1996 Football League First Division play-off Final

1996 Football League First Division play-off final
after extra time
Date 27 May 1996
Venue Wembley Stadium, London
Referee D. Allison (Lancaster)
Attendance 73,573

The 1996 Football League First Division play-off Final was a football match played at Wembley Stadium, London on May 27, 1996 at the end of the 1995–96 season. The match determined the third and final team to gain promotion from First Division to the Premiership, and was contested by Leicester City, who finished fifth during the league season, and Crystal Palace, who finished third. The teams reached the final by defeating Stoke City and Charlton Athletic respectively in the two-legged semi-finals.

It was Leicester's fourth Football League First Division play-off final in five years, having lost to Blackburn Rovers and Swindon Town and beaten local rivals Derby County in three consecutive finals in 1992, 1993 and 1994. Crystal Palace had also been in the play-off final at this level before, also playing Blackburn Rovers, and beating them 4–3 on aggregate in 1989.

Summary

After a shaky start from both teams, Crystal Palace took the early advantage, netting after just 14 minutes thanks to a drilled effort from Andy Roberts. The game ebbed and flowed for the remainder of the half, with just the single goal separating the sides at half-time. Leicester came out fighting in the second half, with Steve Walsh seeing an attempt saved off the line just after the break. Their persistence eventually paid off after Marc Edworthy brought down Muzzy Izzet in the area and Garry Parker converted the resulting spot-kick with 15 minutes of regulation time left to play. The game ended 1-1 at 90 minutes and went into extra-time. The biggest talking point of extra-time came with just seconds to go; Martin O'Neill sent on his substitute goalkeeper Željko Kalac, expecting the 6 ft 7in keeper to be a better bet at saving penalties than Kevin Poole. Immediately following the resumption of play, a long free-kick was only partially cleared by the Crystal Palace defence and the ball came back out to an unmarked Steve Claridge on the edge of the Palace box. Claridge then shinned home the winner from 20 yards past the hapless Nigel Martyn with just 2 seconds of extra-time left to play. Some Crystal Palace players later admitted they were put off by the substitution, though O'Neill admitted that was never the intention.[1]

Match details

Leicester City 2–1 (a.e.t.) Crystal Palace
Parker  76' (pen.)
Claridge  120'
Report Roberts  14'
Attendance: 73,573
Referee: David Allison (Lancaster)
Leicester City
Crystal Palace
LEICESTER CITY:
GK1England Kevin Poole 119'
RB2England Simon Grayson
CB4England Julian Watts
CB5England Steve Walsh (c)
LB3England Mike Whitlow
RM10England Garry Parker
CM6Turkey Muzzy Izzet
CM7Northern Ireland Neil Lennon
LM8England Scott Taylor
CF11England Emile Heskey
CF9England Steve Claridge
Substitutes:
FW12England Mark Robins
GK13Australia Zeljko Kalac 119'
DF14Northern Ireland Colin Hill
Manager:
Northern Ireland Martin O'Neill
CRYSTAL PALACE:
GK1England Nigel Martyn
RWB7England Darren Pitcher
CB2England Marc Edworthy
CB3England Kenny Brown
CB10England Dave Tuttle (c)
LWB5Republic of Ireland Rob Quinn
CM6Scotland David Hopkin
CM4England Andy Roberts
CM8Republic of Ireland Ray Houghton
CF9Scotland Dougie Freedman
CF11England George Ndah
Substitutes:
MF12Australia Carl Veart
MF13England Simon Rodger
FW14England Bruce Dyer
Manager:
England Dave Bassett

MATCH RULES

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Penalty shootout if scores still level.
  • 3 named substitutes.
  • Maximum of 3 substitutions.

Road to Wembley

Leicester City

First LegLeicester City00Stoke City
Second LegStoke City01Leicester City

Crystal Palace

First LegCharlton Athletic12Crystal Palace
Second LegCrystal Palace10Charlton Athletic

References

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