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Everything posted by kushiro
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The Promotion Files #2: Glory for Gordon as Supermac Cracks Up
kushiro replied to kushiro's topic in Leicester City Forum
I'll consider your feelings next time. Sorry - that original post is possibly the longest ever on foxestalk. -
The Promotion Files #2: Glory for Gordon as Supermac Cracks Up
kushiro replied to kushiro's topic in Leicester City Forum
And the green away kit didn't help. I really liked that all red kit we wore in the Oldham video above - but that was the last time we ever wore it. New sponsors Ind Coope wanted us to wear their brand colours - green and gold. Could've been worse, actually. The company were keen for us to wear it at Filbert Street too. We might even have had Leicester green v Coventry brown - the worst kit combination in history (I think they'd ditched brown by then though). -
There's no 'phunny autographs' thread so I'll put this on here. Looking at a programme from the early 80s, I saw this: Eh? That's pretty wild. I mean, what's going on here - You'd never guess 'Lineker' in a million years, would you? What's going on with those loops? Then I realised. Gary's always been able to have a laugh at his own expense.
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The Promotion Files #2: Glory for Gordon as Supermac Cracks Up
kushiro replied to kushiro's topic in Leicester City Forum
There's a few more extras to post on this topic. When the Melrose-English swap happened, English had to give up his Sky Blue Talbot Solara that all the squad had been given in a sponsorship deal Jimmy Hill had signed. Hill wanted the club to change its name to Coventry Talbot, but they didn't get permission. There was also the kit, which had a massive T design. Here's Gerry Daly wearing it: I presume Jim Melrose got English's car because just after the move, this advert appeared in the Mercury: Zoom in on that and you see this: The advert kept appearing in the paper's motoring section every week, and two months later it still hadn't been sold. So - does anyone know who bought Melrose's motor? -
The Promotion Files #2: Glory for Gordon as Supermac Cracks Up
kushiro replied to kushiro's topic in Leicester City Forum
Gordon Milne's book is out soon. It'll be fascinating to see how much of it is devoted to his five years ar Filbert Street. He had a long and distinguished career, so don't be surprised if there's just a single chapter - rather like last year's Martin O'Neill book. Still - it should be well worth reading. Malcolm Macdonald published his life story many years ago. The cover picture was pretty interesting: That's from the 1974 FA Cup Final when Newcastle were outclassed by Liverpool 3-0. Typically, Supermac had spent the days leading up to the final saying just what he was going to do to Liverpool. But on the day he completely misfired. Here's that moment from a different angle: That's a still from a video. And if you watch the video, you can see how good that shot was: That was the cover of his autobiography! Here's Gordon's forthcoming book: -
The Promotion Files #2: Glory for Gordon as Supermac Cracks Up
kushiro replied to kushiro's topic in Leicester City Forum
Youngy always regretted leaving. He never had anything like the same success at Sheff Utd, Brighton and Notts County. Have you read his book? It's pretty harrowing. Melrose had a few high points - though the collision with Steve Walsh in 1987 during the Charlton - Leicester game wasn't one of them. Walsh was sent off and Melrose was 'knocked out cold'. -
It's all going so well, isn't it. Carry on like this and we'll break all the records, surpassing even 1956/57 and 2013/14, those other seasons when we cruised to promotion. But don't be surprised if it isn't quite that simple. For Leicester, promotion seasons are often less of a cruise, more of a rollercoaster. Martin O'Neill has never forgotten the darkest hour of his promotion season, March 30th 1996 . 'The crowd became very restive', he quipped recently, 'in fact, more than restive - they were downright unaccommodating. It's a tale you're no doubt familiar with. There's a similar story a bit further back in history. January 22nd 1983 - a date Gordon Milne has probably never forgotten. Given the circumstances, his eventual triumph was even more impressive than O'Neill's. But this is a story no-one knows - at least, not in any detail. Because it's never been told before. Time to put that right. Not My Gaffer Gordon Milne arrived in August 1982 after Jock Wallace suddenly quit, accepting a lucrative offer from Motherwell. Wallace's departure was a real shock - for the fans, who loved him, for the players, who would run through brick walls for him, and for the board of directors, who'd offered him an unprecedented seven year contract (only two years of which had been completed). The contrast with Wallace handicapped Milne from the start. No City manager had ever had the rapport with the fans that Big Jock enjoyed. The team played with the 'battle fever' mentality he demanded - none more so than his fellow Scot at centre forward, celebrated in song on the Kop: 'He's here, he's there, he's every ***king-where, Alan Young, Alan Young!. And that could equally apply to Wallace himself - his personality was stamped over every corner of the club, on and off the field. Milne's style was very different. The fans took time to get to know him - and many weren't sure they liked what they saw when they did. Just like Jock, the way Milne's team played reflected his personality. Less direct, more patient, more thoughtful. After the Wallace years, many found the change hard to accept. It was just like Martin O'Neill in 1995/96, with fans pining for Mark McGhee, though in that case it was precisely the opposite form of nostalgia, with O'Neill's direct style seeming like a backwards step after McGhee's possession-based approach. Another problem for Milne was his CV. He'd spent the previous ten years at Coventry City. Fans were wary of a man so steeped in Sky Blue - and that was before the season started. When the action began, all these points came together in a perfect storm. First, Jock Wallace's key men departed. When you've been playing for a manager you respect so much, it can feel like a betrayal to suddenly switch your loyalties. Alan Young left for Sheffield United, saying he simply 'couldn't accept Milne as gaffer' (similar again to 95/96, when Steve Corica told Martin O'Neill that he wanted to go to Wolves because of how much he 'respected Mr. McGhee'. Next to quit was Jim Melrose, Wallace's other big money signing. This was the moment when things really started going wrong, so let's look at what happened in some detail: Melrose and English City were lying ninth in Division Two on September 14th when it happened. This was the Coventry Evening Telegraph that day: And this was the Mercury the same day: Yes - an M69 swap. Melrose, hugely popular at Filbert Street, exchanged for Tommy English, a man whose relationship with Coventry fans could not be described in similar terms. Leicester fans suspected they'd got the worst of the deal, but Milne said everything would be OK. He promised that English, the man he'd developed at Highfield Road, would score more goals than Melrose. Let's see how that went. Melrose had a sensational home debut for Coventry, scoring a hattrick against Everton. Leicester were at home to QPR that day, with English in the side. We lost 1-0 - already our third home defeat of the season. News of the hattrick spread round the terraces, and the chant began: 'One Jim Melrose! There's only one Jim Melrose! One Jim Melrose! There's only one Jim Melrose!' Milne must have loved that. And if that wasn't enough, the next roar from Pen 3 was: 'Jock Wall - ace! Jock Wall - ace!'. The following week, Melrose scored again at Maine Road, while English was yet to get off the mark. That was followed four days later by a Melrose double in the League Cup at Fulham, while we were losing 2-0 at Lincoln City. The Coventry Evening Telegraph again: So the score so far was Melrose 6 English 0. 'The worst fears of Leicester City fans over the Melrose-English swap are starting to come true', said the report. Melrose then decided to put the boot in: 'Gordon Milne must wince every time he reads the papers these days', he said. Two weeks later, Milne signed Jimmy Holmes on loan. He was another ex-Coventry man. He made his debut at left back in a 2-0 home defeat to Sheffield Wednesday. The following week, it was Holmes' disastrous back pass that led to Cambridge United's clincher in a 3-1 win at Abbey Stadium. That was the last we saw of Jimmy Holmes - he never played for us again. In early December, the team of the season (so far) arrived at Filbert Street - Fulham, managed by 'Supermac' - Malcolm Macdonald. They were second, behind QPR, and if they won their game in hand they'd go top. We were way down in 15th place. The idea that we could finish the season above them would have seemed ludicrously fanciful. Fulham were playing great football, never more so than in a devastating 4-1 win at St. James Park, a very special day for old Geordie hero Macdonald. Watch the first 90 seconds of this video and see how impressively they tear Newcastle to shreds in the first half with a three goal burst: Macdonald was only 32. He'd had to quit the game early due to injury, but now he was back in the limelight. The day before the game at Filbert Street, he signed a lucrative deal to write a weekly column for the Daily Mirror: Looks pretty confident, doesn't he? With Fulham flying high, perhaps it was justified. But the season wasn't even half over yet. The game at Filbert Street was still goalless with time running out when our season was rescued - by a divot. A header from Alan Smith was about to be collected comfortably on the bounce by Fulham keeper Gerry Peyton. But the ball didn't bounce. It hit a divot and shot forward, rebounding off Peyton's shins to give David Buchanan the chance to put City ahead. 