The most BRUTAL match in English Football History | LEEDS UNITED vs CHELSEA - The Rivalry

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2020
  • The story of 1970's FA Cup final between Leeds United and Chelsea, dubbed "The most brutal game in English football history"
    Download the OneFootball app for free here! tinyurl.com/yyhf8wla
    Watch the full documentary here: • LEEDS UNITED vs CHELSE...
    Edited by Lewis Deighton
    Copyright © LUFC Lewis
    Business enquires: LUFCLewis44@gmail.com
    Contribute to the channel:
    paypal.me/LUFCLewis
    Use of media is on the basis of “fair dealing” under Section 29 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, allowing for criticism, comment, news reporting, research and education.
    Music provided by RFM: • Video
    Follow me on social media!⬇️
    Twitter: / lewisdeighton17
    Instagram: @Lewis_Deighton17
    Facebook: @LewisDeighton17
    Like the video if you enjoyed👍
    Got anything to say? Comment below💬
    Help out by sharing the video➡️
    Subscribe if you're new to the channel▶️
    Turn notifications on so you never miss a video🔔
    Thanks for watching!
    #LUFC #CFC #PremierLeague #MOT #ALAW #WALL #WACCOE #leeds #leedsunited #leedsfans #leedschants #ellandroad #revie #donrevie #bielsa #marcelobielsa #bremner #billybremner #hunter #normanhunter #giles #johnnygiles #jones #mickjones #charlton #jackcharlton #strachan #gordonstrachan #cantona #ericcantona #radebe #lucasradebe #matteo #dommatteo #viduka #markviduka #chelsea #chelseafc #chelseafans #chelseachants #london #stamford #stamfordbridge #mourinho #josemourinho #harris #ronharris #chopperharris #wise #denniswise #poyet #guspoyet #desailly #marceldesailly #zola #gianfrancozola #gullit #ruudgullit #lampard #franklampard #terry #johnterry #drogba #didierdrogba #hazard #edenhazard #torres #fernandotorres #spygate #facup #europaleague #championsleague #mufc #manchester #manchesterunited #manunited #manu #madrid #realmadrid #barca #barcelona #milan #acmilan #rival #rivalry #bestfootballchants #marchingontogether #allleedsarentwe #leedsaregoingup #championsofeurope #weallloveleeds #weareleeds #glorygloryleedsunited #leedsarefallingapartagain #mightywhites #thepeacocks #superleeds #dirtyleeds #united #lufclewis
  • СпортСпорт

Комментарии • 2,2 тыс.

  • @LUFCLewis
    @LUFCLewis  3 года назад +242

    Watch the full documentary: m.ruclips.net/video/K0SdNzjWCV8/видео.html
    Also, for anyone wondering, there was 1 yellow card and no red cards. After a review in 1997, it surfaced that there should’ve been 6 red cards and 20 yellow cards at the very least.

    • @WHU63
      @WHU63 3 года назад +46

      Brutal yes, but most of the players got up immediately. In the modern game they train you to do six somersaults if someone brushes up against you. Different days!

    • @simonwoods8809
      @simonwoods8809 3 года назад +17

      @david edbrooke-coffin Maybe there are pansies in the modern game but dirty play is dirty play and should be punished accordingly. Some of these tackles could have ended someone's career. I remember Martin Buchan pretty much doing that to Colin Bell in a Manc derby League Cup tie in 1975 at Maine Road (Bell made a sort of comeback but was never the same again - aged 29 or so - what a waste of great talent) and Jimmy "Head" Case breaking Geoff Nulty's leg in a Scouse derby a few years later at Goodison. Interesting to see Billy Bremner getting shirty about a challenge that he would have happily dished out himself. Leeds had a reputation but they were hardly unique. We will never see those days again.

    • @yanikg-force
      @yanikg-force 3 года назад +1

      @david edbrooke-coffin True that!

    • @kchall5
      @kchall5 3 года назад +3

      It's a good thing VAR was still about 50 years off, or the entirety of both teams would have been sent off.

    • @tomburley
      @tomburley 3 года назад +14

      This is back when football was played by men.

  • @bonechip01
    @bonechip01 3 года назад +1936

    High, testosterone, balding, magnificent beards. And that's just the players wives.

  • @gwangi64
    @gwangi64 3 года назад +558

    The journalist Hugh McIlvanny said it seemed like the ref in this game would only give a free kick on production of a death certificate.

    • @jerryoshea3116
      @jerryoshea3116 3 года назад +21

      Great comment and a truly fantastic "old school"journalist(till this day he's the only sports Journalist to receive "The Journalist of the year" award)

    • @vb8428
      @vb8428 3 года назад +1

      Think I heard that from Drury the other day

    • @Fleshox19-uz3qt
      @Fleshox19-uz3qt 3 года назад +4

      I laughed immediately after reading.

    • @mrts9544
      @mrts9544 3 года назад +4

      😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣

    • @paulokello5981
      @paulokello5981 3 года назад +2

      😂

  • @robertrodes1546
    @robertrodes1546 Год назад +74

    I was one of those 28.49 million watching in the UK, as a visiting American boy of 14. I was a Chelsea fan at the time. For me, Peter Bonetti was second only to Gordon Banks, and he kept Chelsea in the game with one brilliant save after another.
    When Chelsea equalized at the end of the first game, I ran screaming all over the house. (My sainted mother never said a word...)

    • @jamsheadaziz3999
      @jamsheadaziz3999 2 месяца назад +2

      Shame Bonetti could not repeat it in Mexico '70, quarter final vs West Germany. An absolute howler or two.

  • @brianthesnail3815
    @brianthesnail3815 3 года назад +4

    I was a LUFC supporter as a kid. The fans used to go to matches armed but the violence on the pitch was unrelenting. The pitches were a sea of mud, boots were heavy and hard leather and blood flowed. It was basically a medieval battle.

  • @johndempsey7528
    @johndempsey7528 3 года назад +1040

    Two tough matches to play in but two great teams of that era and also I was lucky to be on the winning side .John Dempsey Ex Chelsea player.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye 3 года назад +47

      Hello John
      What a credit you were, my friend.
      Did the players accept that was the way the game was and at the end just move on to the next game ?

    • @colincarroll5953
      @colincarroll5953 3 года назад +36

      Big respect to you john for the great era you played in yes it was tough and physical but also full of passion and wonderful players too this was proper football and alot of todays prima Donna's wouldn't have cut it .We also had the best commentators ever in those days and a fantastic atmosphere at grounds bet you wouldn't swap those memories for anything john.

    • @judyredd5197
      @judyredd5197 3 года назад +42

      Thank you John, You are well and fondly remembered as a solid ,valuable, talented player in one of the best teams Chelsea ever had, a Cup Winners Cup goal scorer and a gifted defender alongside Ron Harris and David Webb.

    • @johndempsey7528
      @johndempsey7528 3 года назад +61

      Thank you Judy for your kind words you said.Yes I was part of a really great team which I will never forget and also to score in the Cup Winners Final when we won against Real Madrid was a great moment. Thank You again Stay Safe.

