1982–83 in English football

Football in England
Season 1982–83
Men's football
First Division Liverpool
Second Division Queens Park Rangers
Third Division Portsmouth
Fourth Division Wimbledon
Alliance Premier League Enfield
FA Cup Manchester United
Football League Trophy Millwall
League Cup Liverpool
Charity Shield Liverpool
1981–82 England 1983–84

The 1982–83 season was the 103rd season of competitive football in England.

Diary of the season

11 August 1982: Tottenham Hotspur pay Bristol Rovers £105,000 for defender Gary Mabbutt, who turns 21 later this month.

19 August 1982: Newcastle United pay Southampton £100,000 for Kevin Keegan.

24 August 1982: The Shankly Gates are unveiled at Anfield, honouring former Liverpool manager Bill Shankly almost a year after his death.

25 August 1982: Arsenal sign 22-year-old striker Lee Chapman from Stoke City for £500,000.

26 August 1982: Bob Paisley announces that this season as Liverpool manager (his ninth in charge) will be his last.[1]

28 August 1982: The first games of the First Division season are played. Manchester United achieve the biggest win of the opening day of the season beating Birmingham City 3–0.[2] Peter Shilton exits Nottingham Forest in a £325,000 move to Southampton.[3]

4 September 1982: Manchester City's victory over Watford ensures the Maine Roaders are the new Football League leaders. The City club's win came despite having outfield player Bobby McDonald as goalkeeper thanks to regular custodian Joe Corrigan being rendered unavailable after just three minutes. In Bedfordshire, Paul Walsh scores his first goal for Luton Town against Notts County, before bagging two more as the Hatters won 5–3. Elsewhere, Bob Latchford scores three of Swansea's four without reply against Norwich City, Southampton's Justin Fashanu–on loan from Nottingham Forest–scores the only goal in the Saints' clash with Villa, West Bromwich Albion beat Manchester United and a "highly efficient" Liverpool triumph at the Arsenal.[4]

9 September 1982: Peter Beardsley, a 21-year-old former Carlisle United playing for Vancouver Whitecaps in Canada, signs for Manchester United in a £325,000 deal.

11 September 1982: Watford, in the First Division for the first time, go top of the league on goal difference (level with Manchester United and Manchester City) by beating West Bromwich Albion 3–0 in their fifth league game of the season.[2]

22 September 1982: England draw 2–2 with Denmark in Copenhagen in their opening 1984 European Championship qualifier, their first game under the management of Bobby Robson.[5]

25 September 1982: 50 goals are scored in a remarkable day in the First Division. Watford beat Sunderland 8–0 at Vicarage Road in only their seventh game as a First Division club, Ipswich Town win 6-0 at Notts County, and Stoke City and Luton Town draw 4-4.[2]

30 September 1982: The month ends with defending champions Liverpool top of the First Division, with Manchester United in second place. Watford occupy third place, West Ham United and Tottenham Hotspur complete the top five, and Southampton, Birmingham City and Norwich City occupy the bottom three places.[2] In the Second Division, surprise promotion contenders Grimsby Town head the race for a place in the First Division, joined by Wolverhampton Wanderers and Sheffield Wednesday in the top three.[6]

2 October 1982: Liverpool's unbeaten start to the season ends when they are beaten 1-0 by Ipswich Town at Portman Road.[2]

6 October 1982: Nottingham Forest smash six past West Bromwich Albion in the League Cup.[7]

10 October 1982: Manchester United's 1–0 win over Stoke sees them go top of the table, and West Ham ascend to second in the table with victory over Liverpool. Garry Brooke bags a hat-trick in six minutes as Tottenham hit Coventry City for four: Garth Crooks is the other Spurs scorer. WBA exact revenge for the Foresters' 6–1 League Cup victory four days earlier by coming from behind to beat the Nottingham club, who have Steve Hodge sent off.[7]

