1986-87 Season (ITV)
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- Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025
- Another new season with the appearance of Wimbledon, the goals of Clive Allen and Dundee United making the news in Scotland. Hope you enjoy it. Here are the games shown:
Weekend:
16/Aug - Charity Shield - Everton 1 Liverpool 1 (Live Game)
23/Aug - Newcastle United 0 Liverpool 2
28/Sep - Manchester United 0 Chelsea 1 (Live Game)
04/Oct - Wimbledon 1 Liverpool 3
26/Oct - Manchester City 1 Manchester United 1 (Live Game)
16/Nov - Liverpool 1 Sheffield Wednesday 1 (Live Game)
29/Nov - Manchester City 1 Everton 3 (Everton goals)
30/Nov - Newcastle United 4 West Ham United 0 (Live Game)
13/Dec - Plymouth Argyle 1 Derby County 1
10/Jan - FA Cup 3rd Round - Manchester United 1 Manchester City 0
10/Jan - FA Cup 3rd Round - Reading 1 Arsenal 3
17/Jan - Manchester City 0 Liverpool 1
01/Feb - FA Cup 4th Round - Watford 1 Chelsea 0 (Live Game)
08/Feb - League Cup Semi Final 1st Leg - Arsenal 0 Tottenham Hotspur 1 (Live Game)
21/Feb - FA Cup 5th Round - Tottenham Hotspur 1 Newcastle United 0
21/Feb - FA Cup 5th Round - Sheffield Wednesday 1 West Ham United 1
07/Mar - Manchester United 2 Manchester City 0
15/Mar - FA Cup 6th Round - Wimbledon 0 Tottenham Hotspur 2 (Live Game)
15/Mar - FA Cup 6th Round - Wigan Athletic 0 Leeds United 2
22/Mar - Tottenham Hotspur 1 Liverpool 0 (Live Game)
28/Mar - Arsenal 0 Everton 1
11/Apr - FA Cup Semi Final - Tottenham Hotspur 4 Watford 1
12/Apr - FA Cup Semi Final - Coventry City 3 Leeds United 2
18/Apr - Liverpool 3 Nottingham Forest 0
25/Apr - Tottenham Hotspur 3 Oxford United 1
02/May - West Ham United 1 Newcastle United 1
02/May - Portsmouth 2 Millwall 0
16/May - FA Cup Final - Coventry City 3 Tottenham Hotspur 2
29/May - First Division Play-Off Final Replay - Charlton Athletic 2 Leeds United 1
Big League Soccer (Shown abroad):
06/Sep - West Ham United 2 Liverpool 5
15/Nov - Southampton 0 Arsenal 4
22/Nov - Sheffield Wednesday 1 Luton Town 0
06/Dec - Oxford United 4 Luton Town 2 (1 goal)
27/Dec - West Ham United 2 Wimbledon 3
03/Jan - Southampton 1 Manchester United 1 (Manchester United goal)
24/Jan - Tottenham Hotspur 3 Aston Villa 0
11/Apr - Everton 4 West Ham United 0
25/Apr - Liverpool 3 Everton 1
09/May - West Ham United 2 Manchester City 0 (1 goal)
Midweek:
17/Sep - UEFA Cup 1st Round 1st Leg - Rangers 4 Ilves Tampere 0
08/Oct - League Cup 2nd Round 2nd Leg - Nottingham Forest 3 Brighton & Hove Albion 0
29/Oct - League Cup 3rd Round - Watford 2 West Ham United 3
29/Oct - League Cup 3rd Round - Derby County 1 Aston Villa 1
05/Nov - European Cup-Winners' Cup 2nd Round 2nd Leg - Wrexham 2 Real Zaragoza 2
05/Nov - League Cup 3rd Round Replay - Nottingham Forest 1 Crystal Palace 0
05/Nov - European Cup 2nd Round 2nd Leg - Dynamo Kiev 3 Celtic 1
26/Nov - League Cup 4th Round - Cambridge United 1 Tottenham Hotspur 3
26/Nov - League Cup 4th Round - Liverpool 3 Coventry City 1
28/Jan - FA Cup 3rd Round 2nd Replay - Luton Town 3 Liverpool 0
24/Feb - FA Cup 5th Round Replay - Watford 4 Walsall 4
25/Feb - League Cup Semifinal 2nd Leg - Liverpool 3 Southampton 0
25/Feb - FA Cup 5th Round Replay - West Ham United 0 Sheffield Wednesday 2
02/Mar - FA Cup 5th Round 2nd Replay - Walsall 0 Watford 1
04/Mar - League Cup Semifinal Replay - Tottenham Hotspur 1 Arsenal 2
04/Mar - UEFA Cup Quarter Final 1st Leg - Dundee United 1 Barcelona 0
25/Mar - Newcastle United 1 Tottenham Hotspur 1 (Newcastle goal)
25/Mar - Aston Villa 1 Watford 1
22/Apr - UEFA Cup Semifinal 2nd Leg - Borussia Mönchengladbach 0 Dundee United 2
20/May - UEFA Cup Final 2nd Leg - Dundee United 1 IFK Göteborg 1
International:
27/Jul - UNICEF Match - Americas XI 2 FIFA World Stars 2
12/Nov - European Championship Qualifier - England 2 Yugoslavia 0
12/Nov - European Championship Qualifier - Scotland 3 Luxembourg 0
