When Norwich Dreamed of Europe But Settled for Promotion

 Chris Woods, Dave Watson, Paul Haylock and Steve Bruce celebrate after winning the League Cup in 1985. Photograph: David Cannon/Getty Images
Chris Woods, Dave Watson, Paul Haylock and Steve Bruce celebrate after winning the League Cup in 1985. Photograph: David Cannon/Getty Images
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When Norwich Dreamed of Europe But Settled for Promotion

 Chris Woods, Dave Watson, Paul Haylock and Steve Bruce celebrate after winning the League Cup in 1985. Photograph: David Cannon/Getty Images
Chris Woods, Dave Watson, Paul Haylock and Steve Bruce celebrate after winning the League Cup in 1985. Photograph: David Cannon/Getty Images

As spring turned to summer in 1985, Norwich fans must have been emotionally drained. In March, the football Gods shone on them as they beat local rivals Ipswich in the League Cup semi-finals and then won the final against Sunderland to qualify for Europe for the first time in their history. But all that glory and hope would be taken away by the end of May.

Norwich’s league form collapsed after their big day out at Wembley, with a run of eight defeats in nine games sending them towards the relegation zone. Their season was in danger of falling apart but a win at Chelsea in their final game left them on 49 points, surely enough to keep them up. They just had to hope that Coventry, who still had three games to play, didn’t win them all.

At this point the storyline takes an agonising twist. Having failed to win any of their last four games, Coventry suddenly went on a run. In the space of nine days, they beat Stoke, Luton and newly crowned champions Everton to pull off the greatest of escapes and condemn Norwich to the Second Division. The Mirror’s “Sick as a canary” headline summed up the situation perfectly.

The misery continued. Five days after their relegation from the top flight, Norwich also lost their place in the Uefa Cup. The tragic events at Heysel that week led to English clubs being banned from European football for “an indeterminate period of time”. Norwich joined Everton, Manchester United and Southampton in taking an appeal to the high court, but the decision stood. Norwich manager Ken Brown had been planning for the club’s first foray into European football, but he was now preparing for a season in the Second Division.

Brown’s job looked under threat but he was given a one-year contract and told to secure promotion at the first attempt. In truth, he had the tools for the task ahead. England goalkeeper Chris Woods had to stay at the club after his transfer request was rejected and the formidable centre-back partnership of Dave Watson and Steve Bruce remained intact, despite many clubs being linked with the pair.

Mick Channon and Asa Hartford did leave, but Brown spent wisely when replacing them. Mike Phelan and Dave Williams added solidity in midfield; Ian Culverhouse and Wayne Biggins came in to bolster the squad in the autumn; and, even though he didn’t score in his first six matches, Kevin Drinkell’s goals eventually fired Norwich to promotion.

At first, Drinkell’s struggles matched those of his new team. Norwich lost three of their first five games, but their season finally took off with a thumping 4-0 win over Sheffield United. Their momentum stuttered briefly when Wimbledon came to Carrow Road in early October and won 2-1. Bruce suggested that the victors’ tactics would be more appropriate at Twickenham but Norwich toughened up after that defeat. They would not lose again in the league until they played Wimbledon again five months later.

From 5 October to 8 March, no other club in Division Two could lay a hand on Norwich. They went 18 games unbeaten, winning 14 of them, scoring 43 goals, conceding just 11, and winning 10 matches in a row for the first time in their history.

The 10-in-a-row run started with a 3-2 win over Grimsby. Then Bruce demonstrated his knack of scoring useful goals in wins over Leeds and Blackburn. Barham starred in a 6-1 demolition of Millwall, creating four goals and scoring himself. Drinkell scored in four consecutive matches, including a last-minute winner in a smash-and-grab at Fulham, after a superb display from Woods. Barham and Drinkell both scored in the ninth consecutive win, a 2-0 win over second-place Portsmouth in front of 20,129 fans at Carrow Road. And Peter Mendham scored his eighth goal of the campaign in the final match in the sequence, a 2-1 win at Crystal Palace.

Even other managers were impressed. Oldham boss Joe Royle said Norwich were “far and away the best side we’ve played” after his team had been beaten 3-1 at home in December. Shrewsbury manager Chic Bates was similarly complimentary after Norwich won 3-0 at Gay Meadow: “I can only confirm what everyone else says – they’re in a different class to the rest of Division Two.”

