Port Vale’s unlikely FA Cup run has a familiar guide
Port Vale are back in territory their supporters have waited a generation to revisit — and as they prepare to welcome Sunderland to Vale Park on Sunday, they will lean on an unlikely advantage for a League One side: genuine, modern FA Cup final experience.
Veteran striker Andre Gray, part of Watford’s 2019 FA Cup final squad, offers something few in the home dressing room can match — an understanding of the unique pressure, pace and spotlight that comes with the competition’s latter stages. For a club stepping into the fifth round for the first time in 30 years, that lived experience matters.
The sense of occasion around Burslem is not new. The walls of Vale Park still carry reminders of one of the club’s most cherished cup nights, when John Rudge’s team beat Everton 2-1 in a 1996 fourth-round replay after holding the holders at Goodison Park. That remains a touchstone moment for fans — and until midweek, it marked the last time Vale had gone this deep in the competition. Vale’s extra-time win over Bristol City on Tuesday changed that, setting up Sunday’s meeting with Sunderland and putting history back on the agenda (The Guardian).
⚽ Key Insight
Brady: make it a day the supporters talk about
Head coach Jon Brady has framed the challenge in emotional, rather than purely tactical, terms: turning a rare opportunity into a performance that lasts in the memory. The message from the touchline is clear — the fifth round is not just a milestone, it is a stage to create a moment supporters can carry with them for years (The Guardian).
That mindset is where Gray’s “pedigree” fits. Cup football compresses everything — expectation, intensity, momentum swings — into a single afternoon. When ties tighten, the value of players who have navigated major occasions before often shows in calmer decision-making: when to slow the game, when to press the advantage, and how to keep belief steady if the match turns.
Infographic: What’s at stake
Stage: FA Cup fifth round
Venue: Vale Park
Opponents: Sunderland
Port Vale milestone: First fifth-round appearance in 30 years
Experience boost: Andre Gray played in the 2019 FA Cup final (The Guardian)
Sunderland arrive as the higher-profile name, but cup ties at old-school grounds have a habit of levelling reputations. Vale Park will be tight, loud and emotionally invested, particularly with the home side riding the afterglow of an extra-time victory to get here. For Brady and his players, the task is to marry that emotion with discipline — the kind of composed edge that Gray’s career has been built on.
Whatever happens against Sunderland, Vale’s week has already restored the FA Cup as something tangible rather than nostalgic. But if they can combine Gray’s big-game understanding with the momentum of a packed home crowd, Sunday has the potential to become the next plaque on the wall.
Key Takeaways
- Port Vale have reached the FA Cup fifth round for the first time in 30 years after an extra-time win over Bristol City (The Guardian).
- Andre Gray’s experience includes involvement in the 2019 FA Cup final, offering valuable know-how for a rare occasion (The Guardian).
- Jon Brady wants a performance to remember as Sunderland visit Vale Park with history on the line (The Guardian).
- The club’s modern cup folklore still draws on the 1996 upset of Everton under John Rudge (The Guardian).