01/Apr - European Championship Qualifier - Northern Ireland 0 England 2
01/Apr - European Championship Qualifier - Belgium 4 Scotland 1
01/Apr - European Championship Qualifier - Wales 4 Finland 0
19/May - Rous Cup - England 1 Brazil 1 Спорт
Football in the 80s was always my favorite.
The kits, the fans, the passion, the great commentary, the players,....just brilliant.
Spot on.
"and the rest of the world are complaining about the penalty".
5:08 if Suckling thought that game against Arsenal was his worst experience, he's got the mother and father of all shockers coming in about 3 years time for Palace when they get thumped 9-0 by Liverpool 😍😍
Great stuff, really enjoyed looking back at those times, look forward to seeing more I hope, well done putting it together 👍
Considering Everton won the league this season and there is hardly any Everton footage during the 1.03.16 of this "show' justs shows how much we are disliked by the media for some unknown reason.
Exactly. Even though i'm 100% Red, I still have a soft spot for Everton (especially in the 80's). So many great players (even if half of them were Anfield rejects like Harper, Watson & Sheedy!). I always thought Liverpool were at their best when Everton were strong and competitive. Howard had them playing some great stuff in those days.
they got well and truly stitched up with the European ban too. They would've probably won the European cup. That ban set English football back years. Well deserved I might add, but anyhow I remember when English clubs came back and the European game had changed and the clubs just didn't compete.
Brilliant compilations, thanks a lot!
This was the first season I was really into football following Mexico 86.
I have a fair few 'other' NUFC related games from this period on my channel.
All the best.
Same here, Mexico 86 was first time watching football ever and getting to know teams and players, then this season was my introduction to club football as an 8 year old.... would buy my first Panini sticker album in the new year of 1987 ...... good times I miss my childhood
@jonblazeinc best times mate. But football really was better then.
20:48 - Glenn Hoddle's dummy on the Oxford goalkeeper with a shimmy of the hips is still sublime to watch today.
Great stuff, great memories... Football when it was ours.... Saturday afternoons home and away, great times
That Everton team certainly were a very very good side
Again. Loving your work. Absolute class. So many forgotten goals. Only thing I would say is would sometimes like the goal replay to be shown as well cos I am constantly rewinding to see some goals again. But thank you cos this collection of seasons is an absolute joy to watch. So much nostalgia. 👍👌👐👐👐👐👐👐👐👐👐
So glad I was going to games in the 80’s. I miss it, I really do. And I felt sorry for the Watford keeper in the cup semi final, he was a goalie for a non league team who was called up by Watford because all their keepers got injured. Or something like that if I remember rightly.
That's correct. I'm a Watford fan and was at that FA Cup semi-final at Villa Park. His name was Gary Plumley and if I remember rightly after all this time he was the son of our chief executive Eddie Plumley!
Fantastic uploads !! So cool to watch the game develop through the years. And ofcourse the stars of the past (and the amazing 70's & 80's hairstyles and playing kits LOL) THANX for ur great work :D
36:38 absolutely brilliant skill from the late great David Cooper
Absolutely brilliant stuff this was when football was worth going to watch not like the over hyped crap dished up nowadays
How many people saw Sheedy gives the Vs to the KOP after that 1000mph free kick ? hahahahahahahahahahah
When footballers' celebrations were genuine, full of joy and passion - none of the daft, contrived antics of today's 'superstars'!
