MANCHESTER, England — A non-league team against the defending champion. It's what the FA Cup is all about.
Macclesfield — a phoenix club playing in the sixth tier of English soccer — hosts Premier League side Crystal Palace on Saturday, hoping to pull off a memorable upset.
The third round of the FA Cup — soccer's oldest knockout competition — is one of the most anticipated weekends in the sport's calendar as England's top clubs enter the draw and can be pitted against lowly opposition.
It can see part-time players come up against international superstars and small grounds host teams more accustomed to performing at the world's biggest stadiums.
And such a clash of cultures have produced historic giant-killings.
There was the time when — long before Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac — the then-fourth tier Wrexham knocked out reigning league champion Arsenal in 1992.
In 1988, non-league Sutton United dumped out Coventry, which was then a topflight team and holder of the Cup.
So the warning signs are there for Palace as it begins its defense of the trophy it won last May by stunning Manchester City in the final to lift its first major trophy.