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1988 Football League Second Division play-off final

The 1988 Football League Second Division play-off Final was an association football match contested between Chelsea and Middlesbrough over two legs on 25 May 1988 and 28 May 1988. It was to determine which club would play the next season in the First Division, the top tier of English football. Chelsea had finished the season fourth from bottom in the First Division, while Middlesbrough were third in the Second Division. They were joined in the play-offs by the teams that had finished fourth and fifth in the Second Division: Chelsea defeated Blackburn Rovers in their play-off semi-final, while Middlesbrough beat Bradford City.

1988 Football League Second Division play-off Final
on aggregate
First leg
Date25 May 1988 (1988-05-25)
VenueAyresome Park, Middlesbrough
RefereeKeith Hackett (Sheffield)
Attendance25,531
Second leg
Date28 May 1988 (1988-05-28)
VenueStamford Bridge, London
RefereeBrian Hill (Kettering)
Attendance40,550
1987
1989

The first leg of the final was played at Ayresome Park in Middlesbrough, in front of a crowd of 25,531. Trevor Senior and Bernie Slaven scored for Middlesbrough, who won the match 2–0. Three days later, at Stamford Bridge in London, 40,550 fans watched Chelsea beat Middlesbrough 1–0. Gordon Durie scored the only goal of the match, but it was not enough for Chelsea, who lost the tie 2–1 on aggregate. Middlesbrough were promoted to the First Division where they remained for one season before they were relegated. Chelsea won the Second Division the following season and, as of 2024, remain in the top tier of English football.

After the final whistle, a few hundred Chelsea fans broke onto the pitch and threw projectiles at the visiting supporters. It took the police around 40 minutes to clear the pitch and the terraces, and 45 people were injured, including 25 police officers. In total, 102 arrests were made, and Chelsea were later found guilty of failing to control their supporters. They were given a £75,000 fine and had to close their terraces for the first six matches of the subsequent season.

Background edit

English Football League play-offs were first introduced to determine promotion and relegation between the First and Second Divisions, the top two tiers of the English football league system, in the 1986–87 season. They were a means of reducing the number of teams in the First Division from 22 down to 20, but were also designed to add excitement to the end of the season, giving more teams something to compete for, while also generating more money for those clubs involved. For the first two seasons, they featured three teams from the Second Division, along with one from the First Division.[1] The bottom three clubs from the First Division were automatically relegated, while the fourth from bottom entered the play-offs. In the Second Division, the top two clubs gained automatic promotion, and the teams finishing in third to fifth competed in the play-offs.[2]

Chelsea had been Second Division champions in the 1983–84 season, and had played in the First Division for the four seasons since. After two sixth-placed finishes in their first two seasons in the top tier, they dropped to 14th in the 1986–87 season.[3] Middlesbrough had a more turbulent recent history: they were relegated from the First Division in 1982, and four years later dropped down into the Third Division. They were also struggling financially, and in July 1986 their debts forced them into liquidation. The club were locked out of their Ayresome Park ground, and only a last minute rescue by a consortium saved the club. Middlesbrough gained promotion back to the Second Division at their first attempt in the 1986–87 season.[4] According to accountancy firm Deloitte, the match was worth £1 million to the promoted club through increases in matchday, commercial and broadcasting income.[5]

Football hooliganism edit

Football hooliganism has been present within English football since its inception. In the 1960s it escalated and developed from attacks towards oppositions players into fights between opposing fans. The driving force behind the escalation was predominantly groups of young, male fans who wanted to prove their toughness. By the middle of the 1960s, football hooliganism was considered a national problem which affected the image of England overseas. Local and national government intervened to tackle the problem rather than leave it to the football authorities.[6]

Measures introduced to deal with hooliganism were the segregation of opposing fans at matches, which was initially voluntary, before later being enforced, and an increased police presence at football matches. Security fences were erected at grounds, often topped with barbed wire, to keep fans apart and off the pitch. Although this segregation resulted in reduced violence at football matches, it helped to foster a collective identity for the groups of supporters, and often just shifted the violence out of the stadium into the nearby streets. This in turn led to the creation of what Ramón Spaaij describes as "super hooligan" groups, such as Chelsea's Headhunters group, who actively sought out fights against opposing fans.[7]

In 1985, a series of incidents brought English football hooliganism to a head.[8] First, during a match between Luton Town and Millwall in March, a mass riot broke out between the two sets of fans, which spread onto the pitch and into the surrounding town. Sean Ingle writing in The Guardian described it as "a night football died a slow death", and the chairman of the Football Association, Bert Millichip, said that the riot was the reason that England was not named as host for the 1988 UEFA European Football Championship.[9] Two months later, Liverpool fans were blamed for the Heysel Stadium disaster, in which 39 fans, predominantly supporters of Juventus, were killed and over 600 injured. That incident led to English clubs being banned from European competitions for five years.[8]

In the late 1980s, Chelsea's hooligan groups, particularly the Headhunters, were well known for their racism, far-right extremism and violence.[10][11] According to Nick Lowles and Andy Nicholls, in their history of British hooliganism, Chelsea were widely considered to be the "top dogs" of hooligan groups at the time,[12] though the club's chairman, Ken Bates blamed the media for this reputation, saying that although he accepted the club had a problem with hooligans, he blamed the press coverage the club was given: "[Chelsea] are the only club consistently criticised, consistently persecuted and consistently emphasised. If Chelsea has the worst reputation in the country it is because of irresponsible reporting."[13]