    • @johndempsey7528
      @johndempsey7528 3 года назад +41

      Hi Colin I agree with what you say football then was always full of passion and no one dived trying to get players sent off like they do today. I played in a great team and their was also lots of great players in other teams that would grace football today.I have lots of memories from them days and one of them is how the fans got behind the teams you had to play to realise how they pushed you on to win.

  • @roberteastwood9886
    @roberteastwood9886 3 года назад +400

    Back in the days when toilet rolls were so common, you could afford to throw them on the pitch.

    • @andymoore9977
      @andymoore9977 3 года назад +6

      I think some of the players might have found them useful seeing some of those tackles going in!

    • @katieturner5651
      @katieturner5651 3 года назад +2

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @willyappel7722
      @willyappel7722 3 года назад +8

      Little did they know that 40 years later toilet rolls are rare collectoritems.

    • @cliveradcliffe2813
      @cliveradcliffe2813 3 года назад

      Grannn

    • @rjjcms1
      @rjjcms1 3 года назад +1

      The lost art of long-distance bog roll throwing. If I rock up outside a ground now and hurl it as far as I can during a match,I wonder if I can get it to land on the pitch.

  • @Ray-ki6fs
    @Ray-ki6fs 2 года назад +107

    I was 16 years of age and went to both games with my uncle, it was a fantastic experience and remember it so well, specifically the atmosphere and was fortunate to be sitting in the stands at Old Trafford for the replay, along by the Stretford end which the Chelsea fans occupied. There was so much intense gripping drama, it was difficult to keep up. When the final whistle went our seats which all had cushions on them, were unceremoniously thrown into the air in celebration and delight to form a cloud of cushions in the air. It was an absolutely brilliant night and a terrific memory that I’ll never forget!

    • @Caskchap
      @Caskchap 2 года назад

      Stretford End not Stratford FFS!

    • @johnnyoranges
      @johnnyoranges Год назад +4

      @@Caskchap He said STRETFORD.

    • @johnmonaghan-coombs3996
      @johnmonaghan-coombs3996 10 месяцев назад

      I remember both games well 😀

    • @oleggorky906
      @oleggorky906 11 минут назад +1

      ⁠@@johnnyorangesYou were commenting a year later after he edited his original comment. Otherwise, geezer wouldn’t have said it.

  • @happyfeet4506
    @happyfeet4506 2 года назад +106

    This is when football was about the football and not the stupid ridiculous amounts of money they get paid now. 2 amazing teams battling it out as it still should be. Respect to all of them 👍

    • @genustinca5565
      @genustinca5565 Год назад +15

      Yes but it's also striking how much older players looked a couple of decades ago. Even though they are the same age as players today, they looked like they were in their 40s and 50s. But then today's players look and act like spoiled teenagers so I guess it's all relative.

    • @morrisallensheriff5241
      @morrisallensheriff5241 Год назад

      You called this football? 😅 You must be sick, these idiots don't even understand the game, too many sluggish and naive style of play

    • @morrisallensheriff5241
      @morrisallensheriff5241 Год назад +3

      They're just playing fouls all over the pitch and you called it football, I bet all those ones are former war fighters

    • @Alex123491996
      @Alex123491996 11 месяцев назад

      This is more rugby than football. Pathetic 😂

    • @MrRazorblade999
      @MrRazorblade999 11 месяцев назад

      Football is about brutality? Oookey

  • @ChelseaSW6
    @ChelseaSW6 2 года назад +31

    Watching this in 2021 and looking back at those marvellous memories, such passion 2 great teams, that Leeds side was really something else, youngsters today don’t realise how big a football club Leeds is and that Chelsea was always big, their history isn’t since a certain Russian bought us out we won a European trophy before Liverpool even knew what one was
    Leeds and Chelsea are massive football clubs with huge rivalry that still exists today, mainly the old school as the youngsters are oblivious to what football back in the day was like it’s like chalk and cheese to how it is today
    I remember even when we were both in the 2nd tier battling it out to be Champions we were always mentioned when Premier League s and breakaway leagues were spoken about, you had two incredible fan bases especially away from home huge numbers both of them where the battles between Leeds and Chelsea were on and off the pitch
    It was just an era where men were men where life was tough but free at the same time no social media, moments were spontaneous not staged you could rock up to an away game on the day 10,000 of you pay on the gate they’d squeeze you in if it was possible
    Give me those days any day over today s cooperate mish mash, big up Leeds United big up Chelsea, great video well done.

    • @johndempsey7528
      @johndempsey7528 2 года назад +7

      Read your words with interest well done for what you wrote. John Dempsey ex Chelsea player

    • @lennon1482
      @lennon1482 Год назад +1

      liverpool were in the cup winners cup final in 1966 , they got beat by dortmund

  • @arigones
    @arigones 3 года назад +230

    Those were the days. My Dad always mentioned Chelsea Vs Leeds in the good old days as being real battles. So right. It's a joy to watch. These days they go down like pansies after being hit by a daisy..

    • @marcocastellani8348
      @marcocastellani8348 3 года назад +14

      I am not sure where is the joy in seeing two technically mediocre sides beating the snot out of each other. Football is skills, not butchery.

    • @fradiavolo11
      @fradiavolo11 3 года назад +5

      @@irvinglambert9316 Rivalry and physical play does not mean violence and thuggery. Otherwise, football could be played by the supporters themselves. The stands of every stadium are full of brutes, louts, and thugs who would be glad to beat each other up for one tenth of the wage of a standard PL player (they already do it for free!).

    • @vinnyganzano1930
      @vinnyganzano1930 3 года назад +4

      Yeah but there's a happy medium, this game wasn't it.

    • @fancypelusa2863
      @fancypelusa2863 3 года назад +2

      Nancy Boys and Delicate Johnnys.

    • @frankbutcher7812
      @frankbutcher7812 2 года назад +10

      These days players fall over if the wind picks up. They've all got poppadom legs. Back in the day they were made of steel and it took a WW2 tank to knock em down.

  • @guitarlover302
    @guitarlover302 3 года назад +55

    As a 64 year old life time Chelsea fan ! My era 👌 Osgood Bonneti Cooke - real games played by footballers who can play on any surface - respect to Leeds who had great players and manager 👌

    • @johnfused8281
      @johnfused8281 3 года назад

      But did you have Heccy B and mesut ozil?

    • @davidshepherd17
      @davidshepherd17 3 года назад +2

      Am a 61 year old West Ham fan but the memories growing up 1970 cup final the 68 European cup final world cup 70 Pele Arsenal double 71 night at spurs goal was only on the news George who can hit them 71 cup final
      Spending all cup final day in me pyjamas drinking cherryade and eating Smith's crisps watching cup final it's a knockout teams at their hotel all the funnies.
      Now it's cup final 5-15pm with same 3 or 4 teams an hour before KO oh well we can only remember.

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 года назад +1

      @@davidshepherd17 agree the FA Cup.has been disgracefully down graded by the powers that be for some time, but let's not get dewy eyed about the 70s . It was pretty thuggish and skilful.players.were given no protection by referees. The pitches were appalling and a godsend to the less skilful! Golden Age- dont make me laugh and I've been watching Football since 1955. The 50s and early 60s were fairly rough and ready, but with the 70s ,teams like Leeds added a cynicism to the roughness! They were a contemptible team matched only by the product of the 70s cynicism allied to roughness- Wimbledon!!

