Showing posts with label Arsenal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arsenal. Show all posts

Saturday, 3 September 2016

Malcolm MacDonald Scores Five Goals - Ee-ay, ee-ay-oh




“I don’t want you here. I wouldn’t have picked you, but the media has made it impossible so here you are.  If you don’t score in this match I won’t be picking you again”

Malcolm MacDonald, for some, was the archetypal English centre-forward.  Big, strong, and good in the air.  Unlike other “big number nines” he was extremely quick on the ground as viewers of the iconic 1970’s Superstars series will confirm.
He first began his career at Fulham, the club he was born just down the road from.  He was one of the kids who used to hang around the ground looking for autographs from players such as Bobby Robson.  It was Robson who signed him at Craven Cottage.  He moved to Luton Town in 1969 and then onto Newastle United in the summer of 1971.  That season he scored twenty-three goals as Newcastle finished mid-table.  He endeared himself to the home supporters by scoring a hat-trick against Liverpool on his home debut.







[video]
January 1972 saw him win England honours for the first time as he was picked for the under-23 side which took on Wales at Swindon.  He lined up alongside Mick Channon, Phil Parkes, Colin Todd, Ray Kennedy and Tony Currie.  He opened the scoring too, in a 2-0 victory.  Two further appearances against Scotland and East Germany were enough to persuade Alf Ramsey to add him to the full squad for the British Home International Championships.  The now defunct competition was between England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland and took place during May at the end of every season.  Each team played each other once to determine the British champions, with England versus Scotland always being the final fixture.  
Ramsey put MacDonald straight into the starting line-up as England took on Wales at Ninian Park, Cardiff.  England had just been knocked out of the European Championships losing the two-legged Quarter-Final to the eventual winners, West Germany.  MacDonald lined up alongside players such as Gordon Banks, Bobby Moore, Colin Bell, Emlyn Hughes, Norman Hunter and Rodney Marsh.  Hughes, Marsh and Bell scored in a 3-0 win.  A surprise defeat at Wembley to Northern Ireland when future Arsenal manager, and the man who would sign MacDonald to the club, Terry Neill scored the only goal of the game, was then forgotten about when Alan Ball did likewise in a 1-0 win at Hampden against Scotland.
MacDonald seemed to have done enough to impress England’s World Cup winning manager and when he scored a hat-trick against Wales for the under-23’s in November.  But England had plenty of strikers to choose from then with Allan Clarke, Martin Chivers, Mick Channon and Joe Royle being selected ahead of Supermac.  MaDonald didn’t put on another England shirt until he lined up in Moscow for a friendly against Soviet Union where Bobby Moore equalled Bobby Charlton’s appearances world record.  England had just lost a crucial World Cup qualifier in Poland just four days before and were pleased to bounce back with a 2-1 win.
That June appearance was his only cap in 1973 but the summer of 1974 saw him have another run in the team.  England had just suffered the ignominy of failing to qualify for the 1974 World Cup and then lost at home to Italy when Fabio Capello scored.  In April MacDonald was selected for the friendly in Lisbon against Portugal.  Playing up front alongside Mick Channon he was unable to get his first full international goal as the game ended 0-0.  Soon after that Alf Ramsey was sacked.
Ramsey had been a fan of MacDonald and had spoken to him encouraging him to remain patient but assuring him he had a place at this level.
Joe Mercer was the stop-gap caretaker manager for the Home Internationals and ignored MacDonald for the wins over Wales and Northern Ireland but brought him on as a sub for Frank Worthington at Hampden Park where England lost 0-2.  A month later MacDonald was again a replacement for Worthington and goals from Keegan and Channon helped England to a 2-2 draw in Yugoslavia.  Then Don Revie was named as new England manager.
MacDonald never knew why Revie didn’t like him but wondered if it was because he often scored against Leeds when Revie was in charge.
He wasn’t called up for the first two games of Revie’s reign but got the call when World Champions West Germany were to visit Wembley.  MacDonald was in the middle of another twenty-goal season but when he reported for duty he was greeted by the England manager with a terse
“I don’t want you here. I wouldn’t have picked you, but the media has made it impossible so here you are.  If you don’t score in this match I won’t be picking you again”
Not known for his Shanklyesque powers of motivation so MacDonald had every reason to believe Revie was serious.  Lining up alongside Channon and Keegan, MacDonald finally broke his duck midway through the second half. Mick Channon took a quick free-kick on the right wing to Alan Ball and his accurate cross to the far post saw MacDonald head the ball home for his first ever England goal in his eighth appearance.  A 2-0 win had everyone smiling.  But in the dressing room afterwards, if Supermac was to imagine his manager’s sullen exterior was to be relaxed, he was disappointed.  Revie came in and shook all the players by the hand but when he came to MacDonald he completely blanked him and walked out.
A month later and Cyprus came to Wembley for the European Championship qualifiers.  When MacDonald met up with the squad again he was greeted with the same ‘welcome’ from his manager.
“I don’t want you here. I wouldn’t have picked you, but again the media has made it impossible so here you are.  If you don’t score in this match I won’t be picking you again”.
During the build up to the game Revie was similarly cold towards the Newcastle striker who was convinced he was like this rather than Revie trying some reverse psychology on him.  The day before the match MacDonald was so bothered by this treatment he spoke to the captain, Alan Ball and explained how things were.  Initially Bally dismissed it but when MacDonald told him about Revie’s behaviour in the dressing room afterwards he decided this was not on.  So Ball gathered Colin Bell, Alan Hudson and Kevin Keegan and explained how they were going to make sure MacDonald scored.  Ball said the record number of goals scored in one match for England was five, with Willie Hall in 1938 being the last player to do it.  But no player had done it in a competitive match.  So the plan was to make sure Malcolm beat the record and scored six goals.  MacDonald was stunned at the camaraderie but excited at what the team might be able to create for him.
Just two minutes into the game and Kevin Keegan was brought down on the left wing.  Alan Hudson took the free-kick and MacDonald got his head to the ball just ahead of Dave Watson and England were 1-0 up.  One.   






During the celebration Ball came up to MacDonald and reminded him that was goal number one and five more to go.  Ten minutes before half-time and Colin Bell burst forward to the right edge of the area but his ball into the box missed everyone.  Keegan picked it up on the left, turned a defender and pulled it back from the bye-line where MacDonald scuffed his shot but with enough power to beat the keeper.  Two
Just before the break MacDonald hit a shot against the post and could easily have a first half hat-trick.  2-0 at the break and it wasn’t long before they added to their tally in the second half.  Paul Madeley brought the ball into the Cypriot half and exchanged passes with Bell before floating a ball to the far post where Keegan nodded it down for MacDonald to complete his hat-trick.  Three

Revie then shuffled his pack but instead of taking off MacDonald he chose to take off Channon and replace him with QPR’s Dave Thomas.  Commentator David Coleman informed viewers how Thomas was “one of the best crossers of a ball in the First Division” and immediately we had evidence of this as Ball played him in down the right and his cross to the edge of the six-yard area was powered home by the head of MacDonald.  Four.

