I’ve posted a lot on this in the past but it’s always worth revisiting, especially as recent years have seen dozens of new chants established at Manchester City. Successful eras often bring new chants – and that’s definitely happened recently – but failing periods can also generate new supporter songs.
Chanting at football games is rarely documented correctly with many myths, rumours and stories developing over the years. This feature is designed to give a potted overview of the development of singing at City.
I explained about some of the chants in this talk I did a couple of years ago. If you’ve got time watch it:
Now, for subscribers is an 1800 word article on the history and development of chants at Manchester City:
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Today (4 May) in 1929 the legendary Tommy Johnson netted his 38th League goal of the season at Anfield when City drew 1-1 with Liverpool. This remains Manchester City’s record number of goals by a player in a League season (Haaland scored 36 League goals in 2022-23). Johnson’s 38th goal came in the 22nd minute of the final game. Here for subscribers is a detailed look at Tommy’s record and his life.
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On this day (3 May) in 2003 Manchester City defeated Liverpool 2-1 at Anfield. The newspaper reports that followed tended to praise City ‘keeper Peter Schmeichel most, even though Nicolas Anelka had scored both goals for the Blues. In Manchester, this was a hugely popular City win but this was a strange and emotional period for all connected with the Blues. The following game would be City’s last first team match at Maine Road and while fans celebrated a rare win at Anfield there were many emotions as the club now looked ahead to Maine Road’s farewell.
You can read plenty on this final season elsewhere on the site.
If you enjoy all the free material on my website and would like to support my research and keep this website going (but don’t want to subscribe) then why not make a one-time donation (or buy me a coffee). All support for my research is valued and welcome. It allows me to keep some free material available for all. Thanks.
Phil Foden and Khadija ‘Bunny’ Shaw have been named Men’s and Women’s Footballers of the Year by the Football Writers’ Association. It’s an incredible double and adds to an interesting record: Manchester City remain the only club to ever win both accolades during the same season, with Raheem Sterling and Nikita Parris achieving the same feat in 2018-19.
City academy graduate Foden’s outstanding performances saw him receive 42% of the vote while Jamaican international Shaw secured the most votes in the history of the women’s award, during a remarkable season in which her goals have helped lead City to the top of the Women’s Super League.
Foden has scored 24 goals and made 10 assists in all competitions as Pep Guardiola’s side hope to become the first men’s team in English football history to secure fourth consecutive top-flight titles and also record consecutive Premier League and FA Cup doubles.
Foden commented: “Being named the Football Writers’ Association Footballer of the Year is a huge honour. I’m very, very happy to receive this award but I could not have done it without the help of my team-mates. We have a very special squad of players at City, and I’m privileged to be a part of that group. I want to thank all my team-mates as well as Pep and the coaches for all the support and advice they have given me.
“I strive to be the best that I can be every single day and that is all down to the way the manager and my colleagues always seek to improve and get better. I would also like to take this opportunity to thank everyone who voted for me as well as my fellow nominees.”
Shaw secured 53% of nominations to be named FWA Women’s Footballer of the Year ahead of Chelsea’s Lauren James and City teammate Alex Greenwood. The Jamaican international has scored 22 goals in all competitions this season, with 21 of those leading her to the top of the Women’s Super League scoring charts and her team to the top of the league, during a season in which she also became the Club’s all-time top scorer.
Shaw said: “I am very proud and privileged to have received this award and to be recognised in this way is a special honour. I want to also thank all of my team-mates. They provide me with the chances to score goals and I could not have won this award without them.
“I also owe such a lot to Gareth, the rest of the coaching team and everyone else here at City. It’s a pleasure to be part of such a special group. Many thanks to all who voted for me and to my fellow nominees. It means such a lot to have won this award. Hopefully the side can now finish off the season in style and give everyone special cause to celebrate.
On this day (3 May) in 2023 it was a privilege being at the Etihad to see Erling Haaland break the Premier League’s seasonal goalscoring record with City’s second in their 3-0 victory over West Ham United. He netted his 35th Premier League goal of the season and then Phil Foden scored the 1000th goal of Pep’s City reign.
Ths South Stand pre-match, City v West Ham 3 May 2023. The new Pep flag.
Haaland’s goal that night meant that only 47 players had scored more competitive goals for City than Haaland had in the club’s entire history – that’s in their entire careers, not in most of one season! Also, it’s worth highlighting that Haaland had netted 5% of the 1000 goals scored under Pep at City. Phenomenal stuff!
I said it then and I’ll say it now, it’s always great for a historian to experience history being made. Nice work Haaland and City!
After the game Haaland was given a guard of honour by the City players, boss Pep Guardiola and the club’s backroom staff. Afterwards the player commented: ‘It was a nice feeling scoring that goal, it always is… It was painful when everyone hit me on the back in the guard of honour.’
Manager Pep commented: ‘He’s just 22… and still has five games left. How many games I made the substitution after a hat-trick in 60 minutes, maybe he’d have scored more. But maybe he’d have got injured. He’s special. Congratulations to him.