13 October 1982: Karl-Heinz Rummenigge scores twice as West Germany beat England 2-1 in a friendly at Wembley.[8]

31 October 1982: October ends with Liverpool, West Ham United and Manchester United all level on 22 points at the top of the First Division. West Bromwich Albion finish the month in fourth place and Tottenham Hotspur complete the top five, while Birmingham City, Norwich City and Sunderland occupy the bottom three places.[2] Sheffield Wednesday and Queens Park Rangers now head the Second Division promotion race, with Fulham joining them in the top three and their manager Malcolm Macdonald turning heads with his promising young side who are looking like serious contenders for a second successive promotion. Derby County (First Division champions as recently as 1975) are second from bottom.[9]

6 November 1982: In the Merseyside derby at Goodison Park, Liverpool beat Everton 5–0 with four goals from Ian Rush and a further goal from Mark Lawrenson.[10]

10 November 1982: Colchester United striker John Lyons, 25, commits suicide at his home in Essex.[11]

13 November 1982: The Ballon d'Or award winner for 1977, Allan Simonsen, scores on his début for Charlton Athletic; his club are beaten 3–2 by Middlesbrough.[12]

17 November 1982: England beat Greece 3–0 in Salonika in a European Championship qualifier.[8]

25 November 1982: Derby County are fined £10,000 and "warned as to their future conduct" by the Football League over breaches of two regulations relating to illicit negotiations with Roy McFarland, who resigned his post as player-manager at Bradford City.[13]

30 November 1982: Liverpool remain top of the First Division as November draws to a close, four points ahead of second-placed Watford. Nottingham Forest, Manchester United and West Ham United complete the top five, while the bottom three clubs remain unchanged from the end of last month.[2] Queens Park Rangers, Fulham and Sheffield Wednesday head the Second Division promotion race.[14]

6 December 1982: Mike Bailey is sacked from his job as manager at Brighton & Hove Albion, reportedly because Albion's supporters deemed the team "too boring".[15]

11 December 1982: Second-placed Manchester United hit Notts County for four, high-flyers Ipswich Town and West Ham United are beaten at home, while Brighton's acting manager Jimmy Melia guides the Sussex club to their best result of the season so far: a 3–0 win over Norwich City.[16]

15 December 1982: England beat Luxembourg 9–0 at Wembley in the European Championship qualifiers. Luther Blissett scores a hat-trick on his England debut and becomes the nation's first black goalscorer. Débutant Mark Chamberlain is also on the scoresheet.[17]

22 December 1982: Everton sign 26-year-old midfielder Peter Reid from Bolton Wanderers in a £60,000 deal.

29 December 1982: Watford rise to third in the table with a win over West Ham, who move into fifth. At the lower reaches of the table, Norwich beat Luton and Birmingham draw with Swansea; all four clubs and Brighton are separated by four points. In the Second Division, QPR beat Charlton to go level on points with Wolverhampton Wanderers at the top of the table.[18]

31 December 1982: The year ends with Liverpool's lead at the top of the First Division increased to six points, with Nottingham Forest their nearest challengers and Watford and Manchester United two points further back. Sunderland, Birmingham City and Brighton & Hove Albion occupy the bottom three places.[2] An excellent month for Wolverhampton Wanderers has seen the Midlands side storm to the top of the Second Division, joined in the top three by Queens Park Rangers and Fulham.[19]

1 January 1983: Alan Ball, now aged 37 and the only England World Cup winner still playing, leaves Southampton on a free transfer and signs a contract with Bristol Rovers.