Again Ball can be seen encouraging MacDonald to keep going with thirty-five minutes still on the clock.
Within minutes England had the ball in the net again but this was ruled out as Beattie was adjudged to have kicked the ball out of the keeper’s hands after chesting it down in the area.  The challenge was enough to force the visitors to bring on a substitute keeper.  With just three minutes remaining Thomas played a one-two with Ball on the right and his cross into the six-yard box was headed in by MacDonald and he’d become the first England player to score five goals in a competitive international and the first since the War to do it in any match.  Five.
MacDonald did get the ball in the net after his fourth goal but it was ruled out for offside.  He was ecstatic with his performance and especially grateful to Keegan and Ball who’d played such a part in the success.  At the end of the game the electronic scoreboard at Wembley flashed up
“Congratulations – Supermac 5 Cyprus 0”
As MacDonald was leaving the pitch he saw Revie over by the touchline, head down and he shouted over to him 
“Read that and weep, you bastard. Read that and weep”

But Revie didn’t hear him and as everyone was high on the euphoria of it all the manager repeated his performance in the dressing room by not even shaking hands with a player who’d scored five goals in one game.  The only time the manager spoke to the player the whole country was talking about was when he ordered him out of the bath to speak to the press.  
Later in his autobiography MacDonald would explain how the press seemed strangely cool towards him afterwards and he couldn’t understand why.  Back then players or their agents received £25 for post-match interviews and a year later when MacDonald met the BBC football producer and gently suggested his agent hadn’t received the fee, he was abruptly told Revie had demanded £200.  It appeared this was raised via a collection from some of the production staff, camera, sound and lighting engineers and yet Revie had trousered the lot.
MacDonald kept his place in the team for the return against Cyprus where Keegan scored the only goal of the game and then in the goalless draw in Belfast against Northern Ireland.  But he was dropped for the Wales and Scotland matches as his replacement, David Johnson scored in both games.
Supermac would win just three more caps with just two more starting appearances as his international career ended in Lisbon in November 1975.  Six goals from fourteen appearances was a decent return but he only scored in two games and after the Cyprus success he never played at Wembley for England again.  Revie certainly wasn’t interested in him despite his big money move (£333,333) to Arsenal in 1976.

A serious knee injury forced the early termination of MacDonald’s playing career at the age of 29 in 1979 and although he perhaps didn’t achieve the success at international level that his fame at club level suggested, he can at least claim a record which may stand for a while yet.

Sunday, 8 May 2016

Now You're Gonna Believe Them





“You must’ve cheated”
“I didn’t”
“Yeah, don’t give me that. You’ve changed the database to add some big players who wouldn’t ever join your club”
“No, no I didn’t.  Here, have a look at my squad. All these players are those who weren’t wanted by other clubs”
“Ok, well then you must’ve manipulated the scores. Each time you went behind you turned it off and started again”
“Well…..we were hardly ever behind so I didn’t need to”
“Ok, well bless you, you enjoy your fantasy.  It would never happen in real life”


This is a scenario that’s gone on around the world for any of us who’ve played Football Manager and published blogs of our progress.  One of the ultimate addictive facets to the game is the ability to take control of a ‘little club’ and guide them to glory, dreaming of press conferences, awards and team talks where you get to pit your wits against Barcelona, Bayern Munich or Real Madrid.
What we have just witnessed in English football is an achievement of Football Manager proportions.  These things weren’t supposed to come true, in these days of clubs as behemoths burning more money than some countries GDP, football looked for all the world as though without money no club could hope to succeed.  Maybe in cup competitions the minnows could progress, mainly through luck of the draw as the bigger sides knock each other out, and maybe through the luck of timing.  A little club could come up against a big side who field a side to protect their stars as they are days away from a crucial European match.  Plus, cup competitions may only require you to negotiate six or seven matches.  But a league competition?  Surely that goes on too long for a lesser side to prevail?

But Leicester City has defied all the odds and overturned considered convention. 

There are plenty of reasons, or maybe even excuses, clubs can identify to suggest why they’re not currently winning titles.  Maybe they don’t have enough money to buy the quality of player to win trophies, their ground isn’t big enough to bring in enough revenue to afford these players’ wages.  They’ve given youth players a go but they’re struggling to come to terms with the higher standard of play.  All their best players get poached by bigger clubs.  They need a quality goalscorer, or a quality centre-half or a talented goalkeeper.  All those cost money and none of those players are interested in playing for clubs who don’t compete in European competitions.
Leicester has just blown all those excuses out of the water.  They ripped up the rulebook and laughed in the face of “it cannot be done”.  Of course there are a number of factors which have helped them achieve this, mainly the abject performances of other clubs who really should’ve won a league title when only 77 points were required for success.
It’s not just the big boys who’ve had their noses put out of joint and given homework for the summer to work out how they take on Leicester, but clubs who were above The Foxes in early 2015 are all now going to reassess their goals and aspirations.

DREAM BIG
There is a story often given by positive speakers about fleas in a jar.  If you put fleas in a jar and put the lid on, the fleas will jump up and hit their heads on the lid.  They keep doing this for a while until they work out that if they jump just below the level of the lid then they don’t get a headache.  They condition themselves so well they keep on doing this.  If you then remove the lid what happens?  The fleas keep jumping to the level of just below the lid as they’re not aware the lid has been removed.  You can keep them in that jar with the lid off for ages as they’ve been conditioned to believe that jumping any higher will bring them pain.

This is where many clubs who would consider themselves on a par with Leicester, now find themselves.  The lid has been lifted but have they got the ability to realise or the dreams to be able to jump higher?

Some clubs appeared to start the season with acceptance of a relegation battle.  They only really got to work once the drop was a very real possibility and suddenly they put in big enough performances to get them out of the mire.

Leicester’s success isn’t a fluke.  Although it is true this should give many people confidence in aiming to achieve the impossible, you can’t just turn up with a group of players, run around a lot and hope to win the league.  Leicester’s success may actually have been a perfect storm.
Will there be another season when Arsenal, Manchester City, Manchester United and Chelsea all lose a total of 38 matches between them?  Compare that with last season when they lost a total of 25 between them.  That is not to belittle Leicester’s achievement, it’s not their fault those big four clubs all had a meltdown at the same time.  One of the benefits for Leicester for next season is the panic which now pervades the boardrooms of all four clubs to try and work out how to re-arrange their business plans.  Already two of them have announced new management, with another one rumoured to, and the fourth resisting the urge for now. 

There is no single factor which has contributed to Leicester’s stunning title win and in a way what this has proven is that money alone cannot win you a title, but then Manchester City are evidence you need a little more than just money to win league titles.  The fact Leicester staved off relegation last season from a seemingly desperate position will have gone someway for them believing they could achieve anything.

Leicester fell to the bottom of the Premier League at the end of November 2014 when they lost 2-3 at QPR.  It was their seventh defeat in the first thirteen matches of the season, and began a run of six straight defeats.  They ended it by beating Hull City but on New Year’s Day they were still bottom of the pile
The table on New Year’s Day morning makes interesting reading.  Leicester were bottom, with Burnley and then Crystal Palace three points above them.  The fortunes of those bottom three eighteen months on is interesting.  Leicester are now Premier League Champions, Crystal Palace are in the FA Cup Final and Burnley have just won the Championship title.

