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Football League Super Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the one-offEnglish football club tournament held in 1985–86. For England's equivalent of thesuper cup in the traditional sense, seeFA Community Shield.

Football tournament season
Football League Super Cup
Tournament details
CountryEngland
Dates17 September 1985 – 30 September 1986
Teams6
Final positions
ChampionsLiverpool
Runners-upEverton
Tournament statistics
Matches played18
Goals scored49 (2.72 per match)
Top goal scorerIan Rush (7 goals)

TheFootball League Super Cup (known for sponsorship reasons as theScreen Sport Super Cup) was a one-offfootball club competition held in England in the 1985–86 season. It was organised bythe Football League and was intended as a form of financial and sporting compensation for the English clubs which had qualified for European competition in the previous season but had been banned from entering European tournaments byUEFA following theHeysel Stadium disaster. With the ban set to last into the foreseeable future, England's clubs stood to lose a great deal of revenue, and would also have fewer opportunities to win silverware, so the Super Cup was established in the hope of offsetting at least some of this lost income, as well as offering additional competition for them.

The Football League's original intention was to hold the Super Cup annually for the duration of the UEFA ban on English clubs (which ultimately turned out to be five years) but the competition was largely seen as a poor substitute for the glamour of European tournaments and offered nothing different from the two domestic knockout competitions that already existed, theFA Cup andLeague Cup. Consequently, it generated minimal interest from the clubs involved. With the competition's final postponed until the beginning of the following season due to fixture congestion, the Super Cup was ultimately abolished after only one tournament had been held.

Interest in the competition was so low that the Football League initially failed to attract any form of sponsorship for it.Cable TV sports channelScreensport agreed to sponsor the tournament's final in September 1986.

Format

[edit]

The six clubs invited to participate, and the European competitions they would have qualified for, were:

To create a sufficient number of games, the teams played each other home and away in two groups of three teams, with three points awarded for a win and one point for a draw, with the top two teams in each group advancing to the semi-finals. Both the semi-finals and the final were held over two legs, home and away, which was perhaps another factor which may have contributed to the competition's failure to attract much interest from the clubs participating, as the tournament did not offer the prospect of a day out atWembley for the finalists.

Competition history

[edit]

Merseyside rivals Liverpool and Everton won through to the final, but with both these clubs being involved in a battle for the league championship and both of them also reaching theFA Cup final (as well as Liverpool being involved in the semi-finals of theFootball League Cup), fixture congestion became a problem, with Liverpool's semi-final second leg having to be delayed until the final week of the season, two days before the FA Cup final. The English football season had to come to an end immediately following the FA Cup final due to the preparations for the imminentFIFA World Cup inMexico (which many Everton and Liverpool players were to be involved in), which meant that there was no opportunity for the delayed Super Cup final to be played after the FA Cup final and that the Super Cup tournament could not be concluded before the 1985–86 season ended.

The absence of any conclusion of the Super Cup before the season's end may have put paid to any possibility of a second Super Cup tournament being organised in the 1986–87 season, although the perceived failure of the inaugural competition and its unpopularity with the clubs made such an eventuality unlikely in any case.[citation needed] (If the 1986–87 Super Cup had been staged, it would have been contested by Liverpool, Everton,West Ham United, Manchester United,Sheffield Wednesday andOxford United).

Ultimately the 1985–86 Super Cup final had to be held over until the following season and was finally played in September 1986, by which point the competition had finally attracted some sponsorship. Everton, however, fielded a virtual reserve team in the two-legged final (although they were in the middle of a genuine injury crisis) and Liverpool won the trophy 7–2 on aggregate. The games are remembered forIan Rush's impressive haul of five goals for Liverpool over the two games (although these goals are sometimes excluded from his official record-breakingMerseyside derby tally) and for Kevin Sheedy's spectacular goal for Everton atAnfield, scored from a long-range free-kick at the Kop end. Having lost theLeague and Cup double to Liverpool the previous May, Everton later that season managed to pip Liverpool to the League Championship.

The Super Cup was not a success as it was unable to substitute for games against the best sides in Europe in prestigiousUEFA competitions. Attendances were generally poor and the clubs involved apparently regarded the tournament as a pointless addition to the existing three national tournaments and a source of fixture congestion. Consequently, the Super Cup was abolished after only one season and it has not been held since. The competition is now largely forgotten.

Similar competitions

[edit]

TheFull Members' Cup, another Football League cup competition also launched in 1985 for similar reasons (to create additional competition, revenue and opportunity for silverware for English clubs, as well as a final atWembley Stadium), fared marginally better and ran until 1992, often better remembered as the "ZDS Cup" due to that competition being sponsored by Zenith Data Systems. A similar competition to the Super Cup, theMercantile Credit Centenary Trophy was played in the early weeks of1988–89 to celebrate the league's 100th birthday between the top eightFootball League teams from the previous season. The competition, played over three rounds on a knock-out basis, was won byArsenal.

