Bury won 1-0 at QPR and stayed up in the second tier, at the expense of Manchester City who were relegated to the third tier despite winning 5-2 at Stoke.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Twenty years ago today
Collapse
X
-
If I've not got my seasons confused I was in the away end at Maine Road the previous weekend when QPR secured their survival with a 2-2 draw. Georgi Kinkladze scored a cracker for City but the goal of the game was the OG from Jamie Pollock(?) which resulted in him finishing second in an online poll of the time asking for the most significant figures of the 20th Century.
Neil Ruddock threw his boots into the crowd at the end of the game, one of which landed in my lap. I gave it to a kid sitting in front of me.
-
And Carlisle were relegated from the third to fourth tier, so we missed out on the fun of Man City and Stoke being in the third tier.
We started and ended the season badly, but had a decent run in mid season, and the 5-0 defeat of (Neville Southall's) Southend in January was one of the best performances I've seen at Brunton Park.
It was also the year I made a bit of an effort to tick off new grounds - Plymouth, Wrexham, Chesterfield, Bristol City, Fulham and Luton all got cleared (I revisited a couple later) for the grand total of one point out of 18. Fulham in particular was dismal, our former hero Peter Beardsley running the show from the centre circle, Paul Peschisolido scoring a hat-trick and getting subbed early to rest him, and a long coach ride back from London on Easter Monday.
We lost nine out of the last ten games, so relegation was confirmed before 3 May. We kept sinking and a year and a few days later Jimmy Glass arrived in the penalty area....but we'll maybe cover that this time next year.
Comment
-
- Mar 2008
- 3385
- at the edge of the sea
- Plymouth Argyle, Plymouth Gladiators, Seattle Mariners
- cream crackers spread with nutella
The culmination of a love-hate relationship with Burnley saw them win the winner stays up clash at Turf Moor. A horrible, violent day and one of the very few Argyle memories I try and keep blank from my mind. Seats wre broken and coins were thrown and I'm not at all proud of it.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Uroš Predić View PostTwenty years ago yesterday I was watching (and occasionally going on the pitch to interrupt) what I, and most people present, presumed to be Doncaster Rovers last ever match as a football club.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Greenlander View PostThe culmination of a love-hate relationship with Burnley saw them win the winner stays up clash at Turf Moor. A horrible, violent day and one of the very few Argyle memories I try and keep blank from my mind. Seats wre broken and coins were thrown and I'm not at all proud of it.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Walt Flanagans Dog View Postand the 5-0 defeat of (Neville Southall's) Southend in January was one of the best performances I've seen at Brunton Park.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Greenlander View PostThe culmination of a love-hate relationship with Burnley saw them win the winner stays up clash at Turf Moor. A horrible, violent day and one of the very few Argyle memories I try and keep blank from my mind. Seats wre broken and coins were thrown and I'm not at all proud of it.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Paul S View PostNeville Southall never managed Southend. Alvin Martin was manager in 1998, one of the worst managers we've ever had.
Comment
-
- Mar 2008
- 3385
- at the edge of the sea
- Plymouth Argyle, Plymouth Gladiators, Seattle Mariners
- cream crackers spread with nutella
It was toxic on both sides.
About five years previous a load of us had been quite friendly with simlar minded lads from Burnley. We played a couple of friendly games (I'm still bitter about rounding the keeper and having it disallowed for offside by one of our own) and even a tour of Turf Moor allowing some of us to recreate the Kicker Conspiracy video, but things soured in the playoffs a couple of years later with some horrible racist abuse by a sizeable proportion at Home Park as John Fancis tore us a new one. The relegation game was probably the natural culmination of everything that had gone before.
Chumbawamba played in Plymouth a few times during this period and yer man from the band always took delight in reminding us of it.Last edited by Greenlander; 03-05-2018, 14:30.
Comment
-
Spurs won 6-2 at Wimbledon - thanks largely to a four-goal haul from Jürgen Klinsmann - thereby ensuring PL survival after one of the stinkiest seasons that I can recall.
Peter Fear scored both of their goals: the only other fact I know about him is that he's won Ken Bruce's Popmaster quiz twice.
Comment
-
20 years ago this weekend I was shouting abuse at a lacklustre Thistle team who were losing a relegation 6-pointer at home to Ayr United and consigning themselves to the third tier as a result.
My dad used to get annoyed and tell me off for swearing at the football, but Thistle were so wretched that day that not only did he not rebuke me, once or twice he joined in.
The only Thistle player who looked like he cared that day was goalkeeper Lindsay Hamilton, who was a loanee from Queen's Park, which sums it all up perfectly: the amateur with no ties to the club was trying harder than the professionals who were actually on our books.Last edited by blameless; 03-05-2018, 15:12.
Comment
-
I was watching Cardiff City draw 0-0 with Darlington in Division Four. This was the 23rd draw of the season (exactly half of our games) which either equaled or broke the Football League record at the time.
I was match ball sponsor and chose 17 year old Rob Earnshaw to present me with the ball signed by the squad. There was a photo of him doing so with my brothers, Dad and I dwarfing him that I wish I hadn't lost in the intervening years.
The highlight of the actual game was either Craig Middleton or Lee Phillips getting sent off late on. There were around 2,600 there.
Cardiff finished 19th in the bottom tier that season, Darlington one place above them and Swansea one place below.
Happy days.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Ray de Galles View PostHang on, twenty years ago today was a Sunday - all of these games must have been twenty years ago yesterday?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Ray de Galles View PostI was watching Cardiff City draw 0-0 with Darlington in Division Four. This was the 23rd draw of the season (exactly half of our games) which either equaled or broke the Football League record at the time.
I was match ball sponsor and chose 17 year old Rob Earnshaw to present me with the ball signed by the squad. There was a photo of him doing so with my brothers, Dad and I dwarfing him that I wish I hadn't lost in the intervening years.
The highlight of the actual game was either Craig Middleton or Lee Phillips getting sent off late on. There were around 2,600 there.
Cardiff finished 19th in the bottom tier that season, Darlington one place above them and Swansea one place below.
Happy days.
Comment
-
20 years ago City finished their first season under the management of Mark Hateley absolutely bloody thankful that the utter shitshow at Doncaster meant that the threat of relegation was never a serious one. There were some amazing games (7-4 vs Swansea, 4-5 vs Rotherham) and what's generally termed as the worst City display in their history in losing 1-0 at Belle Vue (although some have given this season's defeat at the Stadium of Light equal billing). We even did a bit of giant killing in the League Cup as we saw off Crystal Palace over 2 legs, only to be slayed ourselves in the FA Cup by Hendnesford Town. We mainly recruited players associated with Rangers and Sheffield United, with the fat arses of Kevin Gage and Glyn Hodges waddling around Boothferry Park, although when he could be bothered Hodges was way better than any other player in the league. We even had David Rocastle on loan, and after a blinding debut, had lumps kicked out of him by the rest of the division.
It was also our first season under the ownership of David Lloyd, but that's a whole different story..........
Comment
Comment