When Leicester lost at Tottenham in late March they were seven points from safety with just nine matches to go.  The proceeded to lose just one of those nine, at home to the eventual champions Chelsea, and drew at Sunderland.  All the rest they won.  Back-to-back wins against West Ham and West Brom saw them finally drag themselves from the bottom of the table in mid-April.  Those remaining seven matches are enlightening when looking back now.  They only conceded in two of those matches, the Chelsea defeat and the final game 5-1 thrashing of QPR.  Fast forward to this season and they have kept fifteen clean-sheets.  More tellingly twelve of these have come in the second half of the season.  Between the Boxing Day defeat at Anfield and the 2-2 draw at home to West Ham in mid-April, they played fifteen matches and only conceded in four.  They lost just once, at Arsenal and the consistency is one huge reason for their success.

WORK ETHIC
They have a work ethic, as so many have identified, and this where they work so hard for each other.  They swarm all over sides.  They don’t need to worry about possession of the ball as they’ve proved their ability to retrieve possession, they lead the league in interceptions, and then counter attack at pace.  They possess a striker, Jamie Vardy, who never stops running and has scored 24 goals.  He also broke the Premier League record for consecutive games scored in.  They’ve identified their strengths and worked them thoroughly.  Not worry about not having the ball as long as they can nick it when their opponents are pushing forward, get it up the pitch quickly and then have a striker who can convert more often than not.  Largely Vardy has made the same run time and again every game, all season and yet sides have still to combat it.  They have a greater conversion rate of chances than any other club in the league.

There is also a fascinating synergy between the last two seasons.  They’ve been crowned Champions after 139 days at the top of the table.  Last season they were at the bottom for 140 days.
Claudio Ranieri deserves all the plaudits heading his way, so do the owners for choosing him against others better judgement.  But the groundwork within the club set up by the backroom staff and Nigel Pearson last season, is what has gone a long, long way towards their success.  The medical staff have found a way of preparing and looking after players who have been able to survive the rigours of a 38-game season without a soft-tissue injury anywhere.  Many felt sorry for him when a re-financed Chelsea ditched him for Mourinho in 2004.  Leicester is his sixth club appointment since then and he came from a less than auspicious experience as manager of Greece.  He was not to know of the turmoil behind the scenes within the Greek FA and was only in charge for four matches.  In nearly thirty years of management this is his first league title.  Few begrudge him that.

Have they been lucky? I think they have, but then again they’ve seized on an opportunity and run with it.  They’ve lost three games all season, with only two clubs ever getting the better of them (Arsenal, twice, Liverpool, once).  Chelsea lost just three last season, which puts that into perspective.  They have been clear of injuries, but then as has just been mentioned, they have created their own luck in that department.  They didn’t seem to suffer from any contentious decisions by officials, possibly until the Vardy sending off against West Ham.  They didn’t have many goals chalked off or many goals given against them where replays suggested otherwise.

What Leicester has proved is that there is no substitute for hard work, planning and preparation.  Ranieri didn’t make too many adjustments to the 2014-15 side but the changes he did make were crucial.  There are all sorts of stats about how little they’ve spent compared to the bigger clubs in English football, but what they have generated is a fantastic team spirit where the players are prepared to sacrifice themselves for each other.  There are no huge egos at the club, no big names.  At the end of last year I read a comment from someone about how Leicester would struggle to keep hold of players like Vardy and Mahrez.  Now I’m sure the club is looking forward to barging in on their rivals transfer negotiations, saying “don’t go there, they haven’t got Champions League football”.

PREDICTIONS ARE USELESS
I tweeted towards the end of November about the incredibly tough run of fixtures they had coming up.  They’d just won at Newcastle and gone to the top of the table after thirteen games.  Their run was Manchester United (h), Swansea (a), Chelsea (h), Everton (a), Liverpool (a), Manchester City (h).  My argument was they’d gained a lot of points against weaker opposition.  They’d only picked up two points from games against Tottenham, Arsenal and Manchester United.  I, like many others, expected them to fall away.  I expected them to find the going tough, players would pick up injuries, etc, etc.  .  Most people were likely to have agreed with me about Leicester’s chances, although there was one chap who reckoned they’d get “12 points there easy”.  Take a bow Ross Bell (@RossBell1984), you were almost on the money.  They picked up thirteen points, winning three, drawing two and losing just one of those six matches, at Liverpool.

When they lost at The Emirates in mid-February many people expected Arsenal to go on and take the title.  They were two points behind Leicester and with a supposedly far superior squad and a manager who’d experienced a title win.  But from there Leicester really hit a rhythm, gaining nineteen points from a possible twenty-one over the next seven games, conceding in just one.  A series of 1-0 wins took them further ahead of the pack.  In contrast, Arsenal’s seven matches earned them just nine points.  In the days of George Graham at Arsenal the fans frequently sang “one-nil to the Arsenal”.  All these years later they’d been “out Arsenal-ed” by Leicester City.  58,000 is the average attendance at Arsenal, whereas Champions Leicester only house 32,000 every week.  Even Aston Villa command a higher average attendance.

NO COMPARISON
Was this the ‘greatest story ever told’ in football?  There have been a couple of contenders to challenge this.  Ipswich winning the title in 1962 a year after winning the Second Division title.  Nottingham Forest won the league in 1978 a year after finishing third in the Second Division.  They then went onto win back-to-back European Cups.  The Forest side is a decent comparison with Leicester in that they didn’t have any superstars, until Brian Clough signed one of the best goalkeepers in the world, Peter Shilton.  But other than that they had a lot of players who inidividually weren’t necessarily anything special, but collectively were very hard to beat.  Liverpool had just won back-to-back league titles and also the European Cup, a year after the UEFA Cup.  They contained internationals such as Clemence, Neal, Hughes, Hansen, Thompson, Souness, Dalglish, McDermott and Ray Kennedy.  They won the league by seven points which is the equivalent of ten points today.

In the sixties the league was won by eight different teams.  In the seventies six different clubs won the First Division.  In the last ten years just three different clubs have won the title.  This is not to denigrate either Ipswich or Forest’s achievements but money has changed everything, especially expectations.  

WHAT NEXT?
Leicester may do quite well in Europe, particularly as their brand of football should be very difficult for foreign teams to contend with as they rarely come up against it.  The key could be to keep the same group of players.  It will be important for them to recruit well, paying particular attention to attitude and temperament.  All the talk coming out of the King Power Stadium is they intend to do just that.  What remains for them next season is anybody’s guess.  So many, including their own supporters, got this season wrong so it seems churlish to try and predict anything further of this wonderful story.  Personally, I’m going to just sit back and enjoy it.  One of the most popular successes for many a year.  Let’s hope that success doesn’t ruin the players or the team spirit.

Saturday, 7 May 2016

A Moment in Time - 1974-75 Fulham's Record Cup Run




What’s the record for the most FA Cup matches played by one club to reach a Final?  11, set by Fulham in 1974-75.  They fell just short of winning the trophy for the first time in their history.  Their performance during that campaign remains their best ever in the competition. 
They provided one of the most romantic stories for an FA Cup Final as England’s World Cup winning captain, Bobby Moore lead Fulham out at Wembley against West Ham, the club he’d lifted the tophy for in 1964.  He was joined by another former England international, Alan Mullery, who himself had been an FA Cup winner with Tottenham in 1967. 

Throughout the sixties Fulham had enjoyed First Division status, but back-to-back relegations saw them begin the 1969-70 season in the Third Division.  Two years later they were back in the second tier of English football.  In March 1974 Moore was allowed to leave West Ham, where he had set an appearance record (later to be overtaken by Billy Bonds) and played with utter distinction in an auspicious career spanning sixteen years.  Mullery had begun his career at Fulham in 1958, the same year Moore made his professional debut, and moved to Tottenham in 1964 where he won FA, League and UEFA Cup winners medals.  By 1972 he was back at Craven Cottage.