The unbeaten run came to an end at Plough Lane (not Twickenham) with another 2-1 defeat to Wimbledon. That defeat could have given the other promotion chasers a hint of hope but, having learned the hard way the season before, Norwich were not keen to let a place in the First Division slip again. They won four games on the bounce after that defeat to Wimbledon – Biggins scored twice in a 4-1 win against Huddersfield; Williams did the same in the 2-1 victory over Carlisle; Sheffield United were hit for five at Bramall Lane; and John Deehan, who had missed three months of the season through injury, scored the winner against Fulham.

It was now a case of when, not if, Norwich would achieve promotion. With the Friendship Trophy safely in the bag (no, me neither), they secured their return to the top flight with a 2-0 win at Odsal Stadium, Bradford’s temporary home. Appropriately, goals from Drinkell and Biggins clinched promotion. “It’s been a long, hard season, but everything has been so worthwhile,” said Brown.

They sealed the title with a 1-1 draw against Stoke and finished the campaign in style by beating Leeds 4-0 at Carrow Road. To make things that much sweeter, local rivals Ipswich passed Norwich on the way down. “We’d have been delighted just to win promotion,” wrote Watson in his programme notes before the final match of the season. “But to go up as champions – and such runaway, convincing champions as we have been – really has been extra special. We haven’t had to scrape through many games. We’ve played our way out of the Second Division – and that’s been important.” They had not been too good to go down in 1985, but they proved too good not to go up in 1986.

The Guardian Sport



Arteta Wants Arsenal to Use Liverpool Guard of Honor as Title Fuel

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta. Glyn KIRK / AFP
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta. Glyn KIRK / AFP
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Arteta Wants Arsenal to Use Liverpool Guard of Honor as Title Fuel

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta. Glyn KIRK / AFP
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta. Glyn KIRK / AFP

Mikel Arteta has urged Arsenal to use the frustration of having to give champions Liverpool a guard of honor on Sunday as fuel to win the Premier League title next season after admitting they have gone "backwards" this term.

Arteta's side are destined to finish the season without a major trophy after failing to keep pace with Liverpool and crashing out of the Champions League semi-finals on Wednesday.

The Gunners' 2-1 defeat against Paris Saint-Germain ended their bid to win the tournament for the first time.

It was a painful loss for Arsenal, who created a host of chances in the early stages of the second leg but couldn't find a way past inspired PSG keeper Gianluigi Donnarumma.

Still licking their wounds from the disappointment in Paris, Arsenal head to Anfield this weekend for the uncomfortable task of watching to Liverpool's ongoing title celebrations.

Arne Slot's men wrapped up the title two weeks ago, leaving second-placed Arsenal trailing in their wake.

After finishing as runners-up to Manchester City for the previous two seasons, the north Londoners remain with a title since 2004.

"Something has to drive you, motivate you, and pain for this is a good one to use, when you really want to do something. It's the right thing to do, usually as a motivation for next season," Arteta said of Arsenal's guard of honour for the champions.

"They've been the best team, they've been the most consistent, and what Arne and the coaching staff have done has been fascinating, it's been really good.

"They fully deserve it, and that's the sport. If somebody is better, you have to accept it and try to reach that level."

Arteta attracted criticism in some quarters for claiming Arsenal were the best team in the Champions League this season despite their last four exit.

The Spaniard stood by his claim days later, saying: "100 percent. I'm watching the impact, I'm watching all the stats because they were the best stats and the best goal difference in the semi-final, so it's very clear.

"When you look at the important stats that normally give you the best platform to win football matches, it's crystal clear who was better."

Arsenal's failure to sign a striker in the January transfer window was a major blow in a season marred by long injury absences for Kai Havertz, Gabriel Jesus and Bukayo Saka at various stages.

"In January it was clear or not? I made a very clear statement, and the statement continues the same. I want the best team, the best players. If we have three goalscorers over 25, bring them in, we're going to be a much better team, yes," Arteta said.

Arteta conceded Arsenal have been unable to match his expectations this season.

But he is adamant they have the quality to end the club's five-year trophy drought.

"In the Premier League we've done a step backwards. With the points that we have created, it's clear that we haven't done as good as last season, that's obvious," he said.

"but with the amount of points that we have generated in the last few seasons, we could have two Premier Leagues.

"So we know how close. We are there, we are providing the numbers that win you titles. We have to be a little bit luckier, but still do better to make sure that nobody has a season better than you."