Date:
Venue: Nep Stadium,
Competition: Inter-Cities Fairs Cup Final Second Leg.
Score: Ferencvaros 0
Scorers: Ferencvaros: Nil.
Attendance: 76,000.
Teams:
Ferencvaros: Geczi; Novak, Pancsics; Havasi, Juhasz, Szucs; Szoke (Kraba), Varga, Albert, Rakosi, Katona.
Referee: Gerhard Schulenberg (
On a night of immense tension, United were subjected to their most rigorous European examination in the white-hot atmosphere of the Nep Stadium, before emerging heroically to become the first British winners of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. United were without the injured Johnny Giles and Eddie Gray, but had Mike O’Grady back after a long lay off, with Paul Madeley taking a more defensive role in midfield, while Terry Hibbitt was given the left wing role, but the accent was certainly on defence with Mick Jones, recovered from injury, a lone attacker. Ferencvaros showed only one change from their team from the first leg with Sandor Katona replacing Mate Fenyvesi.
A human barrier of white shirts was strung around the penalty area to keep
the Magyars at bay for virtually the entire ninety minutes. Ferencvaros
hopes of quickly wiping out United’s slender
advantage soon evaporated as the
It might not have been entrancing to watch, as a defensive exhibition, especially for the Hungarian supporters, but it was a fascinating display of how to contain your opponents who were determined to score against you. There were excellent performances from Terry Cooper, Paul Madeley and Norman Hunter. They were unbeatable. Ferencvaros persisted in trying to force their way down the centre of the park, playing right into United’s strength of Norman Hunter, Paul Madeley and Terry Cooper and if it wasn’t one of the three doing the stopping there was Jack Charlton winning everything in the air and behind them they found Gary Sprake in brilliant form. There was always the constant threat posed by the Hungarian forwards particularly Florian Albert and Zoltan Varga, but the capacity 75,000 crowd packed into the mighty Nep Stadium quickly sensed that the pattern of the game was going to be, all out attack by Ferencvaros, against a stubborn rearguard action by Leeds.
As the watch ticked down and the final fifteen minutes started to tick away Ferencvaros had taken off Szoke
and replaced him with Kraba and Leeds brought on Mick
Bates for Terry Hibbitt, but the Doncaster-born
midfielder put away thoughts of attack and joined United’s
massed all-out defence. Ferencvaros created two more
opportunities as Varga tried an overhead kick but the
bounce evaded his team-mates and the
Almost on the final whistle Gary Sprake, saved the
game for
Just as Dinamo Zagreb had frustrated
Billy Bremner later described his feelings as he
received the trophy, “It was a moment to savour. For ten years one British team
after another had been vainly trying to win this competition. It had always
been looked upon as the toughest competition of them all in many ways, because
the tournament seemed to spark off trouble and strife of one kind or another
nearly every season. British clubs had travelled all over
Exactly a week later United started the defence of their new
trophy as they travelled to
Match Action:
Gary Sprake saves bravely Billy
Bremner with the Fairs Trophy Paul Madeley, Jack Charlton
and Gary Sprake
from Florian Albert
celebrate with Billy Bremner
Billy Bremner, with the Cup, Paul Reaney,
Peter Lorimer, Jack Charlton, Gary Sprake, Mick Jones and Mick Bates celebrate
The
Back Row: Norman
Hunter, Mick Bates (on as substitute for Terry Hibbitt),
Paul Madeley, Gary Sprake,
Jack Charlton, Mike O’Grady.
Front Row: Terry
Cooper, Billy Bremner, Paul Reaney,
Mick Jones, Peter Lorimer.
Dressing Room
celebrations at the Nep Stadium:
Back Row: Don Revie (Manager), Les Cocker (Trainer), Jack Charlton, Mick
Bates, Terry Yorath, Paul Reaney,
Terry Hibbitt,
David Harvey, Terry
Cooper, Rod Belfitt.
Front Row: Peter Lorimer, Paul Madeley, Gary Sprake, Billy Bremner, Mick
Jones, Norman Hunter, Mike O’Grady.
Terry Hibbitt, Gary Sprake, Peter Lorimer and Billy Bremner show
off the trophy outside
Teams:
Players:
Gary Sprake: