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Hello, this is Siwri88, better known to some as Simon. Currently work as a picture researcher and product editor with a leading publishing company that works with trading cards and sticker albums on a variety of licenses in sport and entertainment. Freelance Journalist and writing a book in my spare time. Achieved a 2:1 studying BA Hons Journalism at the University of Northampton (2009-2012). Enjoy reading!

Sunday 15 August 2010

Classic Premiership Matches 61-80

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.



61.           Chelsea                                    5-0           Manchester United                  Sunday 3rd October 1999
This was an afternoon that no person will forget, unless you supported Manchester United that was.  Gus Poyet cashed in on another horrendous piece of goalkeeping by Massimo Taibi to hand the home side a lead within of 30 seconds.  Just past the 20 minute mark, Chris Sutton headed home his first and only Premiership goal for Chelsea and soon they were a man up, following a disgraceful kick-out by Nicky Butt on Dennis Wise.  In the second half, United unravelled as Poyet pounced on a third, Henning Berg sliced into his own net then Jody Morris rammed the ball in with ten minutes to go to complete the rout.  Chelsea’s season wouldn’t hit any higher spots again in this campaign.






62.           Manchester City                     3-3           Newcastle United                    Saturday 24th February 1996
Newcastle’s all-out attack play was being exposed to great effect and it happened again at Maine Road.  An unsavoury pair of incidents involving City captain, Keith Curle and Faustino Asprilla overshadowed an extraordinary game which saw Philippe Albert rescue the Geordies twice from a losing position.  Nigel Clough, Niall Quinn and Uwe Rosler had put the relegation-threatened club ahead three times, but they couldn’t hold on and it was really a result that neither team required.

63.           Arsenal                                    4-0           Everton                                   Sunday 3rd May 1998
Arsenal had gone on an awesome run and this home rout sealed their maiden Premiership title, under the brilliant guidance of Arsene Wenger.  Never looking in danger, an own goal from Slaven Billic started the party, which got louder when Marc Overmars beat the Everton defence for pace twice in clinical fashion.  The round-off was completed when skipper Tony Adams lashed home from Steve Bould’s pass to create an iconic memory in Premiership history.  In this season, Arsenal had been truly the cream of the crop. 




64.           Oldham Athletic                     2-3           Norwich City                          Monday 9th November 1992
Norwich was turning into the surprise package of the 1992/93 campaign and this victory put them on top of the table.  For Mark Robins, it was even more bittersweet as the ex-Manchester United reject hit a wonderful hat-trick at Boundary Park.  Twice, Oldham came from behind to draw level but they ended up with nothing in a game that highlighted both of these teams seasons, thrilling attacking and kamikaze defending.

65.           Arsenal                                    2-3           Leeds United                           Sunday 4th May 2003
Going into this match, Arsenal knew they had to stay in the Premiership title race, but were behind in the Highbury sunshine to a scorcher from Harry Kewell inside of five minutes.  Thierry Henry equalized, but Leeds showed some fight required to get out of a dodgy relegation position.  Ian Harte hit another free-kick at Highbury, but once more Arsenal responded with Dennis Bergkamp’s first home goal in the Premiership for the 02/03 season.  Henry then struck the post as both sides pushed for the winner.  A breakout by the Yorkshire unit saw Marc Viduka power an unstoppable shot past David Seaman to bury Arsenal as far as the Premiership was concerned and hand Leeds an improbable lifeline of another season in the top flight.


66.           Sheffield United                      1-2           Wigan Athletic                        Sunday 13th May 2007
Wigan had to win to avoid the dreaded drop and made the perfect start on a rain-soaked afternoon in Sheffield.  Paul Scharner’s low-drilled attempt squirmed into the back of the net.  Sheffield United knew they needed a draw to ensure survival and battled back through a brave header from Jon Stead.  Now, Wigan was back in the red, but right on the stroke of half-time, handball by Michael Tonge gave former Blades man, David Unsworth the chance to convert for the Lactics.  He duly delivered and despite United hitting the post in the second half and missing a catalogue of chances, it was Wigan who won the day.  The relief on Paul Jewell’s face was clear to see and with Carlos Tevez steering West Ham to an unlikely win at Old Trafford, Sheffield United had been cruelly relegated.

