The '1987-88' season was the 108th season of competitive
football in
England.
Overview
First Division
Liverpool won the league title with a comfortable nine-point margin and just two defeats all season. Their key players were two new signings - winger
John Barnes and striker
John Aldridge - who helped defy any doubts that people might have had as to whether Liverpool could challenge for honours after Ian Rush's departure. Second in the league were
Manchester United, rejuvenated under
Alex Ferguson - who had bought some impressive new players including
Brian McClair and
Steve Bruce.
The first
relegation places went to
Watford and
Oxford United, who both lost far too many games and picked up far too few points to have any realistic hope of avoiding relegation. Next to go down were
Portsmouth, whose
First Division comeback lasted just one season.
Chelsea then became the first top division club in 90 years to lose their status after playoffs. They lost to
Second Division Middlesbrough in the playoff final and surrendered their First Division place to the Teessiders.
Second Division
John Docherty's impressive
Millwall side lifted the
Second Division championship trophy and gained promotion to the First Division for the first time in their history. Runners-up were
Aston Villa, managed by
Graham Taylor and boasting a squad of strong players like
David Platt and
Gordon Cowans.
Middlesbrough won promotion for the second season running after negotiating the
relegation/
promotion playoffs at the expense of
Chelsea.
Huddersfield Town, who had suffered a 10-1 defeat at the hands of
Manchester City in November, were the
Second Division's biggest flops during
1987-
88 as they went down in bottom place. The Second/
Third Division relegation/promotion playoffs once again saw a Second Division club suffer relegation, this time it was
Sheffield United.
Third Division
Sunderland's first season in the
Third Division ended in glory as they lifted the championship and went back up to the
Second Division. They were joined by runners-up
Brighton & Hove Albion and playoff winners
Walsall.
The Third Division relegation places were occupied by
Rotherham United,
Grimsby Town,
York City and
Doncaster Rovers.
Fourth Division
Wolves ended their two-year tenure in the
Fourth Division by finishing top of the table and winning promotion to the
Third Division, one season after being rescued by new owner
Jack Hayward and new manager
Graham Turner. They completed an outstanding season by winning the
Sherpa Van Trophy final at a packed Wembley against
Burnley. Earlier the campaign had begun on a sour note, when
Football League newcomers
Scarborough hosted Wolves on the opening day in a match that was marred by crowd trouble.
Bolton Wanderers, another fallen giant, also ensured their Fourth Division tenure was short lived by winning automatic promotion.
Swansea City were promoted via the playoffs just two years after almost going out of existence, while their South
Wales neighbours
Cardiff City were also promoted.
Financially troubled
Newport County were relegated for the second successive season and this time they lost their
Football League status after 68 consecutive seasons.
Lincoln City won the Conference title to take their place. Less than a year later Newport were to go out of business before reforming.
Scunthorpe United left the
Old Showground and moved into
Glanford Park, thus becoming the first English club in more than 30 years to move to a new stadium.
FA Cup
Wimbledon caused one of the biggest footballing upsets of the 20th century by defeating champions
Liverpool 1-0 in the
FA Cup final. The winners had only been league members for 11 years and
First Division members for two years, while the losers had just wrapped up their 17th league championship.
Other Trophies
Ray Harford's
Luton Town achieved a shock 3-2 win over
Arsenal in the
League Cup final to win the first major trophy of their history. Harford had only been promoted to the manager's seat from assistant manager a year earlier as successor to
John Moore.
Luton also appeared Wembley in the final of the
Simod Cup, but were surprisingly beaten 4-1 by
Reading.
In April 1988,
Nottingham Forest won the
Football League Centenary Tournament, a competition played over two days between 16 clubs at Wembley. They beat
Sheffield Wednesday on penalties in the final after a goalless draw in the 60-minute match.
Star players
The
PFA voted Liverpool's high scoring winger
John Barnes Player of the Year and
Newcastle United's exciting young midfielder
Paul Gascoigne Young Player of the Year. Other players to hit the headlines during 1987-88 were
Manchester United striker
Brian McClair, Liverpool striker
John Aldridge and
West Ham striker
Tony Cottee.
Star managers
★
Liverpool manager
Kenny Dalglish added the league title to his managerial CV to bring his total of championships to two in three seasons and Liverpool's all-time total to 17.
★
Alex Ferguson's efforts in rebuilding Manchester United saw them finished second in the league just 18 months after they had looked in danger of relegation.
★
Bobby Gould guided Wimbledon to a shock victory over Liverpool in the F.A Cup final.
