield ( 2 ): 1962, 1967
They also reached an FA Cup quarter-final 1987 and in 1998 won the Auto Windscreens Shield and the second division play-off final.

FA and 1989
from 1986 to 1989 ( a period which included two top five finishes and a run to the FA Cup semi-finals ).
He returned to England in 1989, joining Tottenham Hotspur, and over three seasons he scored 67 goals in 105 games and won the FA Cup.
Dalglish guided Liverpool to victory over Everton in the second all-Merseyside FA Cup final in 1989, winning the match 3 – 2 after extra time, but was deprived of a second Double in the final game of the season, when Arsenal secured a last-minute goal to steal the title from Liverpool.
Liverpool's success was overshadowed by the Hillsborough disaster: in an FA Cup semi-final against Nottingham Forest on 15 April 1989, hundreds of Liverpool fans were crushed against perimeter fencing.
The second disaster took place during an FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest at Hillsborough Stadium, Sheffield, on 15 April 1989.
The day to day head of the FA was known as the Secretary until 1989, when the job title was changed to Chief Executive.
* 1989 Shadows ( VI 5. 10 A5 ), FA by Jim Bridwell, Charles Row, Cito Kirkpatrick, William Westbay
The 1989 Hillsborough disaster was a human crush and a panic which occurred during the FA Cup semi-final match between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest football clubs on 15 April 1989 at the Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield, England.
Football clubs contest the semi-final of the FA Cup at a neutral venue, and in 1989 Hillsborough was selected by the Football Association.
In 1989, Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield, the home of Sheffield Wednesday, was selected by the Football Association as a neutral venue to host the FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest football clubs.
On 15 April 1989, the ground was the scene of one of the worst sporting tragedies of all time when 96 Liverpool fans were crushed to death in an FA Cup semi-final in the infamous Hillsborough disaster.
On 15 April 1989, the ground was the scene of one of the worst sporting tragedies of all time when 96 Liverpool fans were crushed to death in an FA Cup semi-final.
Outside the ground, near the main entrance on Parkside Road, is a memorial to the 96 fans that lost their lives at Hillsborough in 1989, during the FA Cup Semi Final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest.
On 15 April 1989, the club's stadium was the scene of one of the worst sporting tragedies ever, at the FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest, at which 96 Liverpool fans were fatally crushed in the Leppings Lane end of the stadium. The tragedy resulted in many changes taking places at Hillsborough and all other leading stadiums in England, namely the requirement of all-seater stadiumsand the removal of perimeter fencing.
The Hillsborough disaster occurred on 15 April 1989 at an FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest when 96 Liverpool fans were crushed to death after the terraces at the Leppings Lane end of the ground became overcrowded.
The club reached the FA Trophy final for the second time in 1989, facing Telford United, the same opponents as Macclesfield Town's first final nineteen years earlier.
Notable former players of West Bromwich Albion include Ronnie Allen ( who later had a relatively unsuccessful spell as the club's manager ), Bryan Robson ( who was later the club's manager ), Laurie Cunningham ( one of the first black players to play for the England national football team, but who died in a car crash in 1989 aged only 33 ), Tony Brown ( the club's all time leading goalscorer ) and Jeff Astle ( who scored the club's winning goal in the 1968 FA Cup final and remained a cult figure among Albion fans ).
The team included a young John Aldridge who later became one of the most prolific goal-scorers in English football history, most famous for helping Liverpool win the First Division title in 1988 and FA Cup in 1989, as well as helping Oxford United win two successive promotions and the Football League Cup.
Rush had again scored twice against Everton in a thrilling 3 – 2 win in the 1989 FA Cup Final.
The 1989 FA Cup Final carried even greater significance because of the events of 15 April that year.
* 1989 – Coventry were defeated by non-league Sutton United in the FA Cup Third Round, only 19 months after lifting the trophy.
Other bright spots in this period included reaching the final of the Freight Rover Trophy at Wembley in 1985, where the team lost to Wigan, and a run to the FA Cup quarter-finals in 1989 which included wins over three higher-division sides and was only ended by the reigning league champions Liverpool.
In 1989 – 90 the club reached the fifth round of the FA Cup for the first time, but lost 1 – 0 to Crystal Palace.

0.592 seconds.