Date:
Venue: Vetch
Field,
Competition: Second Division.
Score:
Scorers:
Attendance: 17,696.
Teams:
Referee: Unknown
After finishing fourth from
bottom in the previous season and narrowly avoiding relegation,
Revie and his coach, Syd
Owen, had gathered and groomed some outstanding young talent into United’s junior team and they had been given their chance
in the Reserves. They included a fifteen-year-old Peter Lorimer,
sixteen-year-old Barrie Wright, seventeen-year-olds Gary Sprake,
Paul Reaney, Paul Madeley,
and Rodney Johnson, eighteen-year- olds Norman Hunter and Terry Cooper, as well
as Mike Addy (nineteen) and two twenty-year-olds in
Ronnie Blackburn and John Hawksby. Hawksby, an England Youth International, had already played
over thirty times for the first team and Sprake and Addy had made single appearances. Billy Bremner,
though still only nineteen was already a seasoned veteran with over eighty
League appearances to his credit.
There had been an extremely
lack-lustre display in a previous game at Bury and Revie made the decision to give youth a chance, dropping
the vastly experienced though aging Tommy Younger and Grenville
Hair. He chose to give debuts to Paul Reaney, Norman
Hunter and Rodney Johnson and a second game to Gary Sprake
as the three defenders had often combined in the Junior and Reserve teams.
Cliff Mason took the captain’s armband, but it was the irrepressible Bobby
Collins who led by example on the pitch and the “old hands” Eric Smith, Jack
Charlton, Billy Bremner, Noel Peyton and Albert Johanneson who helped the newcomers.
Understandably the new
combination took time to settle and Sprake, playing
in front of his native crowd, was called upon to show his goalkeeping prowess
in the early minutes, twice saving comfortably from the
United took the lead as
Albert Johanneson went on one of his mazy runs down
the left, taking several Swansea defenders with him, before finding Billy Bremner in space, who in turn found Rod Johnson with a fine
through ball. The former Cow Close schoolboy evaded a couple of tackles before
beating the Swans goalkeeper, Noel Dwyer, with a low drive from an acute angle,
after eleven minutes. Collins and Bremner were
starting to control the midfield and the pair, and Noel Peyton, went close to
increasing the lead. Johnson and Johanneson had good
efforts late in the half and there were a couple of spectacular long range
drives from Hunter, as United pressed home their advantage.
The Swans were not a spent
force, but with Jackie Charlton in rare form and Sprake
drawing applause for his efficient handling of all situations, they did not
pose a serious threat and half-time came with Johnson and Smith both going
close. The Welsh side came out for the second half with guns blazing. However,
Charlton was resolute, first blocking an attempt by Webster and then heading
away under pressure when Davies threw the ball into the area. It was only
temporary and soon United were two to the good, with a goal that was
outstanding. Johanneson began the move, dancing his
way down his wing before finding Collins, who took the ball on before passing
to the Bremner, who controlled it before rounding
former United trialist and Welsh International, Harry
Griffiths, to hammer a tremendous shot past the keeper from ten yards.
The young Rod Johnson had
given his all and on the hour he was carried off after a collision with the
much larger
Teams:
Back row: Jim Storrie,
Grenville Hair, Gary Sprake,
Tommy Younger, Ian Lawson, Willie Bell.
Middle Row: Peter McConnell, Jack Charlton,
Cliff Mason, Tom Hallett, Eric Smith.
Front Row: Bobby Collins, Billy Bremner, Freddie Goodwin, John Hawksby,
Noel Peyton,
Albert Johanneson.
Back Row: Roy Saunders, Brian Hughes, Noel
Dwyer, Mel Nurse, Peter Davies.
Front Row: Barry Jones, Eddie Thomas, Harry
Griffiths, Colin Webster, Brayley Reynolds,
Graham Williams.
Players:
Debutant Norman Hunter Debutant Paul Reaney
Second game for Gary Sprake
Debutant and goal-scorer Rod Johnson Noel Peyton
Goal-scorer Billy Bremner