It was perceived by many as a bye. Another step for the red machine of Liverpool on their quest for an unprecedented quadruple. When the runaway Division One leaders drew rock bottom Brighton at Anfield in the last 16 of the 1983 FA Cup, the Seagulls road to Wembley was expected to hit a dead end.
Brighton's charismatic caretaker manager Jimmy Melia was trying his best to talk up his team's hopes. "There is no way this draw means the end of the line," the former Liverpool player protested. "We were the last side to win at Anfield, in March 1982." Yet not everyone shared his optimism.
"But the chances of lightning striking twice in that particular place are hardly likely to dim Bob Paisley's vision of his players handing over the trophy as a retirement present at Wembley in May," the Guardian's Patrick Barclay wrote. Liverpool's departing manager was expected to take another step towards the one trophy that had alluded him during his managerial reign.
History was not on the side of Brighton either. Four times the club had reached the FA Cup fifth round - the last time in 1960 - but they had never progressed past that stage. They may have impressively hammered Manchester City 4-0 in the previous round - City manager John Bond resigned a few days later - but their league form hardly suggested an upset was on the cards.
With just six wins in the league - five of those achieved under previous manager Mike Bailey - Brighton had not won a league match since December (Melia's first game in charge) and that run would continue to March. At least the FA Cup run provided a slight distraction, even if Brighton's odds of 9/1 to win at Anfield emphasised the task ahead of them.
The match was switched to 2.30pm on Sunday February 20, after Everton's opponents Tottenham refused to switch their FA Cup match at Goodison Park from the Saturday. "We believe that day should be kept free of football," Tottenham manager Keith Burkinshaw declared. His opinion had not softened by the time live football on the Sabbath arrived in October.
Over 4,000 Brighton fans made the journey to Merseyside, more in hope than expectation, but as the first half progressed it was evident that Melia's pre-match statement that his team would attack was not all hot air. With Jimmy Case sticking to Liverpool skipper Graeme Souness, and Michael Robinson, Gerry Ryan, and Peter Ward constantly hassling Liverpool's centre backs, Brighton were rocking.
In the 32nd minute came the first moment that would stun the crowd of 44,868 inside Anfield. A surging run from Robinson down Liverpool's left led to the opening goal, the Brighton forward driving into the penalty area, drawing out Bruce Grobbelaar, before cutting back to Ryan. In front of the Kop, Ryan side-footed home.
Brighton's first moment of fortune had arrived before the visit to Anfield. Robinson had been handed a one match ban and given a £250 fine by an FA disciplinary commission for headbutting Watford's Steve Sherwood in January. Fortunately, the ban started the day after the Liverpool match. The future Liverpool player certainly made the most of his opportunity.
Liverpool full back Alan Kennedy almost equalised before half-time when he struck the post, but Robinson would hit the crossbar with a header in the second half and the side-netting with another header from a narrow angle. However, when Craig Johnston acrobatically flicked a volley past Perry Digweed in the 67th minute, it looked like normal service had been resumed.
Just six days after their Anfield triumph, Brighton lost at home to Stoke in the league. There in a nutshell was the issue. Able to raise themselves for the big cup games, Melia and his players simply could not transfer these performances into their league displays. Relegation followed, and by October 1983 Melia was gone.
The 1982/83 season may not have ended well for Brighton fans, yet the cup run and that win at Anfield in particular provided a joyous experience. Inflicting Liverpool's first home cup defeat in 63 matches - going back to 1974 - Melia's seagulls soared on that memorable Sunday. Brighton destroying Liverpool's hopes for a quadruple. It could never happen again. Oh.
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