1974-75 became famous for the year Manchester United played in the Second Division.  They were top of the table at the turn of the year, with Fulham sitting smack bang in mid-table.  For the Third Round they’d been drawn against the side immediately above them, Hull City.  This is where our story begins
SQUAD

GOALKEEPER
PETER MELLOR (age 27, 12 apps)  -  Began his career at Burnley in 1969.  Joined Fulham in 1972.  Played in every game of the 1974-75 season.  Stayed at the club until 1977 when the emergence of Gerry Peyton reduced his first team appearances. He moved to Hereford for a year and then settled at Portsmouth for the remaining years of his career in England.  He became a firm favourite with Fratton Park supporters who voted him Player of the Season in 1979

DEFENDERS
JOHN CUTBUSH (age 25, 9 apps)  -  Born in Malta he started his professional career at Tottenham in 1966, but moved to Fulham six years later having never gained a first team appearance.  Spent five years at Craven Cottage before moving to Sheffield United.  He made almost as many appearances at Bramall Lane as he did for Fulham and in 1981 he moved to United States for take part in indoor soccer.
JOHN FRASER (age 21, 4 apps)  -  Joined Fulham’s youth system in 1971.  He was never a regular first choice at full-back, but stepped in whenever injuries occurred.  During the 1974-75 season he came in when Cutbush was injured and then when Les Strong was going to miss the FA Cup Final, Fraser came in at left-back.
LES STRONG (age 22, 11 apps)  -  A local lad, he joined the youth team at Fulham and spent the majority of his professional career at Craven Cottage.  Was an ever-present in all matches during the 1974-75 season until he picked up an injury just two weeks before the FA Cup Final.  He remained at the club until 1983 making 372 league appearances.
JOHN LACY (age 24, 11 apps)  -  Born in Liverpool, Lacy was recommended to Fulham by former player, George Cohen.  Played in all but one of Fulham’s FA Cup matches, missing one of the replays against Hull City.  He developed a good partnership with Bobby Moore, and earned a transfer to Tottenham in 1978.  Eventually he moved onto Crystal Palace for a season in 1983.
BOBBY MOORE (age 34, 12 apps)  -  The most famous player at the club and at the time was possibly one of the most famous players throughout the world.  Captained England to the World Cup win in 1966 whilst also captaining West Ham to several honours in the mid-sixties.  He was allowed to leave Upton Park and chose to move across London to Fulham.  Missed just one league game during 1974-75 and played in every FA Cup match.  Played his final game for the club in May 1977 and moved to America to play in the NASL.  In February 1993, Moore died from bowel and liver cancer.  He was one of the most decorated players England has ever produced.
ERNIE HOWE (age 22, 1 app)  -  Joined Fulham’s youth ranks in 1973 often deputising when defenders were injured.  Made just three league appearances in 1974-75 and replaced John Lacy in one of the FA Cup replays against Hull City.  Moved to QPR in 1977 spending five years there before moving to Portsmouth.

MIDFIELD
ALAN MULLERY (age 33, 12 apps)  -  Began his career at Fulham in 1958, taking over from Johnny Haynes as captain before moving to Tottenham in 1964.  Was capped by England in March 1964 but missed out on the 1966 World Cup.  Earned infamy as the first England international to be sent-off in a full match.  Played an important part of England’s World Cup team in 1970.  Won FA, League and UEFA Cups with Tottenham and was club captain, before moving back to Fulham in 1972.  Captained Fulham throughout their cup run.  Gave up playing in 1976 to embark on a fairly successful career at manager.
ALAN SLOUGH (age 28, 12 apps, 2 goals)  -  Began his career at his local club, Luton Town, in 1965.  Moved to Fulham in 1973 and became an important part of their midfield.  Played in all but the last two league games in the 1974-75 season but played in every FA Cup game.  Left Fulham for Peterborough in 1977 before finishing his career at Millwall.
JIMMY CONWAY (age28, 10 apps, 1 goal)  -  Born in Dublin he began his career with Bohemians in 1964 before moving to England and Fulham in 1966.  Played as a winger or inside-left and made over 300 appearances for the club before he moved to Man City in 1976 and then eventually onto Portland Timbers in America.
JOHN CONWAY (age 23, 2 apps)  -  Brother of Jimmy, he also started his career with Bohemians and moved to Fulham in 1971.  Only played seven league games of the 1974-75 season and only twice in the FA Cup run.  During his four years at Craven Cottage he only made a total of 38 appearances and moved to Switzerland in 1976.
BARRY LLOYD (age 26, 3 apps)  -  Started as an apprentice at Chelsea before he moved to Fulham in 1969.  Made over 250 appearances for the club.  Began the 1974-75 season as a regular in the number ten shirt for the first twenty games and then only made a handful of appearances after that.  Was substitute in the FA Cup Final but never came on.

STRIKERS
JOHN DOWIE (age 29, 8 apps, 1 goal)  -  Born in Hamilton, Scotland and was a schoolboy at Rangers but never made the grade at the club.  Moved to Fulham in 1973.  Never really established himself in the team although started most of the last 15 league games during the 1974-75 season.  Missed the Third Round matches against Hull City but played in the following FA Cup matches.  Made way for Jimmy Conway in the Final.
VIV BUSBY (age 26, 12 apps, 6 goals)  -  Began his career at Wycombe in 1966 before moving to Luton Town four years later.  In August 1973 he signed for Fulham and became a firm favourite at Craven Cottage.  During the 1974-75 season he scored 18 goals, including 6 in the cup run.  He left a year later to join Norwich before moving again a year after that to Stoke City.
LES BARRETT (age 27, 12 apps, 1 goal)  -  Only two other players have made more appearances for Fulham than Barrett.  He joined in 1965 and stayed until 1977.  He was top scorer during their Third Division promotion push in 1970-71.  Missed just one match during the 1974-75 season and moved to Millwall in 1977 before moving to America to play for California Surf a year later.
JOHN MITCHELL (age 23, 6 apps, 2 goals)  -  Born in St.Albans he started his career with his local club before moving to Fulham in 1972.  Played 170 games, scoring 57 goals during a six year career.  Made as many sub appearances as starts in the league in 1974-75 but two goals against Norwich in the league earned him a place in the Semi-Final games against Birmingham, where he scored both goals and then scored another double against Portsmouth back in the league.  He left Fulham in 1978 to join Millwall.

