West Bromwich Albion Birmingham and West Bromwich Albion were playing in the
First Division and
Second Division respectively, thus both entered the competition at the third round stage. Albion began their cup campaign by drawing 2–2 at home against
Charlton Athletic, with goals from
Stan Wood and
Teddy Sandford. The replay at
The Valley also ended in a draw (1–1), and with
extra time unable to separate the teams, a second replay was required at
Villa Park, where goals from
Joe Carter, Stan Wood and
W. G. Richardson gave Albion a 3–1 victory. Wood also scored the only goal of the game in round four against
Tottenham Hotspur to set up a fifth round tie with First Division
Portsmouth, the only top division side that Albion faced en route to
Wembley; W. G. Richardson's goal was enough to give Albion a 1–0 victory. The quarter-final stage saw Albion paired with local rivals
Wolverhampton Wanderers, whom they had already beaten both home and away during the league season. After a 1–1 draw at
The Hawthorns, Albion won the replay at
Molineux 2–1, thanks to goals from W. G. Richardson and Stan Wood. In the semi-final at
Old Trafford, Albion faced
Everton, who at that time were 13 points clear at the top of the Second Division. Everton dominated the first half but were unable to score from any of the chances they created, and it was Albion who broke the deadlock ten minutes into the second half. Albion captain
Tommy Glidden played the ball into the Everton penalty area from near the halfway line, and aided by a gust of wind it sailed past Everton goalkeeper
Billy Coggins and into the net. The match was played in front of 69,241 spectators, setting a new attendance record for Old Trafford.
Birmingham In the third round, Birmingham "won finely" at
Anfield to defeat First Division opponents
Liverpool 2–0, with goals from
Ernie Curtis and
Joe Bradford. In the fourth, they repeated the scoreline at home to
Port Vale of the
Second Division, both goals scored by Bradford,
Chelsea provided stiffer opposition for the Birmingham team, a number of whose players were still recovering from
influenza, on a
St Andrew's pitch treacherous after overnight sleet. The visitors had much the better of the first half.
Alex Jackson gave them the lead, and, in blizzard conditions,
George Mills appeared to have scored in a goalmouth scramble, only for the goal to be disallowed after the Birmingham players drew the referee's attention to his
linesman who had flagged for the ball having gone out of play. Six minutes into the second half, the lead had changed hands. First
George Briggs crossed for a Bradford header, then the same pair combined for Curtis to put Birmingham ahead. Birmingham's defence held out until a misplaced clearance by
Bob Gregg allowed
Jackie Crawford to equalise. The replay at Chelsea's
Stamford Bridge attracted a crowd of 74,365, then a ground record, with 6,000 locked out; spectators broke through the barriers and sat round the edge of the pitch. Briggs, in front of an empty goal, allowed a centre from Curtis to pass between his legs – "an amazing miss" – before Chelsea centre-half
John Townrow sustained an injury which forced him to leave the field. Chelsea reorganised their personnel, but early in the second half, right-half
Sid Bishop was hurt twice in quick succession, leaving him in a worse condition than Townrow and his team short of numbers – no
substitutes were permitted – with players in unaccustomed positions. Though they held out well, a goal from
Jack Firth and two from Bradford, the second of which scored from an
offside position, gave Birmingham a 3–0 victory. Birmingham faced First Division
Sunderland in the semi-final at
Elland Road,
Leeds.
The Times predicted a "hard game" in which "the first goal ... may decide the result". After half an hour Birmingham took the lead via a powerful shot by Curtis. Sunderland's players appealed in vain for the award of a penalty for handling the ball, their forwards failed to take numerous chances, and Birmingham's
England international goalkeeper
Harry Hibbs – described by Sunderland's
Bobby Gurney as playing "an absolute blinder" – made some fine saves. With three minutes left, Curtis's shot from a Bradford cross was blocked by Sunderland's goalkeeper, Bradford "rushed in to help his colleague and between them they scored the second goal". ==Build-up==