Exeter City (H) | FA Cup | Post Match Thread

Wow didn’t know this we make history again!

No, even across the entire history of English football (since the formation of the Football League in 1888 and the FA Cup in 1871), Manchester City appear to be the only team to have scored 10 or more goals in two separate competitive domestic matches (English league, FA Cup, or League Cup) against two different opponents.

Scoring 10+ goals in these competitions has always been extraordinarily rare, particularly in the professional era. Extreme mismatches were more common in the very early days (pre-1900s), but even then, few clubs achieved multiple such feats in the specified competitions against different sides.

### Manchester City's Unique Achievement
- 10-1 vs Huddersfield Town (Division 2 league match, November 7, 1987).
- 10-1 vs Exeter City (FA Cup third round, January 10, 2026).

These are separated by nearly 39 years, in different competitions, against different opponents — and records consistently highlight this as a first for any English top-flight (or formerly top-flight) club in modern history. Manchester City themselves had an earlier 10-1 FA Cup win vs Swindon Town in 1930, but that would make three for them if counting all — however, the recent pair alone already stands out as unmatched by others.

### Why No Other Team Matches This
- Single 10+ wins are well-documented but isolated:
- Liverpool: 10-0 vs Fulham (League Cup, 1986) — their only one in these comps.
- Tottenham: 13-2 vs Crewe (FA Cup, 1960) — their standout, but no second.
- Various historical highs (e.g., Preston North End's massive 19th-century wins like 26-0 in an early FA Cup, or other 10+ league results in the 1880s/1890s), but these were often against amateur or very weak sides, and no club has two verified 10+ wins in league/FA Cup/League Cup against different opponents post-1888.
- The last league 10+ before City's 1987 was decades earlier; no repeats by the same team.
- Cup competitions (especially FA Cup early rounds) occasionally saw blowouts, but records show no club with multiple double-digit wins in the specified trio of competitions.

Modern football's professionalism, tactical discipline, substitutions, and sportsmanship mean teams rarely push for extreme scores even when dominating. Historical data from Opta, club archives, and football records sites confirm no other team has this double (or more) in English domestic league/cup football.

Manchester City's pair is genuinely unique across the full history — a remarkable statistical quirk in the sport!
 
Wow didn’t know this we make history again!

No, even across the entire history of English football (since the formation of the Football League in 1888 and the FA Cup in 1871), Manchester City appear to be the only team to have scored 10 or more goals in two separate competitive domestic matches (English league, FA Cup, or League Cup) against two different opponents.

Scoring 10+ goals in these competitions has always been extraordinarily rare, particularly in the professional era. Extreme mismatches were more common in the very early days (pre-1900s), but even then, few clubs achieved multiple such feats in the specified competitions against different sides.

### Manchester City's Unique Achievement
- 10-1 vs Huddersfield Town (Division 2 league match, November 7, 1987).
- 10-1 vs Exeter City (FA Cup third round, January 10, 2026).

These are separated by nearly 39 years, in different competitions, against different opponents — and records consistently highlight this as a first for any English top-flight (or formerly top-flight) club in modern history. Manchester City themselves had an earlier 10-1 FA Cup win vs Swindon Town in 1930, but that would make three for them if counting all — however, the recent pair alone already stands out as unmatched by others.

### Why No Other Team Matches This
- Single 10+ wins are well-documented but isolated:
- Liverpool: 10-0 vs Fulham (League Cup, 1986) — their only one in these comps.
- Tottenham: 13-2 vs Crewe (FA Cup, 1960) — their standout, but no second.
- Various historical highs (e.g., Preston North End's massive 19th-century wins like 26-0 in an early FA Cup, or other 10+ league results in the 1880s/1890s), but these were often against amateur or very weak sides, and no club has two verified 10+ wins in league/FA Cup/League Cup against different opponents post-1888.
- The last league 10+ before City's 1987 was decades earlier; no repeats by the same team.
- Cup competitions (especially FA Cup early rounds) occasionally saw blowouts, but records show no club with multiple double-digit wins in the specified trio of competitions.

Modern football's professionalism, tactical discipline, substitutions, and sportsmanship mean teams rarely push for extreme scores even when dominating. Historical data from Opta, club archives, and football records sites confirm no other team has this double (or more) in English domestic league/cup football.

Manchester City's pair is genuinely unique across the full history — a remarkable statistical quirk in the sport!
Amazing stat that
 
Three encouraging signs from yesterday.
1. Semenyo fitted in as if he’d been here for years.
2. The number of very good youngsters from the academy.
3. Rodri goal: standing on ‘point’ he put everything into that shot, a sign of growing fitness. A beautifully timed unstoppable thunder blaster
 
Wow didn’t know this we make history again!

No, even across the entire history of English football (since the formation of the Football League in 1888 and the FA Cup in 1871), Manchester City appear to be the only team to have scored 10 or more goals in two separate competitive domestic matches (English league, FA Cup, or League Cup) against two different opponents.

Scoring 10+ goals in these competitions has always been extraordinarily rare, particularly in the professional era. Extreme mismatches were more common in the very early days (pre-1900s), but even then, few clubs achieved multiple such feats in the specified competitions against different sides.

### Manchester City's Unique Achievement
- 10-1 vs Huddersfield Town (Division 2 league match, November 7, 1987).
- 10-1 vs Exeter City (FA Cup third round, January 10, 2026).

These are separated by nearly 39 years, in different competitions, against different opponents — and records consistently highlight this as a first for any English top-flight (or formerly top-flight) club in modern history. Manchester City themselves had an earlier 10-1 FA Cup win vs Swindon Town in 1930, but that would make three for them if counting all — however, the recent pair alone already stands out as unmatched by others.

### Why No Other Team Matches This
- Single 10+ wins are well-documented but isolated:
- Liverpool: 10-0 vs Fulham (League Cup, 1986) — their only one in these comps.
- Tottenham: 13-2 vs Crewe (FA Cup, 1960) — their standout, but no second.
- Various historical highs (e.g., Preston North End's massive 19th-century wins like 26-0 in an early FA Cup, or other 10+ league results in the 1880s/1890s), but these were often against amateur or very weak sides, and no club has two verified 10+ wins in league/FA Cup/League Cup against different opponents post-1888.
- The last league 10+ before City's 1987 was decades earlier; no repeats by the same team.
- Cup competitions (especially FA Cup early rounds) occasionally saw blowouts, but records show no club with multiple double-digit wins in the specified trio of competitions.

Modern football's professionalism, tactical discipline, substitutions, and sportsmanship mean teams rarely push for extreme scores even when dominating. Historical data from Opta, club archives, and football records sites confirm no other team has this double (or more) in English domestic league/cup football.

Manchester City's pair is genuinely unique across the full history — a remarkable statistical quirk in the sport!
City also beat Crystal Palace 11-4 in the FA Cup 5th Round in 1926.

We lost 1-0 in the final to Bolton that year.
 
Never would have believed how anti-City Sky are, but if you look at the top stories in the news tab on the app, our 10-1 win is 19TH on the list.

Could have understood that a couple of days in, but half a day after the match? Was the same when we put 6 past the rags.
 

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