| Event | 1988–89 Football League Second Division | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| First leg | |||||||
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| Date | 31 May 1989 (1989-05-31) | ||||||
| Venue | Ewood Park,Blackburn | ||||||
| Referee | Joe Worrall | ||||||
| Attendance | 16,421 | ||||||
| Second leg | |||||||
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| After extra time | |||||||
| Date | 3 June 1989 (1989-06-03) | ||||||
| Venue | Selhurst Park,London | ||||||
| Referee | George Courtney | ||||||
| Attendance | 26,358 | ||||||
←1988 1990 → | |||||||
The1989 Football League Second Division play-off final was anassociation football match played overtwo legs betweenBlackburn Rovers andCrystal Palace on 31 May 1989 and 3 June 1989. The final was to determine the third and final team to gainpromotion from theFootball League Second Division, the second tier ofEnglish football, to theFirst Division. The top two teams of the1988–89 Football League Second Division season gained automatic promotion to the First Division, those placed from third to sixth in the league table competed play-off semi-finals. The winners of the semi-finals played against each other for the final place in the First Division for the1989–90 season. Crystal Palace ended the season in third position, two places ahead of Blackburn Rovers, whileSwindon Town andWatford were the other semi-finalists.
The first leg of the final took place at Blackburn'sEwood Park on 31 May 1989. Midway through the first half,Simon Garner flicked on a cross fromScott Sellars andHoward Gayle scored to make it 1–0 to Blackburn. In the 27th minute, Gayle doubled his side's lead with ahalf-volley from just outside the Palacepenalty area. In the 70th minute,Jeff Hopkins brought Gayle down in the box and apenalty was awarded. Gayle took the spot kick himself but struck his shot wide of the goal. With four minutes of regular time remaining, Palace made it 2–1 throughEddie McGoldrick. Garner restored the two-goal lead in injury time, ending the match 3–1.Selhurst Park hosted the second leg of the final on 3 June 1989. Blackburn started the game strongly but Palace took the lead throughIan Wright who scored after 17 minutes from anAlan Pardewcross. A minute after half time,Mark Atkins tripped McGoldrick in the box to concede a penalty from whichDavid Madden scored. Palace were 2–0 ahead at the end of regular time, and with theaggregate score being 3–3, the game went into extra time. With three minutes of the match remaining, Wright scored his 33rd goal of the season heading the ball from a McGoldrick cross pastTerry Gennoe. The match ended 3–0 and Palace were promoted to the First Division with a 4–3 aggregate victory.
Crystal Palace ended the following season in fifteenth position in the First Division. Blackburn's next season saw them finish in fifth position in the Second Division and qualify for theplay-offs where they lost to Swindon Town.
| Pos | Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Chelsea | 46 | 29 | 12 | 5 | 96 | 50 | +46 | 99 |
| 2 | Manchester City | 46 | 23 | 13 | 10 | 77 | 53 | +24 | 82 |
| 3 | Crystal Palace | 46 | 23 | 12 | 11 | 71 | 49 | +22 | 81 |
| 4 | Watford | 46 | 22 | 12 | 12 | 74 | 48 | +26 | 78 |
| 5 | Blackburn Rovers | 46 | 22 | 11 | 13 | 74 | 59 | +15 | 77 |
| 6 | Swindon Town | 46 | 20 | 16 | 10 | 68 | 53 | +15 | 76 |
Crystal Palace finished the regular1988–89 season in third place in theFootball League First Division – the second tier of theEnglish football league system – two places and four points ahead ofBlackburn Rovers. Both missed out on the two automatic places forpromotion to theFirst Division and instead took part inthe play-offs, along withWatford andSwindon Town, to determine the third promoted team. Crystal Palace finished one point behindManchester City (who were promoted in second place) and eighteen behind league winnersChelsea.[1]
Blackburn Rovers faced Watford in their play-off semi-final, with the firstleg taking place atEwood Park in Blackburn on 21 May 1989. The game was described by Stephen Bierley inThe Guardian as "hot, hectic and mostly horrible."[2] The home side made the better start but the match ended goalless with misses fromHoward Gayle andScott Sellars, whileNeil Redfearn's shot for Watford in the second half was saved byTerry Gennoe.[2] The return leg was played three days later atVicarage Road in Watford.Simon Garner put Blackburn ahead after beatingPaul Miller andKenny Jackett and striking the ball pastTony Coton in the Watford goal. Redfearn equalised on 29 minutes with a long-range strike which took a deflection offJohn Millar to beat Gennoe.[3] Ending 1–1, the game moved intoextra time but with no further change to the score, Blackburn progressed to the play-off final on theaway goals rule.[4]
In the other play-off semi-final, Crystal Palace's opponents were Swindon Town, and the first leg was played at theCounty Ground, Swindon, on 21 May 1989. The match was dominated by Swindon but the first half ended goalless. In the 53rd minute, Crystal Palace'scaptainJeff Hopkins scored anown goal after a dangerouscross fromDave Hockaday. Swindon managerLou Macari suggested that his side were favourites going into the second leg but added "we shan't be defending".[5] The return leg took place atSelhurst Park three days later. The largest crowd of the season meant congestion caused thekick off to be delayed by fifteen minutes. On eight minutes,Mark Bright scored his 25th goal of the season afterPaul Digby had beaten away a shot fromDavid Madden, to put Palace ahead. Seven minutes before half-time,Ian Wright doubled the lead after scoring from a Brightheader. The match ended 2–0 and Crystal Palace qualified for the final with a 2–1aggregate win.[6]