How it should be..!
If 80s and 90s football is your thing then follow @RetroFootballTV on Twitter - it's great!
Some observations:
Floodlights really weren't that bright in the older football era.
How well manicured was Wimbledon's home pitch in that game v Liverpool?
The way the game was played was quite chaotic back in those days. It was a slip up here, a random shot there, a deflected pass there etc. Little to no tiki taka or possession based football, although Liverpool tried it.
It was a mish-mash of playing styles,of which Liverpool,Manchester United,Tottenham,even Norwich were among the sides playing more possession and passing-based football while rough-and-ready Wimbledon,who were in their debut top division season,were at the other end of the spectrum!
Crazy boys gangs
Promoted three times in four seasons between 1983 and 1986,they even topped the entire league for a week or two from the start of September! The feathers of the press and establishment were well and truly ruffled.
When away ends were boss
21:56 Pompey going up into the old First Division.
Came second behind a revived (with the notorious Robert Maxwell's largesse) Derby County. It was a second straight promotion for the Rams after they spent a couple of years in the wilderness of the third tier like today. Alan Ball was Pompey's manager and they'd come 4th,just missing out on going up,in each of the previous two seasons.
none of this shit with defenders playing around in the 6 yard box
Ah some great mullets there 😀
yes
I believe Newcastle signed mirandinha on the back of his performance at Wembley
Tony daly was electric quick ....he was like a comet burned bright for a couple of years then disappeared.
Coventry City's finest hour
Coventry had survived yet another relegation scare in 1985-86 while West Midlands rivals West Brom and Birmingham crashed to catastrophic relegation from which the road back was a very long one. The Sky Blues had come 19th,19th again,18th and 17th out of 22 in the top tier in the previous four seasons,but 1986 turned into a year of revival for them. Their highly respected former captain George Curtis came in as the new boss and,assisted by John Sillett,shook the team up and gave it a sense of true purpose it'd been lacking for ages. There was a sound new-found resoluteness to Coventry in 1986-87,along with the power of Regis,the exciting flair of Bennett,the craft of Gynn,et al. This Sky Blues team never fell out of the top half all season and Coventry sailed happily into a final placing of 10th - their highest finish for eight years - at the same time as going all the way in the FA Cup to that classic Wembley final [sources: my rusty old memory from following football in that era,Rothmans Football Yearbook,Breedon Book of Football Records].
Ian rush was the best striker of the 80s .And I'm a gooner .Just below Jimmy greaves as the best I've ever seen.
Ian Rush was a goalscoring machine
Some great action but some shocking mullits lol
My favourite mullet .Andy baily of Everton It was like a mullet with a light perm 😁😂
The AMAZING FANTASTIC UNBELIVABLE golden years of the -- V H S -- hehehehe ;)
When football was played by men, and yeah, the shorts.
proper english men
Not the best for a resume of the title race. Some 20% into the video and we are already at the FA semis, only four games shown of the team that would win the league by 10 points. Perhaps ITV were negligent that year
It was a Merseyside one-two at the top for the third year running!
Division One table at different stages of the 1986-87 season:
End of August 1986 (3 games played each):
1 Tottenham 7 points
2 Liverpool (reigning champions) 7
3 West Ham (all-time best 3rd place finish in 1986) 7
4 Wimbledon (promoted to top flight for first time) 6
5 QPR 6
6 Everton (runners-up in 1986) 5
17 Chelsea 2
18 Newcastle 2
19 Oxford 2
20 Leicester 1 (from 2 games played)
21 Manchester United 0 (!)
22 Aston Villa 0
Wimbledon then won at fellow promoted side Charlton in midweek and moved to thye top of the table! Enraged by this audacity,the national press had a meltdown.