    • @guitarlover302
      @guitarlover302 3 года назад +1

      @@davidshepherd17 Yes agree ! was a great day ! build up in the morning and then kick off at 3 - whole of football ruined by mega money - no longer game of working class and communities - Appalled by latest European breakaway league !

    • @johndempsey7528
      @johndempsey7528 2 года назад +6

      Really liked your comment. John Dempsey ex Chelsea player

  • @robharding4028
    @robharding4028 3 года назад +45

    I loved this club back in 1971, and this cup meeting with Chelsea is among my all time greats of the game.

  • @doctorcooper9205
    @doctorcooper9205 3 года назад +7

    I used to help run the Chelsea supporters club in N Ireland and Ozzie would come over frequently. I used to pick him up at the airport and he would often talk about the cup final and the rivalry with Leeds and what it mean't to both the fans and players. He was also good friends with Norman Hunter these guys were real legends. He always managed to get me tickets for the big games, he was a true gent. How many players today truly love the club they play for like these guys did?

    • @mizofan
      @mizofan 2 года назад +2

      Ah, as a kid i played with marbles, each an individual footballer for my matches between teams by colour. My cousin lost Pater Osgood and Peter Lorimer in the garden- losing Lorimer was bad enough as it undermined the future matches, but i never forgave him for losing Osgood. a most tragic case of losing your marbles.

  • @thevirus7368
    @thevirus7368 2 года назад +33

    Even a manchester united fan, I really admire this video. 2 sets of players getting stuck in as men. When we played on the green when I was a kid, this is what it was like. One set of lads from newbarns and one set from town. Great stuff. We need more men in football again. Every team now has divers. Especially our lot. Sick of it. Get stuck in and give everything for the lads on your team.

    • @victorsproule9508
      @victorsproule9508 2 года назад +7

      Those days football was really a contact sport and not the choreographed ballet for prima-donnas it has become.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 2 года назад +3

      @@victorsproule9508 the ball was heavier and the pitches like clay, the modern game can be an art form on a good day.

    • @garystewart2263
      @garystewart2263 2 месяца назад

      I'm also a man utd fan of over 60 years, incredible watching 2 great teams battling it out players kicking lumps out of each other and getting up an fighting on great skill as well Leeds were an incredible team, think there achiles heal was the goal keeper, a great watch

  • @davidworrall139
    @davidworrall139 2 года назад +4

    Ended up with furniture broken in the living room of my house in Leeds as the family watched the match. I progressed onto stadiums at Molineux and Parc des Princes 😂

  • @simonyeo3246
    @simonyeo3246 3 года назад +17

    I remember this as I was allowed to stay up even on a school night as the replay was midweek. The Chelsea I loved winning the FA Cup for the first time. Then went on to win the European Cup Winners Cup next season against Real Madrid.
    Oh and to all the 'real men in those days' comments - my dad used to say the same about players in the 70's and how soft they were. So nothing changes

    • @peterh1353
      @peterh1353 2 года назад

      Must have gone to bed early -- this was 7.30 kick off.

    • @thespeculum785
      @thespeculum785 3 месяца назад

      Your dad was right then, too.

  • @rogelioduenas8317
    @rogelioduenas8317 3 года назад +405

    The good days of football where the players look like 40, probably had a couple shots of whiskey to calm the nerves before the match

    • @sweaty7012
      @sweaty7012 3 года назад +26

      That's the Sunday League you've just described there. Football at its purest.

    • @bongasokhela493
      @bongasokhela493 3 года назад +3

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Munzi037
      @Munzi037 3 года назад +8

      When the quality of the game and pitch was worse than primary schools this age

    • @daz.6112
      @daz.6112 3 года назад +6

      And some of them smoked.

    • @beniteztheconman
      @beniteztheconman 3 года назад +1

      Hahaha true... footballers should look 40 like the good old days!

  • @billygdj
    @billygdj 3 года назад +36

    Seeing Bremner getting chopped , and Billy turning round to see who did it , and it's none other than mild-mannered Scottish International colleague , Charlie Cooke !

    • @cfcheadhunter
      @cfcheadhunter 2 года назад +3

      Charlie Cooke. My favourite player of all time. Little magician on those pitches.

    • @kennymcevoy8672
      @kennymcevoy8672 2 года назад +1

      what a box of tricks charlie cooke was happy days.

    • @mizofan
      @mizofan 2 года назад +2

      and what a pass by Charlie for the equaliser- a legendary moment.

    • @Michael-cb5nm
      @Michael-cb5nm 2 года назад

      FYI…Charlie eventually made his way to the US and partnered with legendary Dutch coach Weil Coerver to run a series of soccer schools, focused on developing mastery of the ball and one v one skills.
      I was one of those US kids who was coached by Charlie…I didn’t really know who he was as a player until many years later!

  • @tonyhedditch4402
    @tonyhedditch4402 2 года назад +4

    Hi John. I've been a Chelsea fan since i was 10 in 1967, (losing to Tottenham 2-1 in the cup final). Beating Leeds at the time was the happiest day in my life. Loved every single one of you. Ian Hutchinson was my hero, ( with no disrespect to anyone else). You were /are all HEROES in my eyes. What a club we are. Special thanks to Mr A. (the boss). Massive force in world football. Once again John, thank you, not forgetting Dave Sexton.

    • @johndempsey7528
      @johndempsey7528 Год назад +2

      Hi Tony just seen your comment on here and I am so pleased that you liked are team back then and we gave you a lot of pleasure. Yes they were two tough games as Leeds were a really good team but I was so pleased to win the FA Cup but also for every Chelsea fan. “Blue Is The Colour “

  • @CFCVOLUNTEERUA
    @CFCVOLUNTEERUA 3 года назад +18

    As a Chelsea supporter of many years, Leeds are just as bigger club as us. Many Chelsea fans of a certain era I would imagine like myself have a bit of grudging respect for leeds both on and off the pitch. Vice versa I should imagine..

    • @bganonimouse2754
      @bganonimouse2754 3 года назад +3

      Honestly, we've been luckier than Leeds because of geography. If they were a London side and Chelsea were from the North I expect Leeds would be more successful now. Still, we suffered many years in division 2 and there was a time where we might have been liquidated, so we deserve today's success too.

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 года назад +4

      Chelsea are certainly a bigger club than Leeds now, and in truth, Leeds were only ever a big club in the Revie era! Even then, their gates were far lower than the other big clubs, especially for a one club city. Rugby League has always been a counter attraction in Leeds, unlike in Manchester or Liverpool. Chelsea are not really as big a club as Arsenal, Man Utd, or Liverpool either. They are from a middle class area and have 5 other league teams within 8 miles. Admittedly all 5 are smaller but together they account for a fair amount of fans( especially Fulham and Crystal Palace) and could well be joined by a sixth the way Sutton are performing in the National League ! Both Chelsea and Leeds are hampered in a way the really big teams are not, for all their success , Chelsea gates are still lower than Tottenham's !

