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1990 Football League Second Division play-off final

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1991 Football League Second Division play-off Final
Date28 May 1990
VenueWembley Stadium, London
RefereeJohn Martin (Alton, Hampshire)
Attendance72,873
1989
1991

The 1990 Football League Second Division play-off Final was contested by Sunderland and Swindon Town at Wembley Stadium, London. Swindon won the match by a scoreline of one goal to nil, with an Alan McLoughlin goal via a wicked deflection from Gary Bennett thus deciding the fixture. Swindon Town were later demoted after being found guilty of financial irregularities which resulted in Sunderland gaining promotion.[1]

Route to the final

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
3 Newcastle United 46 22 14 10 80 55 +25 80
4 Swindon Town 46 20 14 12 79 59 +20 74
5 Blackburn Rovers 46 19 17 10 74 59 +15 74
6 Sunderland 46 20 14 12 70 64 0+6 74

Semi-finals

First leg
Sunderland0–0Newcastle United
Attendance: 26,641
Referee: Vic Callow

Blackburn Rovers1–2Swindon Town
Kennedy White
Foley
Attendance: 15,636
Second leg
Newcastle United0–2Sunderland
Gates 13'
Gabbiadini 86'

Sunderland won 2–0 on aggregate.


Swindon Town2–1Blackburn Rovers
Shearer
White
Gayle
Attendance: 12,416
Referee: J.E. Martin

Swindon Town won 4–2 on aggregate.

Final

Details

Sunderland0–1Swindon Town
Report McLoughlin 25'
Attendance: 72,873
Referee: John Martin (Alton, Hampshire)
Sunderland
Swindon Town
SUNDERLAND:
GK 1 Tony Norman
RB 2 John Kay
LB 3 Reuben Agboola
CB 4 Gary Bennett (c)
CB 5 John MacPhail
RM 6 Gary Owers
CM 7 Paul Bracewell
CM 8 Gordon Armstrong
FW 9 Eric Gates downward-facing red arrow 71'
FW 10 Marco Gabbiadini
LM 11 Colin Pascoe downward-facing red arrow 69'
Substitutes:
LM 12 Brian Atkinson upward-facing green arrow 69'
FW 14 Thomas Hauser upward-facing green arrow 71'
Manager:
Denis Smith
SWINDON TOWN:
GK 1 Fraser Digby
RB 2 David Kerslake
LB 3 Paul Bodin
CM 4 Alan McLoughlin
CB 5 Colin Calderwood (c)
CB 6 Jon Gittens
CM 7 Tom Jones
FW 8 Duncan Shearer
FW 9 Steve White
DM 10 Ross MacLaren
CM 11 Steve Foley
Substitutes:
FW 12 Fitzroy Simpson
MF 14 Dave Hockaday
Player/Manager:
Osvaldo Ardiles

MATCH RULES

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

Demotion

Although they won the promotion play-offs, Swindon Town did not compete in the First Division during the following season. The 1989–90 season had seen the club charged with 36 breaches of Football League regulations[2] – 35 of which related to illegal payments made to players between 1985 and 1989.

A hearing to decide the club's fate was scheduled for 4 May – before the play-offs began – but this was postponed on legal advice just days before it was due when Swindon chairman Brian Hillier, club accountant Vince Farrar and former team manager Lou Macari were all charged by police for "intent to defraud Inland Revenue by making payments without deducting tax or NI". (In July 1992 both Hillier and Farrar were found guilty of these charges, while Macari was cleared).

Hillier and Macari had already been punished by the FA in February 1990 for their involvement in a £6,500 bet being placed on Swindon losing to Newcastle United in a tie during the 1987–88 FA Cup. The bet was successful and netted £4,000 winnings. As this activity ran counter to FA rules that forbid any bets by club officials or players on their own team, both were found guilty. Hillier was given a six-month suspension from football, but after he (unsuccessfully) appealed, the FA increased it to three years. Macari was fined £1,000 (upheld after his own appeal), and Swindon Town given a £7,500 fine.

At a Football League hearing on 7 June, Swindon pleaded guilty to all 36 charges against them and admitted a further twenty. The league decreed that the club would be denied promotion and instead demoted to the Third Division. Six days later, it was announced that losing play-off finalists Sunderland would be instead promoted to the First Division. This was controversial as Newcastle felt that as they had finished third, three places above bitter rivals Sunderland, they should have been promoted instead. The FA's decision stood and Sunderland were promoted.

Swindon launched a High Court appeal against the Football League's double demotion, claiming it to be "harsh, oppressive and disproportionate to previous penalties". However, within days they dropped this action and instead appealed directly to the FA. On 2 July an FA Appeal Panel reduced the punishment to the club simply remaining in the Second Division; Tranmere Rovers – the losing play-off finalists in the Third Division – who were to have replaced Swindon in the second level were therefore denied promotion.

References

  1. ^ "SAFC – Story so far". Sunderland A.F.C.
  2. ^ "Swindon Town FC History". Swindon Town F.C.