FA Cup final buildup to Crystal Palace v Manchester City – matchday live

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I am a City fan, going to support my team today,” writes Will. “However I now live in Croydon and have many Palace supporting friends.

“This sees me having a huge soft spot for Palace and any other opponent I would be rooting for them to win. I have a sneaking feeling they will.

“Their marvellous front three scare me to death, especially Eze, who I think is better than any City attacker on current form. I’d love him at City.”

Eberechi Eze of Crystal Palace (left) celebrates the semi-final win against Villa.
Eberechi Eze of Crystal Palace (left) celebrates the semi-final win against Villa. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

Selected comments from below the line.

Adam Wharton is such a cool player. He never seems to run but provides this central stability I desperately wish we had at Man Utd. Combined with this knack of receiving the ball and immediately making a progressive pass gives him a set of abilities rare in the P L.

Look, I know it doesn’t work this way but … I’m 64, I had a triple bypass in January, I was there with 50 000 fans in 1979 when we first reached the top level. Saw us lose to United twice in previous cup finals, and I’ve been a fan for 53 years. Don’t I deserve us to lift the cup this year? Don’t I? Ah well, ok, understood, but hey, it’s a great day out anyway and let’s hope it’s a classic .cos I’m going to miss most of Eurovision for this😂

The big question for me today is whether I go to cheer on Palace down the pub or hide behind the sofa like I did for the semi-final.

Kai Havertz, it seems, has been “destroying metrics” in the Arsenal gym.

Jacob Steinberg reports on the forward’s rehabilitation from a hamstring injury:

Stephen Yoxall has been in touch: “Annual moan that the BBC coverage doesn’t start at 10am and last all day like it did in my day.”

I hear you Stephen. Here are some happy Hammers in 1980 just for good measure. (They beat Arsenal 1-0 that year with Trevor Brooking scoring the only goal in the final.)

West Ham United fans celebrate winning the FA Cup.
West Ham United fans celebrate winning the FA Cup. Photograph: Eamonn McCabe/The Guardian

And here’s a still from the BBC coverage in 1988, featuring the late Princess Diana handing the trophy to Wimbledon’s Dave Beasant.

 BBC coverage
FA Cup Final 1988: BBC coverage. Photograph: BBC

Two matches took place in His Majesty’s Premier League last night.

First, Aston Villa beat Tottenham in what it appears may have been Emiliano Martínez’s final match at Villa Park. Ben Fisher was there:

Kicking off a little later, Chelsea and Manchester United played out a largely dreary affair at Stamford Bridge: Marc Cucurella’s second-half header proved the difference in what may be a crucial result in the Blues’ attempt to qualify in for next season’s Champions League. Ben Bloom was on the scene:

Comments are open so please bombard me with your thoughts, including questions for Barney Ronay.

Alternatively you can email our matchday live address.

Jamie Jackson

Jamie Jackson

Pep Guardiola has taken a swipe at the Premier League for scheduling Manchester City’s penultimate fixture of the season, against Bournemouth on Tuesday, 72 hours after today’s FA Cup final meeting with Crystal Palace.

Preamble

The FA Cup is back.

True, it never went away, but it just feels bigger this season. The reasons for that may be numerous and we need not be concerned with them now. All that matters is that in several hours Crystal Palace and Manchester City will stride on to the Wembley turf to contest one of the more eagerly-awaited finals of recent years.

This blog, your one-stop shop for all the buildup, will run until 4pm, otherwise known as half an hour before kick-off. We’ve got plenty to get through including a Q and A with Barney Ronay at Wembley. (Post your questions for Barney in the comments at your leisure, and he’ll be here to answer them at around 2.30pm.)

There are also league games in Scotland and Germany that we’ll be keeping on top of, bringing you the big moments, as well as the League Two playoff semi-final between AFC Wimbledon and Notts County (12.30pm KO BST).

Team news, all the buildup and completely over-the-top hype will be coming thick and fast so sit back, relax, and let the football commence.

Men’s FA Cup final kick-off time: 4.30pm BST

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