Saturday 6th September (5 games played each):
1 Wimbledon 12 points
2 Liverpool 10
3 Nottingham Forest 10
4 QPR 10
5 Everton 9
6 Norwich (promoted back up as champions in 1986) 8
17 Watford 4 (from 4 games played)
18 Charlton (promoted in 1986) 4
19 Chelsea 3
20 Aston Villa 3
21 Newcastle 2
22 Manchester United 1 (from 4 games played)
End of September (8 games played each):
1 Nottingham Forest 19 points
2 Norwich 17
3 Everton 15
4 Coventry 15
5 Liverpool 14
6 Tottenham 14
17 Chelsea 9
18 Manchester City 7
19 Charlton 5
20 Newcastle 5
21 Manchester United 4
22 Aston Villa 4
End of October (12 games played each):
1 Nottingham Forest 23 points
2 Norwich 22
3 Everton 21
4 Arsenal 21
5 Liverpool 20
6 Coventry 19
17 Watford 14
18 Aston Villa 13
19 Manchester United 12
20 Chelsea 12
21 Newcastle 8
22 Manchester City 8
End of November (17 games played):
1 Arsenal 34 points
2 Nottingham Forest 32
3 Liverpool 31
4 Everton 29
5 Luton 29
6 Norwich 29
17 Manchester United 17
18 Leicester 17
19 Charlton 17
20 Manchester City 17
21 Newcastle 17
22 Chelsea 16
Christmas (20 games played):
1 Arsenal 41 points
2 Nottingham Forest 36
3 Liverpool 35
4 Everton 35
5 Tottenham 32
6 Luton 32
17 Newcastle 21
18 QPR 21
19 Leicester 20
20 Charlton 20
21 Aston Villa 20
22 Chelsea 16
Sunday 4th January 1987 (after Christmas and New Year fixture programme completed; 24 games played):
1 Arsenal 51 points
2 Everton 47
3 Liverpool 42
4 Nottingham Forest 39
5 Luton 39
6 Norwich 39
17 Southampton 25 (from 23 games played)
18 Chelsea 25
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19 Charlton 24
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20 Leicester 24
21 Aston Villa 24
22 Newcastle 21
End of January (heavy snow in mid-through-late January caused extensive fixture disruption; 26 games played unless stated otherwise):
1 Arsenal 52 points
2 Everton 50
3 Liverpool 48
4 Nottingham Forest 45
5 Luton 42 (from 25 games played)
6 Norwich 40 (from 25 games played)
17 Chelsea 26 (from 25 games played)
18 Southampton 25 (from 24 games played)
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19 Charlton 25
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20 Leicester 24 (from 25 games played)
21 Aston Villa 24 (from 25 games played)
22 Newcastle 21 (from 25 games played)
End of February (29 games played unless stated otherwise):
1 Everton 55 points
2 Liverpool 55
3 Arsenal 54 (from 28 games played)
4 Luton 50
5 Norwich 48
6 Tottenham 47
17 Manchester City 31
18 Southampton 28 (from 28 games played)
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19 Leicester 27
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20 Charlton 26
21 Aston Villa 26
22 Newcastle 22 (from 28 games played)
End of March (35 games played unless stated otherwise):
1 Liverpool 67
2 Everton 64 (from 33 games played)
3 Luton 57 (from 34 games played)
4 Arsenal 55 (from 33 games played)
5 Tottenham 54 (fromn 31 games played)
6 Nottingham Forest 54 (from 34 games played)
17 Southampton 37 (from 33 games played)
18 Leicester 36 (from 24 games played)
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19 Aston Villa 31 (from 34 games played)
_____________________________________________
20 Charlton 30 (from 33 games played)
21 Newcastle 30 (from 32 games played)
22 Manchester City 30 (from 33 games played)
Good Friday 17th April (36 games played unless stated otherwise):
1 Everton 70 points (from 35 games played)
2 Liverpool 67
3 Tottenham 61 (from 34 games played)
4 Luton 59
5 Arsenal 58
6 Norwich 57
17 Newcastle 40
18 Oxford 39
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19 Leicester 37
______________________________________________
20 Charlton 34
21 Aston Villa 33
22 Manchester City 32
Tuesday 21st April (day after Easter Monday; 38 games played unless stated otherwise):
1 Everton 76 points (from 37 games played)
2 Liverpool 70
3 Tottenham 64 (from 36 games played)
4 Arsenal 64
5 Luton 62
6 Norwich 61
17 Newcastle 43
18 Oxford 42
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19 Leicester 40
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20 Charlton 37
21 Aston Villa 33
22 Manchester City 32
Liverpool beat Everton 3-1 at Anfield on Saturday 25th April to keep the title race alive
End of April (39 games played unless stated otherwise):