8 January 1983: Holders Tottenham Hotspur beat Southampton 1-0 in the FA Cup third round. Nottingham Forest are surprisingly beaten 2-0 by manager Brian Clough's former team, Second Division Derby County.[20]

19 January 1983: Aston Villa lose 1–0 to Barcelona at the Nou Camp in the first leg of the European Super Cup.

26 January 1983: Aston Villa clinch the European Super Cup by beating Barcelona 3–0 at Villa Park.

31 January 1983: As January ends, Liverpool are now ten points clear at the top of the First Division, their nearest rivals now being Manchester United. Watford are third, level on points with Nottingham Forest, and Coventry City have moved into the top five. Brighton & Hove Albion and Birmingham City are still in the bottom three, but Sunderland have climbed out of the relegation zone at the expense of Norwich City.[2] Wolverhampton Wanderers, Queens Park Rangers and Fulham continue to lead the way in the Second Division, with third placed Fulham now nine points ahead of their nearest challengers Sheffield Wednesday. At the other end of the table, fallen giants Derby County show no sign of improvement as they remain bottom of the division and are now eight points adrift of safety.[21]

19 February 1983: Tottenham Hotspur lose their first FA Cup match since March 1980, 2-0 to Everton in the fifth round. Aston Villa beat Watford 4-1, while Norwich City beat Ipswich Town 1-0 in the East Anglian derby.[20]

20 February 1983: Liverpool's hopes of a unique domestic treble are ended when they suffer a shock 2–1 home defeat against Brighton & Hove Albion in the FA Cup fifth round.[20]

26 February 1983: Arsenal goalkeeper Pat Jennings, 37, becomes the first footballer to appear in 1,000 competitive games in England, reaching the milestone in a 0-0 league draw with West Bromwich Albion at The Hawthorns.[22]

28 February 1983: Liverpool now have a 14-point advantage at the top of the First Division, with Watford one place behind and with a game in hand. Manchester United, Nottingham Forest and Aston Villa complete the top five. The bottom three remain unchanged from the end of last month.[2] Wolverhampton Wanderers, Queens Park Rangers and Fulham remain the leading force in the Second Division promotion race, but Leicester City are starting to put pressure on the leading pack.[23]

1 March 1983: Peter Beardsley leaves Manchester United and returns to Vancouver Whitecaps on a free transfer, having only made one appearance for the Old Trafford club.

12 March 1983: Arsenal, Brighton & Hove Albion and Manchester United reach the FA Cup semi-finals after home wins in the sixth round. Burnley and Sheffield Wednesday draw 1-1 in an all-Second Division tie.[20]

16 March 1983: Sheffield Wednesday thrash Burnley 5-0 to reach the FA Cup semi-finals for the first time since 1966.[20]

26 March 1983: Liverpool clinch the League Cup for the third season running by beating Manchester United 2–1 in the final at Wembley.[24]

30 March 1983: England are held to a 0-0 draw by Greece at Wembley in a European Championship qualifier.[25]

31 March 1983: Liverpool are looking all set to add the league title to their League Cup this season, as they end March as First Division leaders with a 13-point lead over nearest challengers Watford. Manchester United, Aston Villa and Southampton complete the top five. The bottom three clubs remain unchanged for the second month-end running.[2] Queens Park Rangers have overhauled Wolverhampton Wanderers at the top of the Second Division, while Fulham remain third but still under pressure from a determined Leicester City side. Derby County are at last showing some sign of being able to avoid relegation as they are now just two points adrift of safety.[26]

4 April 1983: Tottenham inflict a five-nil thumping on Arsenal, exacting revenge for the Gunners winning by the same scoreline in manager Keith Burkinshaw's first season at the Spurs helm.[27]

16 April 1983: Manchester United, FA Cup winners four times, reach the FA Cup final along with Brighton who have never reached the final before.[20]

23 April 1983: Liverpool are now 17 points clear at the top of the First Division, and need just one more point to guarantee the League title. Watford, Manchester United, Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest complete the top five, with Stoke City, Southampton and Tottenham Hotspur providing strong competition in the race for a UEFA Cup place. Brighton & Hove Albion and Birmingham City remain in the bottom two, but Norwich City have climbed out of the drop zone at the expense of Swansea City, who are now at the foot of the table with four games left. Queens Park Rangers are promoted to the First Division after a 1-0 win over Leeds United.[2]