    • @bganonimouse2754
      @bganonimouse2754 3 года назад +1

      @@johnsaunders2109 Got to say that the attendance figures comparison between Chelsea and Tottenham isn't really a fair one - because part of the story is size of stadia and depends on years you are measuring. All time attendances for example are not going to favour a team that spends longer in the second division (although both sides have had these moments).
      But most of the rest of what you wrote I can agree with, although bear in mind that Chelsea was a working class area. Certainly when I used to walk down the North End Road to Stamford Bridge there were a hell of a lot of working class people, just like there used to be when walking around the houses at Highbury.
      For sure Chelsea was not even close to being a member of the original big 5 clubs.

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 года назад +4

      @@bganonimouse2754 Both Islington and Fulham have been gentrified, but Arsenal are a team less inclined to local support than other London teams. Their geographical support is nowhere near as pronounced as Tottenham (N London and Hertfordshire).: West Ham ( Essex estuary) and Chelsea( SW London and Surrey). Of these hinterlands , Chelseas is by far the least working class and they also have more neighbouring clubs of a fairly high standard than the others. It makes for lower support.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 2 года назад

      @@johnsaunders2109 Yeah , ignoring Leyton Orient (as most people do), around Chelsea there is QPR, Brentford, Watford, AFC Wimbledon, Palace, and the exit roads from London go to Guildford and Slough which are hardly areas to pull in great support. Both Chelsea and Leeds though have suffered from owners that regarded them as money machines in the past to pull for their own benefit. Leeds have certainly upset the normal promotion/demotion pattern of the Premiership, coming equiped and ready to play and win, finding it tougher this year as other clubs have sussed what is going on, but with careful player additions Leeds should be able to beat any other club and for the price of the team , give good value.

  • @chelseacharger
    @chelseacharger 3 года назад +35

    The '70 Final is remembered too much for the needle although that only added to compelling viewing. We should never forget that these two teams showed no little skill on terrible surfaces. It was billed beforehand as a potential classic Cup Final with two sides who'd built up an intense rivalry in the preceding years. It didn't disappoint.

  • @postiey
    @postiey 3 года назад +35

    Was at school when this final was played and when the ref blew for time i swear was the happiest schoolkid on this planet. Good days and 2 cracking teams who really should've won more trophies than they actually did. Thank you for posting this.

  • @steven2212
    @steven2212 2 года назад +6

    Glorious! Anytime my fellow Americans say "Football" isn't physical enough, I make them watch this. Just fantastic action.

  • @colincolin5696
    @colincolin5696 8 месяцев назад +3

    I’m here because of Gary 😅

  • @davepike7546
    @davepike7546 3 года назад +91

    The game that made me a Chelsea fan. Dad worked shifts in the dock, so never got taken to any football matches. Watched both games and leapt up at the final whistle, landed and broke the wood support under the chair. Even the spanking I got, couldn't dampen the elation. 50 years ago now, but the rivalry, with Derby's help, feels just as strong. Keep your hankies handy :). In peace.

    • @dinonebitno6251
      @dinonebitno6251 3 года назад +5

      Hello from Bosnia. Im to Chelsea fan and i wish you good health and long life! 💙

    • @dinonebitno6251
      @dinonebitno6251 3 года назад

      Hello from Bosnia. Im to Chelsea fan and i wish you good health and long life! 💙

    • @davepike7546
      @davepike7546 3 года назад +6

      @@dinonebitno6251 Same to you Dino.

    • @emclearance5694
      @emclearance5694 3 года назад

      Yes . Chelsea v Derby was always a good game . I remember as a Kid in Singapore about 1971 . One of the Best games captured on TV , at the Baseball Ground. It was broadcast next day on TV for the Military Families because it was played on New Years Day . ... Its on RUclips .UpTheStags.

    • @philroger4979
      @philroger4979 2 года назад +1

      Funnily enough, this game made me a Leeds fan!

  • @johnburrows3385
    @johnburrows3385 3 года назад +146

    Back in the day when the FA Cup was a big deal.

    • @nihilistcentraluk442
      @nihilistcentraluk442 3 года назад +24

      Back in the days when clubs had some meaningful connection with their supporters instead of being marketing operations by big business

    • @robertstorey7476
      @robertstorey7476 3 года назад +18

      I remember well the incredible excitement of FA cup Saturday as a kid. It seemed to get lost when all the big money flooded into the game in the 1990's.

    • @martm216
      @martm216 3 года назад +3

      Exactly

    • @choppy249
      @choppy249 3 года назад +13

      Exactly , I remember the streets were deserted back in those days when the Cup Final was on , just a few women walking around . Nowadays it is just like a normal day . Hardly anyone seems bothered .

    • @nihilistcentraluk442
      @nihilistcentraluk442 3 года назад +3

      @@robertstorey7476 the communities which are now lost forever.

  • @spudgunn8695
    @spudgunn8695 3 года назад +17

    I remember when they asked a ref from 2000 to re adjudicate this match, and he said that after 56 minutes of play he would have had to abandon the match as neither team would have enough players left on the pitch due to red cards. And he said that was if he was being as lenient as possible, otherwise it wouldn't have made it to half time!

    • @mikefraser4513
      @mikefraser4513 2 года назад +2

      And he would have been correct. I don't like todays football..too much acting. But those fouls were almost GBH. Nothing professional about that.

    • @abednego8304
      @abednego8304 2 года назад

      LoL

    • @Dave-hu5hr
      @Dave-hu5hr 2 года назад

      Graham Poll.. ?

  • @bobbus_74
    @bobbus_74 2 года назад +28

    amazing commitment from both teams. They kicked the shit out of each other but still respected each other at the end of it all. Class.

    • @pauldickinson6943
      @pauldickinson6943 2 года назад +1

      some seriously meaty tackles fying in that game.

    • @johndempsey7528
      @johndempsey7528 2 года назад +3

      Hi Paul glad you liked the game which was very tough to play in. John Dempsey ex Chelsea Player

    • @johndempsey7528
      @johndempsey7528 2 года назад +3

      Glad you enjoyed the match and it a really tough game to play in which I enjoyed. John Dempsey ex Chelsea Player.

    • @gerardkeaveny9746
      @gerardkeaveny9746 2 года назад +1

      If you can't kick the ball kick the man that's got it

    • @gunternetzer9621
      @gunternetzer9621 Год назад +1

      The opposite of class. Football should never be a battle, except a battle of wits.

  • @AndyMartin401
    @AndyMartin401 3 года назад +7

    Excellent, excellent Lewis. Well put together.
    💙🤍💛

  • @matthewballard6399
    @matthewballard6399 3 года назад +23

    Great vlog..as a Chelsea fan I was brought up on the legend and rivalry of this game..and a few tasty encounters inbetween..good to have you back..in a strange sort of way!!!..ha.ha.

  • @fishyfish6510
    @fishyfish6510 3 года назад +31

    This match is our history 💙

  • @burants89
    @burants89 3 года назад +5

    Billy Bremner was a Scottish legend

  • @mikemabson1525
    @mikemabson1525 3 года назад +40

    Great video for those who say Chelsea have no history...

