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Liverpool 0–2 Arsenal (1989)

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English football match

Football match
Liverpool vs Arsenal
Thematch programme cover, featuring Liverpool's1989 FA Cup Final win againstlocal rivalsEverton.
Event1988–89 Football League First Division
LiverpoolArsenal
02
Date26 May 1989 (1989-05-26)
VenueAnfield, Liverpool
RefereeDavid Hutchinson (Oxfordshire)
Attendance41,718
WeatherWarm[1]

The final match of the1988–89 Football League season was contested atAnfield betweenLiverpool andArsenal, respectively the first and second-placed teams in theFirst Division, on 26 May 1989. The clubs were close enough on points for the match to act as a decider for the championship. However, Arsenal had to win by at least two goals to overtake Liverpool in the table; anything else would result in Liverpool becoming champions. Arsenal won 2–0; midfielderMichael Thomas scored the second goal in the final seconds of the match, ending Arsenal's 18-year wait to be crowned champions.

The two clubs had been due to meet a month earlier, but thestadium disaster at Hillsborough during Liverpool'sFA Cup semifinal againstNottingham Forest, which killed 97 Liverpool supporters, meant the fixture was postponed out of respect. It was moved to 26 May, six days after theFA Cup Final – which Liverpool won over crosstown rivalsEverton. Arsenal managerGeorge Graham adjusted his usual formation to a defensive one to stop Liverpool's attacking threat;David O'Leary was employed as asweeper in a back five.

A peak British television audience of over 12 million[2] saw a first half of few chances as Arsenal successfully nullified Liverpool. StrikerAlan Smith scored from a header as play resumed in the second half, but as the game drew to a close with the score 1–0, Arsenal needed a second goal to win the title. Instoppage time, Arsenal's Thomas made a run through the Liverpool midfield. He scored alast-minute goal, in the process denying Liverpool the chance of a secondLeague and Cup double.

The match is considered to be one of the most dramatic conclusions to a league season in the history of the English game and is sometimes seen as the starting point of a renaissance in English football. Theban on English clubs playing in European football was lifted a year later and a new top division – thePremier League – was formed in 1992, which generated more revenue for clubs. The title decider also formed the dramatic climax in the romantic fictional adaptationFever Pitch (1997) ofNick Hornby’s million-selling autobiographical essayFever Pitch: A Fan's Life.

Background

[edit]
A memorial to the Liverpool supporters who died at Hillsborough. The incident happened a few weeks before the title decider.

The1988–89 season marked the 100th anniversary of theFootball League.[1] A season earlier, the body commemorated its founding by organising an exhibition game between a Football League-select XI, and a World XI (captained byDiego Maradona), followed by aFootball Festival in April 1988.[3] The celebrations culminated in October 1988, whenArsenal won acentenary tournament involving seven other First Division clubs.[3] Despite the efforts of the Football League, the events failed to capture the imagination of supporters and the media;The Times football correspondent Stuart Jones described the final tournament as: "the closing debacle of the embarrassing League centenary celebrations."[4]

Football in England had reached its nadir in 1985 as clubs were banned from European competition for five years following theHeysel Stadium disaster. Hooliganism was at its peak and, along with difficult economic times, had contributed to a drop in attendances which didn’t begin to recover until the 1986-87 season.[5][6] In the same year, theKenilworth Road riot – violent scuffles between fans ofMillwall andLuton Town – resulted in Prime MinisterMargaret Thatcher's government setting up a "war cabinet" to combatfootball hooliganism.[7] Incidents like these tarnished the sport's reputation, but commercial interest grew. In August 1988,ITV paid £44 million over four seasons to broadcast live First Division matches.[8] The arrangement came about asBritish Satellite Broadcasting withdrew its joint offer with theBBC, unhappy at how the clubs were run.[9] By November 1988 the government issued a broadcasting shakeup, which aided the growth of multichannel satellite television.[10][11] ITV's contract therefore acted as a precursor to rising broadcasting deals and growing pressures to keep the top clubs in line.[12][13]

For much of the 1988–89 season, Arsenal led the First Division table; their managerGeorge Graham had assembled a side mixed with youth and experience, captained by academy graduateTony Adams.[14] At one stage Arsenal were 11 points clear of defending championsLiverpool, but their lead diminished following a run of bad results.[14] Liverpool had been the dominant English side of the previous 15 years, having won nine league titles and a total of 21 major trophies since 1973. The 1988–89 season had also seen title challenges from surprise contenders includingCoventry City andNorwich City.