Route to the final edit

Chelsea finished the 1987–88 season in 18th place—fourth from bottom—in the First Division. They finished seven points ahead of Portsmouth (who were relegated in 19th place), and were level on points with West Ham United and Charlton Athletic; but both teams had a superior goal difference to Chelsea.[14] Middlesbrough finished the season in third place in the Second Division: goals scored over the season had to be used as a tie-breaker, as they were level on both points and goal difference with Aston Villa, who were automatically promoted in second place.[15] Aston Villa had scored 68 goals over the course of the season, while Middlesbrough had scored 63.[16] Both teams, along with Bradford City and Blackburn Rovers entered the play-offs to determine who would play in the First Division in the following 1988–89 season.[2] Middlesbrough were managed by Bruce Rioch who had held the position since February 1986.[17] Bobby Campbell had been appointed as Chelsea's caretaker manager two weeks prior to the final, after the resignation of John Hollins.[18][19]

Chelsea travelled to Blackburn's Ewood Park for the first leg of their play-off semi-final. They lost John Bumstead to an injury midway through the first half, but opened the scoring after a minute of the second half when Gordon Durie curled a shot around Blackburn's Terry Gennoe. Pat Nevin later doubled the lead, and the match ended 2–0 to Chelsea.[20] In the second leg, both sides missed chances early on before Kevin Wilson scored a volley for Chelsea after 26 minutes. Kerry Dixon redirected the ball into the goal with his thigh 10 minutes into the second half to give Chelsea a four-goal advantage in the tie, and although Scott Sellars pulled a goal back for Blackburn, Chelsea added two more late goals through Wilson and Durie to secure a 4–1 victory in the match, and Chelsea progressed to the final 6–1 on aggregate.[21]

For their semi-final, Middlesbrough also journeyed away from home for the first leg, visiting Bradford City's Valley Parade ground. Both sides had chances in the first half, but the match remained goalless until the 67th minute, when Karl Goddard scored for the hosts. Middlesbrough equalised a minute later, through a header from Trevor Senior, but Bradford retook the lead almost immediately when Stuart McCall scored from close-range. After three goals in three minutes, no more were scored, and the match finished 2–1 to Bradford.[22] In the second leg, a goal from Bernie Slaven gave Middlesbrough the lead in the 35th minute, and the match remained 1–0 at the end of 90 minutes: 2–2 on aggregate. Going into extra time, Middlesbrough added a second goal almost immediately; the Bradford City defender Lee Sinnott missed a cross by Colin Cooper, which fell to Gary Hamilton who put it in the net. Stephen Pears, the Middlesbrough goalkeeper made two saves from Ian Ormondroyd in the 111th minute, and his side held on to claim a 3–2 aggregate victory.[23] In his history of the club, Richard Piers Rayner describes watching that match from the terraces as among his favourite moments as a Middlesbrough fan.[24]

Match details edit

First leg edit

Summary edit

 
The first leg was played at Middlesbrough's Ayresome Park (pictured in 1991).

The play-off final first leg was played at Middlesbrough's Ayresome Park, in front of a crowd of 25,531.[25] Keith Hackett was chosen to referee the fixture; The Guardian's David Lacey rated him as the Football League's best.[26] Middlesbrough had a chance at goal early in the match; Slaven beat Chelsea's offside trap and set-up Senior,[27] but the Chelsea goalkeeper, Kevin Hitchcock managed to get his left palm to the attempted chip.[28] Nevin then created an opportunity for Chelsea, crossing the ball to Dixon, who missed the goal with his header. Chelsea created another chance in the 27th minute; the ball bounced over the head of the Middlesbrough defender Gary Pallister, and was collected by Durie, who evaded another defender, Tony Mowbray, but his shot was saved by Pears.[27][28] Three minutes later, Slaven crossed the ball to Senior, who scored with a glancing header, to put Middlesbrough 1–0 ahead: Clive White of The Times described it as "a slightly flattering lead".[27] The score remained unchanged at half-time.[25]

In the second half, Stuart Ripley crossed the ball into the Chelsea penalty area, but there were no Middlesbrough forwards to convert the chance. Shortly after, Tony Dorigo broke through the Middlesbrough defence with a run, but nothing came of the opportunity. Both teams continued to attack; Cynthia Bateman of The Guardian said that "Chelsea always had the edge in skill", but were always at risk of "being overwhelmed by the ferocity" of Middlesbrough's attacks.[28] Pallister had a shot after a Middlesbrough corner was palmed away from goal by Hitchcock, but he put the rebound straight back at the goalkeeper. Chelsea also missed a rebound: Durie struck a strong shot, which Pears parried to Colin Pates, but he mishit his shot.[28] Senior and Slaven combined again in the 81st minute to double Middlesbrough's lead; Senior crossed the ball in from the right, and Slaven cut in from the opposition wing. His first shot was saved by Hitchcock, but Slaven put away his own rebound to make it 2–0.[27]

Details edit

Middlesbrough2–0Chelsea
  • Senior   30'
  • Slaven   81'
Report
Attendance: 25,531
Referee: Keith Hackett
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Middlesbrough
 
 
 
 
 
 
Chelsea

Second leg edit

Summary edit

The second leg took place at Stamford Bridge in London on 28 May 1988 in front of a crowd of 40,550.[29] Chelsea dominated play early on; within 90 seconds of kick-off, Nevin had a shot at goal which Pears "brilliantly" deflected onto the post, according to White.[30] Middlesbrough's best chance of the match came a few minutes later, when a cross-cum-shot from Cooper rebounded off the post to Slaven. From 5 yards (5 m), his headed shot went over the bar.[31] Nevin created Chelsea's goal in the 18th minute, finding Durie with a long pass, who curled the ball into the net from 10 yards (9 m) out.[32] Soon after, Durie broke through the Middlesbrough defence, but Dixon was offside, and play was stopped.[31] Chelsea continued to dominate possession for the rest of the game, and Nevin created more opportunities for his side, but they did not manage to have another shot on target after their goal.[30] The Observer's Louise Taylor credited Chelsea's superiority "to an outstanding individual performance from Pat Nevin", but in the second half she said that "Chelsea's play became infected with desperation".[32] The match finished 1–0 to Chelsea; Middlesbrough won the tie 2–1 on aggregate.[32]

