Date: Sunday, 12th April 1987.
Venue:
Hillsborough, Sheffield.
Competition: FA
Cup Semi-Final.
Score: Coventry
City 3 Leeds
United 2
Scorers: Coventry
City: Gynn,
Houchen, Bennett. Leeds
United: Rennie, Edwards.
Attendance: 51,372
(Receipts £350/400,000).
Teams:
Coventry City: Ogrizovic;
Borrows, Downs; McGrath, Kilcline,
Peake; Bennett, Phillips, Regis, Houchen, Pickering (Gynn). Unused Substitute: Sedgeley.
Leeds United: Day; Aspin,
Adams; Stiles (Haddock), Ashurst, Ormsby; Ritchie,
Sheridan, Pearson (Edwards), Baird, Rennie.
Referee: R.G.
Milford (Bristol).
Underdogs United came close to achieving their Wembley dream
in one of the best-ever Semi-Finals packed with drama and goals. United’s appearance in a major semi-final for first time in
ten years produced a tremendous duel in the Sunday sunshine with the eventual
FA Cup winners, Coventry City,
at Hillsborough, Sheffield. The game, televised by
delayed telecast by ITV in the early afternoon, kicked off fifteen minutes late
because an estimated six thousand fans were still waiting to get into the
ground at 12.15pm, the scheduled
starting time. The match proved to be worth the wait.
United, who had eliminated Telford United, Swindon
Town, Queens Park Rangers and Wigan
Athletic, made a blistering start. Showing great style they kept sweeping
forward down both flanks and Steve Ogrizovic was
already forced to save superbly from a header from John Pearson, who was out to
impress on his former home ground. They forced a corner on the left and went a
goal up after fourteen minutes when David Rennie lost his marker and with a
tremendous, powerful header he met Mickey Adams’ corner-kick to leave the Coventry
keeper helpless. Only two brilliant saves by Coventry
goalkeeper Steve Ogrizovic prevented United from
taking complete control and gradually the Sky Blues began to create chances as
they probed the United defence, which included Neil Aspin, who had postponed his wedding to play.
Powerful Cyrille Regis was proving
a handful but he missed three chances and Keith Houchen
had a goal-bound shot blocked. Just when it seemed that United had ridden out
the storm disaster struck with only twenty-two minutes between United and a
Wembley appearance. The Leeds heroes were coping fairly
easily with the Coventry attack
when United skipper Brendan Ormsby made the error which was to tip the game
City’s way. Instead of hoofing a misdirected through ball clear, he opted to
guide it over the dead-ball line but was robbed by the persistent David Bennett
whose cross was cracked in from twelve yards by substitute Micky
Gynn, who had only been on the pitch for seven
minutes.
Ten minutes later the United defence was opened up again and
Keith Houchen rounded Mervyn Day in style to give
City the lead, to leave United seemingly dead and buried..
In a late gamble Billy Bremner sent on substitutes
Peter Haddock and Keith Edwards fort John
Stiles and John Pearson with just eight minutes left on the clock. A pulsating
match reached fever pitch seven minutes from the end of normal time when
substitute Keith Edwards, with virtually his first touch, headed in United’s equaliser from Andy Ritchie’s cross, after he was
fed by David Rennie. It was fitting that Andy Ritchie should figure in the goal
as he had been United’s best player on the day, and
after receiving the ball from David Rennie he still had to battle his way past
a couple of defenders before getting in his precision cross.
The goal came after eighty-three minutes but the excitement
did not end there, as Coventry
emerged the stronger team in the extra session. The pace inevitably dropped in
the extra period, but it was Coventry
that won the game in the ninety-ninth minute when Dave Bennett shot home from
close range after Mervyn Day had stopped a Keith Houchen
effort with his legs. But United still fought hard and it needed another
marvellous Steve Ogrizovic save to deny Keith Edwards
a late equaliser. Underdogs Leeds had acquitted themselves superbly and their much-maligned supporters also
made it a trouble-free game to remember, on a day when the club won back much
of its self respect. While Coventry
went on to lift the Cup at Wembley for the first time in their history, United
suffered further agony missing out on promotion by losing a play-off battle
with Charlton Athletic in the dying minutes of extra-time after once again
leading.