27 April 1983: England beat Hungary 2–0 at Wembley in a European Championship qualifier.[28]

30 April 1983: April ends with Liverpool confirmed as champions following Manchester United's draw with Norwich City. It is their 14th League championship. Watford are second with three games to go, while Manchester United are three points behind Watford with two games in hand. Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest complete the top five, but the next six teams are still in contention for a UEFA Cup place. Swansea City and Brighton & Hove Albion have been cut loose at the bottom of the table. Birmingham City win 2-1 at Sunderland to move within a point of out-of-form Manchester City.[2] Wolverhampton Wanderers need only one win from their final three games to be sure of promotion to the First Division alongside Queens Park Rangers. Fulham, meanwhile, have lapsed and are just one point ahead of Leicester City in the race for the final promotion place. Newcastle United and Sheffield Wednesday still have an outside chance of going up this season.[29]

7 May 1983: FA Cup finalists Brighton & Hove Albion are relegated from the First Division after losing 1–0 at home to fellow strugglers Manchester City. Swansea City join them in relegation after losing 2-1 to Manchester United. Luton Town drop into the bottom three with one game remaining after being thrashed 5-1 at home by Everton, but Birmingham City virtually guarantee their survival by beating Tottenham Hotspur 2-0.[20]

14 May 1983: The First Division season ends with champions Liverpool, who failed to win any of their last seven matches, 11 points clear of second-placed Watford. Manchester United are third, followed by Tottenham Hotspur, Nottingham Forest and Aston Villa. The final day drama comes at Maine Road, where Manchester City and Luton Town both go into the game scrapping to avoid the last relegation place. The home side require a draw to stay up, while the visitors need to win to survive.[2] A late goal from Raddy Antic keeps Luton Town up and relegates a Manchester City side who were top of the league 17 months ago.[30] Leicester City take the final Second Division promotion place behind Queens Park Rangers and Wolverhampton Wanderers after they draw 0-0 with Burnley and closest challengers Fulham lose 1-0 to Derby County. A pitch invasion causes the match at the Baseball Ground to finish early, but the result is allowed to stand.

20 May 1983: Everton sell midfielder Steve McMahon, 21, to Aston Villa for £175,000.

21 May 1983: Manchester United and Brighton & Hove Albion draw 2–2 in the FA Cup final to book a replay in five days time. Brighton nearly win the game with a late shot by Gordon Smith, which United goalkeeper Gary Bailey saves.[31]

26 May 1983: Manchester United thrash Brighton & Hove Albion 4–0 in the FA Cup final replay to lift the trophy on legendary former manager and current director Sir Matt Busby's 74th birthday.

1 June 1983: England clinch the Home Championship by beating Scotland 2-0 at Wembley.[32] 19-year-old Swindon Town striker Paul Rideout moves from the Fourth Division to the First in a £200,000 transfer to Aston Villa.

UEFA Competitions

Aston Villa won the European Super Cup with midfield dynamo Gordon Cowans playing a major part in the win.

FA Cup

Manchester United won their first major trophy under Ron Atkinson's management by beating Brighton 4–0 in the FA Cup final replay after a 2–2 draw in the first match.

League Cup

Liverpool won their third successive League Cup as an added bonus for manager Bob Paisley during his final season in charge. When his team prepared to ascend the 39 steps to the Royal Box, they all insisted that he should be the man to collect the trophy.

Football League

First Division

Bob Paisley went out on a high when retiring as Liverpool manager after nine years and numerous trophies by winning the league title and the Football League Cup. His formidable team had looked uncatchable in the league by the turn of 1983, and finished top of the table by 11 points. Their nearest rivals were Watford, in the First Division for the first time and spearheaded by the ownership of Elton John, management of Graham Taylor and the attacking prowess of Luther Blissett and John Barnes. Third placed Manchester United had been on the losing side to Liverpool in the League Cup final and were very nearly beaten by a last minute Brighton goal in the FA Cup final, only for a Gary Bailey save to force a replay which United won 4-0. The top five was completed by Nottingham Forest and Tottenham Hotspur.