Details edit

Chelsea1–0Middlesbrough
Report
Attendance: 40,550
Referee: Brian Hill
 
 
 
 
 
 
Chelsea
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Middlesbrough
GK 1 Kevin Hitchcock
RB 2 Steve Clarke
LB 3 Tony Dorigo
CM 4 Steve Wicks
CB 5 Joe McLaughlin (c)
CB 6 Colin Pates   80'
CM 7 Pat Nevin
CM 8 John Bumstead
FW 9 Kerry Dixon
FW 10 Gordon Durie
FW 11 Kevin Wilson   80'
Substitutes:
MF 12 Gareth Hall   80'
MF 14 Kevin McAllister   80'
Manager:
Bobby Campbell

Post-match hooliganism edit

After the final whistle had been blown, around twelve Middlesbrough fans climbed over the fencing surrounding the pitch,[34] and according to White, "celebrated provocatively on the pitch".[35] Seeing this, roughly 300 Chelsea supporters broke through a gate in the security fence at the Shed End to enter the pitch and ran towards the stand holding the Middlesbrough fans, while throwing a variety of projectiles, including stones.[36][34][37] White said that while the Chelsea fans were entering the pitch, he could not see any of the 378 police officers who were on duty at the match.[35] Writing about the incident in 2020, Anthony Vickers of TeessideLive described it as "a sustained and unprovoked attack from vicious Chelsea hooligans",[38] though Lowles and Nicholls suggest that had the members of Middlesbrough's hooligan group managed to get onto the pitch, "the story would have been very different". According to them, around 1,000 members of Middlesbrough's "Frontline" mob had travelled to London for the match, and had marched provocatively en masse to the ground.[12]

Slaven, part of the victorious Middlesbrough team, had initially started to run towards his team's supporters to celebrate, but he recalls "the Boro fans looking fearful and apprehensive", and when he turned around to see the Chelsea fans running towards him, he joined his teammates in escaping down the tunnel. He said that one of them, Gary Hamilton, had a bottle thrown at him.[38] Roughly 30 police officers created a cordon between the opposing fans, and prevented them from engaging until a mounted police unit arrived to disperse the crowd,[37] and according to the Sunday Mirror, they charged into the supporters on the pitch, knocking some of them over.[39] The police continued to clear the Chelsea fans from the pitch and the terraces for 40 minutes,[34] doing so "under a constant hail of missiles" according to the Sunday Tribune.[37] After 45 minutes, the Middlesbrough players were able to return to the pitch and celebrate with their fans, who remained in the North Stand.[40]

The police made 102 arrests after the match, 3 of which were Middlesbrough fans, and 45 people were injured, including 25 police officers.[41] Bates played down the incident, saying that "the people who described it as a riot have obviously never seen a riot".[35] He blamed the incident on the police, claiming that they should have been policing the perimeter fence.[42] Paul Condon, the Metropolitan Police's deputy assistant commissioner, rebutted the claim, while the official police view was that the fault lay with Chelsea.[43]

Both clubs were charged by the Football Association with failing to control their supporters; Middlesbrough were cleared of the charge, but Chelsea were found guilty. They were fined £75,000 plus costs, the largest financial penalty given by the Football Association at the time, and had to close their terraces for the first six home games of the 1988–89 season.[44]

Aftermath edit

Chelsea's Nevin later recalled the defeat, noting that for him "the last moment was the worst moment".[45] The second leg was his final appearance for Chelsea before moving to Everton, and he referred to his team's dominance in the match: "we absolutely battered them".[45] Middlesbrough were promoted to the First Division for the 1988–89 season, completing back-to-back promotions, but only survived one season in the top tier. They finished their next campaign in 18th place and were relegated back to the Second Division, where they remained for a further three seasons.[4][46] Chelsea were Second Division champions in the 1988–89 season, regaining promotion to the top tier and, as of 2021, have remained there ever since.[3]

In June 1988, UEFA, the governing body for association football in Europe, had been due to meet to discuss whether to readmit English clubs to European competitions in the 1988–89 season. In the wake of the post-match incident during the second leg between Chelsea and Middlesbrough, along with hooliganism at a match between England and Scotland, the English Football Association withdrew their request to be re-admitted.[47] English clubs eventually returned to European competition in the 1990–91 season, at the conclusion of the original five-year ban.[8][48]

