Date: Sunday, 11th January 1987.
Venue: The
Hawthorns, West Bromwich.
Competition: FA
Cup Third Round.
Score: Telford
United 1 Leeds United 2.
Scorers: Telford
United: Williams. Leeds United: Baird (2).
Attendance: 6,460
(Receipts £18,000).
Teams:
Telford United: Charlton; McGinty,
Wiggins; Griffiths, Nelson, Hancock; Joseph, Williams, McKenna, Hogan, Alcock
(Morgan). Unused Sub: Turner.
Leeds United: Day, Aspin, Stiles; Rennie, Ashurst, Ormsby; Ritchie, Sheridan, Baird, Edwards, Doig. Unused Subs: Swan, Thompson.
Referee: V. Callow (Solihull, Birmingham).
The match
against famed giant killers Telford United was switched to the Hawthorns on the
advice of the Shropshire Police who said they would
not be able to cope with the crowd at the Non-Leaguers Bucks Head Ground and
only a small crowd turned up for the Sunday confrontation. The police feared
that they might have been over-run by the notorious section of hooligans that
had attached itself to Leeds
at the GM Vauxhall Conference club’s small stadium. So the FA ordered the
ground switch to The Hawthorns, prompting criticism in the Press that they had
given in to the hooligans. Leeds’
last visit to The Hawthorns the previous month had been an explosive affair
with three Leeds players ordered off in a 3-0 League
defeat. After the match there was trouble as a blaze was started and had to be
tackled with fire-fighters to stop any serious damage. Nobody was taking
chances this time. The FA decreed that the Telford game should go ahead at noon on a Sunday, thus reducing the
number of Leeds followers who could get to the
game. About three hundred police were on duty, yet only six thousand four
hundred and sixty people braved the ice and snow to watch the match, which was
given the go-ahead on the morning of the day.
Frozen conditions
made good football impossible and made the game a lottery and neither side was
able to settle on the white frost-ridden pitch which resembled a skating-rink
rather than a football pitch as the tangerine coloured
ball seemed to have a mind of its own. Two goals from Ian Baird, one four
minutes from the end, put Leeds through from a game which both camps felt
should not have gone ahead.
Leeds received the boost of an eleventh
minute goal from Ian Baird, when his downward header from a John Stiles right
wing cross spun away from goalkeeper Kevin Charlton to give United the lead. Telford posed plenty of problems for Leeds and scored when Colin Williams’
looping header went over Mervyn Day for a Telford equalizer in the fifty-third minute
and the tie seemed to be going to a replay as neither team created chances.
With just
four minutes left Ian Baird ran onto a twenty-five yard John Sheridan pass to
fire past Kevin Charlton from the edge of the box. Even at the end Telford could have snatched an equalizer to
force a replay but substitute Tom Morgan shot over the bar from six yards.
An
alternate report:
The
scaremongers had already been working overtime after the draw paired United
with non-league minnows Telford United and, within days, the tie was switched
to West Brom's Hawthorns ground. The reputation of United's fans had slumped to another low, following
incidents at Bradford and Plymouth earlier in the season, and there
were fears about the potential for trouble at the Third Round clash. The adverse
publicity whipped the footballing public into a
frenzy and in the days leading up to the match it was clear that no-one outside
of Leeds wanted to see Bremner's
men make progress.
The
kick-off was moved back to Sunday lunchtime in a bid to prevent Leeds fans from travelling,
and road blocks and additional security measures were implemented to prevent
ticket-less fans attending. Quite how much Telford lost from the re-scheduling of the tie away
from their Bucks Head ground was never made public.
After all
the hype surrounding the game the clash actually took place in conditions that
were more suited to ice skating. Under normal circumstances the Cup-Tie would
have been called off on the morning of the game, but with stringent security
arrangements in order and pressure on the officials to get the game on, referee
Vic Callow declared the pitch playable and Bremner's
side faced yet another obstacle. The mid-morning sun never appeared to melt the
ice, as predicted by the reluctant officials, and when the game kicked off the
pitch was covered in a crusted layer of ice, making conditions near impossible.
