List of non-League clubs in the Fifth Round of the FA Cup since 1925–26
Since the establishment of its current format in 1925, only 11 non-Leaguefootball clubs – that is, clubs outside the divisions of the Football League and, since 1992, the Premier League – have reached the Fifth Round of the FA Cup, to become one of the last 16 clubs in the competition. To date, only Lincoln City has subsequently reached the next round, the quarter-finals (previously known as the Sixth Round).[1][2]
The Football League was founded in 1888; prior to this, all teams entered the FA Cup as equals, and random byes were used where required based on the number of clubs entering.[a] A qualifying tournament was introduced in 1888–89, giving priority access to the first round for leading Football League clubs, though stronger non-League teams were also given direct entry, ahead of lower-ranked Football League teams.
After the foundation of the Football League, non-League teams reached the FA Cup Final on four occasions: The Wednesday of the Football Alliance in 1889–90, Southampton of the Southern League in 1899–1900 and 1901–02, and Tottenham Hotspur of the Southern League, who became the only non-League winners in 1900–01. The Football League continued to strengthen over time, and in 1920–21 it expanded to absorb the 20 strongest Southern League teams, followed by the addition of two more southern teams and 18 leading northern non-League clubs the following year, making the eminent so-called non-League divisions by this point feeders to the Football League rather than be running parallel to it.
The reformatting of the FA Cup to six rounds before the semi-finals was introduced a few years later for the 1925–26 FA Cup.[3] Prior to this new format, the last non-League teams to reach the last 16 were Southampton and Queens Park Rangers of the Southern League in 1914–15, after the latter had reached the quarter-finals in 1913–14.
To date, Lincoln City remains the only non-League side to have progressed past the fifth round to the quarter-finals. Prior to this, the last non–League side to reach the quarter finals were Queens Park Rangers in 1913–14, before the current format was introduced.
^The exception to this was the second tournament, the 1872–73 FA Cup, in which the holders Wanderers were awarded a bye to the final under the original intention to operate the Cup as a challenge tournament
^ abTier 4 was the highest non-League level at the time, as the Football League only had three tiers until the 1958–59 season.