References edit

  1. ^ Pye, Stephen (22 May 2015). "How Charlton, Swindon and Aldershot triumphed in the first play-offs in 1987". The Guardian. from the original on 3 June 2020. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
  2. ^ a b "UK results and tables". The Sydney Morning Herald. 9 May 1988. p. 55. Retrieved 29 July 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ a b . Chelsea F.C. Archived from the original on 10 August 2020. Retrieved 2 June 2020.
  4. ^ a b "Timeline of MFC: The History Of Our Club As It Happened". Middlesbrough F.C. from the original on 8 July 2020. Retrieved 2 June 2020.
  5. ^ Foster 2015, p. 112.
  6. ^ Spaaij 2006, pp. 77–78.
  7. ^ Spaaij 2006, pp. 79–81.
  8. ^ a b c Spaaij 2006, p. 82.
  9. ^ Ingle, Sean (15 February 2013). "Luton Town v Millwall 1985 – the night football died a slow death". The Guardian. from the original on 11 July 2020. Retrieved 9 July 2020.
  10. ^ King 1998, p. 586.
  11. ^ Lowles & Nicholls 2007a, p. 374.
  12. ^ a b Lowles & Nicholls 2007b, p. 127.
  13. ^ Spaaij 2006, pp. 176–177.
  14. ^ "League Division One end of season table for 1987–88 season". 11v11.com. AFS Enterprises. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  15. ^ Semmens, Aidan (9 May 1988). "Rioch horror show". The Guardian. p. 12 – via Newspapers.com.
  16. ^ "League Division Two end of season table for 1987–88 season". 11v11.com. AFS Enterprises. Retrieved 19 August 2020.
  17. ^ "Bruce Rioch (February 1986 to March 1990)". Middlesbrough F.C. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
  18. ^ "Bobby Campbell". Chelsea F.C. 22 January 2018. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
  19. ^ "John Hollins". Chelsea F.C. 22 January 2018. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
  20. ^ Bateman, Cynthia (16 May 1988). "Mail delivers a lifeline". The Guardian. p. 19 – via Newspapers.com.
  21. ^ Thomas, Russell (19 May 1988). "Wilson double seals Chelsea triumph". The Guardian. p. 12 – via Newspapers.com.
  22. ^ Ross, Ian (16 May 1988). "Bradford get in lane on route 66". The Times. No. 63082. p. 46 – via Gale.
  23. ^ White, Clive (19 May 1988). "Middlesbrough renew hopes of promotion". The Times. No. 63085. p. 46 – via Gale.
  24. ^ Rayner 2014, p. 135.
  25. ^ a b "Middlesbrough v Chelsea, 25 May 1988". 11v11.com. AFS Enterprises. Retrieved 2 June 2020.
  26. ^ Lacey, David (9 May 1988). "Referees to be chosen 'carefully'". The Guardian. p. 12 – via Newspapers.com.
  27. ^ a b c d White, Clive (26 May 1988). "Slaven's late goal gives Chelsea notice of eviction". The Times. No. 63091. p. 48 – via Gale.
  28. ^ a b c d Bateman, Cynthia (26 May 1988). "Chelsea in agonies at Awesome Park". The Guardian. p. 16 – via Newspapers.com.
  29. ^ "Chelsea v Middlesbrough, 28 May 1988". 11v11.com. AFS Enterprises. from the original on 10 July 2020. Retrieved 2 June 2020.
  30. ^ a b White, Clive (30 May 1988). "Chelsea complete fall from grace". The Times. No. 63094. p. 29 – via Gale.
  31. ^ a b Brown, Jeff (30 May 1988). "No spoiling Boro party". Newcastle Journal. p. 10 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  32. ^ a b c Taylor, Louise (29 May 1988). "Chelsea sink with a snarl". The Observer. p. 20 – via Newspapers.com.
  33. ^ "Fixtures". The Guardian. p. 14. Retrieved 24 September 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  34. ^ a b c Ridley, Ian (30 May 1988). "Bates turns a blind eye to something nasty in the Shed". The Guardian. p. 13 – via Newspapers.com.
  35. ^ a b c White, Clive (30 May 1988). "Blame must be shared by club and police". The Times. No. 63094. p. 30 – via Gale.
  36. ^ Lashmar, Paul (29 May 1988). "Chelsea fans riot as team demoted". The Observer. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com.
  37. ^ a b c "Riots as Chelsea go down". Sunday Tribune. 29 May 1988. p. 16 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  38. ^ a b Vickers, Anthony (28 May 2020). "The full story of Middlesbrough's 'Battle of Stamford Bridge' by those who were there". TeessideLive. from the original on 4 June 2020. Retrieved 2 June 2020.
  39. ^ "Soccer Thugs Bid to Kill Child". Sunday Mirror. 29 May 1988. p. 2 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  40. ^ Edwards, Richard (12 May 2017). "30 years of play-offs madness: The 27 best moments from promotion showdowns". FourFourTwo. Retrieved 2 June 2020.
  41. ^ "The malady lingers on". Newcastle Journal. 30 May 1988. p. 8 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  42. ^ Campbell, Alastair (29 May 1988). "Last straw". Sunday Mirror. p. 48 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  43. ^ Sapsted, David (30 May 1988). "Riot fans curbed 'swiftly'". The Times. No. 63094. p. 3 – via Gale.
  44. ^ "Chelsea clobbered". The Guardian. 14 July 1988. p. 14 – via Newspapers.com.
  45. ^ a b Foster 2015, p. 80.
  46. ^ "League Division One end of season table for 1988–89 season". 11v11.com. AFS Enterprises. Retrieved 2 June 2020.
  47. ^ Naughtie, James; Bierley, Stephen (17 June 1988). "Soccer clubs face curbs on supporters". The Guardian. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com.
  48. ^ Murray & Walker 2008, p. 272.

Bibliography edit

  • Foster, Richard (2015). The Agony & The Ecstasy. Huddersfield: Ockley Books. ISBN 978-1-910906-00-2.
  • King, Anthony (December 1998). "The Postmodernity of Football Hooliganism". The British Journal of Sociology. 48 (4): 576–593. doi:10.2307/591597. JSTOR 591597. PMID 9421956.
  • Lowles, Nick; Nicholls, Andy (2007a). Hooligans: The A–L of Britain's Football Hooligan Gangs. Preston: Milo Books. ISBN 978-1-908479-59-4.
  • Lowles, Nick; Nicholls, Andy (2007b). Hooligans 2: The M–Z of Britain's Football Hooligan Gangs. Preston: Milo Books. ISBN 978-1-908479-59-4.
  • Murray, Scott; Walker, Rowan (2008). Day of the Match: A History of Football in 365 Days. Basingstoke: Pan MacMillan. ISBN 978-0-7522-2678-1.
  • Rayner, Richard Piers (2014) [2008]. Middlesbrough FC The Unseen History. Derby: Breedon Books. p. 135. ISBN 978-1-78091-452-7.
  • Spaaij, Ramón (2006). Understanding Football Hooliganism: A Comparison of Six Western European Football Clubs. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. ISBN 978-90-5629-445-8.