That said, it took Leeds just 12 minutes to get their noses in front
against the GM Conference outfit. John Stiles whipped over a cross and Ian
Baird rose to head home his first FA Cup goal. It was a strike which settled Leeds, but both sides struggled to adapt
to the horrendous surface. Instead of improving, the pitch got steadily worse
as the temperatures failed to rise and as Telford, conquerors of Fourth Division Burnley in the previous round, adopted a gung-ho approach
and it was backs to the wall stuff for Leeds. When Colin Williams headed home a John Alcock cross just eight minutes into the second half, Telford had renewed hope and it took a
great save from Mervyn Day and a goal-line clearance
from David Rennie to keep Leeds level.
United
appeared happy to defend the 1-1 score-line in the hope of securing a replay
and escaping the Hawthorns unscathed, but Ian Baird showed the ice dancing
skills of Christopher Dean to settle the tie late on. A deflected pass from
John Sheridan fell to Baird and the Leeds striker somehow kept his feet to control the
ball, take it forward, and drill it beyond the reach of Telford keeper Kevin Charlton. It was a
fine goal and was probably rough justice on gallant Telford, but there was no disguising the
relief of the scorer, his team-mates or the travelling
fans. "We had been on a hiding to nothing," said Baird. "We
needed that win." It was a victory that set up a Fourth Round tie with Swindon and, while Leeds didn't know it, they were well and
truly on the road to Wembley.
Alternate
Reports: (Courtesy Mark Ledgard)
Summary:
Giant-killers Telford came within five minutes of defying
the FA Cup odds, which were stacked against them to the bitter end in this tie.
The little Shropshire club bowed out with a catalogue of
grievances after Leeds
striker Ian Baird had struck an eighty-fifth minute winner. Telford manager Stan Storton
could not conceal his disappointment after his side’s brave attempt to topple
the Second Division club. “It might look like another hard luck story for a
Non-League side but it’s not,” he said. “They had settled for a draw until they
scored their second goal against the run of play. This game shouldn’t have been
played but there was no way they were going to call it off. They would have
moved mountains to get it played because of the security operation, but it was
a lottery. The conditions were treacherous and I am only thankful no-one was
seriously injured. I think we’ve had the rough end of the stick from the moment
they moved the match away from Telford. I’m pretty sure we would have beaten them on
our own pitch.” Telford recovered superbly after goalkeeper Kevin Charlton had fumbled Ian
Baird’s header into the net, to give Leeds a twelfth minute lead. Colin Willams equalized with a fifty-second minute header from
John Alcock’s centre, and Leeds were thankful for a
fine Mervyn Day save from Anton Joseph and a
goal-line clearance by David Rennie from Ken McKenna.
Even after Baird had beaten Charlton with a cross-shot at the near post to
restore Leeds’ advantage, Telford wasted a great chance to equalise when substitute Tom Morgan fired over an empty net
in the last minute.
And from
the YEP: Ian Baird with his second goal of the game five minutes from time,
steered Leeds United through to the Fourth Round in this game. But Telford almost overcame the handicap of
being driven from their own ground and made Leeds battle to the end. The FA had
ordered West Bromwich Albion to stage the Third Round tie because of the
notoriety of the hooligan minority who had latched on to Leeds. Yet the 6,560 crowd was one of the
best behaved, the writer had shared in the last fifteen years. It was the first
time he could remember, since the trouble hit the terraces that there was not
even an obscene chant. It was highly questionable, however, that the match was
played at all. Vic Callow, the Solihull referee, decided at an eight am inspection that the pitch was fit.
Yet when the high noon kick-off came it was not possible for the players to
turn with any confidence on the frost-hit pitch which was ninety-eight per cent
covered by a thin layer of snow. It made the match, for much of the time, a
lottery.
