Date: Saturday, 26th March 1983.
Venue: Elland Road, Leeds.
Competition:
Second Division.
Score: Leeds
United 2 Crystal Palace
1
Scorers: Leeds
United: Ritchie, F. Gray (pen). Crystal
Palace: Murphy (pen).
Attendance:
13,973.
Teams:
Leeds United: Harvey; Thomas, F. Gray;
Sheridan, Hart, Dickinson; Hird, Butterworth,
Ritchie, Donnelly, Graham.
Crystal Palace: Fry; Locke, Murphy; Nebbeling, Cannon, Gilbert; Brown, Hughton,
Jones, Giles, Hilaire. Unused Sub: Langley.
Referee: D.Shaw (Sandbach)
Andy Ritchie, signed from Brighton in
an exchange deal that took Terry Connor to the south coast, made his Leeds
United debut, and marked it by scoring a goal, in a 2-1 victory over Crystal
Palace in March 1983. Manager Eddie
Gray would take satisfaction from his newest signing finding the target, but
saw two other features to encourage his recent actions. John Donnelly, signed
from Dumbarton, and David Harvey upgraded when John Lukic
asked for a move, also having made crucial contributions to the win.
Victory, however, was not achieved until the very last kick
of a nerve-jangling game, after which Palace made a quick-fire get-away with
manager Alan Mullery not bothering to talk to the
press. Presumably he could not have trusted himself to pass judgement on a penalty
awarded to United, ironically, but rightly, in the minutes added on because
Palace had, as one commentator put it, honed time-wasting to a fine,
frustrating art. He did, however, mutter something about time-wasting,
doubtless a reference to the referee’s decision to add time on after the
scoreboard clock had stopped at ninety minutes.
United had fallen behind to a twenty-fifth minute spot-kick
by Palace full-back Jerry Murphy, after referee Don Shaw awarded a penalty for
a handling offence by Kevin Hird and it was not until
the fifty-ninth minute that United really sparked into line. John Donnelly,
bought at a knock-down price of £10,000, split the Palace defence wide open
with a pass that found Andy Ritchie, who promptly hit home the equaliser. David
Harvey was next to shine for United, bringing off a magnificent save to deny
Jerry Murphy, when Palace were awarded a second penalty, this time for a
handling offence by Paul Hart.
The thirty-five-year-old keeper had dived to his left in a
vain attempt to stop Jerry Murphy’s earlier spot-kick, but when Murphy again
chose to shoot to the keeper’s left in the seventy-ninth minute, Harvey’s
full-length dive brought off a vital save. Harvey,
making his first appearance at Elland
Road in three and a half years, brought off
another fine save soon afterwards when Gary Locke
tried his luck with a shot.
None stuck to their tasks more so than John Donnelly and it
was he who, in the last few seconds, took the ball into the Palace penalty
area, where he was tripped by Jim Cannon. Palace protested at the penalty award
but it made no difference and Frank Gray remained cool and calm in a tension
filled situation to hit the winner with what proved to be the last kick of the
game.
Alternative Report from YEP (Courtesy of Mark Ledgard)
Crystal Palace
were the fastest team in the West Riding, but only
after they had paid a poetic sort of price for attempting to bore their way out
of relegation danger. Palace left Elland
Road in an angry cloud of dust, a matter of
minutes after losing to the last kick of a match which was not so much run of
the mill as walk of the mill. Their usually voluble Manager Alan Mullery presumably could not trust himself to pass
judgement on a penalty awarded, ironically but rightly, in the long minutes
added on because Palace honed time-wasting to a fine frustrating art. Palace
would call that professionalism. It looked more like purgatory. Leeds
were little better, a side so mechanical and predictable in an abysmal first
half that their Manager Eddie Gray must surely reconsider his intension to take
early retirement. Their victory was a triumph for durability, for the
experience of the admirable David Harvey and the courage of a referee prepared
to award a last minute penalty as dispassionately as he had in the twenty-fifth
and seventy-nine minutes when they might have mattered less. But Leeds
despite a mathematical chance of promotion and despite a crescendo which left
their supporters slightly delirious and somewhat dazed had only the result to
reflect on with any satisfaction.