THIRD ROUND
3rd January 1975, Craven Cottage, 8897
FULHAM   (1)   1   (Jimmy Conway)
HULL CITY   (0)   1   (Wagstaff)
FULHAM: Mellor; Cutbush, Lacy, Moore, Strong; Slough, Mullery, Jim Conway; John Conway (Mitchell), Busby, Barrett
HULL CITY: Wealands; Banks, Croft, Burnett, Daniels; Lord, Grimes, Galvin, Greenwood; Wood, Wagstaff (Deere)

The two had met in the league almost two months earlier at Boothferry Park where Hull ran out 2-1 winners.  Going into the game Fulham had just played three 0-0 draws over the Christmas period, and had only scored one goal in their previous five matches.  Despite this lack of success in front of goal, they were unbeaten in their last seven matches.  Hull, in comparison had suffered back-to-back defeats against Nottingham Forest and York City.  They hadn’t won in their last five matches which had seen them slip from fifth to tenth.
Dubliner, Jimmy Conway, had scored three times in the first five games of the season but had not found the net since.  He chose the ideal moment to end his drought by giving Fulham as first half lead.  Hull’s top scorer, Ken Wagstaff, then levelled in the second half before he aggravated a knee injury and had to go off.  Unfortunately, for the Wagstaff and Hull City they would not see him again all season.  The game ended 1-1 and so a replay for set four days later

7th January 1975, Boothferry Park, 11,850
HULL CITY   (0)   2   (Fletcher, Croft)
FULHAM   (0)   2   (Busby 2)
HULL CITY: Wealands; Banks, Croft, Burnett, Daniel; Grimes, Lord, Galvin, Greenwood; Fletcher, Hemmerman
FULHAM: Mellor; Cutbush, Howe, Moore, Strong; Slough, Mullery, Jim Conway; John Conway, Busby, Barrett
One eleven ties which went to a replay as the two teams travelled up North to try and settle things.  The first half was goalless, but just after the hour mark Viv Busby put the visitors ahead.  Fulham’s left-back, Les Strong, then made an error with a backpass and Peter Fletcher equalised for Hull.  The tie was level after ninety minutes so extra time was required.  Stuart Croft put Hull in front for the first time in the tie, but Busby was again on hand to score for Fulham and take the game to a third meeting.

13th January 1975, Filbert Street, Leicester, 4,929
FULHAM   (1)   1   (Slough)
HULL CITY   (0)   0
FULHAM: Mellor; Cutbush, Lacy, Moore, Strong; Slough, Mullery, Jim Conway; Mitchell, Busby, Barrett
HULL CITY: Wealands; Banks, Deere, Burnett, Daniel; McGill (Fletcher), Lord, Galvin; Wood, Grimes, Greenwood
This match was played just two days after league matches for both clubs.  Fulham had lost 0-1 at home to a Barry Butlin goal for Nottingham Forest, who had just installed Brian Clough as manager, whereas Chris Galvin’s goal gave Hull a 1-0 win at home to Oxford United.  Neutral grounds were chosen for second replays and the two travelled to Leicester’s Filbert Street to try and find a winner.  The game was decided by a solitary goal in the first half when Viv Busby broke clear just inside his own half and then slid the ball to Alan Slough who fired it home.  Fulham had eventually won and were through to the next round.

OTHER MATCHES
Cup holders, Liverpool, went through comfortably as Steve Heighway and Kevin Keegan were on target to give them a 2-0 win at home to Stoke City.  League leaders, Ipswich Town, came from behind to win 2-1 at Wolves, with goals from Colin Viljoen and David Johnson.  There were shocks as non-league Leatherhead won at Brighton (then of the Third Division).  But the biggest was Wimbledon (also a non-league side then) beating First Division Burnley 1-0 at Turf Moor.  Altrincham, also a non-league side, pulled off a shock themselves by taking Everton to a replay as a Kenny Clements penalty had saved the First Division side’s blushes in the first match at Goodison, only for Joe Royle and Mick Lyons to see them through in a replay which was held at Old Trafford to accommodate a larger crowd.  Stafford forced Rotherham to a replay and beat them 2-0 away from home.  Manchester United, recently relegated to the Second Division, were held at home to a goalless draw by Walsall who then put them out 3-2 in the replay after extra time.  Future Walsall manager, Alan Buckley, scored twice.




FOURTH ROUND
In between the victory over Hull and the next round of the cup, Fulham’s league form continued on its withering slump.  They were beaten 0-1 at Blackpool, extending their run of league games without a goal to five, with just one goal in their previous seven matches.   Torrential rain meant the game, originally scheduled for Saturday 25th January, couldn’t be played until the following Tuesday
28th January 1975, Craven Cottage, 20,000
FULHAM   (0)   0
NOTTINGHAM FOREST   (0)   0
FULHAM: Mellor; Cutbush, Lacy, Moore, Strong (Dowie); Slough, Mullery, Lloyd; Mitchell, Busby, Barrett
NOTTINGHAM FOREST: Middleton; O’Kane, Chapman, Cottam, Greenwood; O’Neill, Lyall, Bowyer, Robertson; Butlin, Martin
Forest had only played twice since Clough took over, including their win at Fulham and were the more dominant of the sides.  They included players such as John Robertson, Martin O’Neill, Ian Bowyer, Barry Butlin and John Middleton, all of whom would have roles to play, with varying success, in the club’s rise to the top of European football by the end of the decade.  Peter Mellor kept the home side in the game with some important saves and the match ended goalless.

3rd February 1975, City Ground, 25,361
NOTTINGHAM FOREST   (0)   1   (Martin)
FULHAM   (1)   1   (Dowie)
NOTTINGHAM FOREST:Middleton; Jackson, Chapman, Cottam, Greenwood (Dennehy); O’Neill, Richardson, Lyall, Robertson; Martin, Butlin
FULHAM: Mellor; Cutbush, Lacy, Moore, Strong; Slough, Mullery, Jim Conway; Dowie, Busby, Barrett
This would be Fulham’s eighth match of the year and six of them had been against either Hull City or Nottingham Forest, as Fulham’s league match before this cup replay was another meeting with Hull.  They finally scored as John Dowie ended their drought in a 1-1 draw. 
The cup replay saw Fulham take the lead in the first half as Busby found Dowie who beat Middleton.  Forest had lost at Oldham in their league match before this replay, but managed to fight back when Neil Martin equalised in the second half, to take the game into extra time.  No further goals could separate the two teams and for the second successive round, Fulham’s cup tie would go into a third game.

5th February 1975, Craven Cottage, 11,920
FULHAM   (1)   1   (Slough)
NOTTINGHAM FOREST   (0)   1   (Robertson)
FULHAM: Mellor; Cutbush, Lacy, Moore, Strong; Slough, Mullery, Jim Conway; Dowie, Busby, Barrett
NOTTINGHAM FOREST: Middleton; O’Kane, Chapman, Cottam, Richardson; O’Neill, Lyall, Bowyer, Robertson; Martin, Butlin
As was the case back in those days, replays would often be scheduled within a few days of the previous match, and this one was no different.  Just two days after the draw in Nottingham, the two teams donned their gear again for another go back at the Cottage.  Fulham were again the first team to score when Alan Slough pounced on a poor clearance from Bob Chapman and the home side lead at the break.  But a brilliant free-kick from John Robertson levelled things in the second half and once again a period of an extra half an hour couldn’t split them, and a fourth meeting was necessary.

