Date:
Venue:
Competition: Second Division.
Score:
Scorers:
Attendance: 33,325. (Receipts: £ 103,000).
Teams:
Referee: Mr P.S. Danson, Blaby, Leicestershire).
The day before the game, however, the men from Valley Parade had come close to asking the Football League to postpone the fixture because of illness and injury in their camp. Six City players attended a sick parade call on the morning of the game after suffering from flu symptoms the day before and two more were on the injured list. Goalkeeper Paul Tomlinson, midfielder Ian Banks, defender Peter Jackson and forwards Mark Leonard and Peter Costello were the players that had been unwell. Greg Abbott was suspended. Dave Evans was out through injury and there was a fitness doubt about Lee Sinnott.
“We were on the verge of asking for a postponement and though things were not too good we eventually decided we would play on,” City manager Terry Yorath said. As things turned out all the unwell or the players doubtful through injury were able to play.
Howard Wilkinson was in his first season as manager of United, having taken over from Billy Bremner some five months earlier, and he was in the midst of re-organising team affairs. Ironically he had concentrated initially on tightening up the defence and in the ten games leading up to the one against City his side had kept seven clean sheets. If City had any respect for United’s defensive capabilities it wasn’t apparent as three times they took the lead but in the end had to settle for a 3-3 draw. “The match began at boiling point and simmered throughout without ever getting really nasty.” The United manager said.
The purists would probably have picked out defensive faults and the apparent inability or unwillingness of any player in either side to steady the pace but few fans would have gone home feeling they had not been entertained by a cracking contest fought in the best traditions of British football. Former United star Yorath, bringing a team to Elland Road for the first time as a manager, clearly had his men fired up and such was the directness and ferocity of their work that there was little United could do early on but back-pedal. Three times United’s defences were breached by a City side showing speed and an unrelenting desire to attack. Each time, though, United had the ability and determination to bounce back.
The game was only five minutes old when City took the lead, Peter Jackson heading against the bar only to see the ball bounce back and go in off United keeper Mervyn Day. United were level after fifteen minutes when Noel Blake fired in off the underside of the bar, following a long throw from David Batty, but City went ahead again on the half hour mark as teenage City striker, Peter Costello, raced away following a long clearance and fired a fierce shot past Day. Five minutes before the break United pulled it back to 2-2 when Vince Hilaire turned the ball in from Noel Blake’s low shot from the left.
There had been four goals in the first half. Could there be more to follow? Talk at half-time suggested the answer was in the affirmative, and so it proved to be. Lee Sinnott took only four minutes of the second half to put City 3-2 ahead, when he headed in from a corner and United had to wait until eight minutes from the end to haul themselves level again. Ian Baird, who went into the game seeking to end a goal drought that had lasted for seven games, was on hand to knock the ball in after keeper Paul Tomlinson had failed to hold a fierce shot from substitute Mark Aizlewood. “It does not matter who gets the goals just as long as someone in the side is scoring but forwards thrive on goals and I said before the game that I could really do with a goal in this game. I am delighted to have got the goal that in the end brought us a point.” Baird said.
His manager was just as pleased. “We showed a lot of
determination and courage to come back three times and we deserved our point,”
Wilkinson said. Although United really needed a win to boost an outside chance
of making the promotion play-offs, they had to regard the draw against their
near neighbours as being a point gained rather than two lost. From a club point
of view, there was the ‘consolation’ of gate receipts of £103,000 from the
Second Division’s biggest crowd of the season. It was almost 300 higher than
the Division’s previous best of 33,034 for United’s
game against
Alternate Report: (Courtesy Mark Ledgard)
YEP: Three times Bradford City were in the lead, three times
Leeds United powered back in this evening clash in one of the most memorable
derby games seen at Elland Road. The Second
Division’s top crowd of the season of 33,325 was spellbound by the often frenzied
but always open, hit-and-run game. Until Ian Baird grabbed his first goal of
the year eight minutes from time, it seemed that the
The two Captains Mick Kennedy and Noel Blake, team-mates a
few seasons back at Portsmouth, both played important roles as the pattern was
set. By half-time a non-stop clash had provided four goals and four bookings.
Mick Kennedy opened the way for the breakthrough goal with a huge throw-in from
the left.
Match Action:
(Match
Action below Courtesy Mark Ledgard)
Teams:
Players:
United’s goals came from Noel Blake, Vince Hilaire and Ian Baird
A Mervyn Day own
goal, a goal from Peter Costello and another from Lee Sinnott
were the scorers for Bradford City
Ex-Leeds hero Terry Yorath
had many players sick including Mark Leonard. Peter Jackson headed against the bar