'The ball hit a hole and shot along the ground', Macdonald lamented afterwards. We then added another and Fulham's great run was over. You can see that divot here - just to the right of Peyton: And you can see the goal here: Our second goal that day was scored by Gary Lineker. With Young and Melrose gone, he was developing a new striking partnership with Alan Smith, Wallace's last signing. Lineker had actually been dropped after a lack lustre performance in Milne's very first game (another home defeat - to Charlton), but he was now hitting form. We followed up that Fulham win with two more, and there was talk of us getting back in the promotion race. But then came January, and the darkest hours of Milne's reign at Leicester. To introduce what happened, let's take a short detour - on to the motorway that lies at the heart of this whole story: The M69 Gordon Milne could be forgiven for thinking that the M69 had been planned and constructed entirely for his own personal convenience. When he became Coventry manager in 1972, he had a house built in Burbage, midway between Coventry and Leicester, and when the Sky Blues weren't playing he loved to watch games at Filbert Street, long before he took over as our boss. His route would take him along the A46 - part of the old Fosse Way. Milne was no doubt aware of the link to the origins of the club. In 1976, that journey was made easier when the first section of the M69 was opened - rolled out like a red carpet between the M1 and Burbage, very close to his house. Six months later, the second section opened - from Burbage to Ansty near Coventry - and his daily commute was now so much more straight forward. When he joined Leicester he joked that a 13 mile trip one way had now become a 13 mile trip in the opposite direction. That brings us to events late at night on Thursday, January 5th, 1983. As is so often the case when calamity strikes, you can only fully understand what happened by looking at a whole chain of events. This particular sequence started eight months earlier - at the biggest game of Jock Wallace's time at Leicester, the FA Cup Semi-Final against Spurs at Villa Park. Everything went wrong that day - players off form, Ian Wilson's own goal, and not least, Tommy Williams breaking his right leg in a challenge with Tony Galvin. It wasn't until December, just after that Fulham game, that Williams was ready to return to first team action. But then tragedy struck again. On the morning of January 6th during a routine training session, Williams was tackled by Dave Buchanan, and broke the same leg again. Buchanan's challenge was described as 'run-of-the-mill'. The injury was apparently a freak accident. But that was little consolation for Williams. He'd played just four games since coming back, and now it looked like his season was over. 'It's a terrible blow', said Milne, 'I'm so sorry for the lad'. Milne decided to offer more than just words of consolation. That evening, along with Commercial Manager Peter Hill, he drove round to Williams' house with a bottle of champagne. The three shared the bottle between them, after which Milne headed down the M69 to his Burbage home. It was a freezing night, and around midnight, about four miles from home, Milne lost control of his Mercedes on the icy surface and skidded onto the embankment, the car striking a marker post and coming to rest in the snow. Milne got out of the car and a passing motorist, a Mr. Wilf Goss, stopped to assist him, giving him a lift the short journey home to Burbage. Shortly afterwards, a police motorway control car passed the scene of the crash. PC Peter Jefferies, on finding the abandoned Mercedes, checked the number plate and phoned though to the national computer centre, who told him the owner's details. Jefferies then drove to Milne's Burbage address. Milne at first denied that he'd been driving the car, and wouldn't say who had been. He refused to take a breathalyser test. PC Jefferies tried to arrest him, but Milne resisted, at which point Jefferies called for support. After what reports described as 'a struggle', Milne was placed in a police car and taken back down the M69 to Wigston Police Station, passing his abandoned Mercedes on the opposite carriageway along the way. At Wigston he gave a sample which revealed 182 milligrams of alcohol in 100 ml of blood - more than twice the legal limit of 80mg. It's unclear what time he got home that night, or how he got into work the next morning. But when he did arrive he had a big decision to make. Who would replace Williams at left back in the FA Cup tie at home to Notts County the following day? Paul Friar was the obvious choice, having already played in 20 games that season, but Milne sprang a surprise by giving a debut to 18 year old Paul Brown. When the game started, County raced into a three goal lead, and two very late goals in reply couldn't disguise the reality of an easy win for the Magpies. He couldn't be singled out for blame any more than his teammates, but Brown never played for the club again. We could now concentrate on the League. But the following week we lost at Charlton, and it looked like the season was already over. Was Milne regretting his move to Leicester? He had been in the job six months. From his own fans there was suspicion, verging on hostility. From ex-players there was rejection (Young) and ridicule (Melrose). And from the law there now came a summons to appear before Hinckley magistrates. The threat of a conviction for drink driving would hang over the remainder of the season. And that wasn't all. Perhaps the biggest obstacle Milne had to overcome that season was financial. While other Division Two clubs made extravagant signings (witness the extraordinary arrival of two recent European Footballer of the Year Winners - Kevin Keegan at Newcastle and Allan Simonsen at Charlton), Leicester City didn't have two pennies to rub together. When he took over, the board made the situation plain. There was no money to spend, and even if he sold players, the proceeds would go towards running costs. His main task, he was told, was to address 'the gross over-staffing at the club'. He had to make drastic cuts to the squad. Drastic cuts. Two words that sum up the economy of the UK in the early 80s. Drastic cuts that led to a deep recession, and soaring unemployment. The new figures had just been released - an unbelievable 3.1 million people were now out of work. Throughout January, the BBC was showing the Alan Bleasdale drama 'Boys From The Blackstuff', which told of the impact of unemployment on the people of Liverpool - including Yosser 'Giz a Job' Hughes. But it wasn't just in the north that unemployment was devastating communities. In mid-January, right here in M69 country, the anger was plain to see. And it was here that the two narratives converged, political controversy providing an illuminating counterpoint to events at Filbert Street. It was two days before the Leicester v Blackburn game, the low point of the season. Employment Secretary Norman Tebbit, 'Thatcher's skinhead' as some called him, was visiting the Jaguar car plant in Coventry. That was the plan anyway. When news of his visit spread, the entire workforce of 3,000 threatened to come out on strike if Tebbit set foot inside the building. Union leader Bob Ainsworth said, 'Nearly everyone here has a friend or relative who has been put on the dole by Tory policies'. Tebbit was forced to change his plans. The following day, Friday, Tebbit headed up the motorway to Leicester. He visited an IT centre at the Magazine Workspace in Newarke Street, and there were protests here too. 60 people broke through a police cordon, and Tebbit was jostled and jeered outside the centre. Inside, 'trainees had lined the walls with posters conveying anti-government slogans'. There were more protests in Leicester the following day - but this time the location was Filbert Street, and the source of anger was the austerity regime at the club. Milne had successfully addressed the 'gross over-staffing'. The big wage earners had gone, with not a penny spent on replacements. And just look at the results. We were out of the Cup, and seemingly out of the promotion race. In the Mercury, the club's policy was described as 'reminiscent of Thatcher's miserly monetarism''. That afternoon, patience finally ran out, discontent spilled over and things turned ugly. It started twenty minutes before kick-off. Tommy English hadn't played for two months, having been dropped in November. But when the team line-ups were announced, English was back as substitute. The news was greeted with a massive chorus of boos. Blackburn took the lead after ten minutes, then City spent 80 minutes striving in vain for an equaliser, as the atmosphere inside the ground deteriorated. The 'Jim Melrose' chant was back, followed again by calls for Jock Wallace. When English came off the bench there were more boos, but the man who bore the brunt of the criticism, reported Bill Anderson in the Mercury, was Gordon Milne. That was it, surely. At the very moment Blackburn went ahead at Filbert Street, Robert Wilson scored for Fulham at Craven Cottage against Middlesbrough, and they too held on for 80 minutes to collect three crucial points. That left them out of sight of the chasing pack, eleven points ahead of fifth-placed Leicester in the race for the third promotion spot (for comparison, when O'Neill's side lost at home to Sheffield United in 1996, we were still just two points off a play-off place). What could Gordon Milne do now? What he did was hold his nerve, and trust his judgement. With no cash in the kitty, he knew that if he wanted a new face it would have to be a loan signing. The man he had his eye on was another Sky Blue - midfielder Gerry Daly, the stylish Irish international who'd made his name at Old Trafford. But how would the fans react? After the disastrous moves for Tommy English and Jimmy Holmes, surely a third ex-Coventry man was too much to stomach. But three days after the Blackburn defeat, Daly arrived on a one-month loan deal. Milne said: There may be some reaction because I have taken another Coventry player, but I don’t care about that. All that matters is that this move is for the benefit of Leicester City. That's club captain Eddie Kelly on the left, welcoming Daly to the club at the Belvoir Drive training ground. Kelly didn't know