Date: Saturday 6th February 1982.
Venue: Elland Road, Leeds.
Competition:
First Division.
Score: Leeds
United 0 Coventry City 0
Scorers: Leeds
United: Nil. Coventry City:
Nil.
Attendance:
16,385.
Teams:
Leeds United: Lukic;
Cherry, F. Gray; Flynn, Hart, Firm; E. Gray, Graham, Parlane,
Hamson, Hird. Unused Sub: Greenhoff.
Coventry City: Blyth; Thomas,
Barnes; Jacobs, Hagan, Gillespie; Bodak, Bradford, Hateley, Thompson, Hunt. Unused Sub: Butterworth.
Referee: G. Courtney (Spennymoor).
What a
bore! The headline said, and it was too. A scrappy game frustrated spectators
when Leeds United and Coventry City met in a First Division game at Elland Road in February 1982. United’s side showed three changes as Manager Allan Clarke
desperately sought a formation good enough to bring an end to a two match
losing run. Scottish striker Derek Parlane, as
predicted, was back after a five and a half month absence, in place of young
Aidan Butterworth and Welsh international skipper Brian Flynn returned in
midfield in place of fellow Welshman, Byron Stevenson. Reserve central defender
Neil Firm took over from the suspended Kenny Burns, alongside Paul Hart as a
means to combat the aerial power of Mark Hateley and
Garry Thompson. Brian Greenhoff was named substitute
instead of Carl Harris.
Coventry had to make a late change when former England captain Gerry Francis, on loan from
Queens Park Rangers, withdrew because of a stomach upset. Marking was tight and
neither side was able to make much of an impression and as a result there was
precious little for the crowd to enthuse about. Coventry thought they had taken the lead
after half-an-hour when Peter Bodak, taking advantage
of a dangerous looking attacking move, involving Mark Hateley
and Steve Hunt, lobbed the ball over John Lukic and
into the United net. But Coventry’s celebrations were cut short
immediately because a linesman was flagging for offside.
Hunt’s skills
in midfield, however, were beginning to show and when he inspired another Coventry attack it needed a hasty clearance
from Paul Hart to save United. The visitors went close to an opener soon
afterwards with what would have been a spectacular goal from Gary Gillespie,
when the Coventry defender tried an overhead kick, which brought
a fingertip save out of John Lukic, as the ball
dipped late.
The United
keeper was having a busy afternoon and he had to race from his line to dive on
the ball as Peter Bodak dashed through in an attempt
to reach a clever ball from Mark Hateley. Spasmodic
outbursts of slow hand-clapping showed what some fans thought of United’s overall efforts and one could sympathise
with them.
Flynn had a
glorious chance four minutes from the end when he got clean through Coventry’s defences
but, with only the goalkeeper to beat, he fired wide of the far post. In the
final minute Kevin Hird had the ball in Coventry’s net but his effort was disallowed
for offside. A fitting end, perhaps, to a match that so miserably failed to
please. The attendance of 16,365 was the lowest of the season and when they saw
the headlines those who stayed away must have felt they had made the correct
decision.
Alternate
Report (Courtesy Mark Ledgard)
The fairest
thing that United could have done with this match was to have asked the gatemen
to stay on and hand back admission money as their supporters left after the
sides most abysmal effort of the season. It was to have been a shop-window day
for Leeds. Scouts from several clubs were
there, there were plenty of players on offer, but the window was bare. The
stay-away supporters were right. But many in the lowest crowd of the season of
16,385 had their say. Perhaps they were over-strong in their frustration. But
it was understandable that slow-handclapping should start as early as the
twentieth minute. Allan Clarke, the Manager, had made changes to try and inject
new spark but there was still no imagination in the side.
The match was an hour old before Leeds had a shot worth the description.
They had done far better at hitting the ball back to John Lukic
in their goal. It was Backpass United. It was well
that Lukic was one of the few to hit his game. Coventry played all the football as the
young goalkeeper must have known only too well. The best home record in the
League would surely have gone had he operated as badly as some of his
collegues. He saved at point-blank range from Danny Thomas, finger-tipped Steve
Hunt’s twenty yard free-kick over the crossbar and Gary Gillespie’s bicycle
kick, daringly dived towards Peter Bodak’s boots to
smother the ball and then brilliantly palmed Dave Bradford’s
fierce drive over the angle. “I thought we were worth more than a point,” said
Coventry Manager Dave Sexton. “I was pleased with our performance. It was one
of those days we should have won. It was all there except the goals.” He
revealed that what had looked like a perfectly good goal from Peter Bodak in the twenty-eighth minute had been disallowed
because an elbow had been used. The linesman’s flag went up as he moved in on
Steve Hunt’s pass to deny Coventry their breakthrough. But the match
officials had a good day with FIFA referee George Courtney impeccable.
The irony
of it all was that with five minutes to go Leeds should have won the game as Gary Gillespie
failed to cut out a through pass on Leeds’ right wing. It left Brian Flynn, one of the
players on offer and making his first full appearance since November in the
clear, but he ran on and shot wide. It all left Allan Clarke saying he was
disappointed with the performance and the result. “Coventry made it difficult for us. All
credit to them,” he said. “I am as frustrated as the crowd. So many players
want to further their careers elsewhere, it’s making
my job a lot harder. If I can get fresh faces in then I will do. But looking at
the players in the squad they all have a job to do, to play to the best of
their ability, and they are giving me total commitment. As a Manager I cannot
expect more.”
Match Action:
Derek Parlane beats
the tackle of Gary Gillespie
Derek Parlane beats
Danny Thomas to a header
Teams:
Leeds United 1981-82:
Back
Row: Gary Hamson, Brian Greenhoff, John Lukic, Neil Firm,
Alex Sabella.
Middle
Row: Geoff Ladley (Physio), Frank Gray, Arthur Graham, Derek Parlane, Paul Hart,
Eddie Gray, Kevin Hird, Bob English (Physio), Peter
Gunby (Coach).
Front
Row: Martin Wilkinson (Assistant Manager), Byron
Stevenson, Trevor Cherry,
Allan Clarke (Manager), Brian Flynn,
Terry Connor, Barry Murphy (Coach).
Players:
Kevin Hird
‘scored’ Derek Parlane returned in place of Aidan Butterworth Brian Flynn replaced Byron
Stevenson
an offside goal
Neil Firm was in for the suspended Kenny
Burns
Brian Greenhoff replaced Carl Harris on the
bench
Paul Hart was at the centre of the defence Gerry
Francis was unable to play but Steve Hunt shone in midfield
Garry Thompson and Mark Hateley
were an aerial threat. Gary Gillespie had a spectacular effort saved
by John Lukic