The '1991-92' season was the 112th season of competitive
football in England.
Overview
===
First Division ===
The last-ever league championship before the creation of the
Premier League was won by
Leeds United, who overhauled
Manchester United thanks to the efforts of players like
Gordon Strachan,
Lee Chapman,
David Batty and
Gary McAllister. After runners-up United came newly promoted
Sheffield Wednesday, who were quickly emerging as one of the most feared sides in England.
Defending champions
Arsenal slipped to fourth place in the 1991-92 season and never made a serious threat to retain their title. The previous season's runners-up
Liverpool slipped to sixth in their first full season under the management of Graeme Souness.
Newly promoted
West Ham United were relegated in bottom place, with another newly promoted side -
Notts County - following days later. The last day of the season saw
Luton Town lose their top flight status after 10 seasons.
===
Second Division ===
John Lyall took
Ipswich Town back to the First Division after a six-year absence for the Suffolk club. The Tractor Boys were followed up by runners-up
Middlesbrough, but it was playoff winners
Blackburn Rovers whose promotion made the biggest headlines. Bankrolled by millionaire chairman
Jack Walker and managed by former Liverpool boss
Kenny Dalglish, Rovers beat Leicester 1-0 in the playoff final to end a 26-year exile from the top flight.
The Second Division relegation places were occupied by
Port Vale,
Plymouth Argyle and
Brighton & Hove Albion - the latter team had been playoff losing finalists just 12 months before going down, but their fortunes had been ruined by financial problems.
===
Third Division ===
New manager
Phil Holder guided
Brentford to a surprise Third Division championship success, while
Terry Cooper's
Birmingham occupied runners-up spot and the playoffs were won by
Chris Turner's
Peterborough United.
The Third Division drop zone was occupied by
Shrewsbury Town,
Bury,
Torquay United and
Darlington.
===
Fourth Division ===
Burnley won the Fourth Division title to join
Wolverhampton Wanderers as champions of all four divisions of the Football League. Also going up were
Rotherham United,
Mansfield Town and play-off winners
Blackpool.
On
25 March 1992,
Aldershot were declared bankrupt and obliged to resign from the
Football League - their record was expunged. There was no
relegation from the Football League in 1991-92.
Carlisle United finished bottom, and Conference champions
Colchester United returned to the league after a two-year absence.
===
FA Cup ===
Liverpool's
Graeme Souness compensated for a disappointing first season as manager in the league by steering the Reds to a 2-0
FA Cup victory over Second Division underdogs
Sunderland.
===
League Cup ===
Manchester United missed out on the league title but achieved success in the
League Cup with a 1-0 triumph against
Nottingham Forest in the final.
League Tables
===
First Division
P W D L F A W D L F A Pts
1. LEEDS UNITED (C) 42 13 8 0 38 13 9 8 4 36 24 82
2. Manchester United 42 12 7 2 34 13 9 8 4 29 20 78
3. Sheffield Wednesday 42 13 5 3 39 24 8 7 6 23 25 75
4. Arsenal 42 12 7 2 51 23 7 8 6 30 24 72
5. Manchester City 42 13 4 4 32 14 7 6 8 29 34 70
6. Liverpool 42 13 5 3 34 17 3 11 7 13 23 64
7. Aston Villa 42 13 3 5 31 16 4 6 11 17 28 60