    • @AliHamim10
      @AliHamim10 3 года назад

      @Dave Dumpling 🤡🤡

    • @williamwhitcombe6487
      @williamwhitcombe6487 3 года назад +2

      They don't. But that's still a 100% movie history than Leeds have, or ever will have

    • @geriatricmotorcars9516
      @geriatricmotorcars9516 3 года назад +1

      Bigger Crowds back then, electric atmosphere.
      The best away support...
      Ken Bates was our hero...

    • @johnrockyryan
      @johnrockyryan 14 дней назад

      Its when you guys had your soul still, i miss this Chelsea

  • @stanandollie7041
    @stanandollie7041 3 года назад +3

    As A CFC fan , great game , great players never to be forgotten.

  • @cfcheadhunter
    @cfcheadhunter 2 года назад +5

    Still the biggest club in London. Massive support. I was 9 or 10 years old ffs. Lost to Spurs in 67. Won the League Cup in 65. Cup Winner's Cup in 71. Then lost to Stoke in the 72 League Cup final. Couple a seasons later we were Div 2 for crying out loud. Great days.

  • @fulham1958
    @fulham1958 3 года назад +15

    The two best cup finals. Ever.

  • @spudtaater602
    @spudtaater602 3 года назад +4

    Im a 67 year old Chelsea fan who along with a mate went to that game. We had Leeds tickets which despite our best efforts could not swap. To witness the Chelsea fans on the Stretford End made up for it though. After the match me and my mate got chased to his car by Man City fans!!!. Obviously a day/night that stays vividly in my ageing mind. What a team to support...

    • @davidpollard4051
      @davidpollard4051 3 года назад +2

      City were playing in the ECWC final in Vienna the same night. Wasn't on tv though hence the CIty fans were looking for other forms of distraction.

  • @Broonzied
    @Broonzied 3 года назад +128

    Players from this era look like men whereas today they almost all look like boys.

    • @kiwanukaivan8651
      @kiwanukaivan8651 3 года назад +4

      Players from that Era don't look like professional footballers.

    • @Broonzied
      @Broonzied 3 года назад +22

      @@kiwanukaivan8651 Of course they do. They look like professional players from that era.

    • @niallburke8985
      @niallburke8985 3 года назад +7

      More like pub football

    • @jovidbodurkhonov7623
      @jovidbodurkhonov7623 3 года назад +1

      @@niallburke8985 Hard man football

    • @dickweeeeeeeeeed
      @dickweeeeeeeeeed 3 года назад +13

      @@kiwanukaivan8651 no alice bands..no man buns..no sarongs..no vegan diets..yeah real men.

  • @jimlogan2329
    @jimlogan2329 3 года назад +19

    How true. It’s not the “Working Man’s Game” anymore that’s for sure.

    • @sanatmahapatra3603
      @sanatmahapatra3603 3 года назад +1

      It's a board game today in comparison

    • @jimlogan2329
      @jimlogan2329 3 года назад +2

      @@angie-smart-but-casual I totally agree with you. I have supported my local team, Motherwell for over fifty years. I have saw many Scottish men go “Down the road” to make name for themselves. Ian StJohn, Gary McAllister, Brian McClair and James McFadden to name a few. Nowadays, we are just not producing the homegrown talent in the same numbers or of the required calibre. Game is getting too “ Top heavy” with not enough TV money distributed down to the lower levels. Don’t get me started.🙀

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 года назад +1

      Never was! Always run by middle class businessmen !!

    • @jimlogan2329
      @jimlogan2329 3 года назад

      @@johnsaunders2109 Talking about the entrance money. I paid 1/6 at the boys gate at Motherwell in 1967. I think it’s £15:00 pre- Covid (I have a Season Ticket). How much to get into the like of Chelsea.

    • @ga-ow7yf
      @ga-ow7yf 3 года назад

      @@jimlogan2329 This is what football is all about.Did not know them great players you mentioned started
      At Motherwell.

  • @jamiecooksey9037
    @jamiecooksey9037 Год назад +14

    I watched this on TV and will never forget Webb's goal. That was real football back then, dirty and brutal, but incredibly entertaining. God bless those players who went before, and played for the club and not the salary.

    • @codingstyle9480
      @codingstyle9480 10 месяцев назад

      Brutal and entertaining. What a stupid remark. I see only gladiators on the pitch.

  • @wernerdefenceleague5634
    @wernerdefenceleague5634 3 года назад +11

    Peter osgood legend

  • @james-alexanderjohnson2847
    @james-alexanderjohnson2847 2 года назад +9

    I love that replay Leeds goal so much. Bravery, speed, so clinical. At our very best.

    • @stephenreeds3632
      @stephenreeds3632 8 месяцев назад +1

      With an elbow in the chin to start it all off.

  • @EstelleCecil
    @EstelleCecil 3 месяца назад +1

    For all of you youngsters reading these messages. This was a period when 10+ teams each year really felt they had an equal chance of winning the league and possibly the FA Cup. Leeds, Liverpool, Everton, Derby County, Arsenal, Man City, Man Utd and Chelsea. All these teams had amazing players and great managers. Even teams not mentioned like Moore, Peters and Hurst’s West Ham, Malcom McDonald’s Newcastle and Queens Park Rangers’ greats: Venables, Marsh, Parkes and Gerry Francis. There were no easy games. Pitches looked like rain-soaked mud-pit Glastonbury festival weekends, for two thirds of the season each year. It was a great heavily contested era for the sport. The English top division had great players in all teams. The talent went deep.
    West Germany, Holland, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Scotland and Yugoslavia had two or 3 really big teams in their league unlike the English top tier. If the same qualification for the champions league happened back then in the 70s with the top 4 gaining entry instead of just the league winners. I think of that era only Cruyff’s Ajax, Beckenbauer’s Bayern Munich and possibly Stein’s Celtic would occasionally get close to those above named clubs.
    I still do not understand though, how with all of the great English world class players available, why England failed to qualify for two World Cups in the 70s?

  • @bigbasspa
    @bigbasspa 2 года назад +10

    What a great pair of games. Like others have said, players today are so protected that all the passion has disappeared from football other than when goals are scored. George Best was great when everyone was trying to cut him in half on the pitch. Very few of the legendary hard men from those days could stop him. People rave about Messi, Ronaldo, Naymer and the like but how many of those would be so great if they had to play in games and on pitches like George did? Football through to the end of the 70's was a sport. Since then it's become more and more of a business and is mostly bland as fuck compared to the days of those Chelsea - Leeds games.

  • @ibrahkimesu2402
    @ibrahkimesu2402 3 года назад +30

    If Neymar woykd have beene playing, he would have never gone through the gates

  • @plasticage2085
    @plasticage2085 3 года назад +19

    bites yer legs vs chopper harris. good ol' one

  • @BadstreetMI
    @BadstreetMI 10 месяцев назад +1

    You gotta love a guy running for goal with the ball, delivering a forearm shiver to the last defender to beat, and then burying the thing in the back of the net. You can't really do that anymore.

  • @puglia5375
    @puglia5375 3 года назад +6

    bloody hell. i wish football was like that still, mick jones, what a goal!