Liverpool, coached by player-managerKenny Dalglish, capitalised after an indifferent start to the campaign, and emerged as Arsenal's main challengers for the title.[14] Towards the end of the season Liverpool supporters were involved in asporting disaster at Hillsborough, where 95 of the club's supporters died as a result of overcrowding and loss of police control during a match againstNottingham Forest on 15 April - a 96th fan died in March 1993 after being in a coma for nearly four years, while a 97th fan who was severely brain damaged died 32 years later.[15] The disaster was the worst of its kind in English sporting history, and led to aninquiry into safety standards of stadiums.[15]

Due to the tragedy, Liverpool's fixture at home to Arsenal on 23 April was postponed; no suitable date was found until after theFA Cup Final, which was traditionally the last match of the English football season.[14] It was eventually rescheduled for 26 May – six days after Liverpool’s victory in the FA Cup final, on a Friday evening. By this stage, Liverpool were three points ahead of Arsenal, who needed to win by at least two clear goals to deprive Liverpool of the title and a then unique second double.[14] The league season had ended for the remaining First Division clubs a week before.[16]

Pre-match

[edit]

The 1988–89 title race was the closest in the history of the First Division.[17] In the run-up to the Anfield match, Arsenal lost toDerby County and drew withWimbledon; Liverpool won twice, 2–0 againstQueens Park Rangers and 5–1 againstWest Ham United allowing them to overtake Arsenal with one game to play and take a superior goal difference.[14] On the eve of the match, they were three points ahead, with the table looking as follows:

First Division table, 25 May 1989[18]
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
1Liverpool37221056526+3976
2Arsenal37211067136+3573

A victory for Arsenal would bring the two teams level on points: victory by a margin of three or more goals would win Arsenal the title on goal difference. Victory by exactly two goals would leave the teams tied on both points and goal difference, but Arsenal would win the title by virtue of having scored more goals. Any other result (i.e. a Liverpool victory, a draw, or an Arsenal win by only one goal) would give the title to Liverpool.

Liverpool had not lost by two or more goals at Anfield in three years, and Arsenal had not won there in fifteen.[19] Furthermore, Liverpool had never previously been defeated when playing forwardsJohn Aldridge andIan Rush together.[20] The home side were therefore the overwhelming favourites to win the title – theDaily Mirror's sports sections led with the headline "You Haven't Got A Prayer, Arsenal".[21] To defuse the tension, Graham gave his players two days off after their draw with Wimbledon.[14] The mood in training was relaxed and the squad travelled to Liverpool on the day of the match, which surprised several players.[22] During the coach trip, Graham showed his players a video of Arsenal's successful1970–71 side to inspire and motivate his players.[23]

In the United Kingdom, the game was shown live on ITV'sThe Match, which aired a live Division One game most weeks of the season from1988 to1992.[24][25]Elton Welsby presented coverage and his guest was theEngland managerBobby Robson.[26] The match commentator wasBrian Moore, alongside formerTottenham Hotspur managerDavid Pleat.[26] On radio, the action was described byPeter Jones andAlan Green onBBC Radio 2.[27]

Match

[edit]

Summary

[edit]

The match took place on a warm spring evening with the kick-off delayed because many Arsenal supporters were caught in traffic congestion.[1] The Arsenal players presented flowers to fans in different parts of the ground in memory of those who had died in theHillsborough disaster.[1] Liverpool lined up in a traditional4–4–2 formation: a four-mandefence, fourmidfielders and twocentre forwards. Arsenal adopted a 5–4–1 formation withDavid O'Leary in the unusual role ofsweeper.[28] Although Arsenal did not usually play this way, this enabled the full-backsLee Dixon andNigel Winterburn more scope to push forward and limit Liverpool's wing play.[21]