1988, football, league, second, division, play, final, 1988, football, league, second, division, play, final, association, football, match, contested, between, chelsea, middlesbrough, over, legs, 1988, 1988, determine, which, club, would, play, next, season, f. The 1988 Football League Second Division play off Final was an association football match contested between Chelsea and Middlesbrough over two legs on 25 May 1988 and 28 May 1988 It was to determine which club would play the next season in the First Division the top tier of English football Chelsea had finished the season fourth from bottom in the First Division while Middlesbrough were third in the Second Division They were joined in the play offs by the teams that had finished fourth and fifth in the Second Division Chelsea defeated Blackburn Rovers in their play off semi final while Middlesbrough beat Bradford City 1988 Football League Second Division play off FinalMiddlesbrough Chelsea2 1on aggregateFirst legMiddlesbrough Chelsea2 0Date25 May 1988 1988 05 25 VenueAyresome Park MiddlesbroughRefereeKeith Hackett Sheffield Attendance25 531Second legChelsea Middlesbrough1 0Date28 May 1988 1988 05 28 VenueStamford Bridge LondonRefereeBrian Hill Kettering Attendance40 550 19871989 The first leg of the final was played at Ayresome Park in Middlesbrough in front of a crowd of 25 531 Trevor Senior and Bernie Slaven scored for Middlesbrough who won the match 2 0 Three days later at Stamford Bridge in London 40 550 fans watched Chelsea beat Middlesbrough 1 0 Gordon Durie scored the only goal of the match but it was not enough for Chelsea who lost the tie 2 1 on aggregate Middlesbrough were promoted to the First Division where they remained for one season before they were relegated Chelsea won the Second Division the following season and as of 2024 update remain in the top tier of English football After the final whistle a few hundred Chelsea fans broke onto the pitch and threw projectiles at the visiting supporters It took the police around 40 minutes to clear the pitch and the terraces and 45 people were injured including 25 police officers In total 102 arrests were made and Chelsea were later found guilty of failing to control their supporters They were given a 75 000 fine and had to close their terraces for the first six matches of the subsequent season Contents 1 Background 1 1 Football hooliganism 2 Route to the final 3 Match details 3 1 First leg 3 1 1 Summary 3 1 2 Details 3 2 Second leg 3 2 1 Summary 3 2 2 Details 4 Post match hooliganism 5 Aftermath 6 References 7 BibliographyBackground editEnglish Football League play offs were first introduced to determine promotion and relegation between the First and Second Divisions the top two tiers of the English football league system in the 1986 87 season They were a means of reducing the number of teams in the First Division from 22 down to 20 but were also designed to add excitement to the end of the season giving more teams something to compete for while also generating more money for those clubs involved For the first two seasons they featured three teams from the Second Division along with one from the First Division 1 The bottom three clubs from the First Division were automatically relegated while the fourth from bottom entered the play offs In the Second Division the top two clubs gained automatic promotion and the teams finishing in third to fifth competed in the play offs 2 Chelsea had been Second Division champions in the 1983 84 season and had played in the First Division for the four seasons since After two sixth placed finishes in their first two seasons in the top tier they dropped to 14th in the 1986 87 season 3 Middlesbrough had a more turbulent recent history they were relegated from the First Division in 1982 and four years later dropped down into the Third Division They were also struggling financially and in July 1986 their debts forced them into liquidation The club were locked out of their Ayresome Park ground and only a last minute rescue by a consortium saved the club Middlesbrough gained promotion back to the Second Division at their first attempt in the 1986 87 season 4 According to accountancy firm Deloitte the match was worth 1 million to the promoted club through increases in matchday commercial and broadcasting income 5 Football hooliganism edit Football hooliganism has been present within English football since its inception In the 1960s it escalated and developed from attacks towards oppositions players into fights between opposing fans The driving force behind the escalation was predominantly groups of young male fans who wanted to prove their toughness By the middle of the 1960s football hooliganism was considered a national problem which affected the image of England overseas Local and national government intervened to tackle the problem rather than leave it to the football authorities 6 Measures introduced to deal with hooliganism were the segregation of opposing fans at matches which was initially voluntary before later being enforced and an increased police presence at football matches Security fences were erected at grounds often topped with barbed wire to keep fans apart and off the pitch Although this segregation resulted in reduced violence at football matches it helped to foster a collective identity for the groups of supporters and often just shifted the violence out of the stadium into the nearby streets This in turn led to the creation of what Ramon Spaaij describes as super hooligan groups such as Chelsea s Headhunters group who actively sought out fights against opposing fans 7 In 1985 a series of incidents brought English football hooliganism to a head 8 First during a match between Luton Town and Millwall in March a mass riot broke out between the two sets of fans which spread onto the pitch and into the surrounding town Sean Ingle writing in The Guardian described it as a night football died a slow death and the chairman of the Football Association Bert Millichip said that the riot was the reason that England was not named as host for the 1988 UEFA European Football Championship 