FA Cup finalists Brighton & Hove Albion were relegated after four seasons in the top flight. Next to go down were Swansea City, whose second season among the elite was a complete contrast to their first, where they had finished sixth. The final relegation place was decided in dramatic fashion at Maine Road, where Luton Town had to beat their hosts Manchester City to stay up and send the home side (who had never been in the relegation zone at any point of the season until then, and had been safely in mid-table until the controversial sacking of manager John Bond in February, leading to a disastrous run of results under replacement manager John Benson) down. A late winner by Luton's Raddy Antic gave Luton survival, which manager David Pleat famously celebrated by running on the pitch when the final whistle was blown.

Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification or relegation
1 Liverpool 42 24 10 8 87 37 +50 82 Qualified for the European Cup
2 Watford 42 22 5 15 74 57 +17 71 Qualified for the UEFA Cup
3 Manchester United 42 19 13 10 56 38 +18 70 Qualified for the Cup Winners' Cup
4 Tottenham Hotspur 42 20 9 13 65 50 +15 69 Qualified for the UEFA Cup
5 Nottingham Forest 42 20 9 13 62 50 +12 69
6 Aston Villa 42 21 5 16 62 50 +12 68
7 Everton 42 18 10 14 66 48 +18 64
8 West Ham United 42 20 4 18 68 62 +6 64
9 Ipswich Town 42 15 13 14 64 50 +14 58
10 Arsenal 42 16 10 16 58 56 +2 58
11 West Bromwich Albion 42 15 12 15 51 49 +2 57
12 Southampton 42 15 12 15 54 58 4 57
13 Stoke City 42 16 9 17 53 64 11 57
14 Norwich City 42 14 12 16 52 58 6 54
15 Notts County 42 15 7 20 55 71 16 52
16 Sunderland 42 12 14 16 48 61 13 50
17 Birmingham City 42 12 14 16 40 55 15 50
18 Luton Town 42 12 13 17 65 84 19 49
19 Coventry City 42 13 9 20 48 59 11 48
20 Manchester City 42 13 8 21 47 70 23 47 Relegated to the Second Division
21 Swansea City 42 10 11 21 51 69 18 41
22 Brighton & Hove Albion 42 9 13 20 38 68 30 40

Source: rsssf.com
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored

Second Division

A year after being runners-up in the FA Cup, Queens Park Rangers won the Second Division title and secured a return to the First Division after four years away. Runners-up spot went to Wolverhampton Wanderers, who had been saved from closure by former player Derek Dougan just before the start of the season, while Leicester City clinched the final promotion place, a point ahead of a Fulham side who came close to a second successive promotion under the management of former England striker Malcolm Macdonald. Another former England striker, Kevin Keegan, who was still playing, had an impressive first season at Newcastle United but could not quite inspire them to promotion, nor could World Cup winner Jack Charlton as manager of FA Cup semi-finalists Sheffield Wednesday.

Bolton Wanderers, Rotherham United and League Cup semi-finalists Burnley ended the season relegated, while Chelsea narrowly avoided the drop, as did Derby County after the return of former coach Peter Taylor to the club as manager.

Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification or relegation
1 Queens Park Rangers 42 26 7 9 77 36 +41 85 Promoted to the First Division
2 Wolverhampton Wanderers 42 20 15 7 68 44 +24 75
3 Leicester City 42 20 10 12 72 44 +28 70
4 Fulham 42 20 9 13 64 47 +17 69
5 Newcastle United 42 18 13 11 75 53 +22 67
6 Sheffield Wednesday 42 16 15 11 60 47 +13 63
7 Oldham Athletic 42 14 19 9 64 47 +17 61
8 Leeds United 42 13 21 8 51 46 +5 60
9 Shrewsbury Town 42 15 14 13 48 48 0 59
10 Barnsley 42 14 15 13 57 55 +2 57
11 Blackburn Rovers 42 15 12 15 58 58 0 57
12 Cambridge United 42 13 12 17 42 60 18 51
13 Derby County 42 10 19 13 49 58 9 49
14 Carlisle United 42 12 12 18 68 70 2 48
15 Crystal Palace 42 12 12 18 43 52 9 48
16 Middlesbrough 42 11 15 16 46 67 21 48
17 Charlton Athletic 42 13 9 20 63 86 23 48
18 Chelsea 42 11 14 17 51 61 10 47
19 Grimsby Town 42 12 11 19 45 70 25 47
20 Rotherham United 42 10 15 17 45 68 23 45 Relegated to the Third Division
21 Burnley 42 12 8 22 56 66 10 44
22 Bolton Wanderers 42 11 11 20 42 61 19 44

Source: rsssf.com
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored

Third Division

Portsmouth's revival continued as they clinched the Third Division title to secure a second promotion in four seasons. Cardiff City won promotion back to the Second Division after suffering relegation the previous season, as well as Huddersfield Town, who like Portsmouth continued their revival by also securing a second promotion in four seasons. Newport County's collapse in the final weeks of the season cost them a place in the Second Division, a similar fate befalling Oxford United in the first full season of Robert Maxwell's ownership and Jim Smith's management. For the second season running, Lincoln City just missed out on promotion.

Chesterfield, Doncaster Rovers, Wrexham and Reading ended the season relegated.

Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification or relegation
1 Portsmouth 46 27 10 9 74 41 +33 91 Promoted to the Second Division
2 Cardiff City 46 25 11 10 76 50 +26 86
3 Huddersfield Town 46 23 13 10 84 49 +35 82
4 Newport County 46 23 9 14 76 54 +22 78
5 Oxford United 46 22 12 12 71 53 +18 78
6 Lincoln City 46 23 7 16 77 51 +26 76
7 Bristol Rovers 46 22 9 15 84 58 +26 75
8 Plymouth Argyle 46 19 8 19 61 66 5 65
9 Brentford 46 18 10 18 88 77 +11 64
10 Walsall 46 17 13 16 64 63 +1 64
11 Sheffield United 46 19 7 20 62 64 2 64
12 Bradford City 46 16 13 17 68 69 1 61
13 Gillingham 46 16 13 17 58 59 1 61
14 Bournemouth 46 16 13 17 59 68 9 61
15 Southend United 46 15 14 17 66 65 +1 59
16 Preston North End 46 15 13 18 60 69 9 58
17 Millwall 46 14 13 19 64 77 13 55
18 Wigan Athletic 46 15 9 22 60 72 12 54
19 Exeter City 46 14 12 20 81 104 23 54
20 Orient 46 15 9 22 64 88 24 54
21 Reading 46 12 17 17 64 79 15 53 Relegated to the Fourth Division
22 Wrexham 46 12 15 19 56 76 20 51
23 Doncaster Rovers 46 9 11 26 57 97 40 38
24 Chesterfield 46 8 13 25 43 68 25 37

Source: rsssf.com
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored

Fourth Division

Wimbledon set the Football League points record in the second season of three points for a win, gaining 98 points to win the Fourth Division title and their third promotion at this level since joining the Football League in 1977. They were joined by Hull City, Port Vale and Scunthorpe United.

Hereford United, Crewe Alexandra and Hartlepool United perhaps unsurprisingly propped up the league and had to apply for re-election, but the fourth club to suffer this humiliation were fallen giants Blackpool, of Stanley Matthews fame and 1953 FA Cup glory. However, all four clubs were successful in gaining re-election.

