Monday, 27 November 2023
1989 UK Championship: Stephen Hendry
Sunday, 19 November 2023
1984: Viv Richards' 189
"I think that's the greatest ODI innings," Australian skipper Pat Cummins said, regarding Glenn Maxwell's stunning unbeaten 201 against Afghanistan in the 2023 World Cup. "It's the best I've ever seen, probably the greatest ODI innings ever." Former New Zealand wicketkeeper and commentator Ian Smith seemed to agree. "I've never seen anything like it."
Sport naturally sets itself up for debates about the greatest or worst, be it competitor, match, series, tournament, goal, try, shot, insert as appropriate. As soon as anything happens in the sporting arena, you can be fairly confident that within minutes or hours pundits and social media experts will be discussing the merits of what we have just seen.
Wednesday, 15 November 2023
1983: Spain v Malta
There are some football matches in the distant past that will forever be shrouded in suspicion. Those results that give growth to conspiracy theories, accusations, and general doubt over sporting integrity. Often first impressions are proved right - not much consolation to Nottingham Forest fans in 1984 - but there are others that may never be confirmed one way or the other.
Fans of the Dutch national team could be forgiven if they cast their minds back to one particular match in December 1983. On the brink of qualification for Euro 84, there was only one possible result that could prevent an orange invasion of France as Spain prepared to play Malta in the final Group Seven match in Seville.
Monday, 6 November 2023
A Question of Sport: Princess Anne
Wednesday, 25 October 2023
1987/88: Liverpool v Nottingham Forest
There are always debates relating to greatness in sport. Constant comparisons between individuals and teams from various eras spark conversations in pubs, on phone-ins and social media, as those involved dig their heels in and present evidence supporting their case.
Arguing about the greatest football team to ever play the sport could prove tiring. Judgement is often clouded by club allegiances, recency bias, or the more mature among us refusing to believe that a team from the distant past will ever be surpassed.
Take the Liverpool team in the 1987/88 season. Surely there can be no argument that Kenny Dalglish's side were great, as they swept aside the rest of the First Division with football that seemed to be from a different planet. The last great Liverpool team of that era has to enter a competitive field as the best to hail from Anfield during the glory years.
Thursday, 5 October 2023
Monday, 25 September 2023
Ryder Cup quiz
Thursday, 14 September 2023
1983 Ryder Cup: Seve's miracle shot
It had all been going so well for Seve Ballesteros and Europe. Going into the final day of the 1983 Ryder Cup at Palm Beach Gardens in an alien position of parity, two hours into the singles Europe were ahead in six matches and level in four, with Ballesteros three up after 11 holes in the opening contest against Fuzzy Zoeller. The unthinkable was becoming a real possibility.
But some Ryder Cup Sundays are never that easy. The quest for those magical 14½ points becomes a real test of nerve, stamina, and mental toughness, both for players and spectators. The ebb and flow between red and blue, the cheers ringing around the course, and the magnitude of every single shot becomes suffocating.
Thursday, 3 August 2023
1980 Challenge Cup final: Hull KR v Hull
Roger 'The Dodger' Millward had enjoyed a stellar rugby league career. Winning with Great Britain in Australia in 1970; captaining his country in two World Cups; skipper of Hull Kingston Rovers as the club won their first Championship for 54 years. But there was one thing missing off the CV of the 32-year-old.
Millward had never appeared in a Challenge Cup final. "It was the match that I'd waited sixteen years to play in," Millward revealed in his autobiography, in one of the three chapters dedicated to the 1980 Challenge Cup final. "It didn't arrive until my very last season - and my last ever game as a first team player."
Monday, 17 July 2023
1981 Fifth Ashes Test: Tavball
Thursday, 6 July 2023
Headingley 1981: Day Five review
A review of day five of the third Ashes Test of the 1981 series at Headingley, written from the perspective of an English cricket fan at the time.
Preview
Day one
Day two
Day three
Day four
Wednesday July 22
Australia 401/9d (Dyson 102, Hughes 89, Botham 6/95)
England 174 (Botham 50, Lillee 4/49)
England f/o 356 (Botham 149*, Dilley 56, Alderman 6/135)
Australia 111 (Dyson 34, Willis 8/43)
ENGLAND WIN BY 18 RUNS
Wow! Simply wow. Forget everything I said about this team. Delete those posts I wrote when in the depths of despair. Of course I never doubted Robert George Dylan Willis. England won the third Ashes Test at Headingley to level the Ashes series. What a way for Peter Willey to win his first Test in his 19th appearance. What a boost for the country. Never in doubt.