it but he had already played his last game for Leicester. Daly was the man who took his place. It was here, at the low point of the season, that hope was kept alive by the precedent set the previous season. Strangely enough, the man who set that precedent was none other than Martin O'Neill, the man who, a decade later, would follow Milne's blueprint and snatch promotion from the jaws of adversity. In February 1982, Norwich City had been even further off the pace in the promotion race, but when O'Neill joined from Man City, he inspired a thrilling surge that saw them clinch promotion on the final day. That was the first season of three points for a win, and teams now realised that if you could put a run together you could shoot up the table. If Norwich could do it, Milne thought, so can we. We're Not Nervous Gerry Daly's impact was instantaneous. We won 1-0 at Carlisle, though Fulham won too. The following week, with Larry May sent off at Grimsby, we fell to another defeat, and were now twelve behind Fulham. Then on February 26th it all suddenly clicked against leaders Wolves. With Daly starring in midfield, and English finally finding a role on the left of midfield, we put on a show that rivaled Fulham's win at Newcastle as the Division Two performance of the season: Fulham's return game against Newcastle was the same day, and they dropped two points in a 2-2 draw. The gap was now 10 points. The following week Milne received confirmation of his pending court appearance on a drink-driving charge, but if he was worried about that, he didn't let it show. We kept picking up points and Fulham started dropping them - losing at Oldham and then Cambridge on a night when a crucial late header from John O'Neill gave us a 1-0 win over Middlesbrough (the electrifying effect of that moment was similar to Kevin Russell's late winner against Tranmere in 1992). After the game, O'Neill said he'd heard Macdonald on TV at the weekend claiming Leicester had no chance of catching them. But now we were just two behind, though we'd played a game more. Once more Macdonald tried to shrug it off, saying 'Leicester have to go to QPR next so we'll be five ahead again'. Rangers were vying with Wolves for the title and seemed invincible on the plastic pitch at Loftus Road, but two Lineker goals gave us a 2-2 draw, and though Fulham beat Charlton, the gap was not five, but four. Macdonald's comments were becoming a factor in the psychological battle. Every week he had to fill those column inches in the Daily Mirror, and you know what they say - 'give 'em enough rope...' He was also providing the Mirror with numerous 'wacky' photo opportunities, such as this, which had appeared on Christmas Eve: It was certainly a Christmas present - an absolute gift, just asking to be pinned on a rival team's dressing room wall and used as a dart board. While Gordon Milne retained a steely determination, saying exactly the right thing at every stage of the run-in, Macdonald's pronouncements were becoming a liability. Asked again about the pressure of Leicester chasing them, he said, 'People are trying to create something that isn't there. We are not nervous'. Macdoanld pictured in April as the pressure builds up. On April 16th, with Daly's loan extended to the end of the season, Lineker got two more in a 3-1 home win over Rotherham - that was nine in ten games for him. At Elland Road that day a young striker called Tommy Wright scored to deprive Fulham of victory, and the gap was back to two, though we had still played a game more. In midweek, Fulham won their game in hand against Barnsley to go five clear with five to play. We knew we needed a result the following Saturday - at Craven Cottage. In the recent thread about the 1991/92 season (let's call it retrospectively The Promotion Files #1), you might recall mention of the Charlton away game being 'our biggest ever away following for a League game in London'. Well, it wasn't by much - we'd taken similar numbers to the Orient title decider in 1980 - and to Fulham for this game on April 23rd 1983. These wonderful extended highlights of the game (uploaded only a few months ago) show just how dominant we were that day. If you don't have time to watch the whole 20 minutes, head for 13.30 in the video to see the key moment: One thing I love about that footage is the Milne interview after the game. There's one key line; in fact, one key word: 'Inevitably, one of them's going to crack'. There it is. That single word encapsulates the whole three-month period of hunting them down and reeling them in, and reveals the ruthless streak in Milne's character that underpinned it. He explained after that game how the team had evolved: Larry May got himself suspended and Kevin Macdonald (switched from midfield) brought a new dimension to the defence. Gerry Daly arrived and so Tommy English moved across to the left side. That led to this classic line-up: Mark Wallington Paul Ramsey John O'Neill Kevin Macdonald Bobby Smith (switched to left back in January after Friar / Williams / Brown has been tried) Ian Wilson Gerry Daly Tommy English Steve Lynex Alan Smith Gary Lineker I Fought The Law - And I Won A week later at Hinckley Magistrates Court, Milne finally had the opportunity to give his version of what happened late at night on January 6th. It wasn't alcohol that had caused the crash. He'd had an emotional day, with the Tommy Williams injury, and a momentary lapse of concentration on an icy road led to him losing control of his Mercedes. He was asked about the result of the blood test, which had revealed over twice the legal amount of alcohol. Supported by his wife Edith's evidence, he explained how, when he finally made it back to his Burbage home, she realised how shaken he was and gave him a glass of brandy. He'd then had several glasses more. What about the champagne he'd taken to Williams' house earlier that evening? He'd only had one glass. When he drove home, he was sober. The prosecution tried to prove otherwise, but they couldn't. The magistrates dismissed the case. Milne was perhaps fortunate that he wasn't working in the age of social media. You can imagine what would happen nowadays. He was no doubt thankful too that the media in Leicester played down the whole episode from start to finish. The Mercury could hardly be accused of sensationalistic journalism - on the day of the trial, their rather dry headline was 'Case Against City Manager Dismissed', above a brief report buried at the bottom of page one, almost asking to be ignored. A different editor might have considered it a more important news item - worthy of the top story perhaps, with a punchier headline in large type, and a fuller account of proceedings, accompanied by a photo of the accused arriving at the court. Just like this: Milne left court that Thursday an innocent man. But like four months earlier following the original arrest, he now had a big decision to make about the crucial game on Saturday. Gary Lineker was injured, and would miss the last two games. Who would Milne choose to replace him at Oldham? Back in January he'd made that surprise decision to include young Paul Brown, which had backfired. Now he made an equally bold choice, bringing in Robert Jones for his debut. 'I know it's a huge risk but I must back my judgement', he said. I don't know what's more impressive here, the action on the pitch or the scenes behind the goal: Milne once again staying cool there after the game. The following week was just as he predicted - Burnley were hard to beat, but the point was enough to take us up, with Fulham losing at Derby. There'll be more detail about events that day below, but the key thing was - we'd done it. A monumental achievement for a young squad, and most of all for the man who'd come through the hard times to taste glory at the finish. This was the magnificent 15 game unbeaten run from February to the end of the season: That's from wikipedia. You'll notice Robert Jones' name is in a different colour. Yes - the man who played such a key role in the climax to that historic season does not have a wikipedia page. At season's end came this wonderful tribute from David Welch, Sports Editor of the Mercury (a man about whom I know nothing, though I wish it were otherwise - this is one of the best things I've ever read in that paper): It's time soccer managers took a back seat. Last weekend we were confronted with pictures of one Cup Final manager, Brighton's Jimmy Melia, surrounded by models in lingerie, and another, Ron Atkinson of Manchester United, perched on the bonnet of a sports car. I had an overwhelming feeling that we should be seeing players, not managers, in those situations. Managers in the past didn't need to have the spotlight turned on them like today's 'larger-than-life' brigade. Every so often, however, a manager overcomes the odds to such an extent that he deserves every bit of praise and publicity he receives. So much more so, of course, if he seeks neither. And that, I believe, is the situation this year with Leicester City and Gordon Milne. Set against a backcloth of severe financial restrictions, necessary team pruning, and falling attendances, Milne has produced a team which has proved capable of gaining promotion. He came in, almost apologetically, to replace the more brash and exuberant Jock Wallace, and quickly had to withstand criticism from loyal Wallace fans during a disappointing start to the season when he seemed more concerned with cutting the wage-bill (and his own resources) by transferring Wallace's costliest buys. Admirably resisting the temptation to hit back, Milne won over the players, and with a quiet confidence, began rebuilding a side not exactly full of heart after the shock, and demoralising exit of Wallace last summer. The side soon played its part by displaying magnificent team spirit and commitment but, whereas his predecessor often found that the quality to be most admired, Milne himself appeared, rightly, to take it for granted. Commitment is the very least supporters can expect of a team, and that's largely what enabled them to gradually reduce Fulham's lead in the promotion race. That, allied to no small amount of skill, has taken the side back where they belong.