★
Ray Harford earned Luton Town the first major trophy of their history by guiding them to victory over Arsenal in the League Cup final.
★
Graham Taylor's first season at
Aston Villa ended in promotion to the
First Division at the expense of his old club
Watford.
★
John Docherty brought First Division football to
Millwall for the first time in their history.
★
Bruce Rioch took
Middlesbrough to the First Division just two years after financial problems almost put the club out of business.
★
Dennis Smith began Sunderland's revival by guiding them to the Third Division title.
★
Graham Turner guided Wolverhampton Wanderers to Fourth Division title glory which made them the first club to win all four divisions of the Football League.
★
Phil Neal ensured that Bolton Wanderers bounced back quickly from their recent sharp decline by taking them to runners-up spot in the Fourth Division.
National team
England were eliminated from
Euro 88 after losing all three group games in
West Germany. The
Netherlands went on to win the tournament. In spite of continued calls from the tabloids for a new manager to be installed, the FA kept faith in
Bobby Robson once more.
Transfers
Liverpool paid an English club record fee of £1.9million for
Newcastle United's 26-year-old striker
Peter Beardsley. They also forked out £900,000 for
Watford winger
John Barnes.
Diary of the season
3 August 1987 -
Today cancel their sponsorship of
the Football League after just one year, and less than 2 weeks before the new season is due to begin.
6 August 1987 -
Peter Beardsley becomes the most expensive player to move between
British clubs when he joins
Liverpool in a 1.9million deal from
Newcastle United.
8 August 1987 - The
Football League begins its centenary celebrations by hosting a match against a Rest of the World XI at Wembley.
Diego Maradona and
Gary Lineker (then at Barcelona) are in the beaten Rest of the World side by a Football League XI.
12 August 1987 -
Barclays Bank become the Football League's new sponsors in a three-year deal worth in the region of 5million.
31 October 1987 -
Everton chairman
Phillip Carter disowns his club's supporters who were making racist chants at the Liverpool winger
John Barnes, shouting: "Stay away you scum".
23 October 1987 -
David Pleat resigns after 15 months as manager of
Tottenham Hotspur, following allegations that he was involved in kerb crawling, and is replaced by
Terry Venables.
9 December 1987 -
Manchester United pay 800,000 for
Norwich City central defender
Steve Bruce.
11 January 1988 -
Dave Bassett is sacked after just six months in charge of
Watford, who are currently bottom of the
First Division a season after they finished ninth.
12 March 1988 -
Maurice Evans resigns as manager of Oxford United, another struggling First Division side. Evans, 51, had managed the South Midlanders to
Football League Cup glory two seasons ago but had failed to establish them as proven winners in the league.
20 March 1988 - Liverpool's record 29-match unbeaten start to the league season is ended when they lose to neighbours
Everton.
16-17 April 1988 - The
Football League programme is put on hold for a week as the
Football League Centenary Tournament is staged at
Wembley Stadium between 16 clubs on the 100th anniversary of the league's foundation.
Nottingham Forest are the winners of the two-day event.
14 May 1988 -
Wimbledon pull off one the greatest footballing upsets of all time by achieving a 1-0 win over Liverpool in the FA Cup final. Wimbledon have been First Division members for just 2 seasons and have only been a Football League side for the last 11 years, while Liverpool recently became the first English team to win 30 major trophies.
Striker
Lawrie Sanchez was Wimbledon's goalscoring hero, while
Liverpool would have won the trophy had it not been for
Peter Beardsley's disallowed goal and
John Aldridge's penalty miss.
Deaths
★
John Smith, 49, played over 400 career games as an inside-forward between 1956 and 1973. In 1958, at the age of 19, he helped West Ham United win promotion to the First Division. His biggest success came in 1969 when he helped Swindon Town win the League Cup and record the only major trophy victory of their history. During the 1972-73 season, he had a five-month spell as manager of Walsall.
★ Harold Dobbie, 65, former Middlesbrough forward who scored twice on his club debut in 1948 - against near neighbours Sunderland. Later played for Plymouth Argyle and finally Torquay United before retiring from football and returning to his native Newcastle to run a hardware shop.
★
John Harris, 70, born in Glasgow, was Chelsea's centre-half in their league championship winning side of 1955. Later managed Sheffield United and took them into the First Division in 1971.
Honours
League table
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First Division===
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Second Division===
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Third Division===
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Fourth Division===
P = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; F = Goals for; A = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points