  • @lesblakeman
    @lesblakeman 3 года назад +43

    Great to see Ian Hutchinson , the best long throw exponent EVER

    • @kevinjackson7375
      @kevinjackson7375 3 года назад

      Ian Hutchinson was THE MAN !!

    • @johnsheldrick7523
      @johnsheldrick7523 3 года назад +1

      Martin Chivers was just as good

    • @jamessim1858
      @jamessim1858 2 года назад

      No much o a player but what a javelin thrower he would have made!

    • @IBeeZ2012
      @IBeeZ2012 2 года назад +1

      Rory Delap is the best long throw specialist ever by a mile. Of course these days he was criticised for it by the primadonas & MOTD!

    • @jamessim1858
      @jamessim1858 2 года назад

      @@IBeeZ2012 Your wrong dude.

  • @welshlad6427
    @welshlad6427 3 года назад +13

    The good old days. Love it proper mans game.

    • @welshlad6427
      @welshlad6427 3 года назад +3

      @valleywoodworker calm down ye little snowflake. Within this hard period of the game came many great players. Best, Pele and the rest. They could give it back too but could also play without protection on rubbish pitches. Proper men. None of this can’t be touched on pristine pitches. A lot easier now.

    • @stephenpurves2590
      @stephenpurves2590 3 года назад +1

      @valleywoodworker you saw about two minutes of both games. I suggest you watch each game in their entireties, I'm sure they are available somewhere on youtube. Without a doubt this was the best ever FA cup final. Both teams were full of top class players, who knew how to look after themselves and their team mates, both were as hard as nails and never gave each other an inch. The football was great and the brutality merely added to the game. Not one inch given and not one inch asked for. Players get red cards for slightly mistiming a tackle these days, even when no one is hurt. I've seen many a good game ruined by one team un-necessarily reduced to ten men.

    • @stephenpurves2590
      @stephenpurves2590 3 года назад

      @valleywoodworker Reading down the rest of the comments the clear majority appear to disagree with you. However I would have to say that many of your points are valid, pitches are miles better than they were back then, coaching, training and medical supervision are also much improved. Technology has improved both the ball and the kit, of course that was completely outwith the control of the players, they had to use what was available to them and thankfully they did so that our game could improve. Yes I'd be the first to agree Franny Lee could be a cheating ****, but he was one of only a very small few, every player today knows how to throw themselves to the ground to try and cheat the referee (and therefor the game). I'd be the first to admit the game is glossier and more professionally presented than ever before, Stadiums are fantastic, the TV coverage is great and there is much to be admired about the modern game, including none of the midless violence on the terraces in the 1970-80s. With regards to all the medical conditions you mention, obviously I have to agree with you, however at present we have no idea at all how the modern player's health will be affected in the future. My understanding is that it is the act of heading which is of serious concern, and not just the heavy balls (although even I would concede that the old heavy balls probably were a big contributor). Please also note that by the 1970's ball technology had improved dramitically. Skillful players of their age, Best Law, Greaves etc WERE appreciated for their skill back then. Is today's game light years better than back then, well clearly it has a lot more money thrown at it, players are set for life with one decent contract, they are fitter, faster and technically better (generally), they get looked after physically. But they owe the development of the game to those who came before them. Diving, cheating, VAR (don't get me started there) have not improved the game at all. Great players will always be great players, to write them off as being from a bygone era is disrespecting what they gave to our game. There were very few images from our footballing past prior to 1960, but I would suggest that you find images from the 1951 FA cup final and tell me that both of Jackie Milburn's goals wouldn't have graced any modern day game. Other than the cheating, diving VAR etc I still love the modern game, but I'm sorry to call yester-years players thugs and write them off the way you have is nothing short of complete disrespect for our game's history.

  • @bigali1963
    @bigali1963 3 года назад +24

    U know that health and well being aren’t to the foremost when your manager lights up a benson & hedges

    • @billpugh58
      @billpugh58 3 года назад

      He smoked cigars did Mr Revie.

    • @uttaradit2
      @uttaradit2 3 года назад +1

      freedom torches

    • @nd-sd1vx
      @nd-sd1vx 3 года назад +1

      Precisely the health and wellbeing etc is little part of the reason their soft as shit today. Scared to die more than ever today.Luxury and convenience debased them. Hard times create strong men, good times create weak men.

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 года назад +2

      @@nd-sd1vx the 70s was one of the 'softest ' times in our History! Jobs were plentiful and secure, immigration was nowhere near todays level, and street violence low. Perhaps both Footballers and Football Fans found this state of affairs boring, and decided to create their own violence , both on and off the pitch !!

    • @nd-sd1vx
      @nd-sd1vx 3 года назад +3

      @@johnsaunders2109 It's 1970. You'd just come out of rationing only 20 years before. They are the parents of these men playing. The players are products of that parenting.They grew up belted still in the house for disrespect THey were taught values by men and women who grew up in a time you could still be hung, for crossing certain lines. Their parents had them before the swinging sixties which is the start of the rot. Sodomites are not quite flavour of the month, therefore men conform more to masculine roles, emulate their Fathers etc. Their fathers and mams, grew up being bombed out, and accepting they might lose their life in war perhaps. Their Fathers did national service. People still worked together to some extent, as Thatcher had not made everything individual, and Blair had not come in and got everyone competing against each other to reach targets.. I get your point and agree, but the effects of a soft 70s are to be seen later. Not in 1970 this match.The causes for this match are laid down a generation before,

  • @thomasmorin749
    @thomasmorin749 3 года назад +2

    On the day that the great Peter lorimar sadly passed this great final means much more.

  • @stevenmorley1639
    @stevenmorley1639 3 года назад +7

    Brutal but riveting, classic FA cup and replay !.

  • @GEricG
    @GEricG 2 года назад +6

    The days when the ball hit the back of the net and you could celebrate instead of waiting for a VAR decision.

    • @thespeculum785
      @thespeculum785 3 месяца назад

      Technological progress = spiritual/aesthetic regression

  • @leecook8818
    @leecook8818 2 года назад +1

    I remember watching this on tv - great games. Lots of people supported Leeds at that time including my older brother and we lived in Devon.

  • @2bsure407
    @2bsure407 3 года назад +4

    Two great sides and these games that started the Chelsea/Leeds rivalry.
    Wonderful times

  • @chrisd0407
    @chrisd0407 3 года назад +4

    I was 18 then, watched both games, and I can tell you now both Leeds & Chelsea had some of the most brutal fans to match. As an Owls fan (waits for abuse...) you could just about predict crowd trouble from Leeds, Chelsea, Newcastle, and Man Utd fans. It's a wonder I managed to escape it all. I can remember coming home on a train from Leeds after playing them (1970 something, even late 1960s possibly) and packs of fans were going from carriage to carriage asking who you supported. If you had the wrong answer you were beaten up! Fortunately I answered correctly.

    • @ga-ow7yf
      @ga-ow7yf 3 года назад

      That was part of the fun.Getting out of the ground and getting to a train station.And practicing accents
      With no club colours.

    • @mizofan
      @mizofan 2 года назад

      No abuse for an Owls fan- suffered enough already.