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The Promotion Files #2: Glory for Gordon as Supermac Cracks Up
kushiro replied to kushiro's topic in Leicester City Forum
Yeah - I thought he was great, even when he was at Man U. In April 1981 he got a crucial goal for Covetry that pretty much confirmed our relegaiton. After beating us 4-1 in March (Tommy English hattrick!), Coventry took only one point from five games and it looked like they were finally heading back to Division Two after 14 seasons in the top flight. Then Daly got the winner at Middlesbrough which meant we needed a miracle to survive. I love this comment from Coventry's Steve Hunt after the game: I shall not forget the reaction of the manager on the bench. The boss normally shows no emotion but he was up on his feet and dancing around like a Zulu warrior. That manager, of course, was Gordon Milne. Here's Daly in action for Cov earlier that season at Filbert Street in the famous brown kit. They won that too - 3-1. -
The Promotion Files #2: Glory for Gordon as Supermac Cracks Up
kushiro replied to kushiro's topic in Leicester City Forum
More on the last Saturday of the season: After Fulham lost at Derby they protested to the Football League that the match should be replayed. With Derby fans lining the pitch in the last few minutes, the referee had blown the final whistle early, shortly after Fulham's Robert Wilson had been kicked by a Derby fan. You can see what happened in this interview with Macdonald after the game: The Football League met two days later but decided that the result should stand. Macdonald's reaction was to lodge an appeal with the FA. He said, with a typical sense of proportion: 'The game as we know it died today. The way is now open for soccer anarchy. The mob can take over. We may never see a game of any importance finish again'. Yes, he really said that. Contrary to his fears, in the following weeks, the FA Cup Final and several other important matches were played successfully to a conclusion. Macdonald leaves the Football League hearing on May 16th. That appeal to the FA went ahead, but no-one seriously thought they would overturn the decision, and on May 25th it was confirmed. Macdonald had not allowed his players to disperse for the close season - he'd kept them in training hoping for a replay. When Fulham heard the FA decision they considered an appeal to the High Court, but then finally accepted that the game was up. So Milne could look forward to Division One. He had completely silenced the doubters. No doubt his mailbag had been bulging with letters from angry fans. But unlike O'Neill in 1996, he would not have stored those letters away, waiting for the day he could call them up and ask 'What have you got to say for yourself now?' That wasn't in his character. So what happened next? Milne kept us in Division One for three seasons, before 'moving upstairs' to become General Manager. After he left, he enjoyed an astonishingly successful time as boss of Besiktas in Turkey, something to be covered in a forthcoming thread about his career before and after Leicester City. What about Malcolm Macdonald? Well that wasn't such a happy tale. Here's another of those wacky photo opportunities from 1982/83: What a heart-warming scene that is, with his wife Julie, five daughters and several other female family members in Fulham kit. But just like that Christmas 'Division One' photo, it soon backfired, and that wholesome image of domestic contentment was shattered. When the photo was taken, Macdonald had already met a young hotel manageress called Nicky Thompson. They became lovers, and a few months later, in March 1984, he told his wife he was leaving her to live with his new girlfriend. The Daily Mirror now turned on him, columnist Anne Robinson writing a blistering character assassination, calling him 'a prize bully' and quoting his wife’s tales of his dominating behaviour. Fulham had been on a great run, but suddenly lost three in a row, including a 4-0 defeat at Stamford Bridge, Chelsea fans no doubt having great fun at Macdonald's expense. Shortly after that he quit, saying his affair had 'put additional pressure on the club'. Macdonald was out of management for three years, but in October 1987 he took over at Huddersfield, then struggling in Division Two. Just three weeks into his reign the club suffered their heaviest ever defeat - 10-1 at Manchester City. Things didn't improve much after that and their relegation was confirmed in April. He quit shortly afterwards, his last ever game as a manager being a 3-0 defeat at Filbert Street.- 15 replies
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Test Thread - Post whatever you like as practice
kushiro replied to WigstonWanderer's topic in Forum Support
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Test Thread - Post whatever you like as practice
kushiro replied to WigstonWanderer's topic in Forum Support
But three days after the Blackburn defeat, Daly arrived on a one-month loan deal. Milne said: There may be some reaction because I have taken another Coventry player, but I don’t care about that. All that matters is that this move is for the benefit of Leicester City. That's club captain Eddie Kelly on the left, welcoming Daly to the club at the Belvoir Drive training ground. Kelly didn't know it but he had already played his last game for Leicester. Daly was the man who took his place. -
It's all going so well, isn't it. Carry on like this and we'll break all the records, surpassing even 1956/57 and 2013/14, those other seasons when we cruised to promotion. But don't be surprised if it isn't quite that simple. For Leicester, promotion seasons are often less of a cruise, more of a rollercoaster. Martin O'Neill has never forgotten the darkest hour of his promotion season, March 30th 1996 . 'The crowd became very restive', he quipped recently, 'in fact, more than restive - they were downright unaccommodating. It's a tale you're no doubt familiar with. There's a similar story a bit further back in history. January 22nd 1983 - a date Gordon Milne has probably never forgotten. Given the circumstances, his eventual triumph was even more impressive than O'Neill's. But this is a story no-one knows - at least, not in any detail. Because it's never been told before. Time to put that right. Not My Gaffer Gordon Milne arrived in August 1982 after Jock Wallace suddenly quit, accepting a lucrative offer from Motherwell. Wallace's departure was a real shock - for the fans, who loved him, for the players, who would run through brick walls for him, and for the board of directors, who'd offered him an unprecedented seven year contract (only two years of which had been completed). The contrast with Wallace handicapped Milne from the start. No City manager had ever had the rapport with the fans that Big Jock enjoyed. The team played with the 'battle fever' mentality he demanded - none more so than his fellow Scot at centre forward, celebrated in song on the Kop: 'He's here, he's there, he's every ***king-where, Alan Young, Alan Young!. And that could equally apply to Wallace himself - his personality was stamped over every corner of the club, on and off the field. Milne's style was very different. The fans took time to get to know him - and many weren't sure they liked what they saw when they did. Just like Jock, the way Milne's team played reflected his personality. Less direct, more patient, more thoughtful. After the Wallace years, many found the change hard to accept. It was just like Martin O'Neill in 1995/96, with fans pining for Mark McGhee, though in that case it was precisely the opposite form of nostalgia, with O'Neill's direct style seeming like a backwards step after McGhee's possession-based approach. Another problem for Milne was his CV. He'd spent the previous ten years at Coventry City. Fans were wary of a man so steeped in Sky Blue - and that was before the season started. When the action began, all these points came together in a perfect storm. First, Jock Wallace's key men departed. When you've been playing for a manager you respect so much, it can feel like a betrayal to suddenly switch your loyalties. Alan Young left for Sheffield United, saying he simply 'couldn't accept Milne as gaffer' (similar again to 95/96, when Steve Corica told Martin O'Neill that he wanted to go to Wolves because of how much he 'respected Mr. McGhee'. Next to quit was Jim Melrose, Wallace's other big money signing. This was the moment when things really started going wrong, so let's look at what happened in some detail: Melrose and English City were lying ninth in Division Two on September 14th when it happened. This was the Coventry Evening Telegraph that day: And this was the Mercury the same day: Yes - an M69 swap. Melrose, hugely popular at Filbert Street, exchanged for Tommy English, a man whose relationship with Coventry fans could not be described in similar terms. Leicester fans suspected they'd got the worst of the deal, but Milne said everything would be OK. He promised that English, the man he'd developed at Highfield Road, would score more goals than Melrose. Let's see how that went. Melrose had a sensational home debut for Coventry, scoring a hattrick against Everton. Leicester were at home to QPR that day, with English in the side. We lost 1-0 - already our third home defeat of the season. News of the hattrick spread round the terraces, and the chant began: 'One Jim Melrose! There's only one Jim Melrose! One Jim Melrose! There's only one Jim Melrose!' Milne must have loved that. And if that wasn't enough, the next roar from Pen 3 was: 'Jock Wall - ace! Jock Wall - ace!'. The following week, Melrose scored again at Maine Road, while English was yet to get off the mark. That was followed four days later by a Melrose double in the League Cup at Fulham, while we were losing 2-0 at Lincoln City. The Coventry Evening Telegraph again: So the score so far was Melrose 6 English 0. 