Michael Thomas (here wearing a Liverpool shirt) scored Arsenal's second goal

Arsenal kicked off the match and did their best to restrict Liverpool's passing game in the opening 45 minutes through tackling and quick counter-attacking with the long ball; with the game's flow interrupted and the two teams cancelling each other out, neither side built any momentum in the first half with few clear-cut chances.[1] The first notable action came for Arsenal when a cross fromMichael Thomas on the right which was met bySteve Bould, butSteve Nicol cleared it over the bar for a corner.[28] Liverpool responded with a shot from outside the box from Rush after being teed up by Aldridge. However, soon after Rush was forced to go off with agroin strain and had to be replaced byPeter Beardsley in the 32nd minute.[29] The score was 0–0 at half time.

Eight minutes after the restart, Whelan was penalised for an offence on the edge of the Liverpool area. Winterburn took the resultingindirect free kick, from whichAlan Smith scored with a header.[28] Liverpool's players protested, claiming Smith had not made contact (and thus the goal should have been disallowed, coming directly from an indirect free kick) or that there had been a push by O'Leary.[29] After consulting hislinesman, the refereeDavid Hutchinson awarded the goal.[28] After the match, he recalled none of the Liverpool players knew why they had protested,[30] and TV replays confirm that Smith made contact.[28]

With the score 1–0, Arsenal pushed forward but Liverpool still held the advantage. In the 74th minute an unmarked Thomas latched onto a pass from Richardson near thepenalty spot, but shot weakly and it was smothered by Liverpool keeperBruce Grobbelaar.[28] Arsenal manager George Graham brought onMartin Hayes andPerry Groves, and switched to a more attack-oriented 4–4–2 formation. This gave Liverpool space to counter-attack throughJohn Barnes and Aldridge.[1] Aldridge andRay Houghton both had late chances to equalise but did not capitalise on them;[29] Houghton sliced a shot from the edge of the box wide, while Aldridge was caughtoffside meeting a Barnes throughball and scored a disallowed goal after the whistle had gone. As full-time approached the game was heading for a 1–0 scoreline, and thus Liverpool would win the title.

Arsenal come streaming forward now in surely what will be their last attack. A good ball by Dixon, finding Smith, for Thomas charging through the midfield! Thomas, it's up for grabs now! Thomas! Right at the end! An unbelievable climax to the league season. Well into injury-time, the Liverpool players are down absolutely abject. Aldridge is down, Barnes is down, Dalglish just stands there. Nicol's on his knees, McMahon's on his knees. Suddenly, it was Michael Thomas bursting through, the bounce fell his way. He flicks it wide of Grobbelaar, and we have the dramatic finish, maybe in the history of the Football League. The top two challenging on the night, and the title possibly decided in the last minute of the whole season.

Brian Moore's commentary of Arsenal's winning goal.

As the time went past 90 minutes, an injury toKevin Richardson held up play.[31] TV cameras showed Liverpool midfielderSteve McMahon telling his teammates there was one minute remaining. The injury itself meant there would, in fact, be two minutes and 39 seconds ofinjury time played. Liverpool adoptedtime-wasting tactics, including an unnecessarybackpass from McMahon to Grobbelaar.[32] In the second minute of injury time, Arsenal launched their final attack. A Barnes run was intercepted by Richardson, and he passed the ball back to his goalkeeperJohn Lukic.[1] Lukic bowled the ball out to Dixon, his long ball to Alan Smith was flicked on, finding Michael Thomas charging through the midfield. Thomas evaded a challenge by Nicol and raced into the penalty area, slipping the ball past the advancing Grobbelaar to score Arsenal's second.[28]

Thomas had scored with just one minute and 18 seconds to go including whatever time the referee may have added due to the goal celebration. An actual 38 seconds were played after the ball was kicked off. Liverpool tried one last attack but Thomas managed to intercept and pass the ball back to Lukic. The final whistle confirmed Arsenal as champions, with the two sides inseparable on points and goal difference meaning the visitors won the title by virtue of having scored eight more goals than Liverpool throughout the season.[33] Arsenal received theChampionship trophy after the match.[1]