  • @jackmallory7996
    @jackmallory7996 3 года назад +23

    "Recriminations forgotten". That'll be the day.

  • @peterdavidson3268
    @peterdavidson3268 3 года назад +3

    For me, perhaps the most memorable feature of the 69-70 season was the FA Cup semi-final tie Leeds contested against Manchester United, which led on to the final match shown here.
    As the season entered its final stages Leeds United were going for an unprecedented (at least it was then but subsequently Alex Ferguson's Man United achieved this feat in 1999) League, FA Cup and European Cup treble.
    However, after three grueling matches with Man U (the first two went to extra time) taking place on 14th, 23rd and 26th March respectively, the Leeds players were essentially knackered.
    When the 69-70 season finished Leeds had won zip all, falling to Celtic in the Semi-final of the European Cup (ties played 1st and 15th April) and finishing runners up to Everton in the First Division title chase - of the six League matches played after the FA Cup Semi-final marathon matches, Leeds only managed one win and one draw, losing the other four - the wheels came off in the final run-in?

    • @mikefraser4513
      @mikefraser4513 2 года назад +2

      No...the most memorable match for me regarding Leeds, was the 1979 European Cup when Leeds lost 2-0 to Bayern Munich in Paris. They were robbed of a victory with a Greek referee Kitabdjian disallowing 2 clear penalties for Leeds (one where Allan Clarke was badly fouled by Beckenbauer). 14 years later Beckenbauer admitted it was a foul and that Leeds were the better team. In the second half. in the 66th minute, a perfectly legitimate volley from Lorimer was chalked off for a perceived offside offence, with Bremner supposedly the culprit. Lorimer said after the game.."Beckenbauer went straight to the linesman. He was held in such stature that he could dominate officials. I looked at the referee to see if he had given it and point to the half-way line, but due to Beckenbauer's protests and he changed his mind". Unfortunately, the Leeds fans lived up to the reputation of English fans at the end of the game by rioting and UEFA initially slapped a four-year ban on Leeds following the crowd trouble, but it was reduced to two years after a well-argued appeal by manager Jimmy Armfield.

  • @boum62
    @boum62 2 года назад +2

    My memory of my late father going crazy and holding my 3 year old baby sister in the air like a cup when Chelsea at last won the fa cup. Love it. Hope you are well Mr Dempsey

    • @johndempsey7528
      @johndempsey7528 2 года назад +1

      I am so pleased that your father saw us win the FA Cup back then and was so excited. Brings back happy memories for me and all Chelsea fans. Stay Safe

  • @glaswegiansouth-side2350
    @glaswegiansouth-side2350 3 года назад +4

    Leeds were the best supported English team up her in Scotland in the 1970'.s My friend won player of the year for Leeds boys club but where has this brilliant institution gone to? Another was their supporters were the hardest in English football.Go on the Leeds lets see you back were you belong....

  • @genokemp2433
    @genokemp2433 3 года назад +7

    My god ,50 years ago ..Where has all the years gone 🤦‍♂️..Loved going to matches when the grounds were packed to the rafters ⚽

    • @yanikg-force
      @yanikg-force 3 года назад

      Your comment got me. 50 years! Damn! I'm getting old! :(

  • @OfficialFingazMC
    @OfficialFingazMC 7 дней назад +2

    Suggs on the overlap brought me here!

  • @stephenogden5470
    @stephenogden5470 7 месяцев назад +1

    I was a 9 year old Leeds fan and shed a few tears of frustration at the time, now can't give football a second glance due to the knee taking, etc,etc!

  • @oe7321
    @oe7321 3 года назад +11

    awesome video man 💙💛

  • @adammaxwell-timmins9564
    @adammaxwell-timmins9564 3 года назад +25

    As a Chelsea fan, if Leeds had been in the Prem for the last 18 years, I'd hate them more than Tottenham!

    • @rogerallan4134
      @rogerallan4134 3 года назад +8

      Leeds have class Tottenham have none.

    • @josephaguilar2503
      @josephaguilar2503 3 года назад +2

      Just a two bit club from West London !

    • @riciunderwood4835
      @riciunderwood4835 3 года назад +4

      Well we're back so please do hate us again, we thrive on it. #ALAW

    • @Azog150
      @Azog150 3 года назад +2

      @@angie-smart-but-casual Depends on the era you grew up in though doesn't it. If its a derby and you encounter supporters from another team all the time in your local area then the rivalry is going to stay strong no matter what leagues you are in. But if you are two teams from other ends of the country the rivalry is inevitably going to die down if they have barely played each other for 20 years, especially for younger fans. Chelsea-Leeds is a rivalry based off some particularly brutal sporting competitions in a bygone era, rather then any real political, geographic or other cultural factors (aside from your bog-standard North/South)

    • @Azog150
      @Azog150 3 года назад

      @@angie-smart-but-casual Im from Liverpool and Red. Our only big and consistent rivals are Everton, from the same city, and Man Utd who are down the road. Only other rivalries we have are temporary and based on form.

  • @paamery
    @paamery 10 месяцев назад +2

    I saw my first two Chelsea games aged 6 in 1970 and both were against Leeds. 2-5 at home in the league in January and 2-2 in the first final (watched the replay in my pyjamas at home!). What epic matches they were. Leeds were favourites to win the league, the cup and the European cup that season and lost all three, even though they were the best team in Britain and probably Europe.

  • @beefy8269
    @beefy8269 11 месяцев назад +2

    I'm sure I've commented on this before but I remember this game. Some hard lads on both sides. A joy to watch Jack Charlton scything Hutchinson to the ground. Happy days

  • @louiem2
    @louiem2 3 года назад +30

    Neymar would have to retire, if he played in a game like this!!

    • @suehabgood2143
      @suehabgood2143 3 года назад

      neymar gets the shit kicked out of him every week

    • @kingsrd1
      @kingsrd1 3 года назад +3

      Neymar watched this video and went down injured

  • @michaelhowchin2142
    @michaelhowchin2142 3 года назад +26

    That was football in those days, hard and brutal at times. I would have loved to see some of today's wimps play in that time, wouldn't last two minutes.

    • @dedfed321
      @dedfed321 3 года назад +1

      well actually it's the other way around. if the law would allow agression on the pitch those old footballers would be no match to nowdays footballers on the physical aspect

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 года назад +2

      @@dedfed321 quite! That thuggery wasn't Football! Leeds were vile, and other English teams not much better! The end result was Wimbledon!!!

    • @tabsntoot
      @tabsntoot 2 года назад +1

      Seriously I doubt that. Stringy lanky and fragile are today’s lot. Men then were far tougher

    • @showtime4818
      @showtime4818 2 года назад

      Ronado or zlatan would rape these farmers

    • @billgates9426
      @billgates9426 2 года назад +1

      Indeed. Back then we has men, now players are pussy and lacked the manliness to compete. I bet messi and ronaldo would've struggled in 70s. Pussy ass footballers these days

  • @zest5977
    @zest5977 7 месяцев назад +1

    I was a small kid, but I perfectly remember this epic match on french TV , watching with my dad, we were so happy in the end. I will remember all my life, so intense.

    • @olikane530
      @olikane530 4 месяца назад

      So you're french?