'The worst fears of Leicester City fans over the Melrose-English swap are starting to come true', said the report. Melrose then decided to put the boot in: 'Gordon Milne must wince every time he reads the papers these days', he said. Two weeks later, Milne signed Jimmy Holmes on loan. He was another ex-Coventry man. He made his debut at left back in a 2-0 home defeat to Sheffield Wednesday. The following week, it was Holmes' disastrous back pass that led to Cambridge United's clincher in a 3-1 win at Abbey Stadium. That was the last we saw of Jimmy Holmes - he never played for us again. In early December, the team of the season (so far) arrived at Filbert Street - Fulham, managed by 'Supermac' - Malcolm Macdonald. They were second, behind QPR, and if they won their game in hand they'd go top. We were way down in 15th place. The idea that we could finish the season above them would have seemed ludicrously fanciful. Fulham were playing great football, never more so than in a devastating 4-1 win at St. James Park, a very special day for old Geordie hero Macdonald. Watch the first 90 seconds of this video and see how impressively they tear Newcastle to shreds in the first half with a three goal burst: Macdonald was only 32. He'd had to quit the game early due to injury, but now he was back in the limelight. The day before the game at Filbert Street, he signed a lucrative deal to write a weekly column for the Daily Mirror: Looks pretty confident, doesn't he? With Fulham flying high, perhaps it was justified. But the season wasn't even half over yet. The game at Filbert Street was still goalless with time running out when our season was rescued - by a divot. A header from Alan Smith was about to be collected comfortably on the bounce by Fulham keeper Gerry Peyton. But the ball didn't bounce. It hit a divot and shot forward, rebounding off Peyton's shins to give David Buchanan the chance to put City ahead. 'The ball hit a hole and shot along the ground', Macdonald lamented afterwards. We then added another and Fulham's great run was over. You can see that divot here - just to the right of Peyton: And you can see the goal here: Our second goal that day was scored by Gary Lineker. With Young and Melrose gone, he was developing a new striking partnership with Alan Smith, Wallace's last signing. Lineker had actually been dropped after a lack lustre performance in Milne's very first game (another home defeat - to Charlton), but he was now hitting form. We followed up that Fulham win with two more, and there was talk of us getting back in the promotion race. But then came January, and the darkest hours of Milne's reign at Leicester. To introduce what happened, let's take a short detour - on to the motorway that lies at the heart of this whole story: The M69 Gordon Milne could be forgiven for thinking that the M69 had been planned and constructed entirely for his own personal convenience. When he became Coventry manager in 1972, he had a house built in Burbage, midway between Coventry and Leicester, and when the Sky Blues weren't playing he loved to watch games at Filbert Street, long before he took over as our boss. His route would take him along the A46 - part of the old Fosse Way. Milne was no doubt aware of the link to the origins of the club. In 1976, that journey was made easier when the first section of the M69 was opened - rolled out like a red carpet between the M1 and Burbage, very close to his house. Six months later, the second section opened - from Burbage to Ansty near Coventry - and his daily commute was now so much more straight forward. When he joined Leicester he joked that a 13 mile trip one way had now become a 13 mile trip in the opposite direction. That brings us to events late at night on Thursday, January 5th, 1983. As is so often the case when calamity strikes, you can only fully understand what happened by looking at a whole chain of events. This particular sequence started eight months earlier - at the biggest game of Jock Wallace's time at Leicester, the FA Cup Semi-Final against Spurs at Villa Park. Everything went wrong that day - players off form, Ian Wilson's own goal, and not least, Tommy Williams breaking his right leg in a challenge with Tony Galvin. It wasn't until December, just after that Fulham game, that Williams was ready to return to first team action. But then tragedy struck again. On the morning of January 6th during a routine training session, Williams was tackled by Dave Buchanan, and broke the same leg again. Buchanan's challenge was described as 'run-of-the-mill'. The injury was apparently a freak accident. But that was little consolation for Williams. He'd played just four games since coming back, and now it looked like his season was over. 'It's a terrible blow', said Milne, 'I'm so sorry for the lad'. Milne decided to offer more than just words of consolation. That evening, along with Commercial Manager Peter Hill, he drove round to Williams' house with a bottle of champagne. The three shared the bottle between them, after which Milne headed down the M69 to his Burbage home. It was a freezing night, and around midnight, about four miles from home, Milne lost control of his Mercedes on the icy surface and skidded onto the embankment, the car striking a marker post and coming to rest in the snow. Milne got out of the car and a passing motorist, a Mr. Wilf Goss, stopped to assist him, giving him a lift the short journey home to Burbage. Shortly afterwards, a police motorway control car passed the scene of the crash. PC Peter Jefferies, on finding the abandoned Mercedes, checked the number plate and phoned though to the national computer centre, who told him the owner's details. Jefferies then drove to Milne's Burbage address. Milne at first denied that he'd been driving the car, and wouldn't say who had been. He refused to take a breathalyser test. PC Jefferies tried to arrest him, but Milne resisted, at which point Jefferies called for support. After what reports described as 'a struggle', Milne was placed in a police car and taken back down the M69 to Wigston Police Station, passing his abandoned Mercedes on the opposite carriageway along the way. At Wigston he gave a sample which revealed 182 milligrams of alcohol in 100 ml of blood - more than twice the legal limit of 80mg. It's unclear what time he got home that night, or how he got into work the next morning. But when he did arrive he had a big decision to make. Who would replace Williams at left back in the FA Cup tie at home to Notts County the following day? Paul Friar was the obvious choice, having already played in 20 games that season, but Milne sprang a surprise by giving a debut to 18 year old Paul Brown. When the game started, County raced into a three goal lead, and two very late goals in reply couldn't disguise the reality of an easy win for the Magpies. He couldn't be singled out for blame any more than his teammates, but Brown never played for the club again. We could now concentrate on the League. But the following week we lost at Charlton, and it looked like the season was already over. Was Milne regretting his move to Leicester? He had been in the job six months. From his own fans there was suspicion, verging on hostility. From ex-players there was rejection (Young) and ridicule (Melrose). And from the law there now came a summons to appear before Hinckley magistrates. The threat of a conviction for drink driving would hang over the remainder of the season. And that wasn't all. Perhaps the biggest obstacle Milne had to overcome that season was financial. While other Division Two clubs made extravagant signings (witness the extraordinary arrival of two recent European Footballer of the Year Winners - Kevin Keegan at Newcastle and Allan Simonsen at Charlton), Leicester City didn't have two pennies to rub together. When he took over, the board made the situation plain. There was no money to spend, and even if he sold players, the proceeds would go towards running costs. His main task, he was told, was to address 'the gross over-staffing at the club'. He had to make drastic cuts to the squad. Drastic cuts. Two words that sum up the economy of the UK in the early 80s. Drastic cuts that led to a deep recession, and soaring unemployment. The new figures had just been released - an unbelievable 3.1 million people were now out of work. Throughout January, the BBC was showing the Alan Bleasdale drama 'Boys From The Blackstuff', which told of the impact of unemployment on the people of Liverpool - including Yosser 'Giz a Job' Hughes. But it wasn't just in the north that unemployment was devastating communities. In mid-January, right here in M69 country, the anger was plain to see. And it was here that the two narratives converged, political controversy providing an illuminating counterpoint to events at Filbert Street. It was two days before the Leicester v Blackburn game, the low point of the season. Employment Secretary Norman Tebbit, 'Thatcher's skinhead' as some called him, was visiting the Jaguar car plant in Coventry. That was the plan anyway. When news of his visit spread, the entire workforce of 3,000 threatened to come out on strike if Tebbit set foot inside the building. Union leader Bob Ainsworth said, 'Nearly everyone here has a friend or relative who has been put on the dole by Tory policies'. Tebbit was forced to change his plans. The following day, Friday, Tebbit headed up the motorway to Leicester. He visited an IT centre at the Magazine Workspace in Newarke Street, and there were protests here too. 60 people broke through a police cordon, and Tebbit was jostled and jeered outside the centre. Inside, 'trainees had lined the walls with posters conveying anti-government slogans'. There were more protests in Leicester the following day - but this time the location was Filbert Street, and the source of anger was the austerity regime at the club. Milne had successfully addressed the 'gross over-staffing'. The big wage earners had gone, with not a penny spent on replacements. And just look at the results. We were out of the Cup, and seemingly out of the promotion race. In the Mercury, the club's policy was described as 'reminiscent of Thatcher's miserly monetarism''. That afternoon, patience finally ran out, discontent spilled over and things turned ugly. It started twenty minutes before kick-off. Tommy English hadn't played for two months, having been dropped in November. But when the team line-ups were announced, English was back as substitute. The news was greeted with a massive chorus of boos. Blackburn took the lead after ten minutes, then City spent 80 minutes striving in vain for an equaliser, as the atmosphere inside the ground deteriorated. The 'Jim Melrose' chant was back, followed again by calls for Jock Wallace. When English came off the bench there were more boos, but the man who bore the brunt of the criticism, reported Bill Anderson in the Mercury, was Gordon Milne. That was it, surely. At the very moment Blackburn went ahead at Filbert Street, Robert Wilson scored for Fulham at Craven Cottage against Middlesbrough, and they too held on for 80 minutes to collect three crucial points. That left them out of sight of the chasing pack, eleven points ahead of fifth-placed Leicester in the race for the third promotion spot (for comparison, when O'Neill's side lost at home to Sheffield United in 1996, we were still just two points off a play-off place). What could Gordon Milne do now? What he did was hold his nerve, and trust his judgement. With no cash in the kitty, he knew that if he wanted a new face it would have to be a loan signing. The man he had his eye on was another Sky Blue - midfielder Gerry Daly, the stylish