John Donnelly was easily their best player and accusingly, a
yard quicker in thought and execution than any of his team-mates. The new
signing Andy Ritchie scored an opportunist goal and created chances which insist
that he has the instinct that Leeds need. John Sheridan
worked hard to create order from threatening chaos without putting too many
feet wrong. The rest were mere journeymen inflicting pressure on themselves and
frustration on their supporters. Vulnerable enough to make Palace’s Jerry
Murphy look a very good player and in truth he only did the simple things well.
Only! Fortunately for Leeds David Harvey made up his mind and made the
difference. He was beaten by Jerry Murphy’s penalty after Kevin Hird flung up an involuntary arm to handle in the
twenty-fifth minute. But he went the same way, far to his left, to save a
seventy-ninth minute penalty when Paul Hart handled and Jerry Murphy tried to
kill Leeds off. “I should have saved the first but I
slipped as I took off and that shortened my dive just enough to matter,” said Harvey.
“When he took the second I wanted to go to the right but I thought I would look
a right idiot, if he put the ball in the same place.”
Harvey’s save, a poignant home-coming after three and a half
years, gave Leeds the lift they desperately needed and the last ten minutes was
pure commitment, a little hell rather more notion than they had shown all
afternoon. Frank Gray crowned it coolly when he drove in Leeds’
penalty after Jim Cannon had tripped John Donnelly in desperation. Not
surprisingly Leeds’ equalising goal was fashioned
exclusively by John Donnelly and Andy Ritchie. “It was a great run by John and
a great ball. All I had to do was put it in,” said Andy Ritchie, which was
disarmingly modest and made no account of the fact that Leeds
suddenly found two men who could think further than the ball at their feet.
John Donnelly speared the ball into Andy Ritchie’s path as he ran parallel with
the penalty area and Ritchie drilled it in as David Fry tried to advance and
spread himself. “We had some luck with us and if that holds out we could still
be promoted,” insisted Ritchie. “After all we have six matches left at home,
and if we win them we must be in with a chance.” Mathematically, yes, but Leeds
in this match were so uninspired for so long, that promotion itself might be a
delayed embarrassment.
Match Action:
David Harvey makes a magnificent save from
Jerry Murphy’s penalty to keep Unite on level terms
Frank Gray remained cool and slotted United’s last gasp winner from the penalty spot with the
final kick of the game
Kevin Hird is
thwarted by the Crystal Palace goalkeeper David Fry’s brave save
Vince Hilaire (left
was just one of several Crystal Palace defenders who combined to try and stop
Paul Hart getting in his effort on goal
(the above six Action shots are courtesy of Mark Ledgard)
Teams:
Leeds United 1982-83:
Back Row: Gary Hamson,
Martin Dickinson, Neil Aspin, Frank Gray, Gwyn Thomas, Peter Barnes.
Middle Row: Peter Gunby
(Coach), Keith Mincher (Coach), Aidan Butterworth,
Kevin Hird,
Paul Hart, John Lukic,
David Seaman, Frank Worthington, Kenny Burns, Barry Murphy (Coach),
Geoff Ladley
(Physio).
Front Row: Brian Flynn, Trevor Cherry, Eddie
Gray (Player-Manager),
Jimmy Lumsden
(Assistant Manager), Terry Connor, Arthur Graham.
Players:
Andy Ritchie and Frank Gray with a penalty
scored for Leeds Crystal Palace scored with a penalty
from Jerry Murphy
David Harvey saved the second penalty Vince Hilaire
later played for Leeds
John Donnelly played well for Leeds
Jim Cannon conceded the penalty Gary Locke was denied by David Harvey Terry
Connor was exchanged for Andy Ritchie