Date:
Venue:
Competition: FA Cup Fifth Round.
Score:
Scorers:
Attendance: 31,324 (Receipts £122,000).
Teams:
Referee: K.P.
Barrett (
The roof nearly blew off
Second Division Leeds United had the ideal opportunity to win back old friends and influence new ones when they were given a home draw against First Division Queens Park Rangers in the Fifth Round of the FA Cup in February 1987. They did just that, qualifying for the quarter-finals with a rousing 2-1 victory over the Londoners in an emotion-charged game watched by a crowd of 31,324, some 10,000 above United’s average at the time.
“It is one of the biggest occasions we have had for sometime and there is a lot at stake,” United’s manager said before the game, and he was rightly proud of his men after the win. Naturally United went into the tie as underdogs but they were in the last sixteen of the competition for the first time in ten years and were hungry for further Cup progress. It showed in a team performance that had endeavour to the fore.
Lanky John Pearson had not scored for his new team in his five games for United following his £70,000 transfer from Charlton Athletic, a situation that had not exactly made him popular with United fans, but he emerged with great credit from this shock Cup defeat of QPR. The six foot three inch striker capitalised on the absence of Rangers’ suspended Northern Ireland international centre-half Alan McDonald and played an influential part in United’s win, using his height to maximum advantage as he ‘made’ the two goals that sank Rangers and brought emotional scenes to Elland Road.
Although Rangers pedigree showed through in flashes, United’s chase and harry game worked well with no man shirking his duties and there were occasions when they attacked with skill and precision. Good work from John Sheridan, John Pearson, Ian Baird and Andy Ritchie had raised the danger signals for Rangers early on, so it was no surprise when United took an eighteenth minute lead.
Micky Adams, who marked speed merchant Wayne Fereday out of the game, found time to use his own pace to get round the defence and when John Pearson headed back his centre, there was Ian Baird to bravely flung himself horizontally to head the ball past David Seaman from close range, for his fourth FA Cup goal of the term and his thirteenth of the season in all games after eighteen minutes.
The exciting match developed into a battle between United’s non-stop running and Rangers’ more intricate skills. United’s style was more suited to the Cup-tie atmosphere generated by the crowd and had their chances to put the game beyond Rangers’ reach. Andy Ritchie sent one shot over the bar and then had another saved by David Seaman. At the other end Mervyn Day made a flying save to touch John Byrne’s shot around the post after fifty-eight minutes.
Just as United seemed to have drawn the sting from Rangers
they gifted the
Alternate Reports: (Courtesy Mark Ledgard)
Comment:
Another view: Ian Baird put it graphically, “We got them by
the throat. They are a pretty side, we are not.” That neatly summed up a
forceful Fifth Round FA Cup-tie, although it failed to emphasise the jubilation
at
Billy Bremner, the Leeds Manager,
must have been delighted with his decision to switch Mickey Adams to left-back
in place of the Cup-tied Bobby McDonald. Since signing from
Respite for Rangers came with a free kick on the edge of the
Match Action:
Ian
Baird scored United’s first goal with a flying header
Brendan Ormsby
scored the second United goal with a powerful header
Fans watch from the roofs of neighbouring
shops after the gates were locked
(Four
photos Courtesy Mark Ledgard)
Brendan Ormsby scores
with a powerful header
Brendan Ormsby
celebrates his goal
Teams:
Back
Row: Jack Ashurst, Ian
Baird, John Pearson, Mervyn Day, David Rennie, Peter Swan,
Neil Aspin.
Middle
Row: Alan Sutton (Physio),
Peter Gunby (Coach), Bobby McDonald, Peter Haddock,
David Rennie, Ronnie
Sinclair, Nigel Thompson, Brendan Ormsby, David
Bentley (Coach),
David Blakey (Chief
Scout), Billy Bremner (Manager).
Front
Row: John Stiles, Andy Ritchie, Bob Taylor, Micky Adams, Russell Doig, John
Sheridan,
Keith Edwards.
Players:
Ian Baird and Brendan Ormsby
scored the
Andy Ritchie and John
Sheridan did good work
Bobby McDonald was Cup-tied
Mervyn Day could only watch the own goal
John Pearson used his aerial advantage John Buckley was a substitute
Micky Adams used his pace Former United Reserve keeper Warren Neill was at right-back Robbie
James was at Left-Back
David Seaman was in goal
Gary Chivers and
Terry Fenwick were partners in central defence Gary Bannister and Johnny Byrne provided the
strike force
Clive Walker and Mike Fillery
started in midfield
Sammy Lee came on as a substitute
Martin Allen and Wayne Fereday
were the two wide men
Gavin Maguire was a substitute
Alan McDonald’s height was missed