‘We expected him to score goals but to break Cole and Shearer records… I’m pretty sure what he wants is to win the Premier League.’
‘It’s unbelievable. How many important goals he’s scored to win games, we are so satisfied. He’s a unique person and he’s so special. He deserved the guard of honour because it’s an incredible milestone. Another day he might break his own record. He’s scored a lot of goals!’
Looking towards the South Stand pre-match, City v West Ham 3 May 2023 (West Ham fans unusually did not sell out their allocation)
I’ve been asked to select an all time Manchester City FA Cup final team to be published later this month. I’ll explain more nearer the FA Cup final but the idea is that I pick 11 City players to make up a team plus a manager. The rules I’ve set myself are that the players must have appeared in FA Cup winning City teams AND none of the current squad can be selected. So…
City chairman John Chapman used City’s success as part of his political campaign.
By Friday morning I’m looking for suggestions of who should be in. Remember it’s a standard 11 so competition for places is high. Post your thoughts below. As it’s an all-time FAC winning team then we’ve got from The first success in 1904 onwards to consider.
It’s a tough job so any suggestions welcome. Thanks.
I’ve heard the news that Ian Mellor has passed away at the age of 74 and so I wanted to pay tribute by publishing an interview I did with him several years ago and also provide a few biographical details too. As always, I think it’s best in these moments to remember the player by using their own comments and thoughts, so I’ll start with that.
In December 2003 I interviewed Ian for a feature in the Manchester City match programme. Here is the interview as it was written and published back then:
IN SEARCH OF THE BLUES – IAN MELLOR
Ian Mellor made his debut in March 1971 and went on to make a total of 48 League and Cup appearances for the Blues. In 1973 he moved on to Norwich. Gary James, author of Farewell To Maine Road, caught up with Ian last week.
Let’s start with your role today, you’re still very much involved in football. Can you explain your role and how it came about?
I’m the Commercial Executive to the Professional Footballers’ Association (PFA). I suppose it started when I first finished playing. I was 34 and unemployed for about four months. I needed to find something new and like any former player it can be difficult at first, but I got myself on to an intensive sales course and really tried to push myself in that direction.
I was in the Sheffield area – I’d been a player with Wednesday and so that helped to some extent – but it was a very tough time to be selling there. The industry had been decimated.
Eventually the athlete Derek Ibbotson – who had been involved with fitness training at City when I was a player – brought me in to work for Puma and my involvement with sports commercial activities really started then. One of my main activities was to persuade key League players to wear Puma goods.
Did your playing career help?
Yes, of course. The fact that I’d played did help, but it wasn’t too difficult. Paul Gascoigne was signed up and, like with any major sports company today, it’s great if a major star wears your products. From that I went on to work for Gola and I’d also spent some time talking with the PFA about providing sportswear for their various initiatives. One thing led to another and, through Mickey Burns, Gordon Taylor asked me to join the PFA as its first Commercial Manager about ten years ago.
As a player did you feel the PFA was important?
Like many unions you don’t appreciate what they do until you need them. As an ex-player the game took its toll on my body and I’ve had to have 2 new hip joints replaced and without the support of the PFA I would have been a cripple. I’m just one of thousands of members of the PFA who have received vital assistance when needed. As a player I didn’t really think about it at the time, but now I have come to realise how much the union helps present and former players, and is involved in so many areas such as community programmes, anti racism campaigns and supporters’ organisations. As you get older you also start to understand how football’s developed and what the union has achieved. The PFA has a major role in football and it puts so much back into the game that we all love.
Going back to your early career, did your elevation to the first team come easily?
I was certainly worried – I’d been sent to Altrincham on loan and was paid something like £2 a week. I played two games and started to wonder what was going on. When that happens you can’t help but feel your career is not going to be in the first team. Then Ken Barnes started working closely with the City youngsters and he started to look at me. That got things moving.
Your debut came against Coventry in March 1971. Do you feel you performed well?
It was a lot to handle really. I was nervous, very nervous. I knew I’d be facing Wilf Smith who I think was the most expensive fullback in the game at the time. I became a nervous wreck, and in the first half I think that was obvious. I just wasn’t right. Malcolm Allison had a real go at me at half time and warned: “If you don’t pull your finger out, you’ll be off!” So that got me playing! The second half I really worked hard and played my normal game. I tried not to worry. I just got on and did it.
You must have performed well enough because you kept your place.
Well the Coventry draw was on 20th March and four days later I played in the second leg of the European Cup Winners’ Cup and managed to score, so it was a great start really. I still wasn’t a regular, but I played in another five league games and even scored against United in the derby match on the last day of the season. As a City fan the derby meant an awful lot and scoring your first League goal in a derby is something special, especially for a local lad.
Was that your biggest moment?