We only needed five more runs in the morning to set Australia an insurmountable target of 130. And although Beefy took the first wicket - obviously, naturally, inevitably - when Australia neared lunch on 56/1 it looked like normal service was about to be resumed.
Wednesday, 5 July 2023
Headingley 1981: Day Four review
A review of day four of the third Ashes Test of the 1981 series at Headingley, written from the perspective of an English cricket fan at the time.
Tuesday July 21
Australia 401/9d (Dyson 102, Hughes 89, Botham 6/95)
England 174 (Botham 50, Lillee 4/49)
England f/o 351/9 (Botham 145*, Dilley 56, Alderman 5/131)
I'll be honest; I was expecting this blog to be my last covering this Test match. But I reckoned without taking the Beefy factor into the mix. It may be delaying the inevitable, but you never know. What is certain though is that a bit of pride has been restored to English cricket.
None of this looked possible early on. With Brearley, Gower, and LBW Gatting back in the pavilion, England were 41/4 and making 100 looked a distant dream. Boycott (46) and Willey (33) battled hard, but when Bob Taylor departed we had slumped to 135/7.
Tuesday, 4 July 2023
Headingley 1981: Day Three review
A review of day three of the third Ashes Test of the 1981 series at Headingley, written from the perspective of an English cricket fan at the time.
Sunday July 19
Australia 401/9d (Dyson 102, Hughes 89, Botham 6/95)
England 174 (Botham 50, Lillee 4/49)
England f/o 6/1 (Lillee 1/4)
Pathetic. Pitiful. Spineless. Feeble. Woeful. Deplorable. Lamentable. Wretched. Contemptible. Despicable. Mournful. Harrowing. Mortifying. These are some of the polite words I found in my thesaurus to describe that England batting display yesterday.
You can probably handle losing to Australia if the team showed a tiny bit of fight. Yet what we witnessed yesterday was a staggering display of ineptitude in both technique and heart. Only Ian Botham came out of the episode with any credit on a day of despair.
Monday, 3 July 2023
Headingley 1981: Day Two review
A review of day two of the third Ashes Test of the 1981 series at Headingley, written from the perspective of an English cricket fan at the time.
Saturday July 18
Australia 401/9d (Dyson 102, Hughes 89, Botham 6/95)
England 7/0
Pain pain go away. Despite heroics from Ian Botham, the next few days feel like they could drag on and on. Australia declared their innings just over 400 and look well set to put the Ashes to bed. The scary thing is that without Beefy it would have been a lot worse.
At one point Kim Hughes' men had reached 332/4. Naturally England shot themselves in the foot along the way, Graham Gooch dropping Australia's skipper when he was on 66. At this point you wondered if the Hughes-Yallop partnership would ever end. Botham decided to take matters into his own hands.
Sunday, 2 July 2023
Headingley 1981: Day One review
A review of day one of the third Ashes Test of the 1981 series at Headingley, written from the perspective of an English cricket fan at the time.
Friday July 17
Australia 203/3 (Dyson 102)
Oh well. I'm not sure I care that much about the Ashes anyway. Australia, aided once again by some inconsistent bowling and yet more charitable fielding, have strengthened their hold on this series. Quite where England go from here I don't know.
The decision to leave out spinner Emburey is looking questionable. The seam attack appeared toothless on what looks a tricky surface to bat on, and when they did create chances then the butterfingers boys returned. Seeing Peter Willey turn a few deliveries on day one must have raised the eyebrows of Emburey too.
Saturday, 1 July 2023
Headingley 1981: Preview
A preview of the Ashes Test at Headingley in 1981, written from the perspective of an English cricket fan at the time.
Day one
Day two
Day three
Day four
Day five
Thursday July 16
Say what you want about English cricket, but it is never dull. After losing at Trent Bridge, England arrived at Lord's 1-0 down in the series. They left HQ with a draw and without a captain. Understandably, Ian Terrence Botham decided enough was enough.
As Botham said on the Lord's balcony, the match-by-match captaincy tenure was not helping him or the team. Undoubtedly the key player in our XI, his loss of form has been hugely damaging. Botham the captain needed Botham the player to perform. That never seemed likely.
Sunday, 25 June 2023
1981: Second Ashes Test
The end was near, the final curtain closing on Ian Botham's spell as England captain. As the second Ashes Test at Lord's approached it was becoming clear that the clock was ticking. Appointed skipper on a match-by-match basis, the situation for Botham and England was far from stable.
"By appointing Botham from Test to Test the England selectors are giving the inescapable impression that they would dearly love to get rid of Botham but cannot find a satisfactory method of completing the dreadful deed," Paul Fitzpatrick wrote in the Guardian. Even for English cricket, the whole environment seemed a joke.
