FA Cup Cardiff entered the FA Cup in the first round and were drawn against
Third Division North side
Darlington. Despite being considered heavy favourites, Cardiff could only manage a goalless draw in a result that was regarded as one of the surprise results of the round, with the home side being jeered off the pitch by their own supporters. The result was partly blamed on the substandard condition of the pitch at Cardiff's Ninian Park ground, with the surface being noted for its "deadness that made accurate passing impossible". In the second round, Cardiff were drawn against
Fulham. The match was played in difficult conditions with
The Times stating that the heavy rainfall meant that "good football was out of the question". The rapidly deteriorating pitch led the referee to halt the game for ten minutes before both sides agreed to continue play with Len Davies scoring the only goal of the match. Fellow First Division side Notts County were Cardiff's opponents in the third round, with County considered favourites for the tie. With Len Davies injured, his replacement Joe Nicholson opened the scoring before Jimmy Gill scored a second. Gill's goal received particular praise and was described as "the finest exhibition of artistry ever seen. With the ball at his feet, he evaded opponent after opponent, all after him like terriers and when he placed the ball in the net he gave
Iremonger no chance." More than 50,000 spectators attended the fixture and Leicester enjoyed the better play of the first half but it was Cardiff who took the lead early in the second half when Beadles headed in from Willie Davies' cross. Leicester quickly equalised when
Arthur Chandler's shot was parried by Cardiff goalkeeper
Tom Farquharson, allowing
Johnny Duncan to lift the ball over the stricken keeper and into the net. In the final moments of the game, Leicester defender
Adam Black cleared the ball out for an opposition corner after being pressured in possession. Willie Davies took the corner for Cardiff, sending the ball into the box where it looped over the head of the opposition goalkeeper and into the net.
The Times match report described the goal, writing "As it came across it seemed to hang in the wind and then took a quick swerve, curling into the farther corner of the net." The referee immediately blew his whistle for both the goal and the end of the match. As the rule stopping a player to score directly from a corner kick had only been lifted the previous year, there was initially confusion in the ground as to whether the goal stood before some Cardiff fans invaded the pitch and engulfed Willie Davies in celebration. He later recalled his goal and the moments after, remarking "I took it in a hurry with my right foot. The swerve on the ball beat everybody and it went straight into the net! I had forgotten, in the excitement, that a goal could now be scored direct from the corner-flag, but the next minute I was being mobbed by thousands of spectators." The team's victory over Leicester saw them reach the semifinal of the FA Cup for the second time in five seasons where they were drawn against fellow First Division side Blackburn Rovers. With semifinal ties traditionally played at a neutral venue, the match was held at
Meadow Lane, the home ground of Notts County, attracting a relatively low crowd of 20,000. Cardiff made a last minute change when Len Davies was replaced by Nicholson in the starting line-up and it was Nicholson who opened the scoring after just six minutes when he headed in after a goalmouth scramble from a corner. Gill and Beadles added two further goals after mistakes in the Blackburn defence to give their side an unassailable lead. Blackburn scored a late consolation goal through
John McKay but were unable to breach the Cardiff defence again despite sustained pressure. By defeating Blackburn, Cardiff became the first Welsh club to reach an FA Cup final and the first non-English team to do so since Scottish side
Queens Park in 1885. Despite recovering from injury, Len Davies was left out of the side with Nicholson keeping his place. Around 92,000 spectators attended the
final against Sheffield United at
Wembley Stadium with the match dubbed "The Jubilee Final" as the 50th final in the competition's history. The match was deemed to be low on quality with
The Times reporting that more than two-thirds of the final were "never first-class."
Match results ;Key • In result column, Cardiff City's score shown first • H = Home match • A = Away match • N = Neutral venue • pen. =
Penalty kick • o.g. =
Own goal ;Results
Welsh Cup Cardiff entered the
Welsh Cup in the fifth round, being drawn against
South Wales rivals
Swansea Town. Manager Fred Stewart chose to rest several first team players for the match and they went on to suffer a 4–0 defeat.
Match results ;Key • In result column, Cardiff City's score shown first • H = Home match • A = Away match • pen. =
Penalty kick • o.g. =
Own goal ;Results ==Player details==