Details

[edit]
Liverpool0–2Arsenal
Mirror Report
Attendance: 41,718
Liverpool
Arsenal
GK1ZimbabweBruce Grobbelaar
CB2EnglandGary Ablett
RB4ScotlandSteve Nicol
CB6ScotlandAlan Hansen
LB3Republic of IrelandSteve Staunton
RM7Republic of IrelandRay Houghton
CM5Republic of IrelandRonnie Whelan (c)
CM11EnglandSteve McMahon
LM10EnglandJohn Barnes
CF8Republic of IrelandJohn Aldridge
CF9WalesIan Rushdownward-facing red arrow 32'
Substitutes:
DF14EnglandBarry Venison
FW12EnglandPeter Beardsleyupward-facing green arrow 32'
Manager:
ScotlandKenny Dalglish
GK1EnglandJohn Lukic
SW5Republic of IrelandDavid O'Leary
RB2EnglandLee Dixon
CB6EnglandTony Adams (c)
CB10EnglandSteve Boulddownward-facing red arrow 76'
LB3EnglandNigel Winterburn
MF4EnglandMichael Thomas
MF7EnglandDavid RocastleYellow card
MF8EnglandKevin RichardsonYellow card
MF11EnglandPaul Mersondownward-facing red arrow 73'
CF9EnglandAlan Smith
Substitutes:
MF12EnglandPerry Grovesupward-facing green arrow 76'
MF14EnglandMartin Hayesupward-facing green arrow 73'
Manager:
ScotlandGeorge Graham


Assistant referees:
Geoff Banwell (England)
P. Cullen (England)
W. Townson (Reserve)


Match rules

  • 90 minutes, no extra time or penalties.
  • Three points awarded to winner, none to loser.
  • One point awarded to each in the event of a draw.
  • Two named substitutes.
  • Maximum of two substitutions.

Source:[34]

Post-match

[edit]

Shortly after receiving the trophy, Adams was called over by pitchside reporterJim Rosenthal for a conversation on the field, explaining his absence from the celebratory team photograph for the press.[35] The Arsenal captain spoke of how his teammates were "really fired up" before the game and was delighted with the effort they put in during the course of the match.[36] Graham was proud of his team's performance, and credited Adams, who "suffered an awful lot of stick which has given football very little dignity."[37] When asked about the result he said, "Nobody outside Highbury expected us to do it, but when you lose belief you might as well get out of football."[37] Dalglish paid tribute to his players and refused to blame the fixture rearrangements for losing out to Arsenal, lamenting "It just wasn't to be."[37]

Stuart Jones inThe Times wrote how Thomas's late strike was "...worthy of the occasion, defied belief, logic and all expectation. So did Arsenal's performance as a whole."[38]The Guardian's David Lacey opined that Arsenal were deserved winners, calling the match "a marvellous night for English football" after the events at Hillsborough had overshadowed the sport.[29]

In popular culture

[edit]

The events of the night formed the pivotal point of the 1997 filmFever Pitch, an adaptation ofNick Hornby's bestsellingbook of the same name.[39] Hornby disagrees his book was responsible for gentrifying the sport, arguing "theowner of an international media empire" had more of a profound impact.[40]

Moore's goal call for Arsenal's winner ("Thomas, it's up for grabs now!") has become synonymous with English football and is one of the sport's most memorable lines.[41][42] In 2002, it was selected as one of the top ten commentaries of all time byThe Observer,[43] and the phraseIt's Up For Grabs Now is used as the title of the Arsenal commemorativeDVD of the match.[44]It's Up For Grabs Now is also the title of a podcast, hosted by comedian and Arsenal supporterAlan Davies.[45]

Legacy

[edit]

Last game of the season. You need two goals away from home. And Arsenal did it. I don't care what people are saying – that's the best ending ever of any league I've ever seen.