I suppose my biggest moment came when I actually signed professional forms. Johnny Hart took me into a little room hidden away under the Main Stand at Maine Road and I signed the forms. All the time I was thinking where’s the press? Where’s Granada? Instead of the hype you always imagine surrounds these things there were Johnny and I in a damp, cold corner of the ground. Johnny though said something which has stuck with me ever since, he said: “I wish you all that you wish yourself”. Which is a great comment because in football… and in life for that matter… you have to have aims and dreams. You need to want to be a player to be a player.
Who would you say was the biggest influence in your playing career?
Well, we were very fortunate at City to have Johnny Hart, Ken Barnes, and Dave Ewing in the coaching set up. They were very knowledgeable and men of real quality. They knew what they were talking about and they also cared passionately about the game and the Club. They’d all had great careers and as a young player you listened and learned.
At times they could be very hard. They pushed you because they knew you had to be hard to survive in football, and they certainly made you work. They gave me the right sort of grounding.
The biggest coaching influence though has to be Malcolm Allison. In those days he was the best as a coach and motivator and I learnt so much from him. Again he could be tough, but you listened because he had already delivered so much by the time I got into the first team.
As players did you socialise as a group?
There were quite a few of us who came up the ranks together so people like Donachie, Carrodus, Gibbons, McBeth, and Jeffries were the ones I went out with. I suppose there were two age groups. The older players were married and had also come through the Sixties team together, and then there were the younger single guys. Naturally, as in any environment, you stick in your peer groups, but obviously on the pitch you’re one team and work hard for each other.
Willie Donachie was probably the closest to me. Our wives went to the same school and he was the Best Man at my wedding, and we get on really well.
Was it one of the players who gave you the nickname ‘Spider’?
Ah yes. Spider’s been my nickname since those early days at City. It was Ken Mulhearn who gave it to me, although he probably doesn’t realise that now. On a Saturday morning if we were at an away match and sat in the hotel, we’d usually watch a bit of television and it always seemed to be that Spiderman was on. Ken shouted “look it’s Ian Mellor” and the name Spider then stuck because of my long legs and the comparison with Spiderman!
The funny thing is there are many, many of my business contacts who don’t really know my proper name. It’s always Spider. I always get introduced as Spider, and so if I ever give my name as Ian Mellor when I’m calling someone I deal with they get confused. It’s amazing how these things stick, but it’s great.
How did the fans treat you?
Always well. It was a great side to join, and as long as you put the effort in the fans loved you. I never received any stick and the fans have always loved to see players who attack. Once I’d made my first appearance I started to get recognised. Being tall and thin helps you get noticed, and I enjoyed the support they gave.
The team was great as well. There was tremendous camaraderie and the success must have helped to create that spirit.
Clearly, there must have been a downside. What was your biggest regret?
Leaving! I should never have gone to Norwich. I went from a top five side to a bottom five side overnight and it was such an alien environment. Norwich is a nice place, and a good club, but at that time the move was totally the wrong move to make. Because they were struggling there was no confidence. The contrast with City was unbelievable.
At City everything was so positive, and as a Blue I shouldn’t have gone.
You come from a family of Blues, don’t you?
Yes. We were season ticket holders and I used to stand on the Kippax.
Naturally, I have to ask how you felt when your son Neil played for Liverpool against City in the FA Cup last season?
It was great to see him play at Maine Road, and I felt very proud. It was a very strange feeling really though because he was playing against the family’s team. We’re all Blues and the best result would have been for him to score but for City to win. It didn’t go that way of course, but it was great to see him play in that match. A great feeling.
I hope that gave a sense of the man and now here’s a brief career overview:
Ian Mellor Career Detail
Ian was with Manchester City between July 1968 and March 1973. He also played for Norwich City (joined 7 Mar 1973), Brighton & Hove Albion (6 May 1974), Chester City (24 Feb 1978), Sheffield Wednesday (11 June 1979), Bradford City (24 June 1982), Hong Kong (Jan 1984) and Worksop Town. and here is a brief profile of him:
Known affectionately as Spider, Ian Mellor was recognised for his speed and dedication. He signed for City first as an amateur (July 1968) then as a professional (16 Dec 1969), making his Reserve debut in October 1970 away at Aston Villa. A former Cheshire Boys player, he won an England youth cap with City.
In March 1971 there was an injury crisis at Maine Road and Spider was given his debut against Coventry City (h) on 20 March. City drew 1-1 with Franny Lee scoring.
Ian scored his first League goal in the last match of the 1970-71 season against United. He was virtually an ever-present for the first half of the following season until replaced by Tony Towers.
You can see a goal he scored at Arsenal in 1971 here:
In 1972-73 his appearances were limited and then came a controversial transfer to Norwich City in March for £70,000. This transfer was often cited as the cause of the resignation of Malcolm Allison who felt that the player had been sold behind his back. Spider’s last City appearance was against Wolves on 3 March 1973.
Later Ian was employed by a sportswear company and also for the PFA in Manchester.