Date:
Venue:
Competition: League Cup, Fifth Round.
Score:
Scorers:
Attendance: 28,176.
Teams:
Aston Villa: Spink; Price, Gray; McGrath, Birch (Ormondroyd),
Nielson; Yorke, Platt, Cascarino,
Cowans, Callaghan.
Referee:
Mr R. Lewis (Great Bookman,
Leeds United had the best home record in the League over the
previous three months when they maintained their three pronged assault on
Wembley by beating Aston Villa in the quarter-final of the Rumbelow’s
Cup at
This Cup clash with Villa was just one of three in different Cup competitions facing United in twelve days, the others being an FA Cup Fourth Round tie at Arsenal and a Zenith Data Systems Cup northern area quarter-final against Derby County, and the United manager felt his men had every right to go in against Villa brimful of confidence. “We are in the top third of the First Division and you have to think in terms of having a chance of getting to one of the finals,” Wilkinson said.
United had knocked in twenty-three goals in their last eight home wins, but Villa had two players, in Republic of Ireland striker Tony Cascarino and promising teenage attacker Dwight Yorke, looking for the chance to shoot holes into that impressive record, but United rose to the occasion and swept Villa aside in majestic fashion. Total commitment, vision and more than a touch of class turned the game into one to savour for United fans, two goals from Lee Chapman, and one each from Gary McAllister and Gary Speed putting the icing on the cake.
Super United produced a magnificent display to put Wembley
within their grasp for the first time in eighteen years. Their last competitive
game at the famous old Stadium had been in 1973 when they were sensationally
beaten in the FA Cup Final and now they were just one step away from another
appearance between the
United strode out in front of a noisy crowd willing them on
into the League Cup Semi-Fimals and they dismantled
Villa piece by piece with their best display of the season. On a bitterly cold
night Scottish International Gary McAllister and his midfield partner David
Batty totally eclipsed
Villa, who finished runner-up to Liverpool in the League in the previous season almost took a ninth minute lead when Paul Birch managed a long-range shot that struck the crossbar, but once Lee Chapman had got in front of his marker, Kurt Neilsen, and headed a seventeenth minute near post goal from a Glynn Snodin corner, to take his tally for the season to fifteen, Wilkinson’s men never looked back. Mel Sterland’s industry on the right flank had been a feature of United’s recent play and it was from one of his crosses that United went 2-0 up, as Gary Speed flicked the ball on with his head for Gary McAllister, running through unmarked, to fire in his fifth goal of the season.
Gary Speed’s aerial ability was a constant source of worry and
embarrassment to the Villa defence and he got his name on the score-sheet after
seventy-eight minutes with a powerful downward header from Gordon Strachan’s slide-rule cross and Lee Chapman headed in the
fourth, ten minutes from the end, when he arched a header from another Glynn Snodin left-wing cross over goalkeeper Nigel Spinks. It was
left to former
Players:
Lee Chapman (2) Gary McAllister and Gary Speed scored for
Substitute Ian Ormondroyd
scored for Villa Mel Sterland was a
threat down the right Nigel Spink was in goal for Villa
Chris Price and Stuart Gray were the full-backs
Tony Cascarino and
Dwight York were the Villa strikers Paul McGrath and Kent Nielsen were the
central defenders
Paul Birch, David Platt, Gordon Cowans and
Nigel Callaghan were the Villa midfield