In the past 18 seasons, football fans across the globe have been treated to some cracking Premiership matches. On the eve of the 19th season having begun yesterday, here is a look-back at some classics down the years.
1. Liverpool 4-3 Newcastle United Wednesday 3rd April 1996
The greatest game of the Premiership’s entire history as two attacking sides did battle to keep them in the title race. A classic header from Robbie Fowler handed Liverpool a dream start, but Newcastle retaliated with goals from Les Ferdinand & David Ginola. Fowler restored parity early in the second half with a low drilled shot, before Faustino Asprilla curled an attempt around the onrushing David James to put Kevin Keegan’s men back infront. Stan Collymore tied the game again at 3-3, converting Jason McAteer’s wicked cross and then Stan the Man hit a dramatic stoppage time winner for Liverpool , which funnily enough pushed the title into the hands of their greatest enemies, Manchester United.
2. Tottenham Hotspur 3-5 Manchester United Saturday 29th September 2001
This was the greatest turnaround in Premiership history. Glenn Hoddle’s outfit were in dreamland at half-time, 3-0 to the good against the reigning champions thanks to efforts from new boy Dean Richards, Les Ferdinand & Christian Ziege. Sir Alex Ferguson rallied his troops at half-time and fought back in the style of champions. Andy Cole, Laurent Blanc, Ruud Van Nistlerooy, Juan Sebastian Veron and David Beckham all found the net in a breathless second half that left the North London fans stunned into silence.
3. Blackburn Rovers 3-4 Chelsea Monday 21st September 1998
Gianluca Vialli’s foreign superstars found their form in a genuine classic at Ewood Park . Gianfranco Zola’s magnificent free-kick opened the scoring, but Blackburn got back on terms through Chris Sutton. A debatable penalty led to Chelsea ’s 2nd, converted by the reliable Franck Lebouef. Sebastian Perez hooked in Rovers 2nd equaliser, before being controversially dismissed in a brutal clash with Lancashire old boy Graeme Le Saux. With both sides at 10 men, Blackburn responded better, Sutton putting them infront after Michael Duberry pushed Martin Dahlin in the box. Back came Chelsea again, with super sub Tore Andre Flo powering in a header, then coolly converting a long ball from Brian Laudrup to turn a probable defeat into a definite victory.
4. Leeds United 4-3 Liverpool Saturday 4th November 2000
5. Southampton 6-3 Manchester United Saturday 26th October 1996
Inspired by the messiah, Matt Le Tissier, Southampton inflicted further pain on Manchester United at the Dell, just six days after United’s 5-0 reverse at Newcastle . A hat-trick from the unknown Egil Ostenstad plus a majestic chip from Le Tissier and a double by Eyal Berkovic did the damage to give Graeme Souness his finest hour in management.
6. Tottenham Hotspur 4-5 Arsenal Saturday 13th November 2004
It was quite a baptism for new Tottenham boss Martin Jol who witnessed a nine-goal thriller in his first North London Derby. In a score line more associated to hockey, there were nine different scorers, with common men like Thierry Henry & Robert Pires and more unfamiliar names in the form of Noureddine Naybet & Lauren finding the net. The pick of the goals was a solo effort from Jermain Defoe.
7. Portsmouth 7-4 Reading Saturday 29th September 2007
The highest aggregated score in Premiership history and a day for Marcus Hahnemann to forget with three goalkeeping blunders. Benjani took full advantage by striking a hat-trick for Pompey.
8. West Ham United 5-4 Bradford City Saturday 12th February 2000
Despite leading 2-0 & 3-1 in this match, Bradford threw it away in this nine goal thriller. The winner was struck in the closing stages by Joe Cole.
9. Manchester United 2-1 Sheffield Wednesday Saturday 10th April 1993
This was a game that ended up changing the history of football. It looked like Manchester United had thrown the title away again, this time to Aston Villa. They were 1-0 down to Manchester fanatic John Sheridan, who converted a penalty for the Owls. Struggling, Alex Ferguson pulled off a tactical masterstroke and threw centre back Steve Bruce forward. Thanks to a long injury-time stoppage due to an earlier referee issue, Bruce scored twice, the second 7 minutes into injury time. The celebrations from Ferguson and assistant Brian Kidd said it all, United went on to win the league and start their English dominance.
10. Chelsea 2-3 Arsenal Saturday 23rd October 1999
11. Liverpool 3-3 Manchester United Tuesday 4th January 1994
With only 22 minutes gone, Manchester United looked like they were cantering towards another victory at Anfield. A header from Steve Bruce, stunning lob from Ryan Giggs and a thunderous free-kick from Denis Irwin left Liverpool shell-shocked. However, the Kop roared their team on, despite their lack of previous form. Nigel Clough thumped two goals home before half-time and then a bullet header from Neil Ruddock rescued an unlikely point in this masterpiece of a match.