8. Nottingham Forest 42 10 7 4 36 27 6 4 11 24 31 59
9. Sheffield United 42 9 6 6 29 23 7 3 11 36 40 57
10. Crystal Palace 42 7 8 6 24 25 7 7 7 29 36 57
11. Queen's Park Rangers 42 6 10 5 25 21 6 8 7 23 26 54
12. Everton 42 8 8 5 28 19 5 6 10 24 32 53
13. Wimbledon 42 10 5 6 32 20 3 9 9 21 33 53
14. Chelsea 42 7 8 6 31 30 6 6 9 19 30 53
15. Tottenham Hotspur 42 7 3 11 33 35 8 4 9 25 28 52
16. Southampton 42 7 5 9 17 28 7 5 9 22 27 52
17. Oldham Athletic 42 11 5 5 46 36 3 4 14 17 31 51
18. Norwich City 42 8 6 7 29 28 3 6 12 18 35 45
19. Coventry City 42 6 7 8 18 15 5 4 12 17 29 44
20. LUTON TOWN (R) 42 10 7 4 25 17 0 5 16 14 54 42
21. NOTTS COUNTY (R) 42 7 5 9 24 29 3 5 13 16 33 40
22. WEST HAM UNITED (R) 42 6 6 9 22 24 3 5 13 15 35 38
Second Division
P W D L F A W D L F A Pts
1. IPSWICH TOWN (P) 46 16 3 4 42 22 8 9 6 28 28 84
2. MIDDLESBROUGH (P) 46 15 6 2 37 13 8 5 10 21 28 80
3. Derby County 46 11 4 8 35 24 12 5 6 34 27 78
4. Leicester City 46 14 4 5 41 24 9 4 10 21 31 77
5. Cambridge United 46 10 9 4 34 19 9 8 6 31 28 74
6. BLACKBURN ROVERS (P) 46 14 5 4 41 21 7 6 10 29 32 74
7. Charlton Athletic 46 9 7 7 25 23 11 4 8 29 25 71
8. Swindon Town 46 15 3 5 38 22 3 12 8 31 33 69
9. Portsmouth 46 15 6 2 41 12 4 6 13 24 39 69
10. Watford 46 9 5 9 25 23 9 6 8 26 25 65
11. Wolverhampton Wanderers 46 11 6 6 36 24 7 4 12 25 29 64
12. Southend United 46 11 5 7 37 26 6 6 11 26 37 62
13. Bristol Rovers 46 11 9 3 43 29 5 5 13 17 34 62
14. Tranmere Rovers 46 9 9 5 37 32 5 10 8 19 24 61
15. Millwall 46 10 4 9 32 32 7 6 10 32 39 61
16. Barnsley 46 11 4 8 26 25 5 7 11 19 32 59
17. Bristol City 46 10 8 5 30 24 3 7 13 25 47 54
18. Sunderland 46 10 8 5 36 23 4 3 16 25 42 53
19. Grimsby Town 46 7 5 11 25 28 7 6 10 22 34 53
20. Newcastle United 46 9 8 6 38 30 4 5 14 28 54 52
21. Oxford United 46 10 6 7 39 30 3 5 15 27 43 50
22. PLYMOUTH ARGYLE (R) 46 11 5 7 26 26 2 4 17 16 38 48
23. BRIGHTON & H ALBION (R) 46 7 7 9 36 37 5 4 14 20 40 47
24. PORT VALE (R) 46 7 8 8 23 25 3 7 13 19 34 45
Third Division
P W D L F A W D L F A Pts
1. BRENTFORD (P) 46 17 2 4 55 29 8 5 10 26 26 82
2. BIRMINGHAM CITY (P) 46 15 6 2 42 22 8 6 9 27 30 81
3. Huddersfield Town 46 15 4 4 36 15 7 8 8 23 23 78
4. Stoke City 46 14 5 4 45 24 7 9 7 24 25 77
5. Stockport County 46 15 5 3 47 19 7 5 11 28 32 76
6. PETERBOROUGH UNITED (P) 46 13 7 3 38 20 7 7 9 27 38 74
7. West Bromwich Albion 46 12 6 5 45 25 7 8 8 19 24 71
8. Bournemouth 46 13 4 6 33 18 7 7 9 19 30 71
9. Fulham 46 11 7 5 29 16 8 6 9 28 37 70
10. Leyton Orient 46 12 7 4 36 18 6 4 13 26 34 65
11. Hartlepool United 46 12 5 6 30 21 6 6 11 27 36 65
12. Reading 46 9 8 6 33 27 7 5 11 26 35 61
13. Bolton Wanderers 46 10 9 4 26 19 4 8 11 31 37 59
14. Hull City 46 9 4 10 28 23 7 7 9 26 31 59
15. Wigan Athletic 46 11 6 6 33 21 4 8 11 25 43 59
16. Bradford City 46 8 10 5 36 30 5 9 9 26 31 58
17. Preston North End 46 12 7 4 42 32 3 5 15 19 40 57
18. Chester City 46 10 6 7 34 29 4 8 11 22 30 56
19. Swansea City 46 10 9 4 35 24 4 5 14 20 41 56
20. Exeter City 46 11 7 5 34 25 3 4 16 23 55 53
21. BURY (R) 46 8 7 8 31 31 5 5 13 24 43 51
22. SHREWSBURY TOWN (R) 46 7 7 9 30 31 5 4 14 23 37 47
23. TORQUAY UNITED (R) 46 13 3 7 29 19 0 5 18 13 49 47
24. DARLINGTON (R) 46 5 5 13 31 39 5 2 16 25 51 37
Fourth Division=
P W D L F A W D L F A Pts
