1986 Full Members Cup Final

1986 Full Members Cup Final
Date 23 March 1986
Venue Wembley Stadium, London
Referee Alan Saunders
Attendance 67,236

The 1986 Full Members Cup final was a football match which took place at Wembley Stadium on 23 March 1986. It was the final of the inaugural Full Members Cup, the competition created in the wake of the 1985 ban on English clubs from European competitions following the Heysel disaster. Contested between First Division sides Chelsea and Manchester City, the game produced nine goals, with Chelsea prevailing 54. Chelsea had led 5–1 courtesy of David Speedie’s hat-trick and a brace by Colin Lee, but Man City scored three times in the last five minutes to give the Blues a scare.[1] Rougvie's own goal, the result of a shot by City's Lillis, denied Lillis the consolation of having scored the fastest hat trick in Wembley history at that point.

Match details

23 March 1986
15:00 BST
Chelsea 5 4 Manchester City
Speedie (3)
Lee (2)
Lillis (2)
Kinsey
Rougvie (o.g.)
Wembley Stadium, London
Attendance: 67,236
Referee: Alan Saunders (Newcastle)
Chelsea
Manchester City
CHELSEA:
GK 1England Steve Francis
RB2 England Darren Wood
LB 3 Scotland Doug Rougvie
CM 4 England John Bumstead
CB 5Scotland Joe McLaughlin
CB6England Colin Pates (c)
RM 7Scotland Pat Nevin
CM 8England Nigel Spackman
CF 9England Colin Lee
CF 10Scotland David Speedie
LM 11Scotland Kevin McAllister
Substitutes:
MF 12England Micky Hazard
MF 13 England Keith Dublin
Manager:
England John Hollins
MANCHESTER CITY:
GK 1England Eric Nixon
RB 2England Nicky Reid
LB 3 England Paul Power (c)
CB 4England Steve Redmond
CB 5Republic of Ireland Mick McCarthy
RM 6England David Phillips
CM 7 England Mark Lillis
CM 8 England Andy May
CF 9England Steve Kinsey
CF 10Scotland Neil McNab
LM 11England Clive Wilson
Substitutes:
CF 12 England Paul Simpson
MF 13 England Graham Baker
Manager:
Scotland Billy McNeill

MATCH RULES

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Penalty shootout if scores still level.
  • Two named substitutes.
  • Maximum of two substitutions.

References

  1. "THE LIST: The greatest Wembley finals in history". Daily Mail. 2009-05-26. Retrieved 2011-02-07.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/22/2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.