    • @zest5977
      @zest5977 4 месяца назад

      yes ;) @@olikane530

  • @user-bu9nb8wr6e
    @user-bu9nb8wr6e Год назад +1

    Remember it well and got to meet Osgood once and thank him for scoring that diving header.

  • @pantarei8382
    @pantarei8382 3 года назад +65

    These guys play with more heart then our 2020 primadonnas ever have!!

  • @glynsutton7172
    @glynsutton7172 3 года назад +5

    Rip all you legends

  • @fredbeach2085
    @fredbeach2085 2 года назад +1

    "Who do you think you are lad ? Bremner." Brian Glover in Kes and the funniest game of football I`ve ever seen.

  • @lowl123
    @lowl123 3 года назад +9

    We've always had history 💯🙌⚽️💙

  • @trustmetours57
    @trustmetours57 3 года назад +7

    Any game featuring LUFC getting beaten is a game worth watching.

  • @thexen3120
    @thexen3120 3 года назад +33

    Red cards were not neccessary. There was enough red with the blood on the pitch.

  • @TheBigjimlizzy
    @TheBigjimlizzy Год назад +2

    Mick Jones was a very underrated player imo.

    • @ianbennett1491
      @ianbennett1491 Год назад +1

      He was brilliant was Mick. Did all the Donkey work for Allan Clarke. As you say. Scandalously underrated.

  • @paulhacche4396
    @paulhacche4396 2 года назад

    Love this video. LU all mongrel and class no matter the result.

  • @martm216
    @martm216 3 года назад +15

    The F A Cup meant more in those days.

  • @christian_4037
    @christian_4037 2 года назад +6

    Came from MOTD

  • @MikeL-hd6sh
    @MikeL-hd6sh 11 месяцев назад +1

    That defeat still hurts now. 2 unbelievable matches.

  • @steverichards575
    @steverichards575 3 года назад +5

    Yup . One of the very best finals ever .

  • @johnruskin4330
    @johnruskin4330 3 года назад +6

    I was working as a Able Seaman on the MV Zealandic during this game an had to listen on ships radio in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, still a Pensioner well now I am lol,

  • @oldskoolraver2067
    @oldskoolraver2067 3 года назад +75

    When footballers were men and wags made the dinner lol

  • @ryansanghera7717
    @ryansanghera7717 3 года назад +7

    Rip jack charlton

  • @josephjohnston8573
    @josephjohnston8573 3 года назад +1

    Much of the violence in the replay was instigated by Chelsea. Such was the bias of the London press Chelsea received a free pass.

  • @welshknight1456
    @welshknight1456 3 года назад +4

    I remember watching these two matches, the best games i ever saw, As the title says the 2nd game was Brutal.

  • @davidbailey533
    @davidbailey533 3 года назад +8

    Am wolves fan personally and I know Leeds had a bit of a reputation in 70s but after seeing that Chelsea were far dirtier players than Leeds. Ps good luck for rest of season you guys deserve it

    • @mizofan
      @mizofan 2 года назад

      Chelsea were normally angelic. Even Chopper Harris was so named because of his chopper- as a woodcutter, that is

  • @Muirton66
    @Muirton66 3 года назад +2

    Could you imagine any modern player trying to play in that era, no mohawks or hair gel on show just pure raw football, the way the game was meant to be played.

  • @ricardoblue5436
    @ricardoblue5436 2 года назад +1

    Unless I missed it I can't believe at the end they never showed Chelsea's Eddie McCeadie nearly kicking Billy Bremner's head off his shoulders Bruce Lee style.
    Ref just says play on and Chelsea go up the other end and nearly score whilst Bremner still doesn't know where he is?
    COYB

  • @joshuaharwood4910
    @joshuaharwood4910 3 года назад +136

    Who’s here after chelsea beat Leeds 3-1

    • @rogerallan4134
      @rogerallan4134 3 года назад +9

      I never hide. Leeds never got the press going. Scored first by Chelsea junior you never played. We lost but learned a lot, the return leg you will get bollocksed by our fans. Leeds United-are here to attack teams. Can’t wait for the return leg.

    • @jfarley777
      @jfarley777 3 года назад +13

      As a Chelsea fan, I enjoyed the result but Leeds is a quality side and will test any opponent. Love their style of play!

    • @rogerallan4134
      @rogerallan4134 3 года назад +6

      As a football fan, Leeds played well below par. Bamford deserved his goal, we were never allowed to press ,Chelsea were the better team overall. No axes to grind.

    • @rituraj4447
      @rituraj4447 3 года назад

      @@rogerallan4134 if Leeds had scored the second goal early on... who knows...?

    • @paula200
      @paula200 3 года назад +1

      But I was also there in 1970👍👍👍

  • @subrosa7708
    @subrosa7708 3 года назад +6

    That was the time, when British football was still British. I miss that time...

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 года назад

      Why? We were always rubbish internationally! Leeds were a disgrace, and would have won buggerall in any other era, and the rest weren't much less thuggish !!

    • @LeedsLyons
      @LeedsLyons 3 года назад +1

      @@johnsaunders2109 obsessed you pal

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 года назад

      @@LeedsLyons whatever that means!!!

    • @Dave-hu5hr
      @Dave-hu5hr 2 года назад

      @@johnsaunders2109 In the early 70's Leeds was arguably the best team in the world.

    • @chriss740
      @chriss740 Год назад

      @@johnsaunders2109 England won the world cup in 1966, well there is that ...

  • @AndreAndre-zk3mz
    @AndreAndre-zk3mz 3 года назад +5

    That was fucking football!

  • @december2364
    @december2364 3 года назад +1

    Peter Bonnetti was my hero as a little kid.

  • @EvoGoody
    @EvoGoody 3 года назад +3

    Chelsea really dished it out. Much more so than Leeds.

  • @neilwebster2084
    @neilwebster2084 3 года назад +5

    I was a 12-year-old at both matches with my Dad. I was behind the goal at Wembley where Gary Sprake let the ball under his body. He was my hero, but that was a hard one to defend.

    • @bedpansniper
      @bedpansniper 3 года назад +2

      Even the fans at Elland Road called him Cinderella because he kept missing the ball!
      MOT

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 года назад +1

      But he blew the whistle on Leed's corruption later! Might never have been proved, but no smoke without fire and he was there!!

    • @albertskytour6288
      @albertskytour6288 Год назад +1

      @@johnsaunders2109 he was a gambler and used the money from that story to pay off debts. If Leeds were fixing matches to win I cannot see a single match where something 'strange' worked in their favour. I can think of many bizarre refereeing decisions and blunders that were mostly made by Sprake that cost them so much, so the story doesn't add up. Famous losses to Wolves and West Brom were due to refereeing errors that are still legendary 50 years later.

    • @stingray4real
      @stingray4real 11 месяцев назад

      Each time Gary Sprake makes an appearance the DJ would play a record by Des O'Connor called Careless Hands. That was the title of Gary Sprake autobiography.

  • @MrTonycoughlan
    @MrTonycoughlan 3 года назад

    Hi Lewis, I loved this can I share this on my Facebook page with a link to yours? My Leeds mate would love this.