A look at Newcastle’s near-misses in 70-year wait for domestic silverware

Jan 8, 2025 4 min read
Newcastle are hoping to end a 70-year wait for a major domestic trophy in this season’s Carabao Cup (John Walton/PA)
Newcastle are hoping to end a 70-year wait for a major domestic trophy in this season’s Carabao Cup (John Walton/PA)

Newcastle boosted their hopes of ending a 70-year wait for a major domestic trophy when they took a firm grip on their Carabao Cup semi-final against Arsenal.

The Magpies emerged from their first-leg trip to the Emirates Stadium – where they had won only once in 19 previous visits – with a precious 2-0 lead to take into next month’s return at St James’ Park and their dream of ending a drought, which stretches back to the 1955 FA Cup final, very much alive.

Here, the PA news agency takes a look at the near-misses the Tyneside club, whose last piece of significant silverware of any description came in the 1969 European Fairs Cup, have suffered during the intervening years.

Liverpool 3 Newcastle 0 – 1974 FA Cup final

A volley from Kevin Keegan puts Liverpool a goal up after 57 minutes of the 1974 FA Cup Final at Wembley
Future Newcastle boss Kevin Keegan scored twice in Liverpool’s 3-0 FA Cup final victory over the Magpies in 1974 (PA)

Nineteen years after their sixth and last FA Cup triumph, the Magpies, who had Malcolm Macdonald spearheading their armoury, headed back to Wembley with high hopes. Ultimately, they were undone by a man who would later play a significant role on Tyneside as Kevin Keegan scored twice, either side of Steve Heighway’s strike, to send the trophy to Merseyside.

Manchester City 2 Newcastle 1 – 1976 League Cup final

Manchester City’s Peter Barnes (right) celebrates scoring the opening goal with team-mate Dennis Tueart
Peter Barnes and Dennis Tueart scored as Manchester City beat Newcastle 2-1 in the 1976 League Cup final (PA Archive)

The Magpies’ bid for a first League Cup success ended in disappointment despite Alan Gowling cancelling out Peter Barnes’ early opener. A minute into the second half, Dennis Tueart dashed their hopes with a spectacular overhead kick after Tommy Booth had headed Willie Donachie’s cross back across goal.

Premiership 1995-96

Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson (right) and assistant manager Brian Kidd holding aloft the Premiership trophy after beating Middlesbrough at the Riverside Stadium
Sir Alex Ferguson’s Manchester United overhauled Newcastle to claim the 1995-96 Premiership title (John Giles/PA)

Keegan’s Newcastle were in pole position to claim a first league title since 1927 and a fifth in total when they went 12 points clear of Manchester United at the top of the Premier League table in January 1996. However, they won only seven of their last 15 games as United took 40 points from a possible 45 – three of them from an Eric Cantona-inspired 1-0 win at St James’ on March 4 – to claim the title by four.

Arsenal 2 Newcastle 0 – 1998 FA Cup final

Dejection for Newcastle’s Alan Shearer (standing) and David Batty after a 2-0 FA Cup final defeat by Arsenal
Marc Overmars and Nicolas Anelka ruined Newcastle’s FA Cup dream in 1998 (Owen Humphreys/PA)

A cup run which had stuttered into life with a third-round win at Everton, thanks to Ian Rush and a hard-fought victory over non-league Stevenage in the fourth – a tie which went to a replay as Alan Shearer returned to the starting line-up after a lengthy injury lay-off – eventually resulted in another trip to Wembley for Kenny Dalglish’s men. However, goals from Marc Overmars and Nicolas Anelka either side of half-time saw Arsenal complete the Double with the league title already secured.

Manchester United 2 Newcastle 0 – 1999 FA Cup final

Newcastle's Alan Shearer (centre) looks dejected, following the 2-0 FA Cup final defeat by Manchester United
Manchester United beat Newcastle in the FA Cup final on their way to an unprecedented Treble in 1999 (Owen Humphreys/PA)

Having led Chelsea to FA Cup glory in 1997, Ruud Gullit took the Magpies back to headquarters two years later, intent on a repeat. This time, it was their misfortune to come across a Manchester United side which would ultimately claim an unprecedented Treble after a dramatic Champions League final victory over Bayern Munich in Barcelona four days later, with Teddy Sheringham and Paul Scholes doing the damage.

Manchester United 2 Newcastle 0 – 2023 Carabao Cup final

Manchester United's players celebrate victory over Newcastle in the 2023 Carabao Cup final
Manchester United were the victors once again when the sides met at Wembley in the 2023 Carabao Cup final (David Davies/PA)

Newcastle’s first trip to Wembley in 24 years was delivered by Eddie Howe as his Saudi-backed resurgence promised to pay dividends much sooner than expected. However, once again they could not reproduce the form which had got them there on the day as Casemiro and Marcus Rashford both struck within six first-half minutes to extend the wait.

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