10th February 1975, City Ground, 23,240
NOTTINGHAM FOREST   (0)   1   (Chapman)
FULHAM   (1)   2   (Busby 2)
NOTTINGHAM FOREST: Middleton; O’Kane, Chapman, Jones, Richardson; O’Neill, Lyall, Bowyer, Robertson; Dennehy, Martin
FULHAM: Mellor; Cutbush, Lacy, Moore, Strong; Slough, Mullery, Jim Conway; Dowie, Busby, Barrett
As if two cup games in a week wasn’t enough, Fulham had a league fixture to fulfil at the weekend when they travelled to Villa Park to take on an Aston Villa side pushing for promotion.  Viv Busby put Fulham in front but Chris Nicholl equalised and Fulham fans had yet another draw to endure.  Forest weren’t so fortunate, ending up on the wrong side of a five-goal thriller at Bolton.
Two days later the two sides met for a fourth time to try and sort out a result, with the next round of scheduled for the coming weekend.  For the third game running, Fulham took the lead in the first half as Viv Busby converted Jimmy Conway’s cross.  Busby then grabbed his second in the second half when Mullery played a brilliant through-ball and the striker rounded Middleton to slide the ball into the empty net.  Chapman got one back for the home side but at last we had a winner, and for Fulham they could now looked forward to a trip to Goodison Park.

OTHER MATCHES
The Fourth Round saw the end of Liverpool’s defence of the cup as they were beaten 0-1 at Ipswich Town.  Ipswich, who were second in the First Division at the time, won thanks to a Mick Mills strike.  League leaders Everton, who’d been taken to a replay by Altrincham in the previous round, won at Plymouth with Mick Lyons grabbing a double.  Lyons was now being employed as Bob Latchford’s strike partner owing to an injury to Joe Royle.  West Ham were held at home by Swindon and were behind in the replay before goals from Brooking and Holland took them through.
The shock of the round came at Fellows Park where Third Division Walsall put out First Division Newcastle United. They’d knocked out Manchester United in the previous round so they were gaining a reputation.  Lowest ranked club Leatherhead chose to host their home tie against Leicester City at Filbert Street and were rewarded by a crowd of over 32,000.  Amazingly they were 2-0 up at half-time but Sammels, Earle and Weller got the ‘home’ side out of the mire for Leicester to progress 3-2.  The other non-league side, Stafford, also chose an away ground for their home tie against Peterborough and 31,000 watched them get narrowly beaten 2-3 at Stoke.


FIFTH ROUND
Fulham’s reward for finally seeing off Nottingham Forest was a trip to league leaders Everton.  It normally takes a club six matches to reach a Final and Fulham had already played seven games.

15th February 1975, Goodison Park, 45,223
EVERTON   (0)   1   (Kenyon)
FULHAM   (1)   2   (Busby 2)
EVERTON: Davies; Bernard, Clements, Kenyon, Seargeant; Jones, Hurst, Dobson; Lyons, Latchford (Telfer), Pearson
FULHAM: Mellor; Cutbush, Lacy, Moore, Strong; Slough, Mullery, Jim Conway; Dowie (Lloyd), Busby, Barrett

Everton lead the First Division on goal average in a season littered with draws. Everton were top but had drawn more games than they’d won.  Fulham should feel proud the attendance was the second highest at Goodison all season, bettered only for the visit of Liverpool back in November.  Fulham again went in front after a strange mistake between goalkeeper Dai Davies and Roger Kenyon.  During the build-up play Busby and Jimmy Conway set Barrett away down the left and his ball across the six yard box looked to have eluded Conway at the near post, but as Davies went down to smother the ball Kenyon, who’d been tracking Busby back, collided with his keeper and appeared to knock the ball out of his hands. As the keeper and the defender lay on the ground Busby cooly tapped the ball over the line to give the Second Division club a first half lead.  Fulham were unlucky not to go further ahead when after a corner, the ball into the box appeared to come off John Hurst and Conway put the ball into the net.  Conway was clearly offside but only if the ball had come from his own player.  Everton were given a reprieve by Clive Thomas, the referee, who would earn more infamous notoriety from Evertonians for his cup decisions a couple of years later.
In the second half Everton pressed for an equaliser and finally got their reward when a left-wing corner curled in right-footed into the six-yard box by Jones, was headed in by Roger Kenyon.  As the game got stretched towards the end it opened up and Everton’s right-back, Bernard found space down the right near the bye-line. His high cross saw Lyons challenge the Fulham keeper, Mellor. He headed it against Lacy on the line and then put in the rebound, but Thomas blew for a foul on Mellor. Replays would suggest Everton were unlucky but maybe that evened things up from the earlier refereeing howler.  Within minutes, though, Fulham scored a goal which wasn’t chalked off.  Conway again found himself clear on the left-hand edge of the area and his ball across found Busby on the penalty area.  The big Fulham striker had time to turn and shoot left-footed past Davies and Fulham had pulled off a famous win.  Manager Alec Stock would later claim it to be “our finest hour”.  After needing seven attempts to get past the first two rounds, they must’ve been relieved to do this at the first time of asking.

OTHER MATCHES
The lowest ranked side still left in the competition, Mansfield Town, were top of the Fourth Division when they played host to Carlisle United who were enjoying their only ever season as a First Division club.  Carlisle managed to put away their relegation concerns as Bobby Owen scored the only goal of the game to give the Cumbrians their first ever FA Cup Quarter-Final appearance.
Third Division side, Walsall’s cup run finally came to an end as they went down 1-2 to Birmingham at St. Andrews.  Goals from Bob Hatton and Kenny Burns gave the home side the win, despite a goal from Brian Taylor for the visitors.  Peterborough, also of the Third Division, took First Division Middlesbro to a replay but were beaten in the end.  West Ham beat QPR at Upton Park with goals from Pat Holland and Pop Robson giving them a 2-1 win.  Ipswich, just one point off the lead in the league, strengthened their claim as favourites to lift the trophy as they saw off Aston Villa at Portman Road.  Bryan Hamilton came off the bench to score twice in a 3-2 win.
The two all-First Division clashes saw Arsenal needing three attempts to beat Leicester when John Radford scored in extra time in the third game.  A David Nish own goal gave Leeds United a 1-0 win at Derby County.


SIXTH ROUND
Fulham were drawn against Carlisle United for the Quarter-Finals.  Carlisle were enjoying their most successful period in their history having won promotion to the First Division last season for the one and only time.  In the same season they were now into the FA Cup Quarter-Finals for their first time ever too.  By the time of the game Carlisle were in awful league form having lost their last five and eight of their last nine.  Fulham’s league form had finally changed for the better with them registering their first wins since mid-December as they beat Sunderland and Sheffield Wednesday in successive weeks.
8th March 1975, Brunton Park, 21,570
CARLISLE UNITED   (0)   0
FULHAM   (0)   1   (Barrett)
CARLISLE: Ross; Carr, Parker, Green, Gorman; Train, O’Neill, Martin, Balderstone; Owen, Laidlaw
FULHAM: Mellor; Fraser, Lacy, Moore, Strong; Slough, Mullery, Jim Conway (Lloyd); Dowie, Busby, Barrett

Peter Mellor had another inspired day in goal for Fulham and was largely responsible for a memorable performance from the team.  Sixty-eight minutes in with the game still goalless, substitute Barry Lloyd made a fine run down the right-wing taking on future England Assistant Manager, John Gorman, and his cross into the area looked likely to be gathered by Carlisle keeper, Alan Ross.  But as Peter Carr ran in trying to shepherd Viv Busby away from the ball, Ross decided to go for the ball with his feet and proceeded to knock it into the path of Les Barrett who put the ball into the empty net.  Fulham had only beaten Carlisle once in their eight previous meetings but this one put them into the Semi-Finals for the sixth time in their history.