9 Two months later Liverpool fans were blamed for the Heysel Stadium disaster in which 39 fans predominantly supporters of Juventus were killed and over 600 injured That incident led to English clubs being banned from European competitions for five years 8 In the late 1980s Chelsea s hooligan groups particularly the Headhunters were well known for their racism far right extremism and violence 10 11 According to Nick Lowles and Andy Nicholls in their history of British hooliganism Chelsea were widely considered to be the top dogs of hooligan groups at the time 12 though the club s chairman Ken Bates blamed the media for this reputation saying that although he accepted the club had a problem with hooligans he blamed the press coverage the club was given Chelsea are the only club consistently criticised consistently persecuted and consistently emphasised If Chelsea has the worst reputation in the country it is because of irresponsible reporting 13 Route to the final editChelsea finished the 1987 88 season in 18th place fourth from bottom in the First Division They finished seven points ahead of Portsmouth who were relegated in 19th place and were level on points with West Ham United and Charlton Athletic but both teams had a superior goal difference to Chelsea 14 Middlesbrough finished the season in third place in the Second Division goals scored over the season had to be used as a tie breaker as they were level on both points and goal difference with Aston Villa who were automatically promoted in second place 15 Aston Villa had scored 68 goals over the course of the season while Middlesbrough had scored 63 16 Both teams along with Bradford City and Blackburn Rovers entered the play offs to determine who would play in the First Division in the following 1988 89 season 2 Middlesbrough were managed by Bruce Rioch who had held the position since February 1986 17 Bobby Campbell had been appointed as Chelsea s caretaker manager two weeks prior to the final after the resignation of John Hollins 18 19 Chelsea travelled to Blackburn s Ewood Park for the first leg of their play off semi final They lost John Bumstead to an injury midway through the first half but opened the scoring after a minute of the second half when Gordon Durie curled a shot around Blackburn s Terry Gennoe Pat Nevin later doubled the lead and the match ended 2 0 to Chelsea 20 In the second leg both sides missed chances early on before Kevin Wilson scored a volley for Chelsea after 26 minutes Kerry Dixon redirected the ball into the goal with his thigh 10 minutes into the second half to give Chelsea a four goal advantage in the tie and although Scott Sellars pulled a goal back for Blackburn Chelsea added two more late goals through Wilson and Durie to secure a 4 1 victory in the match and Chelsea progressed to the final 6 1 on aggregate 21 For their semi final Middlesbrough also journeyed away from home for the first leg visiting Bradford City s Valley Parade ground Both sides had chances in the first half but the match remained goalless until the 67th minute when Karl Goddard scored for the hosts Middlesbrough equalised a minute later through a header from Trevor Senior but Bradford retook the lead almost immediately when Stuart McCall scored from close range After three goals in three minutes no more were scored and the match finished 2 1 to Bradford 22 In the second leg a goal from Bernie Slaven gave Middlesbrough the lead in the 35th minute and the match remained 1 0 at the end of 90 minutes 2 2 on aggregate Going into extra time Middlesbrough added a second goal almost immediately the Bradford City defender Lee Sinnott missed a cross by Colin Cooper which fell to Gary Hamilton who put it in the net Stephen Pears the Middlesbrough goalkeeper made two saves from Ian Ormondroyd in the 111th minute and his side held on to claim a 3 2 aggregate victory 23 In his history of the club Richard Piers Rayner describes watching that match from the terraces as among his favourite moments as a Middlesbrough fan 24 Match details editFirst leg edit Summary edit nbsp The first leg was played at Middlesbrough s Ayresome Park pictured in 1991 The play off final first leg was played at Middlesbrough s Ayresome Park in front of a crowd of 25 531 25 Keith Hackett was chosen to referee the fixture The Guardian s David Lacey rated him as the Football League s best 26 Middlesbrough had a chance at goal early in the match Slaven beat Chelsea s offside trap and set up Senior 27 but the Chelsea goalkeeper Kevin Hitchcock managed to get his left palm to the attempted chip 28 Nevin then created an opportunity for Chelsea crossing the ball to Dixon who missed the goal with his header Chelsea created another chance in the 27th minute the ball bounced over the head of the Middlesbrough defender Gary Pallister and was collected by Durie who evaded another defender Tony Mowbray but his shot was saved by Pears 27 28 Three minutes later Slaven crossed the ball to Senior who scored with a glancing header to put Middlesbrough 1 0 ahead Clive White of The Times described it as a slightly flattering lead 27 The score remained unchanged at half time 25 In the second half Stuart Ripley crossed the ball into the Chelsea penalty area but there were no Middlesbrough forwards to convert the chance Shortly after Tony Dorigo broke through the Middlesbrough defence with a run but nothing came of the opportunity Both teams continued to attack Cynthia Bateman of The Guardian said that Chelsea always had the edge in skill but were always at risk of being overwhelmed by the ferocity of Middlesbrough s attacks 28 Pallister had a shot after a Middlesbrough corner was palmed away from goal by Hitchcock but he put the rebound straight back at the goalkeeper Chelsea also missed a rebound Durie struck a strong shot which Pears parried to Colin Pates but he mishit his shot 28 Senior and Slaven combined again in the 81st minute to double Middlesbrough s lead Senior crossed the ball in from the right and Slaven cut in from the opposition wing His first shot was saved by Hitchcock but Slaven put away his own rebound to