Neither side had featured in a play-off final although Blackburn Rovers had lost in the semi-finals during the1988 Football League play-offs.[7] Crystal Palace had played in the second tier of English football since being relegated in the1980–81 season, while Blackburn had been in the Second Division since they were promoted in the1979–80 season.[8][9] During the regular 1988–89 season, Blackburn Rovers had won their home game between the two sides 5–4 in October, while the clubs played out a 2–2 draw at Vicarage Road the following February.[10] Garner was Blackburn's leading scorer during the regular season with 23 goals across all competitions (20 in the league, 1 in theFA Cup and 2 in theLeague Cup), followed by Gayle who scored 20 in total (19 in the league, 1 in the FA Cup and 1 in the League Cup).[11] The leading marksman for Crystal Palace was Wright who had scored 30 goals during the regular season comprising 24 in the league, 1 in the FA Cup, and 5 in the League Cup.[12]
In a training session leading up to the first leg of the final, the Blackburn managerDon Mackay tore ankle ligaments, but suggested it had helped to relax his players: "There was a lot of tension in the air until the players saw me hobbling about."[13] He had a fully fit squad to choose from. Crystal Palace hadGavin Nebbeling available for selection after suspension.[13]
The first leg of the final took place at Blackburn's Ewood Park on 31 May 1989 in front of a crowd of 16,421 and wasrefereed byJoe Worrall.[14][15] In the 13th minute, a chance fell to Garner as hevolleyed a cross fromChris Sulley, butPerry Suckling in the Crystal Palace goal saved the shot. Eight minutes later, Garner flicked on a cross from Sellars and Gayle scored to make it 1–0 to Blackburn. In the 27th minute, Gayle doubled his side's lead with a half-volley from just outside the Palace penalty area afterDavid Burke had failed to clear the ball.[15][16]
Blackburn continued to dominate the match in the second half, with Hopkins almost scoring an own goal and Millar striking a shot wide of the Palace goal. On 57 minutes, Palace made the onlysubstitution of the game, withGlenn Pennyfather coming on for Madden. In the 70th minute, Hopkins brought Gayle down in the box and apenalty was awarded. Gayle took the spot kick himself but missed out on hishat-trick after he struck his shot wide of the goal. With four minutes of regular time remaining, Palace made it 2–1.[15]John Pemberton's free kick was headed on by Wright toEddie McGoldrick who scored his first goal of the season from close range.[16] Garner restored the two-goal lead in injury time with a tap-in from a Gayle cross, ending the match 3–1.[15][16] After the match, Garner warned that, despite the lead, that his team would "be treating the second leg as if the score was 0–0."[17]
![]() ![]() ![]() Blackburn Rovers | ![]() ![]() Crystal Palace |

Crystal Palace had been hoping to temporarily increase the capacity of Selhurst Park by 7,000 to 38,000.[13]Geoff Thomas, the Palace captain, was available for selection after an extended period of absence as a result of a stomach operation. Blackburn's Hendry was carrying a leg injury.[18]
The second leg of the final took place at Selhurst Park on 3 June 1989 and was refereed byGeorge Courtney in front of a crowd of 26,358.[11][19] Blackburn started the game strongly but Palace's defence kept the score goalless.[20] Palace took the lead through Wright who scored from after 17 minutes from anAlan Pardew cross.[19] Wright then saw his volley from the edge of the box tipped round the post by Gennoe, before a header from McGoldrick went wide of the Blackburn goal.[20] A minute after half time, Atkins tripped McGoldrick in the box to concede a penalty from which Madden scored, sending the Blackburn goalkeeper Gennoe the wrong way.[19] Six minutes later, a poor backpass fromGary O'Reilly was claimed from Garner's feet by the Palace goalkeeper Suckling.[20] On 56 minutes,Sean Curry came on to replace Miller in the first substitution of the game. With Palace 2–0 ahead at the end of regular time, the aggregate score was 3–3 and the game went into extra time. On 105 minutes, Blackburn made their second change of the game with Gayle being replaced byAlan Ainscow. With three minutes of the match remaining, Wright scored his 33rd goal of the season heading the ball from a McGoldrick cross past Gennoe. The match ended 3–0 and Palace were promoted to the First Division with a 4–3 aggregate victory.[19][21]
![]() ![]() Crystal Palace | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Blackburn Rovers |
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Coppell stated that he had a fulfilled his five-year ambition at Crystal Palace: "It is five years tomorrow since I joined the club as manager. I said then that promotion was a five-year job."[19] Wright, who had signed fromnon-League clubGreenwich Borough five years earlier, had been confident of promotion: "I had faith in the club. I knew we could do it. We are ready for the First Division."[22]
Crystal Palace ended thefollowing season in fifteenth position in the First Division, having conceded more goals than any other team.[23] Blackburn's next season saw them finish in fifth position in the Second Division and qualify for the1990 Football League play-offs where they lost 4–2 on aggregate to Swindon Town.[24][25]