Date:
Venue:
Competition: First Division.
Score:
Scorers:
Attendance: 30,085.
Teams:
Arsenal: Seaman;
Referee: Mr J. Lloyd (Wrexham).
In the
1990/91 season, the two sides must have been fed up of the sight of each other
as they met on no fewer than six occasions. Four of those meetings were in the
FA Cup, when their Fourth Round tie went to three replays before the more
experienced Gunners finally went through. There was no indication of the future
FA Cup encounters when Arsenal visited Elland Round
in late September 1990 in United’s first season back
with the elite, of which Arsenal were one of the foremost. United had several
players in their line-up who had a one time or another been adjudged to be
surplus to the Gunners’ requirements. Central defender Chris Whyte, Goalkeeper John Lukic and chief Striker, Lee Chapman.
Lee Chapman
had the kind of goal record at
The
Lincoln-born striker developed quite a liking for putting the ball in the
Arsenal net and in twelve games he scored seven goals over the next three
years, which was a good success rate against the miserly Arsenal defence of the George Graham era. It may have had something
to do with the fact that earlier in his career he left Stoke City, where he had
risen to prominence, for £500,000 in 1982 and his flourishing reputation
suffered a stutter at Highbury and after an
inconspicuous stay of less than two years he was off-loaded to Sunderland for
£100,000 and it was not until he joined up with Howard Wilkinson at Sheffield
Wednesday in 1984 that he regained his true scoring form. He later enjoyed
success at
One of
those goals he scored against Arsenal was in the 2-2 draw between the clubs in
late September 1990, in a game that
While the
decision angered United on video evidence the referee was proven correct, and
United who had looked the better team to that point, fought back and gained a
creditable draw against a side generally rated as the second best in the
country. The Gunners were unbeaten in eight League and Cup games, five of which
had been away, so, considering the circumstances of the opening Arsenal goal,
United fully deserved at least the draw they eventually had to settle for.
United outran and outplayed their more highly rated rivals for the first
twenty-five minutes, when they served up some highly entertaining and skillful
football that was rewarded by an eighth minute goal.
Glynn Snodin’s doggedness in midfield won him possession from Siggi Jonsson and when he
released Gary McAllister, the Scottish international fired across a low centre
that deflected off defender Steve Bould and seemed
about to drop over the line but Chapman arrived on the scene and made sure. Not
one of Chapman’s more memorable goals, but important never-the-less, and
whatever the contentions about Anders Limpar’s
fortieth minute goal, it stood despite a desperate attempt to kick the ball
clear by Mel Sterland.
While
United had done enough in the first half to have gone to the break in the lead,
they had to be content with the 1-1 score-line. Spurred on by the midfield
promptings of David Batty, Gordon Strachan and Gary
McAllister, United posed many questions for Arsenal. They went close to
regaining the lead when Chris Whyte hit a shot
against the woodwork early in the second half but then suffered another
set-back when Anders Limpar scored again five minutes
into the second half, following some excellent play by full-back Lee Dixon and
Paul Merson. It shocked United but, inspired by
Gordon Strachan, they fought back and when the
referee awarded them a penalty for Gary McAllister having his shirt tugged by
Jonsson, it was Strachan who duly hammered home an excellent spot-kick to earn
United a fully deserved equaliser.
Match Action:
Teams:
Players:
Mel Sterland
supplied David Batty’s
poor pass caused Chris Whyte hit the woodwork Glynn Snodin’s
good work resulted in
Chapman the first goal
the
Ex-Leeds Reserve David Seaman kept goal Lee Dixon and Nigel Winterburn
were the full-backs
Central defence was Steve Bould
and Tony Adams
Future
Alan Smith and Paul Merson were the Arsenal strike force. David Hillier and Perry Groves were the substitutes for Winterburn and Merson