1 Everton 76 (from 38 games played)
2 Liverpool 73
3 Tottenham 68 (from 38 games played)
4 Arsenal 64
5 Luton 63
6 Norwich 62
17 Newcastle 46
18 Oxford 42
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19 Leicester 40
_______________________________________
20 Charlton 38
21 Aston Villa 36
22 Manchester City 35
May Day Bank Holiday Monday 4th April (41 out of 42 games played):
1 Everton 80 points (from 40 games played) (champions)
2 Liverpool 76
3 Tottenham 71 (from 40 games played)
4 Arsenal 70
5 Luton 66 (from 40 games played)
6 Norwich 65
17 Newcastle 47 (safe)
18 Oxford 42 (from 40 games played)
____________________________________________
19 Charlton 41
____________________________________________
20 Leicester 41
21 Manchester City 39
22 Aston Villa 36 (relegated)
Saturday 9th April (last day of season; scheduled 42nd of 42 rounds of fixtures)
1 Everton 83 (from 41 games played) (champions)
2 Liverpool 77
3 Tottenham 71 (from 41 games played)
4 Arsenal 70
5 Norwich 68
6 Wimbledon 66
7 Luton 66
8 Nottingham Forest 65
9 Watford 63
10 Coventry 63
11 Manchester United 56
12 Southampton 52
13 Sheffield Wednesday 52
14 Chelsea 52
15 West Ham 52
16 QPR 50
17 Newcastle 47
18 Oxford 46
______________________________________________
19 Charlton 44 (into newly-instigated promotion/relegation play-offs: Ipswich v Charlton; Leeds v Oldham (over two legs)
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20 Leicester 42 (relegated)
21 Manchester City 39 (relegated)
22 Aston Villa 36 (relegated)
Monday 11th May:
Everton 1 Tottenham 0
1 Everton 86 points (champions)
2 Liverpool 77
3 Tottenham 71
wish my mrs looked at me like roy Evans did to dalglish ( 3mins)
Shilton doing his usual thing, blaming others for goals, the parry v BRAZIL at the end, blaming Tony Adams ffs
Attendances look a bit sparse at ot there
Tottenham had a good chance of winning the league that year
They finished third, but I'm not sure they ever topped the table that season, and finished some way behind Everton.
Spurs had a fabulous side that season and were perhaps not that far away from making that breakthrough,but they were shut out of the top two places by Merseyside's twin powers. It was about the nearest they got as - certainly in the league - things went predominantly downhill for them in the years that followed.
Man U. Where are you.
That was a watershed season for Manchester United. They got off to a shocking start,quickly sinking in amongst the stragglers and even losing 0-1 at home to newly-promoted Charlton,a team who had got up against the odds while the South London club was effectively homeless,lodging at Crystal Palace while in exile from the Valley! The fans weren't happy and in October the board had had enough,bringing the axe down on the flamoyant Big Ron (Atkinson) after five or so years as their manager,during which United had been a good cup-winning side but always come in just behind the might of Merseyside,especially Liverpool. That in an era when United and Tottenham always made the splash headlines on the back pages for being the big spenders but never won the league despite the predictions proferred at the start of a new season by press and pundits.
So it was that in the mid-autumn a certain Alex Ferguson was lured down from Aberdeen,who he'd led to a Scottish league title and European glory. The United he took over were floundering somewhere in lower mid-table at best. Full of sound possession football but perhaps a little blunt for their own good at the attacking end,they won 2-0 at Old Trafford in one of his first league matches in charge,but Ferguson's great initial hurdle was to challenge an ingrained heavy drinking culture among a group of core players that conspired to act against their abundant talent,to rekindle unity at the club and to instill a true winning mentality in a team that had become used to coming 3rd or 4th in the league and winning a few cup competitions. United improved but such was the challenge that Ferguson was going to need time to truly turn the good ship United properly back onto the right course.
ophhh!!!!!
is this the last The blue dhite won the lragur
one more trophy in the nrxt 30 years
We do know your history
PUSB
Champions! Too long far too long
I h
Pooooo