FA Cup legends Peter Osgood and Jim Montgomery will be picking the balls for the Third Round.
Heroes in for Draw
Wednesday, 23 November 2005.
The FA Cup
Third Round Proper
Saturday 07 January 2006 3pm
Winning clubs will receive £40,000
The Draw will be made at Soho Square on Sunday 4 December and it will be covered live on the BBC, Sky Sports and Radio Five Live.
One scored in every round of The FA Cup and the other produced goalkeeping heroics to help his side lift the famous trophy.
They are former Chelsea striker Peter Osgood and former Sunderland goalkeeper Jim Montgomery, and together they will make the draw for the Third Round of this year's competition at Soho Square.
Osgood made 286 appearances for Chelsea, scoring 105 goals. He is one of only nine players to score in every round of The FA Cup, helping Chelsea to victory in the Final replay in 1970.
The following year Osgood was part of the Chelsea team which lifted the European Cup Winners' Cup after defeating Real Madrid.
He also scored for Chelsea in the League Cup Final two years after his FA Cup goal, but he was on the losing side on this occasion as Chelsea went down 2-1 to Stoke City.
Later he joined Southampton, lifting The FA Cup again in 1976 after a famous victory over Manchester United. While playing for Chelsea he was selected for England for the 1970 World Cup squad and won four caps for his country.
Montgomery was part of the Sunderland team that won The FA Cup in 1973, triumphing over a Leeds United side who were appearing in their eighth final in all competitions in nine seasons.
The Second Division no-hopers struck the crucial goal on 31 minutes - Ian Porterfield bringing the ball down and volleying home in one sweet flowing movement to roars of approval from Sunderland fans - and somehow they held firm.
Montgomery was outstanding during the fightback from Leeds, preserving the lead and his clean sheet with a string of fine saves. The best of the lot came as Montgomery, having kept out Trevor Cherry's header, twisted up from a prostrate position to acrobatically turn away Peter Lorimer's follow-up.
The final whistle prompted delirious celebrations, not least from manager Bob Stokoe, who ran to embrace hero Montgomery for one of Wembley's most enduring memories.