The debate

3 min read

Should the FA Cup semi-finals be played at Wembley Stadium?

Tell us what you think via #FFTDebate on X, or email us at fourfourtwo@futurenet.com
YESMATTHEW KETCHELL DEPUTY EDITOR @ketchell

A Wembley of the north? No thanks, Sir Jim Ratcliffe. Didn’t the British tax payer already fork out for West Ham’s stadium? Let’s not make the same mistake twice by funding a new Old Trafford.

I live in the North East but want our national stadium to remain in the capital. Big football occasions deserve big stages, big cities, big days out and Wembley is the biggest, most famous away day in football (and, frankly, easier for people in the North East to get to than most major cities in the north).

Wembley is a pilgrimage that’s been paid for more than a century and that should be protected. Yes, the stadium is unrecognisable from The Empire Stadium of old, but it’s still a venue to be proud of and an enjoyable supporter experience to boot.

How do you protect that? By funding it with events and adding to its rich history with sporting and cultural theatre. Periods of inactivity put it at risk of turning into Old Trafford. A big, iconic stadium supposedly in so much disrepair that they need to knock it down and start again.

People complain that the FA Cup has lost its prestige. It has to some extent, but let’s leave the carrot of a day out at Wembley where it is for the semi-finals. I saw my club win two FA Cup semis at Old Trafford in the ’90s – great days, but I don’t want a return to club stadiums for that stage of the competition.

I’ve also attended dozens of Wembley FA Cup semis in a working capacity, and they’re some of the loudest football matches I’ve ever been to. Two sets of fans, 40,000 allocations screaming their way to a cup final. No other venue in England gives you that.

I don’t support the Manchester clubs, Arsenal, Liverpool, Chelsea or Tottenham. If fans of the big clubs are ‘bored’ of trips to Wembley, that’s their problem. There’s more to English football than them.

Five EFL clubs have never played at the new Wembley – Ipswich might yet change that via this season’s play-offs, so let’s have a Blackburn vs Accrington Stanley FA Cup semi-final next term, with the winners playing Crawley or Colchester. With a last four like that, who would dare say the FA Cup has lost its magic?

NOMARK WHITE DIGITAL CONTENT EDITOR @markwhite

Gamemakers will tell you that just like the final, FA Cup semis are all about the

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