make it 2 0 27 Details edit 25 May 198819 30 BSTMiddlesbrough2 0ChelseaSenior nbsp 30 Slaven nbsp 81 ReportAyresome Park MiddlesbroughAttendance 25 531Referee Keith Hackett nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Middlesbrough nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Chelsea GK 1 Stephen Pears RB 2 Gary Parkinson LB 3 Colin Cooper CB 4 Tony Mowbray c CM 5 Gary Hamilton CB 6 Gary Pallister CF 7 Bernie Slaven RM 8 Stuart Ripley CF 9 Trevor Senior CM 10 Paul Kerr LM 11 Dean Glover Manager Bruce Rioch GK 1 Kevin Hitchcock RB 2 Steve Clarke LB 3 Tony Dorigo CM 4 Steve Wicks CB 5 Joe McLaughlin c CB 6 Colin Pates CM 7 Pat Nevin CM 8 John Bumstead FW 9 Kerry Dixon FW 10 Gordon Durie FW 11 Kevin Wilson Manager Bobby Campbell Second leg edit Summary edit The second leg took place at Stamford Bridge in London on 28 May 1988 in front of a crowd of 40 550 29 Chelsea dominated play early on within 90 seconds of kick off Nevin had a shot at goal which Pears brilliantly deflected onto the post according to White 30 Middlesbrough s best chance of the match came a few minutes later when a cross cum shot from Cooper rebounded off the post to Slaven From 5 yards 5 m his headed shot went over the bar 31 Nevin created Chelsea s goal in the 18th minute finding Durie with a long pass who curled the ball into the net from 10 yards 9 m out 32 Soon after Durie broke through the Middlesbrough defence but Dixon was offside and play was stopped 31 Chelsea continued to dominate possession for the rest of the game and Nevin created more opportunities for his side but they did not manage to have another shot on target after their goal 30 The Observer s Louise Taylor credited Chelsea s superiority to an outstanding individual performance from Pat Nevin but in the second half she said that Chelsea s play became infected with desperation 32 The match finished 1 0 to Chelsea Middlesbrough won the tie 2 1 on aggregate 32 Details edit 28 May 198815 00 BST 33 Chelsea1 0MiddlesbroughDurie nbsp 18 ReportStamford Bridge LondonAttendance 40 550Referee Brian Hill nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Chelsea nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Middlesbrough GK 1 Kevin Hitchcock RB 2 Steve Clarke LB 3 Tony Dorigo CM 4 Steve Wicks CB 5 Joe McLaughlin c CB 6 Colin Pates nbsp 80 CM 7 Pat Nevin CM 8 John Bumstead FW 9 Kerry Dixon FW 10 Gordon Durie FW 11 Kevin Wilson nbsp 80 Substitutes MF 12 Gareth Hall nbsp 80 MF 14 Kevin McAllister nbsp 80 Manager Bobby Campbell GK 1 Stephen Pears RB 2 Gary Parkinson LB 3 Colin Cooper CB 4 Tony Mowbray c CB 5 Gary Hamilton RM 6 Gary Pallister CF 7 Bernie Slaven CM 8 Stuart Ripley CF 9 Trevor Senior CM 10 Paul Kerr LM 11 Dean Glover Manager Bruce RiochPost match hooliganism editAfter the final whistle had been blown around twelve Middlesbrough fans climbed over the fencing surrounding the pitch 34 and according to White celebrated provocatively on the pitch 35 Seeing this roughly 300 Chelsea supporters broke through a gate in the security fence at the Shed End to enter the pitch and ran towards the stand holding the Middlesbrough fans while throwing a variety of projectiles including stones 36 34 37 White said that while the Chelsea fans were entering the pitch he could not see any of the 378 police officers who were on duty at the match 35 Writing about the incident in 2020 Anthony Vickers of TeessideLive described it as a sustained and unprovoked attack from vicious Chelsea hooligans 38 though Lowles and Nicholls suggest that had the members of Middlesbrough s hooligan group managed to get onto the pitch the story would have been very different According to them around 1 000 members of Middlesbrough s Frontline mob had travelled to London for the match and had marched provocatively en masse to the ground 12 Slaven part of the victorious Middlesbrough team had initially started to run towards his team s supporters to celebrate but he recalls the Boro fans looking fearful and apprehensive and when he turned around to see the Chelsea fans running towards him he joined his teammates in escaping down the tunnel He said that one of them Gary Hamilton had a bottle thrown at him 38 Roughly 30 police officers created a cordon between the opposing fans and prevented them from engaging until a mounted police unit arrived to disperse the crowd 37 and according to the Sunday Mirror they charged into the supporters on the pitch knocking some of them over 39 The police continued to clear the Chelsea fans from the pitch and the terraces for 40 minutes 34 doing so under a constant hail of missiles according to the Sunday Tribune 37 After 45 minutes the Middlesbrough players were able to return to the pitch and celebrate with their fans who remained in the North Stand 40 The police made 102 arrests after the match 3 of which were Middlesbrough fans and 45 people were injured including 25 police officers 41 Bates played down the incident saying that the people who described it as a riot have obviously never seen a riot 35 He blamed the incident on the police claiming that they should have been policing the perimeter fence 42 Paul Condon the Metropolitan Police s deputy assistant commissioner rebutted the claim while the official police view was that the fault lay with Chelsea 43 Both clubs were charged by the Football Association with failing to control their supporters Middlesbrough were cleared of the charge but Chelsea were found guilty They were fined 75 000 plus costs the largest financial penalty given by the Football Association at the time and had to close their terraces for the first six home games of the 1988 89 season 44 Aftermath editChelsea s Nevin later recalled the defeat noting that for him the last moment was the worst moment 45 The second leg was his final appearance for Chelsea before moving to Everton and he referred to his team s dominance in the match we absolutely battered them 45 Middlesbrough were promoted to the First Division for the 1988 89 season completing back to back promotions but only survived one season in the top tier They finished their next campaign in 18th place