Alternate Report by the YEP: (Courtesy Mark Ledgard)
Leeds United players hobbled off, some in tears, to a
standing ovation from their own and Coventry’s
followers after an extra special FA Cup Semi-Final had been decided in
extra-time at Hillsborough in this momentous match. If there had to be a
winner, fittingly it came from the most precocious talent on view, Coventry’s
box of tricks Dave Bennett who nudged the winner in the ninety-eighth minute.
But right to the last minute Leeds might have forced the game into a replay the
following Wednesday, Steve Ogrizovic smothering Keith
Edwards’ dash onto a Neil Aspin shot to complete
Coventry’s day. Yet none of the 51,372 spectators who composed the wall of
sound inside the stadium would be able to forget this Titanic battle for the
right to meet Tottenham Hotspur in the final that 16th May. For
despite the odd flare-up and delaying tactics from Coventry
in the physically exhausting final gasps of the game, the tie will go down as
being among the best Semi-Finals in the history of the tournament.
It seemed for twenty minutes that Leeds
had hoisted the Second Division banner so high that Coventry
would not get a kick. Then Coventry
hit back without finding the killer touch and the first half ended with Leeds
ahead through David Rennie’s first goal of the season but a realistic
score-line might have been 4-3 in Coventry’s
favour. Cyrille Regis had squandered three golden
close-in openings while Steve Ogrizovic had
brilliantly turned aside fierce goal-bound attempts from John Pearson and
Brendan Ormsby then Keith Houchen saw a powerful
drive fly over the Leeds bar from twelve yards. The key
to a second half in which Coventry scored twice by the seventy-eighth minute
was the introduction of Micky Gynn,
a mighty little man of immense speed. He got Coventry’s
equaliser and Ken Houchen, York
City’s former Cup hero, nipped in
to put the First Division side ahead. But Billy Bremner,
the Leeds Manager, had another ace to play and sent on Keith Edwards with eight
minutes of normal time left and with his second touch he headed in the
equaliser to send the game into extra-time. Then eight minutes into the first
period of extra time Micky Adams Leeds’ former
Coventry defender, brought down the flying Dave Bennett on the right wing. Micky Gynn chipped a free kick to
the far post, Cyrille Regis headed across the goal
and Ken Houchen stabbed the ball towards the net.
Mervyn Day got his foot to the ball but Dave Bennett forced in the rebound.
The best moment for Leeds had been
when David Rennie’s powerful near post header from ten yards flew into the net
from Micky Adams’ fifteenth minute corner. Just after
the hour Coventry had replaced the
injured Nick Pickering with Micky Gynn
and immediately their fortunes looked up. The substitute smacked in the
equaliser from twelve yards when Brendan Ormsby had failed to stop Dave Bennett
on the right wing goal line getting in a telling cross. Twelve minutes from the
end of ordinary time Ken Houchen put Coventry
ahead for the first time.
Match Action:
David Rennie opens
the scoring for Leeds
Micky Gynn equalises for
Coventry
Keith Edwards celebrates his goal with Ian
Baird
Ian Baird, Micky
Adams, Dave Rennie and Mervyn
Day can only watch as Dave Bennett nets the winner.
Brendan Ormsby and
Neil Aspin were also onlookers.
(Six photos
below courtesy Mark Ledgard)
Keith Edwards, the scorer, and Ian Baird
celebrate United’s second goal
John Stiles slides in to try and tackle Micky Gynn
Players:
Micky Gynn, Keith Houchen
and Dave Bennett were the Coventry City goal-scorers
David Rennie got the Leeds first goal Substitute Keith Edwards scored United’s second Billy
Bremner was proud of his Leeds team
Steve Ogrizovic made
many fine saves Trevor Peake and
Brian Kilcline were the central defenders
Brian Burrows and Greg Downs were Coventry’s full-back
pairing David Phillips
and Lloyd McGrath were in midfield Nick Pickering and
Cyrille Regis were the strikers with Keith Houchen
with Dave Bennett and substitute Micky Gynn