Group stage

[edit]
Key to colours in group tables
Top two places advance to the semi-finals

Group 1

[edit]
TeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
Everton430163+39
Norwich City41213305
Manchester United402247−32
Source:[citation needed]
18 September 1985
Manchester United2–4Everton
2 October 1985
Everton1–0Norwich City
23 October 1985
Norwich City1–0Everton
6 November 1985
Manchester United1–1Norwich City
4 December 1985
Everton1–0Manchester United
11 December 1985
Norwich City1–1Manchester United

Group 2

[edit]
TeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
Liverpool431082+610
Tottenham Hotspur420257−26
Southampton401348−41
Source:[citation needed]
17 September 1985
Liverpool2–1Southampton
2 October 1985
Tottenham Hotspur2–1Southampton
22 October 1985
Southampton1–1Liverpool
3 December 1985
Liverpool2–0Tottenham Hotspur
17 December 1985
Southampton1–3Tottenham Hotspur
14 January 1986
Tottenham Hotspur0–3Liverpool

Knockout stage

[edit]

Semi-finals

[edit]

First leg

[edit]
Norwich City1–1Liverpool
Drinkell 49'ReportDalglish 79'
Attendance: 15,313
Tottenham Hotspur0–0Everton
Attendance: 7,548

Second leg

[edit]
Everton3–1 (a.e.t.)Tottenham Hotspur
Heath 77'
Mountfield 91'
Sharp 112'
Falco 48'
Attendance: 12,008

Everton won 3–1 on aggregate

Liverpool3–1Norwich City
MacDonald 56'
Mølby 72' (pen.)
Johnston 79'
ReportBrooke 2'
Attendance: 26,690

Liverpool won 4–2 on aggregate


Final

[edit]

First leg

[edit]
Liverpool3–1Everton
Rush 6',65'
McMahon 56'
Report
Report
Sheedy 40'
Attendance: 20,660
Liverpool
Everton

GK1EnglandMike Hooper
RB2EnglandBarry Venison
LB3Republic of IrelandJim Beglin
CB4Republic of IrelandMark Lawrenson
LM5Republic of IrelandRonnie Whelandownward-facing red arrow
CB6ScotlandGary Gillespie
SS7ScotlandKenny Dalglish
RM8ScotlandSteve Nicol
CF9WalesIan Rush
CM10ScotlandKevin MacDonald
CM11EnglandSteve McMahon
Substitutes:
MF12ScotlandJohn Wark
MF14DenmarkJan Mølbyupward-facing green arrow
Player/Manager:
ScotlandKenny Dalglish
GK1EnglandBobby Mimms
RB2EnglandPeter Billing
LB3EnglandPaul Power
CB4WalesKevin Ratcliffe (c)
CB5EnglandIan Marshall
CM6EnglandKevin Langley
RM7EnglandNeil Adams
ST8EnglandPaul Wilkinson
ST9ScotlandGraeme Sharp
CM10EnglandTrevor Steven
LM11Republic of IrelandKevin Sheedydownward-facing red arrow
Substitutes:
MFEnglandWarren Aspinallupward-facing green arrow
Manager:
EnglandHoward Kendall

Second leg

[edit]
Everton1–4Liverpool
Sharp 88' (pen.)Report
Report
Rush 10',27',84'
Nicol 62'
Attendance: 26,068
Everton
Liverpool

GK1EnglandBobby Mimms
RB2EnglandPeter Billing
LB3EnglandPaul Power
CB4WalesKevin Ratcliffe (c)
CB5EnglandDerek Mountfield
CM6EnglandTrevor Steven
RM7EnglandNeil Adams
CM8EnglandAdrian Heath
ST9ScotlandGraeme Sharp
ST10EnglandPaul Wilkinson
LM11Republic of IrelandKevin Sheedydownward-facing red arrow
Substitute:
MFEnglandWarren Aspinallupward-facing green arrowdownward-facing red arrow
DFEnglandNeil Pointonupward-facing green arrow
Manager:
EnglandHoward Kendall
GK1ZimbabweBruce Grobbelaar
RB2ScotlandGary Gillespie
LB3Republic of IrelandJim Beglin
CB4Republic of IrelandMark Lawrenson
LM5Republic of IrelandRonnie Whelan
CB6ScotlandAlan Hansen (c)
SS7ScotlandJohn Wark
RM8ScotlandSteve Nicoldownward-facing red arrow
CF9WalesIan Rush
CM10DenmarkJan Mølby
CM11EnglandSteve McMahondownward-facing red arrow
Substitute:
DF12EnglandBarry Venisonupward-facing green arrow
FW14EnglandPaul Walshupward-facing green arrow
Player/Manager:
ScotlandKenny Dalglish

Liverpool won 7–2 on aggregate

Top goalscorers

[edit]
PlayerClubGoals
Ian RushLiverpool7
Mark FalcoTottenham Hotspur4
Graeme SharpEverton3
Kevin SheedyEverton3

References

[edit]


External links

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