Wednesday, 31 May 2023
Golden goals: Steve MacKenzie (1981)
There are moments in sporting history that are often forgotten. For all Kevin Pietersen's heroics, the contribution of Andrew Strauss on the first day of the final Ashes Test in 2005 should not be underestimated. Ian Poulter may have stolen the headlines late on Saturday during the 2012 Ryder Cup, but please remember the role played by Sergio Garcia and Luke Donald in the previous match. And then there is Gordon Smith.
Smith deserves a lot more than being the man remembered for spurning a golden opportunity to win the 1983 FA Cup for Brighton. Scoring a goal in an FA Cup final - the opener at Wembley against Manchester United - should have been the standout moment in Smith's career. Yet subsequent events will always overshadow this.
Tuesday, 9 May 2023
Book review: Everybody Wants to Rule the World
Tuesday, 2 May 2023
1983 European Cup Winners' Cup final: Aberdeen v Real Madrid
Monday, 24 April 2023
1989: The David Elleray experiment
This is what referees really say to footballers during a game... 🗣️
— Amazon Prime Video Sport (@primevideosport) April 18, 2023
A fascinating insight from Ligue 1! 👀🇫🇷 pic.twitter.com/jfBcyhSe0g
Tuesday, 4 April 2023
1983 US Masters: Seve Ballesteros
If the modern day Michael Fishes - or their American equivalents - are to be believed, then there seems a strong possibility that the 2023 US Masters may be hugely impacted by a depressing weather forecast. With thunderstorms and rain predicted to hit Augusta, Georgia, there have even been rumours circulating that the tournament may have to conclude on the Monday.
Hardly ideal for those of us who love settling down in front of the television for the traditional conclusion to the Masters on the Sunday evening in the UK. Whether first fears will be realised remain to be seen. But if play is extended to a fifth day then it will be the first time this has happened since 1983.
Thursday, 30 March 2023
Golden goals: John Hewitt (1983)
It seems some footballers are not content with just one golden goal in their career. Some get a little greedy, gorging on the glory, delighting at making their mark in history. In 1983, Aberdeen's John Hewitt achieved this and some, inflicting pain on two European giants and cementing his place in the Dons' Hall of Fame.
This piece could just as easily be about that winner on that rainy night in Gothenburg. But before Hewitt's header against Real Madrid came a goal on a memorable evening in the north east of Scotland that surely must rank as the most remarkable in the history of Aberdeen's Pittodrie stadium. You can't have one without the other.
Wednesday, 22 March 2023
1983 FA Cup final: Manchester United v Brighton
Monday, 6 March 2023
1983/84: Tottenham v Nottingham Forest
Wednesday, 8 February 2023
Golden goals: Peter Beardsley (1987)
Monday, 30 January 2023
1988/89: Everton v Arsenal
Maybe the Propellerheads and Shirley Bassey knew their ball, as the kids may or may not say now, in respect to Arsenal's 2022/23 season. "The word is about, there's something evolving. But to me it seems quite clear, that it's all just a little bit of history repeating."
You may be wondering if the introduction above is one of those legendary unfathomable clues on 321, yet it really is just my ham-fisted way of drawing comparisons with Arsenal's forthcoming match at Goodison Park and their Division One fixture at the same ground in January 1989. Because, in certain regards, what is evolving at Arsenal in 2023 does have elements of history repeating itself.
Tuesday, 17 January 2023
1984 FA Cup Fourth Round: Brighton v Liverpool
Thursday, 12 January 2023
1979/80: Tottenham v Arsenal
Squad rotation is now sadly a pivotal part of the FA Cup third round experience. Each year most Premier League clubs and those in the Championship striving for a slice of the cash cow make sweeping changes to their starting XIs, with the famous old competition suffering as a consequence.
Of course it wasn't always this way. There are a number of tales from the distant past of marathon seasons, cup replay sagas, and players out on their feet as managers without the luxury of vast squads attempted to drain every drop of energy from their reserves.
Wednesday, 4 January 2023
1986 FA Cup Third Round: Birmingham v Altrincham
It was a fitting chapter in the shambolic story of Birmingham City's 1985/86 season. When Gola League Altrincham visited St Andrew's in the 1986 FA Cup Third Round and left victorious, it says a lot about the state of the First Division side that it was not a huge shock. On and off the pitch, Birmingham City were spiralling out of control.
Manager Ron Saunders had predicted the trouble ahead. After leading the club to promotion in the previous campaign, the former Aston Villa boss urged chairman Keith Coombs to spend some money, otherwise the club faced an instant return to the Second Division.