Arsenal record goalscorerThierry Henry on the 1989 final fixture[46]
Manchester City's league win of2011–12 bore comparison to Arsenal's in that the title was decided in the final seconds of the season.[47]

The match has been cited as a pivotal turning point in English football. AuthorJason Cowley noted how instead of rioting, Liverpool fans stayed on after the game and applauded Arsenal "as if they understood that we were at the start of something new; that there would be no returning to the ways of old".[1] Cowley noted that "the speed and audacity of a movement that took the Kop's breath away and left Kenny Dalglish standing open-mouthed in disbelief by the Liverpool bench epitomised the healthier qualities of English football as the game approaches the 90s" and "describes the match as "the night football was reborn" and that the event "repaired the reputation of football".[1]

Dominic Fifield suggested Arsenal's win "had shattered the myth that Liverpool were invincible",[48] while Si Hughes inThe Daily Telegraph wrote it "...set in motion the decline of one of football's grandest institutions."[49] Although Liverpool regained the championship a year later, the club's dominance waned.[48] In February 1991, Dalglish resigned as Liverpool manager after an FA Cup replay against Merseyside rivalsEverton, citing stress as the principal cause.[50] His successor,Graeme Souness, struggled to sustain the club's success with a conservative hierarchy and ageing squad, despite investing in youth players.[51] Liverpool throughout the 1990s and 2000s declined as a league force and it would be 30 years until Liverpool would be crowned top-flight champions since Dalglish's, winning it in 2020.[52][53]

Arsenal were unable to take part in theEuropean Cup as English clubs were still banned from European competition.[54] Graham's side went on to further successes in the early 1990s, winning the League title again in1990–91, followed by a domestic cup double and finally theEuropean Cup Winners' Cup.[55] Despite his part in denying them the title, Thomas went on to play for Liverpool in a spell between 1991 and 1998, scoring the opener in their 2–0 victory overSunderland in the1992 FA Cup Final.[56]

The title decider at Anfield is not only seen as the starting point of a renaissance in English football, but also the moment where businessmen started to see the untapped commercial potential of live football on television.[1][57] In the early 1990s discussions were in progressbetween broadcasters and football chairmen overforming a breakaway league.[13] With the backing ofThe Football Association, all of the First Division clubs resigned from the Football League to form thePremier League. The new division was created to ensure clubs could capitalise on television money and divide their earnings amongst themselves instead of the lower leagues.[13] After a lengthy bidding process, satellite companyBSkyB were awarded exclusive rights for £191m, over five years to show 60 matches per season.[13] This represented an increase of 1,800% on the 1983 deal.[58] In addition to broadcasting, clubs increased their revenue through higher ticket prices; for some like Arsenal, this was to facilitate the phasing out of standing terraces to ensure stadia complied with theTaylor Report.[59][60]

In 1999, the match was ranked at number 60 inChannel 4's100 Greatest TV Moments.[61] In 2002, the match was ranked at number 15 inChannel 4's100 Greatest Sporting Moments,[62] and in 2007 Thomas's goal was voted the second greatest moment in Arsenal's history second only to the 2003–04 "Invincibles" completing anentire Premier League season unbeaten.[63] To commemorate the 20th anniversary of the win, Arsenal's away kit for the2008–09 season was styled on the same design as that of the1988–89 season.[64]

Manchester City's comeback to beatQueens Park Rangers3–2 on 13 May 2012 at theEtihad Stadium on the final day of the2011–12 Premier League season drew comparisons to the 1989 finish. On this occasion, needing to win after Manchester United beat Sunderland to win the league for the first time since1967–68, City scored twice in stoppage time to overcome a 2–1 deficit, withSergio Agüero scoring the winner just 100 seconds from the final whistle.[47]

References

[edit]

General

  • King, Anthony (2002).The end of the terraces: the transformation of English football in the 1990s. London: Continuum International Publishing Group.ISBN 0-7185-0259-0.
  • Leighton, James (2016).Rocky: The Tears and Triumphs of David Rocastle. London: Simon and Schuster.ISBN 978-1-4711-5333-4.
  • Moore, Brian,Pleat, David (commentators),Welsby, Elton (presenter),Robson, Bobby (studio guest) (26 May 1989).The Match [Liverpool v Arsenal] (Television production). ITV Sport.
  • Smart, Barry (2005).The Sport Star: Modern Sport and the Cultural Economy of Sporting Celebrity. London: SAGE.ISBN 1-4711-5333-9.
  • Soar, Phil; Tyler, Martin (2005).The Official Illustrated History of Arsenal. London: Hamlyn.ISBN 0-600-61344-5.