Irish international who'd made his name at Old Trafford. But how would the fans react? After the disastrous moves for Tommy English and Jimmy Holmes, surely a third ex-Coventry man was too much to stomach. But three days after the Blackburn defeat, Daly arrived on a one-month loan deal. Milne said: There may be some reaction because I have taken another Coventry player, but I don’t care about that. All that matters is that this move is for the benefit of Leicester City. That's club captain Eddie Kelly on the left, welcoming Daly to the club at the Belvoir Drive training ground. Kelly didn't know it but he had already played his last game for Leicester. Daly was the man who took his place. It was here, at the low point of the season, that hope was kept alive by the precedent set the previous season. Strangely enough, the man who set that precedent was none other than Martin O'Neill, the man who, a decade later, would follow Milne's blueprint and snatch promotion from the jaws of adversity. In February 1982, Norwich City had been even further off the pace in the promotion race, but when O'Neill joined from Man City, he inspired a thrilling surge that saw them clinch promotion on the final day. That was the first season of three points for a win, and teams now realised that if you could put a run together you could shoot up the table. If Norwich could do it, Milne thought, so can we. We're Not Nervous Gerry Daly's impact was instantaneous. We won 1-0 at Carlisle, though Fulham won too. The following week, with Larry May sent off at Grimsby, we fell to another defeat, and were now twelve behind Fulham. Then on February 26th it all suddenly clicked against leaders Wolves. With Daly starring in midfield, and English finally finding a role on the left of midfield, we put on a show that rivaled Fulham's win at Newcastle as the Division Two performance of the season: Fulham's return game against Newcastle was the same day, and they dropped two points in a 2-2 draw. The gap was now 10 points. The following week Milne received confirmation of his pending court appearance on a drink-driving charge, but if he was worried about that, he didn't let it show. We kept picking up points and Fulham started dropping them - losing at Oldham and then Cambridge on a night when a crucial late header from John O'Neill gave us a 1-0 win over Middlesbrough (the electrifying effect of that moment was similar to Kevin Russell's late winner against Tranmere in 1992). After the game, O'Neill said he'd heard Macdonald on TV at the weekend claiming Leicester had no chance of catching them. But now we were just two behind, though we'd played a game more. Once more Macdonald tried to shrug it off, saying 'Leicester have to go to QPR next so we'll be five ahead again'. Rangers were vying with Wolves for the title and seemed invincible on the plastic pitch at Loftus Road, but two Lineker goals gave us a 2-2 draw, and though Fulham beat Charlton, the gap was not five, but four. Macdonald's comments were becoming a factor in the psychological battle. Every week he had to fill those column inches in the Daily Mirror, and you know what they say - 'give 'em enough rope...' He was also providing the Mirror with numerous 'wacky' photo opportunities, such as this, which had appeared on Christmas Eve: It was certainly a Christmas present - an absolute gift, just asking to be pinned on a rival team's dressing room wall and used as a dart board. While Gordon Milne retained a steely determination, saying exactly the right thing at every stage of the run-in, Macdonald's pronouncements were becoming a liability. Asked again about the pressure of Leicester chasing them, he said, 'People are trying to create something that isn't there. We are not nervous'. Macdoanld pictured in April as the pressure builds up. On April 16th, with Daly's loan extended to the end of the season, Lineker got two more in a 3-1 home win over Rotherham - that was nine in ten games for him. At Elland Road that day a young striker called Tommy Wright scored to deprive Fulham of victory, and the gap was back to two, though we had still played a game more. In midweek, Fulham won their game in hand against Barnsley to go five clear with five to play. We knew we needed a result the following Saturday - at Craven Cottage. In the recent thread about the 1991/92 season (let's call it retrospectively The Promotion Files #1), you might recall mention of the Charlton away game being 'our biggest ever away following for a League game in London'. Well, it wasn't by much - we'd taken similar numbers to the Orient title decider in 1980 - and to Fulham for this game on April 23rd 1983. These wonderful extended highlights of the game (uploaded only a few months ago) show just how dominant we were that day. If you don't have time to watch the whole 20 minutes, head for 13.30 in the video to see the key moment: One thing I love about that footage is the Milne interview after the game. There's one key line; in fact, one key word: 'Inevitably, one of them's going to crack'. There it is. That single word encapsulates the whole three-month period of hunting them down and reeling them in, and reveals the ruthless streak in Milne's character that underpinned it. He explained after that game how the team had evolved: Larry May got himself suspended and Kevin Macdonald (switched from midfield) brought a new dimension to the defence. Gerry Daly arrived and so Tommy English moved across to the left side. That led to this classic line-up: Mark Wallington Paul Ramsey John O'Neill Kevin Macdonald Bobby Smith (switched to left back in January after Friar / Williams / Brown has been tried) Ian Wilson Gerry Daly Tommy English Steve Lynex Alan Smith Gary Lineker I Fought The Law - And I Won A week later at Hinckley Magistrates Court, Milne finally had the opportunity to give his version of what happened late at night on January 6th. It wasn't alcohol that had caused the crash. He'd had an emotional day, with the Tommy Williams injury, and a momentary lapse of concentration on an icy road led to him losing control of his Mercedes. He was asked about the result of the blood test, which had revealed over twice the legal amount of alcohol. Supported by his wife Edith's evidence, he explained how, when he finally made it back to his Burbage home, she realised how shaken he was and gave him a glass of brandy. He'd then had several glasses more. What about the champagne he'd taken to Williams' house earlier that evening? He'd only had one glass. When he drove home, he was sober. The prosecution tried to prove otherwise, but they couldn't. The magistrates dismissed the case. Milne was perhaps fortunate that he wasn't working in the age of social media. You can imagine what would happen nowadays. He was no doubt thankful too that the media in Leicester played down the whole episode from start to finish. The Mercury could hardly be accused of sensationalistic journalism - on the day of the trial, their rather dry headline was 'Case Against City Manager Dismissed', above a brief report buried at the bottom of page one, almost asking to be ignored. A different editor might have considered it a more important news item - worthy of the top story perhaps, with a punchier headline in large type, and a fuller account of proceedings, accompanied by a photo of the accused arriving at the court. Just like this: Milne left court that Thursday an innocent man. But like four months earlier following the original arrest, he now had a big decision to make about the crucial game on Saturday. Gary Lineker was injured, and would miss the last two games. Who would Milne choose to replace him at Oldham? Back in January he'd made that surprise decision to include young Paul Brown, which had backfired. Now he made an equally bold choice, bringing in Robert Jones for his debut. 'I know it's a huge risk but I must back my judgement', he said. I don't know what's more impressive here, the action on the pitch or the scenes behind the goal: Milne once again staying cool there after the game. The following week was just as he predicted - Burnley were hard to beat, but the point was enough to take us up, with Fulham losing at Derby. There'll be more detail about events that day below, but the key thing was - we'd done it. A monumental achievement for a young squad, and most of all for the man who'd come through the hard times to taste glory at the finish. This was the magnificent 15 game unbeaten run from February to the end of the season: That's from wikipedia. You'll notice Robert Jones' name is in a different colour. Yes - the man who played such a key role in the climax to that historic season does not have a wikipedia page. At season's end came this wonderful tribute from David Welch, Sports Editor of the Mercury (a man about whom I know nothing, though I wish it were otherwise - this is one of the best things I've ever read in that paper): It's time soccer managers took a back seat. Last weekend we were confronted with pictures of one Cup Final manager, Brighton's Jimmy Melia, surrounded by models in lingerie, and another, Ron Atkinson of Manchester United, perched on the bonnet of a sports car. I had an overwhelming feeling that we should be seeing players, not managers, in those situations. Managers in the past didn't need to have the spotlight turned on them like today's 'larger-than-life' brigade. Every so often, however, a manager overcomes the odds to such an extent that he deserves every bit of praise and publicity he receives. So much more so, of course, if he seeks neither. And that, I believe, is the situation this year with Leicester City and Gordon Milne. Set against a backcloth of severe financial restrictions, necessary team pruning, and falling attendances, Milne has produced a team which has proved capable of gaining promotion. He came in, almost apologetically, to replace the more brash and exuberant Jock Wallace, and quickly had to withstand criticism from loyal Wallace fans during a disappointing start to the season when he seemed more concerned with cutting the wage-bill (and his own resources) by transferring Wallace's costliest buys. Admirably resisting the temptation to hit back, Milne won over the players, and with a quiet confidence, began rebuilding a side not exactly full of heart after the shock, and demoralising exit of Wallace last summer. The side soon played its part by displaying magnificent team spirit and commitment but, whereas his predecessor often found that the quality to be most admired, Milne himself appeared, rightly, to take it for granted. Commitment is the very least supporters can expect of a team, and that's largely what enabled them to gradually reduce Fulham's lead in the promotion race. That, allied to no small amount of skill, has taken the side back where they belong.