1. BURNLEY (P) 42 14 4 3 42 16 11 4 6 37 27 83
2. ROTHERHAM UNITED (P) 42 12 6 3 38 16 10 5 6 32 21 77
3. MANSFIELD TOWN (P) 42 13 4 4 43 26 10 4 7 32 27 77
4. BLACKPOOL (P) 42 17 3 1 48 13 5 7 9 23 32 76
5. Scunthorpe United 42 14 5 2 38 18 7 4 10 25 41 72
6. Crewe Alexandra 42 12 6 3 33 20 8 4 9 33 31 70
7. Barnet 42 16 1 4 48 23 5 5 11 33 38 69
8. Rochdale 42 12 6 3 34 22 6 7 8 23 31 67
9. Cardiff City 42 13 3 5 42 26 4 12 5 24 27 66
10. Lincoln City 42 9 5 7 21 24 8 6 7 29 20 62
11. Gillingham 42 12 5 4 41 19 3 7 11 22 34 57
12. Scarborough 42 12 5 4 39 28 3 7 11 25 40 57
13. Chesterfield 42 6 7 8 26 28 8 4 9 23 33 53
14. Wrexham 42 11 4 6 31 26 3 5 13 21 47 51
15. Walsall 42 5 10 6 28 26 7 3 11 20 32 49
16. Northampton 42 5 9 7 25 23 6 4 11 21 33 46
17. Hereford United 42 9 4 8 31 24 3 4 14 13 33 44
18. Maidstone United 42 6 9 6 24 22 2 9 10 21 34 42
19. York City 42 6 9 6 26 23 2 7 12 16 35 40
20. Halifax Town 42 7 5 9 23 35 3 3 15 11 40 38
21. Doncaster Rovers 42 6 2 13 21 35 3 6 12 19 30 35
22. Carlisle United 42 5 9 7 24 27 2 4 15 17 40 34
Events ==
Premier League gets go-ahead
1991-92 was the last season of the four-division
Football League. For
1992-93, the
First Division would become the breakaway
FA Premier League, and the Football League would contain just three divisions. The new league was seen as the last chance to maintain interest in a sport which had been blighted in recent years by numerous incidents of hooliganism and images of decay at football grounds which had contributed to the Bradford Fire Disaster and the Hillsborough Disaster.
Leeds grab title
Leeds United won the last-ever league championship before the creation of the F.A Premier League, two years after returning to the top flight. Driving force in the title triumph was experienced midfielder Gordon Strachan, who helped Leeds overtake Strachan's former club Manchester United in the title race.
Dalglish makes comeback to deliver promised land to Blackburn
Blackburn Rovers, managed by former
Liverpool manager
Kenny Dalglish, won promotion to the new F.A Premier League to end a 26-year exile from the top flight of English football. Their triumph was sealed with a 1-0 win over Leicester City in the playoff final, thanks to a penalty from Mike Newell - a former Leicester striker.
Aldershot go bust
Aldershot, who had been plagued with financial problems for two years, finally went out of business on 25th March. Their Fourth Division record was expunged and their place in the Football League was taken over by
Colchester United for the 1992-93 season. A new Aldershot club was formed almost immediately, and joined the Third Division of the Isthmian League for the following season.
League Cup win at last for United
Manchester United won the
League Cup for the first time in their history after
Brian McClair scored the only goal of the game in a 1-0 win over
Nottingham Forest at
Wembley. It was some consolation for their failed title challenge.
Souness delivers Cup glory for Reds
Liverpool won the
FA Cup for the fifth time in their first full season under the management of
Graeme Souness, beating Second Division underdogs Sunderland 2-0 in the final at Wembley. But the cup triumph did not fully compensate for a disappointing league campaign in which Liverpool failed to mount a title challenge.