12. Blackburn Rovers 7-2 Sheffield Wednesday Monday 25th August 1997
With Englishman Roy Hodgson in charge, Blackburn had been banging in goals, left right and centre. Infront of the Sky cameras, they gave Sheffield Wednesday a footballing lesson. Doubles from potent strike force Kevin Gallacher & Chris Sutton, plus further efforts from Jason Wilcox, Lars Bohinen and an own goal left Rovers in seven heaven. Benito Carbone had a dramatic night, scoring twice and then got sent off for using an elbow on Patrick Valery.
13. Liverpool 4-4 Arsenal Tuesday 21st April 2009
14. West Ham United 3-4 Tottenham Hotspur Sunday 4th March 2007
An all-time classic of a London derby gripped fans on a chilly Sunday afternoon. West Ham had been coasting at half-time, courtesy of Mark Noble and an emotional first strike for the Hammers by popular Argentine ace, Carlos Tevez. Instead of pushing on, Alan Curbishley saw his side press self-destruct in the 2nd half. They were pegged back by a Jermain Defoe penalty and Teemu Tainio. With five minutes to go, Bobby Zamora headed in to put the East London side back infront, only for a specialised Dimitar Berbatov free-kick to level it up again. Desperate for the winner, West Ham were caught on the break, with Paul Stalteri snatching a last-gasp winner. Curbishley’s outfit were now bottom of the table and looked doomed, or were they….
15. Wolves 4-3 Leicester City Saturday 25th October 2003
Between two rivals, this defeat highlighted the problems Leicester had in their battle to avoid the drop. Coasting at the interval with a 3-0 lead, Micky Adams watched a horror show in the second half, as Wolves battled back to claim a sensational win. Senegal international Henri Camara poked home the deciding goal four minutes from time.
16. Oldham Athletic 4-3 Southampton Saturday 8th May 1993
Despite late wins against Aston Villa and Liverpool, Oldham came into the last day of the season needing to beat Southampton and hope that Crystal Palace were beaten at Arsenal. Oldham romped into a 4-1 lead at Boundary Park , but faced a nervy ending as Matt Le Tissier scored another hat-trick and the Saints started upping the pressure. But, the Lactics held on and with an Ian Wright hat-trick at Highbury, Palace went down and awesome Athletic stayed in the Premiership.
17. Arsenal 4-2 Wigan Athletic Sunday 7th May 2006
An emotional farewell to Highbury saw Arsenal achieve their aim of securing Champions League football thanks to their hero and a dodgy food chef. North London rivals, Tottenham saw their squad decimated by food poisoning on the eve of their trip to West Ham and eventually lost 2-1. Party poopers Wigan did take a brief 2-1 lead to cause shudders for the home supporters, before Thierry Henry settled the nerves with a sublime hat-trick. The King of Highbury had signed off in style.
18. Liverpool 4-3 Newcastle United Monday 10th March 1997
Just over a year on from their thrilling first encounter, Liverpool & Newcastle repeated the trick on a pulsating night at Anfield. Liverpool played some mastering football in the first half, earning a 3-0 half-time lead, due to strikes from Steve McManaman, Patrik Berger & Robbie Fowler. A pathetic piece of goalkeeping from David James gave Newcastle a way back into the game, allowing Keith Gillespie a consolation. Suddenly, Liverpool got cocky and conceded soft goals to Faustino Asprilla and Warren Barton in the last five minutes. It looked like they had thrown it away, until a brave header from Robbie Fowler in injury time won the game. For the second year running, Geordie hearts had been cruelly broken in Merseyside.
19. Middlesbrough 4-3 Bolton Wanderers Sunday 26th March 2006
With a draining UEFA Cup campaign in progress, Middlesbrough were struggling in their battle against the Premiership drop, but turned their domestic season around with a last-gasp triumph over European contenders, Bolton. 3-1 up with an hour gone, Steve McLaren’s side got complacent and goals from Jay-Jay Okocha and Ivan Campo placed the game back in the balance. An 89th minute winner from defender Stuart Parnaby earned Boro a crucial three points.
20. Manchester United 4-3 Manchester City Sunday 20th September 2009
No doubt that this was the greatest Manchester derby of all time. Rich Manchester City turned up at Old Trafford, expecting to win, rather than hope to win. They fell behind inside 3 minutes to a Wayne Rooney goal, but were level by half-time, after Gareth Barry capitalised on some poor goalkeeping. Darren Fletcher and Craig Bellamy exchanged four goals between each other in the second half, Bellamy’s first was a stunner, the second in the 90th minute looked to have rescued a point for Mark Hughes men. However, with almost the last kick of the match, Ryan Giggs fed Michael Owen in, who coolly slotted home past Shay Given and send the home supporters into raptures. This was an absolute belter.
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