67,           Fulham                                    2-4           Liverpool                                                Saturday 16th October 2004
Rafa Beintez had initially struggled to adapt to the English game and his side looked out-of-touch on the road, but in this game, they produced one of the comebacks for the season.  Trailing 2-0 at half-time to Fulham, they stormed back to win 4-2 with an own goal, a tap-in from Milan Baros, a wonderful free-kick by Spanish ace, Xabi Alonso and a spectacular finish from Igor Biscan.  A flash had been provided for the future by the soon-to-be European champions.






68.           Newcastle United                    4-3           Manchester United                  Saturday 15th September 2001
Following the recent terrorist attacks on September 11th, football paid its respects in typically, fond fashion and these two teams served up a real treat.  Laurent Robert powered the home side infront with a typical free-kick, pegged by Ruud Van Nistlerooy.  A horror moment from Fabien Barthez allowed Rob Lee to celebrate a rare goal and when Nicolas Dabizas smashed home from close range early in the second half, the game looked done and dusted.  However, never write Until off at your peril and efforts from Ryan Giggs and Juan Sebastian Veron tied the game all-square again.  With less then ten minutes remaining, Alan Shearer’s strike took a wicked deflection off Wes Brown to earn three famous points for Sir Bobby Robson’s side.  Once again, Roy Keane made the headlines for the wrong reasons, sent off following a tedious clash with Shearer.


69.           Wigan Athletic                        5-3           Blackburn Rovers                   Saturday 15th December 2007
It is a rarity for two different players to score hat-tricks in the same game, but it happened in this local derby.  Wigan had been cruising at 3-0 up until Roque Santa Cruz dragged his Blackburn side back into the contest with three goals either side of half-time.  Back came the home side through Emile Heskey and a 3rd goal from Marcus Bent to round off a stunning match managed by former Manchester United legends, Steve Bruce and Mark Hughes.
 




70.           Arsenal                                    7-0           Everton                                   Wednesday 11th May 2005
Three days earlier, Champions League finalists Liverpool had been played off the park at Highbury, losing 3-1.  Now, their Merseyside rivals faired even worse when taking on the Highbury medicine.  7-0 was the final score, including a virtuoso performance from Dennis Bergkamp, a double by Robin Van Persie and a final Gunner goal from talismanic midfielder, Edu.  This was an absolute masterclass.







71.           Manchester United                  5-2           Tottenham Hotspur                                Saturday 25th April 2009
At 2-0 up at half-time through goals by Darren Bent and Luka Modric, Tottenham looked on the cards for a shock win at the Theatre of Dreams, but it turned into the Theatre of Nightmares in the second half, as the fabulous four from United, Ronaldo, Rooney, Tevez & Berbatov showed their stuff in the second half.  A scandalous penalty decision from Howard Webb started the comeback, but Tottenham’s pitiful second half collapse was almost unthinkable and would have had Harry Redknapp tearing his hair out.  This was the result that effectively sealed Manchester United’s grip on a record-equalling 18th league championship.


72.           Blackburn Rovers                   2-3           Chelsea                                    Sunday 1st February 2004
Despite the guile of Manchester United and Arsenal, Chelsea were hanging onto the coat-tails of the top two and their true spirit was underlined in a physical encounter at Ewood Park.  Down after three minutes through Garry Flitcroft, Chelsea came back with a neat, tidy double by Frank Lampard.  In the second half, super sub Paul Gallagher netted twice.  One was ruled offside, the other stood, whilst at the other end, Brad Friedel was repelling the attack of Lampard, Emmanuel Petit and Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink.  With three minutes to go, Adrian Mutu over hit a corner, but it found Glen Johnson, who produced a breathtaking piece of individual skill that would make him an England regular.  It was a goal worthy of winning any game and kept Claudio Ranieri’s side onto the back of the top two.