Crewe Alexandra built for the future by appointing Dario Gradi as manager, hoping that he could keep them clear of the Fourth Division's lower reaches and achieve some of the success with them that he had achieved in two promotion winning campaigns at Wimbledon (although he did not complete the second promotion campaign at Wimbledon).

Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification or relegation
1 Wimbledon 46 29 11 6 96 45 +51 98 Promoted to the Third Division
2 Hull City 46 25 15 6 75 34 +41 90
3 Port Vale 46 26 10 10 67 34 +33 88
4 Scunthorpe United 46 23 14 9 71 42 +29 83
5 Bury 46 23 12 11 74 46 +28 81
6 Colchester United 46 24 9 13 75 55 +20 81
7 York City 46 22 13 11 88 58 +30 79
8 Swindon Town 46 19 11 16 61 54 +7 68
9 Peterborough United 46 17 13 16 58 52 +6 64
10 Mansfield Town 46 16 13 17 61 70 9 61
11 Halifax Town 46 16 12 18 59 66 7 60
12 Torquay United 46 17 7 22 56 65 9 58
13 Chester 46 15 11 20 55 60 5 56
14 Bristol City 46 13 17 16 59 70 11 56
15 Northampton Town 46 14 12 20 65 75 10 54
16 Stockport County 46 14 12 20 60 79 19 54
17 Darlington 46 13 13 20 61 71 10 52
18 Aldershot 46 12 15 19 61 82 21 51
19 Tranmere Rovers 46 13 11 22 49 71 22 50
20 Rochdale 46 11 16 19 55 73 18 49
21 Blackpool 46 13 12 21 55 74 19 51 Re-elected
22 Hartlepool United 46 13 9 24 46 76 30 48
23 Crewe Alexandra 46 11 8 27 53 71 18 41
24 Hereford United 46 11 8 27 42 79 37 41

Source: rsssf.com
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored

Top goalscorers

First Division

Second Division

Third Division

Fourth Division

Non-league football

The divisional champions of the major non-League competitions were:

CompetitionWinners
Alliance Premier League Enfield
Isthmian League Wycombe Wanderers
Northern Premier League Gateshead
Southern League AP Leamington
FA Trophy Telford United
FA Vase VS Rugby

Star players

Successful managers

  • Bob Paisley's illustrious career as Liverpool manager went out on a high as they were league champions and League Cup winners.
  • Graham Taylor guided Watford to an impressive second-place finish in their First Division debut season.
  • Ron Atkinson won the FA Cup to end Manchester United's six-year trophy drought.
  • Terry Venables took Queens Park Rangers back into the First Division after a four-year exile.
  • Jimmy Melia guided Brighton to their first-ever FA Cup final although he couldn't save them from relegation to the Second Division.
  • Graham Hawkins took Wolverhampton Wanderers back into the First Division a year after relegation.
  • Dave Bassett guided Wimbledon to Fourth Division championship glory with 98 points.
  • Malcolm Macdonald took Fulham to fourth place in the Second Division – just missing out on promotion – to achieve their highest league finish for nearly 20 years.
  • Keith Burkinshaw inspired Tottenham to fourth place in the First Division and ensured that they would qualify for the following season's UEFA Cup.
  • Brian Clough ensured that Nottingham Forest remained among English football's leading sides by inspiring them to fifth place in the league and achieving qualification for the UEFA Cup.