Burnley enter the history books
Burnley won the last ever
Fourth Division championship to join
Wolves as only the second English team to have been champions of all four divisions of the English league. It was Burnley's first successful season after a period of misery which had almost seen them relegated to the Conference in 1987.
The Owls make an impressive comeback
Newly promoted
Sheffield Wednesday finished third in the league and qualified for the
UEFA Cup, confounding suggestions that 37-year-old player-manager Trevor Francis was too inexperienced to keep the Owls in the top flight.
Euro final returns to Wembley
Wembley hosted the
European Cup final for the first time in 24 years.
Barcelona of Spain beat
Sampdoria of Italy 1-0.
Keegan rescues Newcastle
Newcastle United sacked manager
Ossie Ardiles, just 36 hours after being told by chairman
John Hall that his job was safe. Hall appointed former striker
Kevin Keegan as manager in hope of staving off relegation from the
Second Division - and he succeeded.
Successful players
In his last season at
Tottenham Hotspur before joining
Nagoya Grampus Eight of Japan,
Gary Lineker was voted
FWA Footballer of the Year after scoring 28 goals in all competitions during the 1991-92 season.
The
PFA Player of the Year award went to Manchester United's rock solid and ultra reliable central defender
Gary Pallister.
The PFA voted Manchester United's exciting 18-year-old winger
Ryan Giggs as
Young Player of the Year.
Veteran
Scottish midfielder
Gordon Strachan, now in his 35th year, had another brilliant season as he proved the driving force in
Leeds United's championship glory.
Little known Danish goalkeeper
Peter Schmeichel quickly established himself as one of the most feared shot-stoppers in Europe in his first season with Manchester United, helping them win the League Cup and come within a shout of championship glory.
Successful managers
Leeds United manager
Howard Wilkinson brought the league championship trophy to
Elland Road just two seasons after they gained promotion to the First Division.
Manchester United's
Alex Ferguson added another trophy to the
Old Trafford boardroom, this time the club's first-ever League Cup.
Graeme Souness marked his first full season as Liverpool manager with an FA Cup triumph.
Trevor Francis had a successful first season as player-manager of Sheffield Wednesday, who finished third in the league and qualified for the UEFA Cup to end a 28-year absence from European competitions.
John Lyall brought First Division football back to
Ipswich Town for the first time since
1985-86.
Kenny Dalglish put together an impressive squad to win promotion to the new
FA Premier League for fallen giant
Blackburn Rovers.
Phil Holder had a successful first season in management by winning the Third Division title with Brentford.
Chris Turner guided Peterborough United to a second successive promotion as they won the Third Division playoffs to claim a place in the second tier of the English league for the first time in their history.
Jimmy Mullen won the last-ever Fourth Division title with Burnley, who joined Wolverhampton Wanderers in the distinction of having been champions of all four divisions of the English league.
Roy McDonough steered Colchester United to title success in the Conference to return the club to the Football League after a two-year exile.
European qualifiers
Leeds United were rewarded for their championship success with a place in the
European Cup for the
1992-93 season.
Runners-up Manchester United and third-placed Sheffield Wednesday were England's entrants for the
UEFA Cup.
England's place in the
Cup Winners Cup went to Liverpool.
Biggest rise
Blackburn Rovers won promotion to the new Premier League to end their 26-year spell outside the top flight.
Biggest fall
Brighton & Hove Albion were relegated to the league's third tier (Division Two next season) just one year after narrowly missing out on promotion to the top flight and eight years after being FA Cup finalists.
Diary of the season
30 August 1991 - Former
Tottenham Hotspur full-back
Cyril Knowles dies of cancer aged 47. Three months ago he retired as manager of
Hartlepool United shortly after taking them to promotion to the
Third Division.
23 September 1991 -
Arsenal pay a club record 2.5million for
Crystal Palace striker
Ian Wright.
1 October 1991 -
Crystal Palace play a club record 1.5million for
Sunderland's 23-year-old striker
Marco Gabbiadini.