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Test Thread - Post whatever you like as practice
kushiro replied to WigstonWanderer's topic in Forum Support
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Test Thread - Post whatever you like as practice
kushiro replied to WigstonWanderer's topic in Forum Support
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Test Thread - Post whatever you like as practice
kushiro replied to WigstonWanderer's topic in Forum Support
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Well I never... When we sold Gary Lineker in 1985, his first appearance in an Everton shirt was in a pre-season friendly at Wigan. Gary scored and Everton won 4-1, Look at the 20 year old centre back marking him:
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A Little Bit of History Before The Preston Game
kushiro replied to kushiro's topic in Leicester City Forum
Here's some of my favourite scenes in the video. 1) Cycling Proficiency Practice: In the background you can see the old cattle market clock tower. The cycling practice is taking place in the cattle maeket car park, which you can see in the top right of this shot from the Historic England aerial photos collection. Football, rugby and cricket venues all visible too: 2) Not far from there, a gas holder in Aylestone Road: I think that's Swanscombe Road. Here's another aerial shot to show where in the photo they're standing. 3) Lorry sheds its load at Leicester Market: In the market stalls you can see through to where the Lineker fruit and veg stall is located.Back then, in the late 50s, Gary's dad Barrie would've been working on the stall. Of course, it would be too fantastic to imagine that Barrie appeared in the video. Here's the crowd that gathered round to see what was happening: That guy in the middle looks a bit like him, doesn't it? Probably not. 4) Medway School Recall that story above about PC Jack Broughton disarming the guy with a knife and a gun near the Clock Tower - well the guy lived in Upper Tichborne Street in the Highfields. A street that is featured in the video: Love that shot of Medway school. My brother used to live just round the corner. 5) Cycling down Jersey Road: He even put his bicycle clips on. -
A Little Bit of History Before The Preston Game
kushiro replied to kushiro's topic in Leicester City Forum
It does look like it. Good spot. -
Here's another dive into Leicester history triggered by a post from @davieG . A few days ago on the City of Leicester thread he posted this amazing old video entitled 'A British Policeman', pointing out that 'the anonymous city appears to be Leicester'. The comments after the video also recognize Leicester as the location, and if you watch it for a few moments you can confirm it for yourself. It's an amazing window on the city in the late 50s - so fascinating that it was crying out for further investigation. So here we go: Right at the start we see 'PC Jack Edwards' helping a man who's just arrived at the old St. Margaret's Bus Station. Tied to the lamppost is a placard advertising that day's Leicester Evening Mail, the old rival of the Mercury. It's a bit difficult to see but you can just make out that it says 'Charnwood Motorway: Official Route and Plans'. That could help us pin down the day it was filmed. Those motorway plans were released on Wednesday September 17th 1958, and indeed, that day's Evening Mail carried the details of the route. The 'Charnwood' motorway was the Leicestershire section of what would become the M1. There had been huge controversy over the original route, as it passed very close to Bradgate Park. After a local outcry, the route through the county was shifted westwards, resulting in the well-known 'kink' in the line of the motorway as it stretches northwards. The very first motorway in the UK was just about to be completed. It was the Preston by-pass, the stretch of road that would become part of the M6, and which many visiting fans will be using tomorrow night as they head for the King Power. So - to confirm - we know that the fooage at the Bus Station was taken on that date - September 17th. What was happening in Leicester on that Wednesday? Anything connected to football? That season, 1958/59, there were only 23 first team games played at Filbert Street. But one of them happened to be on that day. We were playing at home in a First Division fixture - and the visiting team? Would you believe, Preston North End. Later in the video, we see PC Edwards at London Road Railway Station as a train pulls in: It's a fine shot of an old engine looking just like Gordon from the Rev. Awdry books. And who knows, maybe as the train pulled into Leicester, jumping down onto the platform were Preston fans, heading for Filbert Street. Or maybe even the Preston team. In those pre-motorway days most clubs would travel to away games by rail. In truth, we don't know if the shots at the station were taken on the same day, It looks like the video was taken over a period of several days, or even weeks, given the number of different scenes it features. That Leicester-Preston game witnessed a little piece of history. Look at the line-ups for the match, printed in the same edition of the Evening Mail: Can you spot the player making his first ever appearance at Filbert Street? Not Tom Finney - he was now in his mid-30s and a veteran of numerous legendary FA Cup battles against Leicester. The reference to Gordon the Big Engine was a pretty big hint. Yes - at number four for North End was 21 year old Gordon Milne, future Leicester City manager, playing against us for the first time. His father, Jimmy was also on the train. He was a former Preston player, and was now their trainer. The game was a 2-2 draw, and Gordon Milne was described in the match report as 'a great worker', which is pretty impressive given the 24 hours he'd just experienced. He was doing his two years of National Service, and was selected to play for the Army in a match against Rangers at Ibrox on September 16th - the Tuesday. After that game he dashed to Glasgow Station and got on the overnight sleeper to Preston, where he met up with his teammates for the journey to Leicester. He'd helped the Army to a 1-0 win over Rangers, and now he contributed to this 2-2 draw that left North End handily placed near the top of Division One. The following week they won the return fixture against Leicester 3-1 at Deepdale to go top. There'll be much more about Gordon Milne in a forthcoming thread about the never-to-be-forgotten 1982/83 season, when he led Leicester back to the top flight. But let's get back to PC Jack Edwards. That wasn't actually his real name. His colleagues at Charles Street Police Station knew him as PC Jack Broughton, and he would enjoy an 'ee-aye-ee-aye-ee-aye-oh' rise through the ranks of the force in the 60s and 70s. Looking through the archives his name crops up frequently in newspaper reports, often in remarkable ways. On April 28th 1953 this headline appeared in the Mercury: City Detectives Hung On To Stolen Car. The report told us that as a stolen car was racing down East Street in Leicester, 'Detective Constable Broughton jumped onto the nearside running board and Detectice Constable Bestwick mounted the offside running board'. Between them they forced the car to slow down and 'collide with scaffolding outside the Lansdowne Garage'. On August 28th 1964, the headline on page one of the Mercury was 'Sergeant Disarmed Man With Gun'. The report started like this: Police Sergeant Jack Broughton approached a man in Leicester's Clock Tower area who, he knew, was not only armed with a revolver and ammunition, but was possibly carrying a knife. As he drew near, the man thrust his hand into his pocket, but after a scuffle, the sergeant disarmed the man of both the gun and the knife. He could also deal with football hooligans. On August 23rd 1969, Leicester beat Norwch 3-0 at Filbert Street, and after the game a group of Leicester fans 'confronted a smaller group of Norwich fans in Buttermere Street'. 'The Leicester youths were throwing pieces of brick, and both groups were shouting obscenities' a court was told, but Chief Inspector Jack Broughton 'arrested all nine of them'. Wow. On his own? Reading these reports, it's no wonder he was promoted so rapidly through the ranks. He sounds like something out of a supercop cartoon series. The makers of that old video really should have receated some of his real-life capers rather than using those twee scenes of cats in factories and boys with toy guns. Broughton stayed with the Leicester police for 35 years and finally retired in May 1984: That same week in 1984, Gordon Milne, now Leicester boss, told Gary Lineker that he had been called up to the England squad for the first time. Milne had got us promoted, then kept us up. Preston, meanwhile, were heading for Division Four. Gordon's still going strong at 86 - and he's actually got a book coming out soon about his amazing career, which I can't wait to read. Who knows, he may even be there tomorrow night, supporting both teams at once.
