"It's just surreal": jubilant Macclesfield fans reflect on FA Cup heroics
As Macclesfield FC players prepare to return to their day jobs on Monday, they will have earned a new title: giant-killers. The Cheshire market town club 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.
For lifelong fan Richard Snape, watching his beloved Silkmen at Moss Rose Stadium on Sunday was a dream come true. "Last night I kept thinking I'm just going to wake up and it's all a dream," he said, still trying to process the enormity of their achievement. "It's unbelievable. I still haven't got over it, to be honest." For Snape, who has been supporting Macclesfield since 1987, this victory was a phoenix-like rise from oblivion, just five years after the club was wound up and sold on the property website Rightmove.
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, with even Crystal Palace fans joining in the festivities. "I heard one walking down the high street singing: 'We were shit, we were shit, we were shit,'" said Tom Broadhead, whose father was at the game on Saturday and compared the atmosphere to Live Aid rather than a football match.
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 team's captain, Paul Dawson, a former highway supervisor who now works for a friend's candle business, scored two goals and led his side to victory.
"It was another level," said Bob Trafford, the club's head of sponsorships, trying to piece together the night before. "I can't remember it. The politically correct answer is: we celebrated." For Trafford, this achievement would outlive him and his fellow players. "What we did will outlive us all," he said. "When we're dead and gone, people will still reflect on that day. That's the closest thing to immortality you will ever get."
For fans like Lorraine Chapman, who moved to Macclesfield from New Zealand, this victory is a testament to the town's spirit. "Rob Smethurst knows our names, the players know our names," she said, referring to the club's local businessman owner. "Before Christmas, there were nearly 2,000 kids out on the pitch β that's what it's all about. I don't think you would get that at the big clubs."
Macclesfield's success has also inspired confidence across the town. Tom Broadhead hopes the FA Cup heroics will prove infectious and inspire confidence: "It's about the art of the possible. The fact that we can strive and achieve great things with a positive attitude, even in very adverse circumstances β that goes further than just the football club."
As Macclesfield FC players prepare to return to their day jobs on Monday, they will have earned a new title: giant-killers. The Cheshire market town club 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.
For lifelong fan Richard Snape, watching his beloved Silkmen at Moss Rose Stadium on Sunday was a dream come true. "Last night I kept thinking I'm just going to wake up and it's all a dream," he said, still trying to process the enormity of their achievement. "It's unbelievable. I still haven't got over it, to be honest." For Snape, who has been supporting Macclesfield since 1987, this victory was a phoenix-like rise from oblivion, just five years after the club was wound up and sold on the property website Rightmove.
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, with even Crystal Palace fans joining in the festivities. "I heard one walking down the high street singing: 'We were shit, we were shit, we were shit,'" said Tom Broadhead, whose father was at the game on Saturday and compared the atmosphere to Live Aid rather than a football match.
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 team's captain, Paul Dawson, a former highway supervisor who now works for a friend's candle business, scored two goals and led his side to victory.
"It was another level," said Bob Trafford, the club's head of sponsorships, trying to piece together the night before. "I can't remember it. The politically correct answer is: we celebrated." For Trafford, this achievement would outlive him and his fellow players. "What we did will outlive us all," he said. "When we're dead and gone, people will still reflect on that day. That's the closest thing to immortality you will ever get."
For fans like Lorraine Chapman, who moved to Macclesfield from New Zealand, this victory is a testament to the town's spirit. "Rob Smethurst knows our names, the players know our names," she said, referring to the club's local businessman owner. "Before Christmas, there were nearly 2,000 kids out on the pitch β that's what it's all about. I don't think you would get that at the big clubs."
Macclesfield's success has also inspired confidence across the town. Tom Broadhead hopes the FA Cup heroics will prove infectious and inspire confidence: "It's about the art of the possible. The fact that we can strive and achieve great things with a positive attitude, even in very adverse circumstances β that goes further than just the football club."