OTHER MATCHES
The four Quarter-Final ties only brought four goals but along with Fulham, West Ham booked their place in the Semis when two Alan Taylor goals gave them a win over Arsenal at Highbury.  Bob Hatton scored the only goal of the game to help Birmingham beat Middlesbrough.  Ipswich and Leeds United played out a 0-0 draw at Portman Road.  The two were on the same number of points in the top seven in the First Division and there was no separating them in the cup either.  Three days later they drew again, 1-1.  The second replay wasn’t possible until the end of March and was another draw, 0-0 at Filbert Street before the tie was finally settled back at Leicester two days later.  Trevor Whymark, Bryan Hamilton and Clive Woods scored the goals to beat Leeds 3-2.

SEMI-FINALS
Three First Division clubs and a Second Division club in the semis.  Ipswich, the tournament favourites since they knocked out the holders Liverpool in the Fourth Round, were up against the next best ranked side, West Ham at Villa Park.  Birmingham, down in sixteenth in the First Division would take on Fulham at Hillsborough.

5th April 1975, Hillsborough, 55,000
FULHAM   (0)   1   (Mitchell)
BIRMINGHAM   (0)   1   (Gallagher)
FULHAM: Mellor; Fraser, Lacy, Moore, Strong; Slough, Mullery, Jim Conway (Dowie); Mitchell, Busby, Barrett
BIRMINGHAM: Latchford; Page, Gallagher, Roberts, Pendrey; Campbell, Kendall, Taylor; Francis, Burns, Hatton
The Birmingham side Fulham were up against included Howard Kendall, future Everton manager, Gordon Taylor, future Chairman of the PFA, Kenny Burns, future European Cup winner with Nottingham Forest and Trevor Francis, who was going to become the first million pound footballer in England.  These accolades may all have been impressive but of course Fulham had a World Cup winning captain in their starting line-up. 
Going into the game Fulham’s form was so much better than it had been when they began this amazing cup run.  They had lost just once in their previous eleven league games and were scoring regularly.  They were up to eighth in the table, although promotion was probably out of reach.  Birmingham had just lost to Liverpool and Ipswich which ended a run of five games unbeaten. They were sixteenth in the table but only four points above the relegation zone.
A huge crowd created a wonderful atmosphere which made for a breathless match with Fulham certainly not being overawed in any way.  The first half was goalless with Busby looking the most dangerous for the underdogs.  Five minutes into the second half and Fulham pressed the Birmingham goal.  Howard Kendall’s misplaced pass saw Les Barrett run at Joe Gallagher and forced a corner, which he took.  The corner was half cleared but Bobby Moore got the move going again down the right as he clipped the ball inside to Alan Mullery, who in turn flicked the ball with the outside of his right foot to Alan Slough on the edge of the ‘d’. With his back to goal, he knocked it first time to his left to John Mitchell. Mitchell flicked the ball up with his left foot and then volleyed it into the top corner from twenty yards out.  It was a stunning strike.  Mitchell had only made four starts all season before he got the nod against Norwich in the week before this game, and he crowned it with two goals.  It earned him a place in the Semi-Finals and will go down in history with one of the best goals in an FA Cup Semi-Final.
Fulham, having had the better of the chances, were rampant, especially Les Barrett down the left.  Within minutes of the goal Barrett charged down the left again and combined with Busby to square the ball for Slough to hit a ferocious strike which Roberts managed to deflect over his own bar.  It could easily have been 2-0 and game over.  Birmingham gradually fought back into it and Campbell should’ve finished after he pounced on a loose ball in the six yard box but dragged his shot wide.  As Birmingham pushed men forward, Page floated the ball into the box where Fulham failed to clear and Joe Gallagher turned and shot past Mellor to equalise.  Then in the dying minutes Busby found some space for a shot in the area but it deflected wide for another corner.  Lacy also had a chance when he got up above the defence but his header was straight into Latchford’s hands when if he’d put it either side the keeper wouldn’t have reached it.  The game ended 1-1 and Fulham were heading for their sixth replay of the competition.

9th April 1975, Maine Road, 35,025
FULHAM   (0)   1   (Mitchell)
BIRMINGHAM   (0)   0
FULHAM: Mellor; Fraser, Lacy, Moore, Strong; Slough, Mullery, Barrett;  Dowie, Mitchell, Busby
BIRMINGHAM: Latchford; Page, Gallagher, Pendrey, Bryant; Hendrie, Kendall, Taylor; Francis, Burns, Hatton

The following Wednesday the two sides moved to Maine Road, Manchester.  Both sides made one change.  John Dowie started for Fulham replacing Jim Conway and for Birmingham Steve Bryant came into defence in place of John Roberts.  This was a tense affair, without any of the drama of the first meeting.  The game was goalless after ninety minutes and so extra time loomed.  As time moved towards the end of the extra thirty minutes, suddenly there was a breakthrough.  Alan Slough crossed the ball from the right into the area where Dowie got up first to head the ball down.  John Mitchell was running in but his shot seemed to hit the keeper in the face, came back to Mitchell where it bounced off him and into the net.  It was a thrilling finish to the game and seemed to sum up their cup run.  They’d dominated the first match and were a little unlucky not to be successful then, but in the end they got their rewards – their first ever FA Cup Final appearance.

OTHER SEMI-FINAL
West Ham were up against the cup favourites, Ipswich, who were fifth in the First Division but just one point behind the leaders, Liverpool.  The two met at Villa Park and played out a goalless draw.  The replay, on the same night as the other one, was at Stamford Bridge.  Our old friend, Clive Thomas refereed this one and not surprisingly there were goals scored which he disallowed.  Unfortunately, for Ipswich both of them were theirs.  Alan Taylor put West Ham in front in the first half, heading in at the far post from a left wing cross by Brooking.  Ipswich then drew level when Billy Jennings sliced his kick at the near post from a corner and the ball flew past Mervyn Day.  With just ten minutes to go Alan Taylor was on hand again to put West Ham in front.  A free-kick from the left wing by Lampard was headed to Taylor by an Ipswich defender and he fired past Sivell.  West Ham wouldn’t be denied this time and they were through to their first FA Cup Final since Bobby Moore led them out in 1964.

5th April 1975, Villa Park, 58,000
WEST HAM UNITED   (0)   0
IPSWICH TOWN   (0)   0
WEST HAM: Day; McDowell, Bonds, T. Taylor, Lampard; Jennings, Lock, Brooking, Gould (Holland); Paddon, A.Taylor
IPSWICH: Sivell; Burley, Hunter (Osborne), Beattie, Mills; Viljoen, Hamilton, Talbot; Lambert, Whymark, Woods

9TH April 1975, Stamford Bridge, 45,344
WEST HAM UNITED   (1)   2   (A. Taylor 2)
IPSWICH TOWN   (1)   1   (Jennings o.g.)
WEST HAM: Day; McDowell, Bonds, T. Taylor, Lampard; Jennings (Holland), Lock, Brooking, Gould; Paddon, A. Taylor
IPSWICH: Sivell; Burley, Beattie, Wark, Mills; Viljoen, Hamilton, Talbot; Lambert, Whymark, Woods