12 October 1991 - Eight months after his controversial resignation from
Liverpool,
Kenny Dalglish returns to management with
Blackburn Rovers in the
Second Division. The 40-year-old Scotsman accepted an offer from chairman
Jack Walker, who sees Dalglish as the man to bring top flight football back to one of the country's most historic sides. Dalglish has a dream start to his Blackburn career as his new team crush struggling
Plymouth Argyle 5-2.
9 November 1991 -
Cambridge United, in the
Second Division after two successive promotions, start to look capable of achieving a unique third promotion in a row after going top of the Second Division.
26 December 1991 -
Blackburn Rovers displace
Cambridge United at the top of the Second Division.
1 January 1992 -
Southend United, in the Second Division for the first time in their history, go top of the division for a few hours before Blackburn Rovers regain top spot.
4 January 1992 -
Arsenal, defending league champions, lose 2-1 at
Wrexham, who finished bottom of the
Fourth Division last season, in the FA Cup first round.
6 January 1992 -
Terry Butcher, at 33 still the youngest manager in the First Division, is sacked by
Coventry City and replaced by his 56-year-old assistant
Don Howe.
5 February 1992 -
Swansea City winger
Alan Davies, 30, is found dead in his car near his home in
South Wales. Davies played for
Manchester United in the
1983 FA Cup final, and later played for
Newcastle United and
Bradford City.
6 February 1992 - Newcastle United, second from bottom in the
Second Division sack manager
Ossie Ardiles after 11 months in charge and replace him with former striker
Kevin Keegan.
20 February 1992 -
The Football Association confirms that the top 19 clubs in the First Division and the three newly promoted Second Division clubs will break away from
the Football League and form a new
FA Premier League of 22 clubs for next season.
25 March 1992 -
Fourth Division side
Aldershot, who have struggled to stay afloat for the last two years, are declared bankrupt and forced to resign from
the Football League.
26 April 1992 -
Leeds United are confirmed as league champions for the first time in 18 years, and just 2 years after winning promotion, thanks to
Manchester United's 2-0 defeat at
Liverpool.
1 May 1992 -
Dave Stringer resigns as manager of
Norwich City. Stringer, 48, had been in charge at
Carrow Road for five seasons and had taken the club to the FA Cup semi finals twice as well as a club-best finish of fourth place in
1989. Youth team coach
Mike Walker is announced as Stringer's successor.
5 May 1992 - It is announced that England will host the
1996 UEFA European Football Championships.
9 May 1992 - Liverpool lift the FA Cup for the fifth time in their history thanks to a 2-0 win over
Sunderland at
Wembley.
25 May 1992 -
Blackburn Rovers return to the top flight of English football after a 26-year exile after beating
Leicester City in the
Second Division playoff final. The only goal of the game was a penalty by striker
Mike Newell, ironically a former Leicester player.
Deaths
★
Cyril Knowles, who played at left back for Tottenham and
England during the late
1960s and early
1970s, died of brain cancer aged 47. Achieved Fourth Division promotion success with
Darlington in 1985 and
Hartlepool United in 1991.
★
Joe Hulme, 87, was a right-winger for Arsenal in
Herbert Chapman's great interwar team. After the war, he was the manager of Tottenham Hotspur for four years.
★
Cliff Bastin, 79, played centre-forward during Arsenal's hugely successful pre Second World War side and set a goalscoring record for the club which would be unbroken for some 60 years. Had played for Exeter City early in his career and a new stand at the club's St James's Park ground was named after him.
★
Tom Wilson scored for Nottingham Forest in their second FA Cup victory - when they beat Luton Town in the 1959 final at
Wembley.
★
Jack Kelsey, 63, kept goal for Arsenal and Wales during the postwar years and played until his career was ended by a back injury suffered against Brazil in 1962.
★
Alan Davies, 30, who played on the left wing for Manchester United in their 1983 FA Cup triumph, was found dead in his car in South Wales. He had committed suicide. At the time of his death, Davies was employed by Swansea City and his other clubs had included Newcastle United and Bradford City.
★
Mick Leach, 45, played more than 300 games for Queens Park Rangers between 1965 and 1979. He helped them achieve their highest-ever league finish when they finished runners-up in the league title race at the end of the 1975-76 season, and continued at the club for the next three seasons before finishing his career with Cambridge United.