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You got it. It was actually an even better move than shown in that clip. Have a look at 10.50 in this video. He was then sent off, as you'll see. That game was part of an eight game unbeaten run when Pleat's team removed the threat of relagation. Pretty interesting set of results that weekend - spot the Leicester links, including Gerry Daly's only goal for Stoke:
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Title odds at the start of the season: Leicester 5,000-1 Blackburn 7-2 Then there's the financial comparison. Vichai and Jack Walker were both very rich owners who were adored by the fans, but whereas Jack's money bought Rovers the title, Vichai's money was not a siginificant factor in 2015/16, as shown by this extraordinary graph of points won relative to wage bill:
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The Wembley Wizards - And What Might Have Been
kushiro replied to kushiro's topic in Leicester City Forum
This was Channie's only representative honour - chosen for the Football League against the Scottish League in 1927. This is his crest from the game: That's from this excellent look back at the 1920s from John Hutchinson: Leicester City Through The Years: 1920-1930 (lcfc.com) -
1927/28 - quite a season for Leicester City. The Double Decker opened and Filbert Street took on the basic dimensions it would retain for the rest of the century. Two big sides and two little. We were a thrillingly entertaining as well as effective side that challenged for the title for the first time, eventually finishing third. The highest ever attendance at the ground was recorded as over 47,000 saw an FA Cup Fifth Round tie v Spurs. Oh - and a tune called 'When You're Smiling' was released in the USA. It was also the year of the Wembley Wizards - the Scottish XI written off as midgets that came to Wembley and outclassed England with an historic 5-1 win. Not something that ever figures in the Leicester City story. But it was nearly so different. On February 8th that year, two months before the game, England played 'The Rest' at Middlesbrough. This was a trial for Wembley. England A v England B, it might have been called. In the England team were Reg Osborne at left back and Syd Bishop at left half - both Leicester City players. They were, in fact, the first two Leicester City players ever to wear the Three Lions, Bishop the first (for the Scotland fixture a year earlier, when he had marked the legendary Hughie Gallacher out of the game, as England won 2-1 at Hampden), then Osborne just three monhts before this trial, in a 2-1 defeat by Wales at Turf Moor. Bishop and Osborne: We also had a player in the 'Rest' XI. Ernie Hine was at inside forward. The result that day at Ayresome Park was 8-3 to the first XI. Dixie Dean scored five - one more amazing performance in the season he scored 60 in the League for Everton. Contributing to such a crushing victory, Reg Osborne and Syd Bishop now surely had a great chance of being selected for the big Wembley occasion. The Rest, and Ernie Hine, less so. Five weeks later the Scottish trial game took place at Partick Thistle's ground. Scotland had recently lost 1-0 at home to Ireland, and the new faces in this trial game knew they had a good opportunity to impress. The game was 'Anglo-Scots' v 'Home Scots' - those playing in the Football League v those playing for Scottish League clubs. Two of the Anglos who traveled north were Johnny Duncan and Arthur Lochhead, who had been catching the eye in Leicester City's surge up the table. Both of them are massive figures in the club's history - two Peter Hodge signings who would both later manage the club. Duncan was now playing in the half back line after years at inside right, and Lochhead was at inside left. The result of the game was Anglo-Scots 1 Home Scots 1. So now those 44 players all waited to see if they'd be chosen for the real thing at Wembley. In the days before the World Cup, and long before the European Championships got off the ground, this was the most prestigious fixture in the international calendar. How many of those five Leicester players would make it? The answer was - not a single one. Syd Bishop was the unluckiest. He was actually chosen to captain England - a great honour in just his fifth international. But then he got injured and had to pull out, replaced by Harry Healless, who had just captained Blackburn Rovers to an FA Cup semi-final victory over Arsenal in the biggest game ever staged at Filbert Street (just one more great occasion in this momentous season). Neither Reg Osborne nor Ernie Hine were chosen for England. As for the Scots, they picked eight 'Anglos', but amazingly, neither Duncan nor Lochhead. The forward line they chose was: Alex Jackson 5 ft 10 Jimmy Dunn 5ft 6 Hughie Gallacher 5ft 5 Alex James 5ft 6 Alan Morton 5ft 4 They were the ones that mesmerized England on March 31st and went down in history. And those five Leicester players had only tales of what might have been. In fact, it was seven. Len Barry and Arthur Chandler had also been on the England selectors minds. Barry, a winger, was called up to Engand's very next game, a 5-1 win in Paris, becoming the third Leicester player to win an England cap. Chandler had been watched by the selectors, though incredibly, our goalscoring legend was destined never to win a cap. For the English players, that 'if only' would have been a fairly mild refelction, something along the lines of 'If I'd been playing we wouldn't have let five in'. For Johnny Duncan and Arthur Lochhead, it would have been a more intense feeling of regret - that they came so close to featuring in what is perhaps the greatest day in the history of the Scottish national side. Duncan and Lochhead:
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@purpleronnie mentioned that he still has a scrapbook from that season. Well guess what - so do I. Here's a selection: First, the goals from the Cambridge 5-0: Tommy Wright puts us one up: Simon Grayson makes a wonderful break through the middle... ...and Steve Thompson makes it two: Rooster makes it 3-0 after half-time: Sixty seconds later Tommy Wright gets his second. 4-0: Ian Ormondroyd makes it five: Rooster after the match: Here's some pages from the Final: Tommy Wright after missing a late chance to equalize: And this was the bus tour the next day, ending in Viccy Park:
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Part Two So Cambridge United stood between us and Wembley. The first leg would be at the Abbey Stadium, where we'd lost 5-1 earlier in the season. But this wasn't quite the same Cambridge. No-one knew it at the time, but Steve Claridge had had a massive bust up with boss John Beck. It came a few weeks earlier when they were playing Ipswich. You might recall that quote in the original post about Claridge 'bringing much needed variety to the attack'. But variety was the last thing the boss wanted. Claridge was under strict orders to play orthodox Beck-ball, feeding the ball quickly into the corners so the wide men could get crosses in. But in the first half against Ipswich, he committed the cardinal sin - keeping possession and cutting inside. Only 22 minutes had been played, but Beck took him off. At half time, Beck went crazy, but Claridge stood his ground, saying, 'I'm not doing a f***ing thing you say anymore. You can stick it up your arse'. Beck then flew at him, trying to headbutt him, but Claridge pushed him away. Beck went for him again, swinging his fists, but Claridge was too quick and connected first, punching him in the eye and sending him falling backwards into the heat treatment equipment. Beck took a run at him again but Claridge got him in a headlock and punched him again. Eventually they were separated by teammates and coaching staff. If you watch closely, you can see what looks like a black eye as Beck broods on the bench in the second half: Claridge watched those match highlights on TV the following day and thought proudly 'That's all my own work'. After that, Claridge kept his place in the team, but he knew he'd be on his way soon (all the detail is in the wonderful book, 'Tales From the Boot Camps'). Brian Little knew he needed to combat their aerial strength, and Tony James, out injured for seven months, was brought in to form a three man central defence alongside Steve Walsh and Colin Hill. Kevin Russell was finally given a place in the starting XI after so many cameos from the bench. The second leg, three days later, is surely a candidate for 'Greatest Game Ever At Filbert Street'. There are two highlights videos on youtube - do you want the five minute version or the nine minute version? Well here's both of them: So we were heading back to Wembley for the first time since the 1960s. It's weird, but things wouldn't have been quite the same had we beaten Forest in the ZDS Cup semi-final three months earlier. A win then would have taken us to a Wembley Final against Southampton in late March. That would have been quite an occasion, but then the Play-Off Final, and the build-up to it, wouldn't have had quite the same uniquely magical quality. I remember going down to queue up for Wembley tickets at 4am in the morning, and thousands were already there. When City's allocation rapidly sold out, many headed to Lancashire for tickets that Blackburn couldn't sell. It would be the biggest following we had ever taken to an away match. Brian Little decided to head south early. He took the squad to the two other Wembley play-off finals, hoping it would get them used to the atmosphere. On the Saturday it was Scunthorpe v Blackpool in the Division Four final, which the Tangerines won on penalties. Who's the handsome chap confidently knocking Scunthorpe's third penalty into the roof of the net? Then on Sunday in the Division Three Final they came back to watch Peterborough beat Stockport. Stoke City, still wishing they'd been able to afford Kevin Russell, had lost in the semi-finals to Stockport. And so on May 25th, 104 years of history came to an end. Leicester City v Blackburn Rovers would be the last game before the brave new world of the Premier League. In the days leading up to the final, Sky TV had outbid ITV for rights to live coverage next season. A new era really was on the way. We didn't turn up, did we? We had a few chances but there was none of the quality we'd shown against Cambridge. My clearest memories of the day are going home up the M1 in the back of a van with my old mate Andy - writing 'Speedie Dived' on a ripped up cardboard box and holding it up to the window as Blackburn coaches went by. Then throwing ourselves theatrically to the ground. Pathetic really. When we got back to Leicester we headed for Town Hall Square, thinking there'd be some kind of mass gathering, despite the defeat. No-one was there. The whole day was a complete anti-climax. Here's a crumb of consolation. Had we won, Blackburn would have stayed down, and wouldn't have won the League in 1995. We could have had five Man U title wins in a row. Horrible thought. What happened next for Leicester? In the summer we sold Tommy Wright, my favourite player. And then Rooster left too. It was never quite the same. It's strange but 1991/92 was much more special to me than the following year, with its amazing Wembley comeback, or the year after, when we actually won. Those six weeks, starting with Russell's late winner against Tranmere, were like a dream - even if the dream didn't come true:
