LINCOLN, England (AP) — The team looking to pull off possibly the biggest shock in the FA Cup's 146-year history is coached by a pair of inseparable brothers who were teaching physical education in a secondary school just nine months ago.
It has a striker who was recently working in a factory making diggers, and a forward who runs his own mobile hairdressing business.
It's a club from a quiet, picturesque cathedral city in the east of England that hasn't played in the English professional leagues for six years and, not so long ago, had attendances of 2,000 people for its games.