Macclesfield FC has pulled off the greatest shock in FA Cup history, knocking out Premier League team Crystal Palace and becoming the first non-league opposition to beat cupholders since 1909. The Cheshire market town club's part-time squad of PE teachers, podcasters, and property developers will add one more title: giant-killers.
The victory caps a phoenix-like rise from oblivion barely five years after Macclesfield Town FC was wound up by the high court with debts of over ยฃ500,000. Lifelong fan Richard Snape, who has been watching his beloved Silkmen since 1987, was back at the 6,000-capacity Moss Rose Stadium on Sunday to buy souvenir scarves and check if it was all just a dream. "Last night I kept thinking I'm just going to wake up and it's all a dream," he said. "It's unbelievable. I still haven't got over it, to be honest. For quite a few days now, it will just be surreal."
The team's heroics were led by captain Paul Dawson, who scored the only goal of the game despite being injured just minutes after coming on. Macclesfield's triumph was all the more poignant as it came only weeks after the death of their 21-year-old forward, Ethan McLeod, in a car accident on the way back from a game.
The celebrations lasted long into the night, with many of Macclesfield's jubilant players out until the early hours celebrating with fans. The town was packed with pubs and even Crystal Palace fans joined in the celebrations, with one fan heard singing "We were shit, we were shit, we were shit." Tom Broadhead, a 35-year-old local who designs and sells merchandise bearing his hometown's name and heritage, proudly showed off a Macclesfield FC jumper with a scarf embroidered across the front. He hopes the FA Cup heroics will prove infectious and inspire confidence across the town.
Macclesfield's manager, John Rooney, said: "What we did will outlive us all." The club's head of sponsorships, Bob Trafford, echoed this sentiment, saying that the victory was a reward for all the hard work. As one fan noted, Macclesfield FC is no longer just about football - it's about the art of the possible and striving to achieve great things despite adversity.
The victory caps a phoenix-like rise from oblivion barely five years after Macclesfield Town FC was wound up by the high court with debts of over ยฃ500,000. Lifelong fan Richard Snape, who has been watching his beloved Silkmen since 1987, was back at the 6,000-capacity Moss Rose Stadium on Sunday to buy souvenir scarves and check if it was all just a dream. "Last night I kept thinking I'm just going to wake up and it's all a dream," he said. "It's unbelievable. I still haven't got over it, to be honest. For quite a few days now, it will just be surreal."
The team's heroics were led by captain Paul Dawson, who scored the only goal of the game despite being injured just minutes after coming on. Macclesfield's triumph was all the more poignant as it came only weeks after the death of their 21-year-old forward, Ethan McLeod, in a car accident on the way back from a game.
The celebrations lasted long into the night, with many of Macclesfield's jubilant players out until the early hours celebrating with fans. The town was packed with pubs and even Crystal Palace fans joined in the celebrations, with one fan heard singing "We were shit, we were shit, we were shit." Tom Broadhead, a 35-year-old local who designs and sells merchandise bearing his hometown's name and heritage, proudly showed off a Macclesfield FC jumper with a scarf embroidered across the front. He hopes the FA Cup heroics will prove infectious and inspire confidence across the town.
Macclesfield's manager, John Rooney, said: "What we did will outlive us all." The club's head of sponsorships, Bob Trafford, echoed this sentiment, saying that the victory was a reward for all the hard work. As one fan noted, Macclesfield FC is no longer just about football - it's about the art of the possible and striving to achieve great things despite adversity.