But Mr Callow was one of the game’s best performers, in fact,
controlling it admirably and collecting the names of John Stiles and Anton
Joseph along the way. But Leeds were able to rid themselves of the nightmare of
their last appearance at ‘The Hawthorns’ a month previous, in a game in which
three players were sent off, even though for most of this game Telford
demonstrated how they had collected so many League club scalps in Cup football
in recent seasons. The Non-League side even went within a whisker of forcing a
replay in the last minute, when Brendan Ormsby lost
his footing on the right wing of Leeds’ penalty area, to let in Ken McKenna, whose
low cross found Tom Morgan six yards out. But the substitute, under pressure
from Neil Aspin, lifted the ball over the Leeds bar and Telford’s last chance was gone. Telford found both Brendan Ormsby and Jack Ashurst
rock-solid in the centre of the Leeds defence, but from
the half hour the part-timers had pressed Leeds hard. They forced their equaliser
seven minutes into the second half and it was not until the final ten minutes
that Leeds were able
to reassert themselves once more.
Leeds started the game well and after
Andy Ritchie had had one shot held, Ian Baird headed them in front with his
ninth goal of the season in the twelfth minute. John Stiles, Leeds’ most influential player for most
of the game, produced a high cross from the right from which Ian Baird
dispatched a firm header from near the penalty spot, which burst through Kevin
Charlton’s grasp. Anton Joseph and Eddie Hogan prodded Telford to life but it was not until their
fifty-second minute equaliser they got anything on
target. Then, after Brendan Ormsby had missed his
footing forty yards out, Colin Williams was able to shunt the ball via Ken
McKenna to John Alcock on the left whose cross found
Williams ten yards out. The former Scarborough striker got nicely between two
defenders to loop a header over Mervyn Day with the
goalkeeper seemingly unable to get any purchase on the pitch when he tried to
leap for the ball. Then with five minutes left, Neil Aspin
won a tight challenge with his head, cleared up field to Keith Edwards, who
nudged the ball to John Sheridan. His twenty-five yard through pass took a
deflection off a Telford defender, but still found Ian Baird, who raced down
the inside right slot and held off a challenge by Mark Hancock, before firing
low into the near corner of the net from close range. The ball sneaked in and Leeds sneaked through.
(Ticket Courtesy Mark Ledgard)
Match Action:
Jack Ashurst and
Brendan Ormsby to the rescue as Leeds defend
Ian Baird on the attack
(Picture
Courtesy Mark Ledgard)
John Stiles flies into a tackle in
midfield
(above two
pictures Courtesy of Mark Ledgard)
Teams:
Telford United 1987-88:
Back Row: Lenny Lloyd, Harry Wiggins, Ian
Crawley, Trevor Storton, Mark Harrison, Chris Brindley, Kevin Charlton, Steve Nelson,
Mark Hancock, Tommy Lloyd
Front Row: John McGinty, Paul Grainger, Tony
Griffiths, Paul Nelson, Stan Storton, Andy Lee, Antone Joseph, Iain Sankey, John
Stringer
Leeds United 1986-87:
Back Row: Andy Ritchie, Neil Aspin, Ronnie Robinson, Mervyn
Day, Ronnie Sinclair, Peter Swan, Peter Haddock, David Rennie.
Middle Row: Geoff Ladley
(Physio), Dave Bentley (Assistant Manager), Jack Ashurst, Bob Taylor, Brian Caswell, Brendan Ormsby,
Ian Baird, Peter Gunby
(Coach), Billy Bremner (Manager).
Front Row: Nigel Thompson, John Stiles, John
Sheridan, Ian Snodin, Tommy Wright, Russell Doig, John Buckley.
Players:
Ian Baird got both Colin Williams scored for Telford Mervyn
Day made a great save David Rennie kicked off
Leeds goals
the line
John Stiles crossed for first goal John Sheridan’s
deflected pass Brendan Ormsby lost his footing in the final minutes
led to United’s
second goal