and were relegated back to the Second Division where they remained for a further three seasons 4 46 Chelsea were Second Division champions in the 1988 89 season regaining promotion to the top tier and as of 2021 update have remained there ever since 3 In June 1988 UEFA the governing body for association football in Europe had been due to meet to discuss whether to readmit English clubs to European competitions in the 1988 89 season In the wake of the post match incident during the second leg between Chelsea and Middlesbrough along with hooliganism at a match between England and Scotland the English Football Association withdrew their request to be re admitted 47 English clubs eventually returned to European competition in the 1990 91 season at the conclusion of the original five year ban 8 48 References edit Pye Stephen 22 May 2015 How Charlton Swindon and Aldershot triumphed in the first play offs in 1987 The Guardian Archived from the original on 3 June 2020 Retrieved 3 June 2020 a b UK results and tables The Sydney Morning Herald 9 May 1988 p 55 Retrieved 29 July 2020 via Newspapers com a b Historical League Positions Chelsea F C Archived from the original on 10 August 2020 Retrieved 2 June 2020 a b Timeline of MFC The History Of Our Club As It Happened Middlesbrough F C Archived from the original on 8 July 2020 Retrieved 2 June 2020 Foster 2015 p 112 Spaaij 2006 pp 77 78 Spaaij 2006 pp 79 81 a b c Spaaij 2006 p 82 Ingle Sean 15 February 2013 Luton Town v Millwall 1985 the night football died a slow death The Guardian Archived from the original on 11 July 2020 Retrieved 9 July 2020 King 1998 p 586 Lowles amp Nicholls 2007a p 374 a b Lowles amp Nicholls 2007b p 127 Spaaij 2006 pp 176 177 League Division One end of season table for 1987 88 season 11v11 com AFS Enterprises Retrieved 1 June 2020 Semmens Aidan 9 May 1988 Rioch horror show The Guardian p 12 via Newspapers com League Division Two end of season table for 1987 88 season 11v11 com AFS Enterprises Retrieved 19 August 2020 Bruce Rioch February 1986 to March 1990 Middlesbrough F C Retrieved 11 September 2020 Bobby Campbell Chelsea F C 22 January 2018 Retrieved 11 September 2020 John Hollins Chelsea F C 22 January 2018 Retrieved 11 September 2020 Bateman Cynthia 16 May 1988 Mail delivers a lifeline The Guardian p 19 via Newspapers com Thomas Russell 19 May 1988 Wilson double seals Chelsea triumph The Guardian p 12 via Newspapers com Ross Ian 16 May 1988 Bradford get in lane on route 66 The Times No 63082 p 46 via Gale White Clive 19 May 1988 Middlesbrough renew hopes of promotion The Times No 63085 p 46 via Gale Rayner 2014 p 135 a b Middlesbrough v Chelsea 25 May 1988 11v11 com AFS Enterprises Retrieved 2 June 2020 Lacey David 9 May 1988 Referees to be chosen carefully The Guardian p 12 via Newspapers com a b c d White Clive 26 May 1988 Slaven s late goal gives Chelsea notice of eviction The Times No 63091 p 48 via Gale a b c d Bateman Cynthia 26 May 1988 Chelsea in agonies at Awesome Park The Guardian p 16 via Newspapers com Chelsea v Middlesbrough 28 May 1988 11v11 com AFS Enterprises Archived from the original on 10 July 2020 Retrieved 2 June 2020 a b White Clive 30 May 1988 Chelsea complete fall from grace The Times No 63094 p 29 via Gale a b Brown Jeff 30 May 1988 No spoiling Boro party Newcastle Journal p 10 via British Newspaper Archive a b c Taylor Louise 29 May 1988 Chelsea sink with a snarl The Observer p 20 via Newspapers com Fixtures The Guardian p 14 Retrieved 24 September 2020 via Newspapers com a b c Ridley Ian 30 May 1988 Bates turns a blind eye to something nasty in the Shed The Guardian p 13 via Newspapers com a b c White Clive 30 May 1988 Blame must be shared by club and police The Times No 63094 p 30 via Gale Lashmar Paul 29 May 1988 Chelsea fans riot as team demoted The Observer p 1 via Newspapers com a b c Riots as Chelsea go down Sunday Tribune 29 May 1988 p 16 via British Newspaper Archive a b Vickers Anthony 28 May 2020 The full story of Middlesbrough s Battle of Stamford Bridge by those who were there TeessideLive Archived from the original on 4 June 2020 Retrieved 2 June 2020 Soccer Thugs Bid to Kill Child Sunday Mirror 29 May 1988 p 2 via British Newspaper Archive Edwards Richard 12 May 2017 30 years of play offs madness The 27 best moments from promotion showdowns FourFourTwo Retrieved 2 June 2020 The malady lingers on Newcastle Journal 30 May 1988 p 8 via British Newspaper Archive Campbell Alastair 29 May 1988 Last straw Sunday Mirror p 48 via British Newspaper Archive Sapsted David 30 May 1988 Riot fans curbed swiftly The Times No 63094 p 3 via Gale Chelsea clobbered The Guardian 14 July 1988 p 14 via Newspapers com a b Foster 2015 p 80 League Division One end of season table for 1988 89 season 11v11 com AFS Enterprises Retrieved 2 June 2020 Naughtie James Bierley Stephen 17 June 1988 Soccer clubs face curbs on supporters The Guardian p 1 via Newspapers com Murray amp Walker 2008 p 272 Bibliography editFoster Richard 2015 The Agony amp The Ecstasy Huddersfield Ockley Books ISBN 978 1 910906 00 2 King Anthony December 1998 The Postmodernity of Football Hooliganism The British Journal of Sociology 48 4 576 593 doi 10 2307 591597 JSTOR 591597 PMID 9421956 Lowles Nick Nicholls Andy 2007a Hooligans The A L of Britain s Football Hooligan Gangs Preston Milo Books ISBN 978 1 908479 59 4 Lowles Nick Nicholls Andy 2007b Hooligans 2 The M Z of Britain s Football Hooligan Gangs Preston Milo Books ISBN 978 1 908479 59 4 Murray Scott Walker Rowan 2008 Day of the Match A History of Football in 365 Days Basingstoke Pan MacMillan ISBN 978 0 7522 2678 1 Rayner Richard Piers 2014 2008 Middlesbrough FC The Unseen History Derby Breedon Books p 135 ISBN 978 1 78091 452 7 Spaaij Ramon 2006 Understanding Football Hooliganism A Comparison of Six Western European Football Clubs Amsterdam Amsterdam University Press ISBN 978 90 5629 445 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1988 Football League Second Division play off final amp oldid 1220145266, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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