Specific

  1. ^abcdefghijkCowley, Jason (29 March 2009)."The night football was reborn".The Observer. London. Retrieved25 May 2009.
  2. ^"Beatleville to the Beeb via poachings and prime-time".The Guardian. London. 9 August 2004. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  3. ^abPye, Steven (4 January 2017)."How Arsenal won the Centenary Trophy, the least celebrated title in their history".The Guardian. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  4. ^Jones, Stuart (1 September 1988). "Mistakes rebound in Arsenal's favour".The Times. p. 12.
  5. ^Mullen, Tom (29 May 2015)."Heysel disaster: English football's forgotten tragedy?". BBC News. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  6. ^Edwards, Richard (14 January 2015)."The worst five months in English football: Thatcher, fighting and fatalities in 1985".FourFourTwo. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  7. ^Hearn, Tim (23 January 2014)."History of Football violence – Is it still a problem?".HuffPost. Retrieved19 September 2017.
  8. ^Henderson, Jon (6 May 2007)."TV's staggering sum is now small change".The Observer. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  9. ^King (2002), p. 63.
  10. ^"New TV channels given the green light".The Times. 8 November 1988. p. 12.
  11. ^Brown, Maggie (12 April 2013)."Margaret Thatcher was the architect of controversial changes to TV and press".The Guardian. Retrieved20 September 2017.
  12. ^Titford, Roger (May 2011)."Boxing clever".When Saturday Comes. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  13. ^abcdMacInnes, Paul (23 July 2017)."Deceit, determination and Murdoch's millions: how Premier League was born".The Observer. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  14. ^abcdefgMassarella, Louis (3 March 2017)."Football's greatest-ever title finish? Arsenal's 1989 triumph over Liverpool, told by the players".FourFourTwo. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  15. ^ab"How the Hillsborough disaster happened". BBC News. 14 April 2009. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  16. ^"English Division One (old) table". Statto Organisation.Archived from the original on 3 April 2016. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  17. ^Collings, Tim (24 December 2006)."Replay 1988–89: An epic race from Christmas to the last kick".The Independent on Sunday. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  18. ^"English Division One (old) table, 23-05-1989". Statto Organisation.Archived from the original on 1 September 2014. Retrieved19 September 2017.
  19. ^Lister, Graham; Parry, Rich (15 April 2011)."'We won the league at Liverpool and got a standing ovation from Anfield' – remembering Arsenal's last-gasp title winners of 1989". Goal. Retrieved22 September 2020.
  20. ^"Liverpool 0–2 Arsenal".Daily Mirror. Archived fromthe original on 14 June 2012. Retrieved5 August 2014.
  21. ^ab"Thomas strike seals title at Anfield". Arsenal F.C. Archived fromthe original on 23 April 2011. Retrieved25 May 2009.
  22. ^Leighton (2016), p. 222.
  23. ^Leighton (2016), pp. 221–2.
  24. ^"The Match, episodes". British Film Institute. Archived fromthe original on 24 June 2009. Retrieved16 August 2012.
  25. ^King (2002), p. 62.
  26. ^ab"Liverpool V Arsenal (1989)". British Film Institute. Archived fromthe original on 25 September 2017. Retrieved24 September 2017. See alsoYouTube footage.
  27. ^"Radio coverage of Michael Thomas's goal at Anfield".Archived from the original on 20 December 2021. Retrieved24 September 2017 – via YouTube.
  28. ^abcdefgSoar & Tyler (2005), p. 145.
  29. ^abcdLacey, David (27 May 1989)."Last-gasp Thomas ends the doubting".The Guardian. Retrieved15 August 2012.
  30. ^Harris, Chris (26 May 2009)."Anfield '89: The view from the Referee". Arsenal F.C. Archived fromthe original on 16 April 2014. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  31. ^"Kevin Richardson". Arsenal F.C. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  32. ^Hurrey, Adam (28 January 2014)."In memory of backpasses (1863–1993)".The Guardian. Retrieved28 January 2014.