FA CUP FINAL 1975



There were so many stories in the run-up to the Final it seemed as if things had been set up.  The last time West Ham were at Wembley was back in 1964, when they were lead out by Bobby Moore.  Eleven years later Moore would again be leading a team out but this time he would be on the opposite side as captain of Fulham.  Moore left West Ham in March 1974, in September of that year John Lyall replaced Ron Greenwood as manager of the club.  Two months later he signed a 21 year old from Fourth Division Rochdale, Alan Taylor.  Taylor made his first full debut in a defeat at Stoke at the end of December and by the time of the Sixth Round cup match at Arsenal that was his only starting place thus far.  He scored twice at Highbury and then twice to beat Ipswich in the Semi-Finals and his was another of the fascinating stories of this FA Cup Final.
On the morning of the Final there was a High Court verdict denying Bobby Moore and one or two other Fulham players from showing advertising logos on their boots.  Can you imagine that today?
Fulham were managed by Alec Stock, who’d spent over 30 years in management in the game yet was making his first appearance at Wembley.  In contrast, West Ham were managed by John Lyall, who was also making his first appearance at the home of football, but he’d only been in management for nine months.  Lyall had played for West Ham but a serious knee injury ended his career a year before their FA Cup win in 1964.
The two clubs had met in the League Cup back in October when Fulham won 2-1 at Craven Cottage thanks to goals from Alan Mullery and Alan Slough after Trevor Brooking gave West Ham a first half lead.
On the playing side, Fulham had Moore and Mullery who’d both captained their country.  Moore was making his 47th , and as it turned out his final, appearance at Wembley.  West Ham had Mervyn Day in goal who at nineteen was the youngest keeper in FA Cup Final history. 
You had to feel sorry for Fulham’s usual left-back, Les Strong.  He had played every game of the season until he picked up an injury at home to Portsmouth towards the end of April.  He’d played 40 league games and all eleven of the FA Cup matches, yet agonisingly missed out on the big one.  John Fraser took his place
Fulham had the better of the early stages in the game and the first shot on target came when Alan Slough hit one from outside the area but it was straight at the young Hammers keeper.  Fulham were certainly the first out of the traps and West Ham looked very shaky to begin with.  Fulham were awarded a free-kick about 30 yards out in the inside-left position which Moore stepped up to take.  If you can remember England’s first goal in the 1966 World Cup Final then you’ll be able to picture this.  Moore floated the ball left-footed into the area and John Mitchell lost his marker, rose to glance the header but it didn’t trouble Day’s far post.  West Ham eventually settled into the game but Fulham certainly weren’t prepared to be overawed.
Moore and Mullery came more into the game for the Second Division side and forced a corner after a quarter of an hour.  Conway took it and drove the ball to the far edge of the six-yard box where Lacy got up unchallenged but again his header went wide of the post.  Within minutes Fulham won the ball back on their left wing after a McDowell throw and Viv Busby tested Day with a fizzing shot after he beat a couple of defenders but his shot was straight at the young Hammers keeper.
For the first twenty-five minutes Fulham seemed to enjoy the lion’s share of possession.  Mullery orchestrating things in midfield with Conway proving a willing runner.  Kevin Lock, who would later move to Craven Cottage, put in some important tackles.  The underdogs were knocking the ball around with ease.  But then West Ham had a chance when Brooking floated a ball, left-footed to the far post where Jennings got up above Fraser but his header was caught by Mellor just under his crossbar.  Brooking was coming more and more into the game for the First Division side but then we were given another glimpse of Moore at Wembley ten years before.
He intercepted a pass just inside his own area and calmly came forward with the ball, when others may have lumped it aimlessly.  Then with the vision which had encapsulated Hurst’s third goal v West Germany in ’66, he played a long ranging pass ahead of Busby allowing the bearded striker to run at Lock.  But unlike nine years earlier, the defender was equal to the striker and the chance had gone.
Then with ten minutes to go to the break, West Ham had a free-kick on the left which Paddon took left-footed and Alan Taylor got his head first to the ball but it looped just over the crossbar.  It was probably The Hammers best chance of a half they were struggling to get hold of.  As the half came to an end West Ham came more into things but just couldn’t break down a determined and dogged Fulham defence.  Fulham had looked the more likely to score and had equipped themselves very well.  The half-time score was 0-0 and Fulham had every reason to be the happier of the two.
Both sides took time to settle in the second half but John McDowell livened things up with a break into the Fulham half and hit a shot along the turf from about 30 yards out, but Mellor got down to save it.  Although there was a slight concern as the ball appeared to slip clear of the keeper’s grasp, momentarily but he grabbed it quick before Taylor could nip in.  Then a few minutes later Mitchell turned Lock in the area and fired a shot which Day parried round the post.  It was the first defensive mistake from Lock who’d looked assured all afternoon.
Then on the hour we finally had a breakthrough.  Holland stole the ball on the left wing for West Ham, turned inside and found Jennings whose shot was only parried by Mellor, low down to his left and as the ball ran clear there was Alan Taylor to hit a low shot from a tight angle and it went through Mellor’s legs for the opening goal


It was tough on Fulham who’d made a game of it, but Mellor should’ve held onto the shot.  Four minutes later the lead was doubled.  Again the move came down the left as Holland clipped the ball inside to Paddon who fired a low shot, left-footed and once again Mellor stopped it but couldn’t hold onto it and yet again there was Alan Taylor, who pounced in to knock the ball into the roof of the net.  It was an amazing story for the 21-year old.  Two goals in the Sixth Round, two goals in the Semi-Final and then two goals in the Final.  


Back in mid-November, Taylor had scored in what was his final appearance for Rochdale, in front of 1,600 spectators at Scunthorpe.  Six months later he’d scored twice in an FA Cup Final in front of 100,000 spectators at Wembley.
You had to have some sympathy for Mellor.  His saves saw Fulham past Birmingham in the Semi-Finals and he’d put in some good performances in the earlier rounds but his mistakes in this game just showed what a fine line there was between hero and villain, especially for a goalkeeper.
Fulham did their best to fight back but West Ham were happy to sit back and take any pressure.  Lacy came close with a header from a left-wing corner which Day just pushed away one-handed.  Now it was West Ham who were looking comfortable and in control, knowing their opponents had to make all the running.  With a quarter of an hour left, Mitchell finally got clear of Tommy Taylor but his left foot shot bounced off Mervyn Day and away to safety.
Within the final ten minutes West Ham had another chance when Lampard joined the attack and fired a right-footed shot from the left-hand edge of the area but Mellor did well to push it past the post.  Mellor’s afternoon may have been remembered for his two errors but he had made some decent saves.
With just five minutes to go, Les Barrett was finally able to run at the West Ham defence.  One of the features of their earlier rounds had been Barrett’s runs down the left wing but in this match he had hardly seen anything of the ball.  He picked up the ball in the centre circle and headed straight towards Day beating Holland for pace.  Bonds slid in but couldn’t make contact and as Barrett got to the ‘D’ John McDowell grabbed him by the shoulder and pulled him back.  It was a cynical challenge, a professional foul and surprisingly Pat Partridge just awarded a free-kick and didn’t give McDowell a card.  Nothing came of the free-kick other than West Ham throwing bodies in the way of everything.
But Fulham weren’t able to make any real impression and threaten Day’s goal and West Ham won the cup.  It was a wonderful occasion for Alan Taylor but Alan Mullery and Bobby Moore had done as much as they could to help their side but in the end they didn’t really create enough clear-cut chances to justify the periods where they were dominant in the game.

It had been a fantastic run and for Fulham it remains the one and only time they have reached a FA Cup Final.  That West Ham side was the last to win an FA Cup with a full team of English players.