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Posted

I wasn't at the game (too young and Monday Night) but have seen it on the end of season review. The decisions were shockingly bad. Andy Gray on co-commentary laid into Keith as well.

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Posted

A bit more context about that Leicester v Coventry game. It was three months after the 1994 World Cup, where refs had been given a new directive to clamp down on tackles from behind. Those guidelines were carried over into the new season. That partly explains the Gillespie red card, at least. 

 

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Posted (edited)
On 23/06/2024 at 11:25, kushiro said:

This is a poor quality clip

Hey now, that's the quality that was available on Foxes Player or its predecessor when I downloaded it in 2006 lol

Edited by Mike the Metal Ed
  • Haha 1
Posted

Here's another fascinating moment from Keith's career as a ref.

 

This one has a lot in common with the notorious Derby v Fulham game on the last day of the 1982/83 season. The ref blew the final whistle 90 seconds early that day because of the threat of a pitch invasion, and Fulham's 1-0 defeat meant Leicester were promoted to Division One. 

 

Fulham felt cheated, and they appealed to both the Football League and the FA to have their game replayed. Neither appeal succeeded, and we were back in the top flight (you'll recall that Keith took charge of one game at Filbert Street that season - the 2-1 win v Oldham).

 

Eight years later, on May 4th 1991, Stoke had a game against Grimsby in Division Three. Stoke were stuck in mid-table, but it was a key game for Grimsby, who were chasing automatic promotion. And there was another reason why it was a high profile fixture. Earlier that season, the two sides had met at Blundell Park, an occasion remembered not for the game itself but for what happened afterwards.

 

Back then of course, a good proportion of the people who went to football games were there as much for a punch-up - or the promise of one - as for a good game of footy. Most of the time, opposing fans were kept apart, both inside and outside grounds, but just occasionally, the thrill-seekers got exactly what they were after.

 

After the final whistle blew at Grimsby, home fans poured on to the pitch and headed for the away end. Stoke fans were fenced in behind the goal, but tried to get through the gate in the fence and confront the home fans on the pitch.

 

Since the Hillsborough disaster two years earlier, police were not allowed to lock those gates, and so they had to use their bodies to physically stop it being opened, resulting in a dislocated shoulder for one officer.

 

Eventually the Stoke fans broke through, both there and in the corner between the away end and the Main Stand. This was the result:

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DewZhMRrB8o&t=370s

 

On the Stoke 'Oatcake' forum you'll find stories of much worse scenes outside the ground that day.

 

The return fixture in May was Stoke's last home game of the season. A year earlier,  fans had marked the occasion with a celebratory pitch invasion, and this season that would be a lot easier because the perimeter fencing on three sides of the ground had been removed in the wake of the Taylor Report.  And now Grimsby were added to the equation. It was the perfect storm. 

 

Who did the Football League choose to control this volatile encounter? Keith Cooper.

 

With twenty minutes to go and the match goalless, Stoke fans began gathering on the touchlines. With fifteen minutes to play they surged on to the pitch. The players raced for the dressing rooms but according to the Grimsby Evening telegraph, two Grimsby players 'sought refuge with the Town fans until it was safe to leave the pitch'.  What an extraordinary image - their route to the tunnel blocked by marading Stoke fans, so they jumped in the away end? 

 

After a ten minute delay, Keith restarted the game, and the clock had ticked on to 88 minutes when he decided to blow the final whistle early. The fans then swarmed back on, with mounted police preventing them getting at the away end. 

 

GET-May-6-91-2.png

 

 

The match 'finished' 0-0, which left the top of the table like this:

 

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Restructuring of the Football League meant that three went up automatically that season, plus one from the play-offs. Had the full ninety minutes been played at Stoke, Grimsby might have got a winner to put them in a much stronger position, or they might have conceded a late goal, leaving them 4th instead of 2nd. In the end, there were no appeals, either by Grimsby or their rivals.

 

A week later, Grimsby's 2-1 home win over Exeter saw them clinch promotion, just as Tony James was scoring that famous goal at Filbert Street to prevent Leicester dropping down to replace them.

 

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