  33. ^Harris, Harry (27 May 1989)."The Greatest Story Ever Told"(PDF).Daily Mirror. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 17 June 2012. Retrieved5 August 2014.
  34. ^"Matchdetails from Liverpool – Arsenal played on Friday 26 May 1989". LFC History. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  35. ^N, Richard (26 May 2014)."Thomas 1989, it's up for grabs!" (in French). Les Cahiers du Football. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  36. ^Moore, Pleat (1989). Event occurs towards the end of the match; live coverage between 21:55pm and 21:58pm.
  37. ^abc"Graham marvels at fairy tale end".The Times. 27 May 1989. p. 45.
  38. ^Jones, Stuart (27 May 1989). "Thomas has final word".The Times. p. 45.
  39. ^Mars-Jones, Adam (3 April 1997)."Kicked into touch: Fever Pitch".The Independent. London. Retrieved25 May 2009.
  40. ^Hornby, Nick (17 August 2012)."Nick Hornby: 'People say my book sold football to the middle classes. I disagree'".The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  41. ^Lynch, Michael (11 December 2013)."The soundtrack to our footballing lives ... and death".The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  42. ^Borg, Chris (2 September 2001)."Commentator Moore dies, aged 69". ESPN FC. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  43. ^Honeyball, Lee (6 October 2002)."The 10 greatest bits of commentary ever".The Observer. London. Retrieved25 May 2009.
  44. ^"Arsenal FC: It's Up For Grabs Now! – 1988–89". British Video Association. Archived fromthe original on 24 February 2012. Retrieved25 May 2009.
  45. ^"It's Up For Grabs Now". Playback Media. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  46. ^89: Arsenal's Triumph Against the Odds (Documentary film). Universal Pictures. 20 November 2017. Retrieved25 December 2024 – viaYouTube.
  47. ^ab"Manchester City's Premier League clincher and five other massive injury-time winners".Radio Times. 14 May 2012. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  48. ^abFifield, Dominic (30 November 2002)."History puts Ferguson on red alert".The Guardian. London. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  49. ^Hughes, Si (1 November 2013)."Flashback: Liverpool 0 Arsenal 2 – Michael Thomas stoppage-time strike wins 1989 league title for Gunners".The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  50. ^Taylor, Louise (14 January 2011)."The game that forced Kenny Dalglish to resign as Liverpool manager".The Guardian. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  51. ^Tandy, John (January 2000)."Souness destroyed Liverpool".When Saturday Comes. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  52. ^Murray, Scott (15 October 2015)."A brief guide to … Liverpool's failure to recapture the glory days".The Guardian. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  53. ^"Premier League:Chelsea v Man City". BBC. 25 June 2020.
  54. ^Delaney, Miguel (21 June 2013)."What if ... England hadn't been banned from Europe". ESPN FC. Retrieved31 July 2016.
  55. ^"Graham's glory years". Arsenal F.C. Retrieved24 September 2017.
  56. ^"Michael Thomas – So tell us about that goal..." LFC History. Retrieved22 September 2017.
  57. ^White, Jim (6 April 2009)."The Last Game by Jason Cowley: Review".The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved11 May 2010.
  58. ^Smart (2005), p. 153.
  59. ^Rumsby, Ben (25 April 2016)."The legacy of Hillsborough – how football has changed".The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  60. ^Kelly, Andy (2 October 2015)."History of Arsenal ticket prices since 1980".The Arsenal History. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  61. ^"The 100 Greatest TV Moments (1999)". British Film Institute. Archived fromthe original on 25 September 2017. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  62. ^"100 Greatest Sporting Moments – Results".Channel 4. Archived fromthe original on 28 June 2002. Retrieved25 May 2009.
  63. ^"Gunners Greatest 50 Moments". Arsenal F.C. Retrieved25 May 2009.
  64. ^"Retro Arsenal away kit to honour Anfield 1989".The Daily Telegraph. London. 14 July 2008. Retrieved5 August 2014.

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