Famous debutants

1 January 1983: Tony Cottee, 17-year-old striker, scores on his debut for West Ham United in 3–0 win over Tottenham Hotspur at Upton Park.[34]

26 February 1983: Ian Baird, 18-year-old striker, makes his debut for Southampton in 1–1 draw with West Ham United at Upton Park.[35]

20 April 1983: Colin Hill, 19-year-old defender, makes his debut for Arsenal in 3–1 defeat by Norwich City at Carrow Road.[36]

Deaths

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Smailes, Gordon (2000). The Breedon Book of Football Records. Derby: Breedon Books. p. 150. ISBN 1859832148.
  2. Manchester United FC News – United Mad. Manchesterunited-mad.co.uk (1982-08-28). Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  3. "Manchester City now top". The Age. Melbourne. 6 September 1982. p. 30. Retrieved 19 April 2015.
  4. Payne, Mike (1993). England: The Complete Post-War Record'. Derby: Breedon Books. p. 245. ISBN 1873626398.
  5. Queens Park Rangers FC News. Qpr Mad (1982-09-28). Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  6. 1 2 "Manchester on top of ladder". The Sydney Morning Herald. 11 October 1982. p. 23. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
  7. 1 2 Payne, Mike (1993). England: The Complete Post-War Record'. Derby: Breedon Books. p. 246. ISBN 1873626398.
  8. Queens Park Rangers FC News. Qpr Mad (1982-10-30). Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  9. LIVERWEB – Liverpool Results 1982–83
  10. Colchester United Archived October 7, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.. Coludata.co.uk. Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  11. Jackson, Jamie (9 February 2017). "English football's overseas arrivals who began with a Gabriel Jesus-style bang". theguardian.com. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 14 February 2017.
  12. "League fine Derby £10,000". The Herald. Glasgow. 26 November 1982. Back page. Retrieved 16 October 2014.
  13. Queens Park Rangers FC News. Qpr Mad (1982-11-27). Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  14. "Boring - so Bailey gets the boot..." New Straits Times. Kuala Lumpur. 8 December 1982. p. 31. Retrieved 16 October 2014.
  15. "Liverpool wins but United keeps pace, beating Notts". The Gazette. Montreal. Reuters. 13 December 1982. Retrieved 16 October 2014.
  16. Black Players by Match. Englandfootballonline.com. Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  17. "Watford moves up in English soccer". The Gazette. Montreal. United Press International. 30 December 1982. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
  18. Queens Park Rangers FC News. Qpr Mad (1982-12-29). Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  19. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Smailes, Gordon (2000). The Breedon Book of Football Records. Derby: Breedon Books. p. 236. ISBN 1859832148.
  20. Queens Park Rangers FC News. Qpr Mad (1983-01-22). Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  21. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2011-12-17.
  22. Queens Park Rangers FC News. Qpr Mad (1983-02-26). Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  23. Smailes, Gordon (2000). The Breedon Book of Football Records. Derby: Breedon Books. p. 259. ISBN 1859832148.
  24. Payne, Mike (1993). England: The Complete Post-War Record'. Derby: Breedon Books. p. 248. ISBN 1873626398.
  25. Queens Park Rangers FC News. Qpr Mad (1983-03-26). Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  26. Smyth, Rob; Burnton, Simon (30 October 2009). "The Joy of Six: Classic Arsenal v Tottenham matches". theguardian.com. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
  27. Payne, Mike (1993). England: The Complete Post-War Record, p. 248. Breedon Books, Derby. ISBN 1873626398.
  28. Queens Park Rangers FC News. Qpr Mad (1983-04-30). Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  29. Rice, Simon (18 May 2011). "Luton Town, Division One, 1982–1983 Luton Town went to Maine Road needing". The Independent. London.
  30. "... and Smith must score!". The Daily Mail. London. 11 October 2008.
  31. Payne, Mike (1993). England: The Complete Post-War Record'. Derby: Breedon Books. p. 249. ISBN 1873626398.
  32. English League Leading Goalscorers. Rsssf.com (2010-09-17). Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  33. Tony Cottee – West Ham United FC – Football-Heroes.net. Sporting-heroes.net. Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  34. Ian Baird – Southampton FC – Football-Heroes.net. Sporting-heroes.net. Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
  35. Colin Hill – Arsenal FC – Football-Heroes.net. Sporting-heroes.net. Retrieved on 2011-03-23.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.