73.           Newcastle United                    4-3           Aston Villa                              Monday 30th September 1996
Once again, Newcastle were part of another breathtaking, free-flowing game, this time against an in-form Aston Villa side.  Brian Little’s side grabbed an early lead thanks to Dwight Yorke, his first goal of the season.  The visitors then had a nightmare 15 minutes before half-time which saw them 3-1 down to goals from Les Ferdinand (2) & Alan Shearer, before Mark Draper was given his marching orders for two yellow cards.  What Little had installed into his side was belief and they kept attacking, which paid off with a brilliant solo effort from Yorke.  Quickly, Steve Howey’s flying header re-installed the two goal advantage, before Yorke helped himself to another, completing his hat-trick.  In the end, Newcastle grimly hung on during an entertaining match at St. James Park.

74.           Southampton                          4-3           Norwich City                          Saturday 30th April 2005
In the relegation scrap, there were some stunning games between the bottom four clubs, none more so than this affair at St. Mary’s.  On a day for defenders to forget, Henri Camara struck a 90th minute winner for Southampton after the score were pegged at 3-3 in the interlude.  It kept Southampton out of the bottom three and halted Norwich’s recent momentum.  Both would suffer the similar fate though just a fortnight later.





75.           Tottenham Hotspur                                4-4           Aston Villa                              Monday 1st October 2007
Martin Jol was fighting to hang to his Spurs job following a dismal start to this season and going 4-1 down with half an hour to play against Aston Villa was not the tonic required.  To give them credit, the home side dug in deep with all their possible reserves and claimed an unlikely draw, due to a do-or-die header by under-fire centre-back Younes Kaboul in the last minute.







76.           Coventry City                         3-2           Manchester United                  Sunday 28th December 1997
December 28th 1997 turned out to be a pivotal day in the 97/98 title battle, as it seriously highlighted Manchester United’s defensive vulnerabilities.  An ever improving Coventry was infront through Noel Whelan but goals from Teddy Sheringham and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer looked to have got United out of jail again.  Not on this occasion however, due to old lad Dion Dublin via the penalty spot, then a sensational solo strike by Darren Huckerby.  It was a richly deserved result for Gordon Strachan’s side, who comfortably avoided relegation in this campaign.

77.           Newcastle United                    8-0           Sheffield Wednesday                               Sunday 19th September 1999
A meeting of the Premiership bottom two turned into a one-horse race.  Sheffield Wednesday totally ripped apart in Sir Bobby Robson’s first home match in charge of Newcastle.  Alan Shearer equalled another Premiership scoring record with 5 goals in the same match as the Magpies started their climb up the Premiership leaderboard.  Meanwhile, the writing was already on the wall for the Owls.











78.           Charlton Athletic                    3-3           Manchester United                  Saturday 9th December 2000
Despite conceding to South African Shaun Bartlett after only ten minutes, Manchester United was totally in control of this scrap in East London.  Just before half-time, their dominance was rewarded with two goals in a minute, courtesy of Ryan Giggs and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.  When Roy Keane added a 3rd, halfway through the 2nd half, there looked like no way back for Charlton.  Despite the odds being against them, they showed great character and rescued a point in the last ten minutes, through another Bartlett goal and a close-range shave from John Robinson.  This was a minor slip in an almost imperious season for the champions.

79.           Bolton Wanderers                   5-2           Crystal Palace                        Saturday 2nd May 1998
It rained goals in the first twenty minutes at the Reebok at Bolton were playing for their lives as far as Premiership football was concerned.  Having grabbed an early lead, two thunderbolts by Dean Gordon and Marcus Bent stunned the home supporters.  The lead for already relegated Palace didn’t last long, due to Mark Fish’s header and another bullet, this time through Jimmy Phillips.  Nathan Blake added a 4th and Dean Holdsworth scored his first in Bolton colours in the closing stages.  This result gave Colin Todd’s side a great chance to stay in the Premiership, but as it transpired, it wasn’t to be…..

80.           Manchester United                  5-3           Newcastle United                    Saturday 23rd November 2002
The first of two goal-fests between these two sides ended up rocketing Manchester United’s stuttering season back into life.  Although Alan Shearer’s free-kick saw him become the first player to score 100 Premier League goals for two different clubs (Blackburn & Newcastle), it was a classy Ruud Van Nistlerooy hat-trick that was the difference in this one.

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