Ian ‘Spider’ Mellor

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.

50 Goals in a Season

On this day (30 April) in 2023 Erling Haaland became the first Manchester City player ever to score 50 goals in a season when he scored a 3rd minute penalty (awarded for a foul on Alvarez) against Fulham. Haaland converted the penalty with a left footed shot to the bottom right corner. Not only was this his 50th competitive goal of the season but it was also his 34th Premier League goal, which equalled the record seasonal Premier League tally. The record had been held by Andy Cole and Alan Shearer.

City ended up winning the game 2-1 with World Cup winner Julian Alvarez scoring the second for the Blues with a 25 yard strike in the 36th minute. That victory put City top, overtaking Arsenal. The Blues were on 76 points from 32 games while Arsenal were a point behind and had played one further game.

After the match manager Pep Guardiola was told by a journalist that Haaland had now scored the most goals by a top-flight player for 92 years (Tom ‘Pongo’ Waring reached 50 for Aston Villa in 1930-31) when Ramsay MacDonald was the Prime Minister. Pep responded: ‘Before Winston Churchill was prime minister? Wow. Sounds a long time ago.’

He added: ‘Congratulations to Erling. The best goals to help us achieve what we want is still [to come] there. I was really impressed that he took the penalty with the strong mentality he has.’

On This Day MCFC’s first European Trophy

On this day (29 April) 1970 Manchester City won the European Cup Winners’ Cup beating Gornik Zabrze from Poland 2-1 at the Prater Stadium in Vienna.  For those wondering, this meant that City had won a UEFA tournament years before many prominent ‘European’ teams including Liverpool, Barcelona, Juventus etc. Note: The Fairs Cup was not established as a UEFA competition and had some odd entry rules (one team from a city plus initially only teams from cities that had staged trade fairs could enter, hence its title. London entered it one year!).

The following table shows the span of success between each club’s first UEFA trophy and their most recent for the 20 or so clubs with the biggest span between first and most recent European success.

European span of success 2023, showing EC/CL, ECWC, UEFA/Europa & Europa Conference

Also, for subscribers, here are a few comments and feelings from supporters, players, and others affected by the Gornik final in 1970. These were gathered as part of a project I organised to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the final. As we’ve now reached the 54th anniversary they have become an even greater historical record.

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MCFC Reserves 1958-59 and 1959-60

I’ve recently been asked about two players who were on Manchester City’s books, so thought I’d post a few details about them here, along with the Reserve line-ups for both 1958-59 and 1959-60. These make interesting reading, especially when attendances are checked.

I don’t have much on them but the players were Sand Wann and George Greenall. Wann joined City on 25/6/58 from Luncarty Juniors (Dave Ewing’s old team too!) and left City on 9/5/1960, joining St Mirren. George Greenall left City on 4/4/1960. My notes are not clear but George either went to Oldham or Southampton.

These images show the starting 11 for every MCFC Central League game in 1958-59 and 1959-60:

1958-59 Manchester City Reserves, Central League Starting 11
1959-60 Manchester City Reserves, Central League Starting 11

In 1959-60 George made 5 Central League appearances and Wann made 8. In 1958-59 Greenall played 2 and Wann 4.

Wann’s Central League games over both seasons were:

21/3/59 v Blackpool

11/4/59 v Barnsley

18/4/59 v Huddersfield

25/4/59 v Wolves

22/8/59 v Wolves

29/8/59 v Sheff Wed

31/8/59 v Chesterfield

5/8/59 v Aston Villa

19/3/60 v WBA

6/4/60 v Blackburn

15/4/60 v Bolton

23/4/60 v PNE

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Francis Lee CBE 80th Anniversary

Today (29 April 2024) marks the 80th anniversary of Francis Lee’s birth. I met Francis a lot over they years and interviewed him frequently. So, to mark this anniversary, here’s an interview I did with him at his home in February 2010. This was published in the City match programme back then and you can read Franny’s views on his career here as published at the time. Enjoy!

In a glittering career Francis won two League Championships, the ECWC, League Cup and the FA Cup.

Francis, let’s begin with your early career at Bolton.  Is it true you started on the groundstaff?

That’s right.  I set myself a target that I had to get into the first team by the time I was 17 or 18.  If I didn’t I was going to go back to college and train as a draughtsman.  That was my plan, but I managed to get into the first team at 16 and I made my debut against City (5/11/60).  We won 3-1 and I scored a header at 3.15 against Bert Trautmann – I think Bert must have thought he was getting over the hill for me to score a header past him! 

I had about a dozen games over two seasons, then in 1962-63 I was top scorer with 12 goals from 23 League games.

You topped the goalscoring charts each season at Bolton from 1962 until you left.  You were playing on the wing.  Was that your preferred position?

I think my best position was as support striker to a big fella.  I only played in that role twice really – at Bolton with Wyn Davies when I scored 23 League goals one season and then at City with Wyn again when I scored 33 League goals in 1971-72.  A lot of my career was spent at centre-forward which is a bit of a difficult position to play if you’re only 5ft 7.  When I played for England I was support to Geoff Hurst and that suited me.  At centre-forward I had my back to the ball but when I was support striker – the free player – that suited me fine.  I could pick up the ball going forward and that was great.

At Bolton you scored 106 goals in 210 appearances.  A great record, but when you left the club the stories were that you were in dispute.  Is that true?

Well, what happened is that we were relegated in 1964 and, despite a near-miss in 1965 when we finished third, it didn’t feel as if we were going forward.  My ambition was still to see how far I could develop in the game and in the back of my mind I had the ambition to play for England, but I wasn’t even selected for the under 23s.  The story was going around that I was difficult to handle – which is funny because Joe Mercer said that I was the easiest player to handle at one point.

Were you difficult to handle at Bolton?

I was opinionated and ambitious, but not difficult.  I think that message was going around because I was on a weekly contract at that time.  The club knew that it would be difficult for them to stop me moving on if another club came in.  So any player with a reputation for being difficult would not be on anyone else’s shopping list, would they?  Bolton offered me a new contract worth something like £150 a week but my wage was only £35.  That actually upset me and I said: “if you now think I’m worth £150 a week what about all those years you’ve been underpaying me?”  It wasn’t the money that was an issue it was the way they handled it.  What they were doing was trying to get me on that contract and then my value would increase if someone came in to buy me.   Once they saw how dissatisfied I was with the way they were handling it, they said that it’d be best if we made a clean break, and so I said I’d pack the game in.  I had my business by then and so I said:  “give me my employment cards and I’ll pack it in.”  They thought I was bluffing. 

It’d been a decent season – I’d scored 9 goals in 11 games including when we beat the great Liverpool side in the League Cup – but then it ended in September 1967.  They gave me my cards and that was it.

Were you absolutely certain you’d pack it all in at that point?

I kept myself fit but I was working on my business.  I was driving my lorry around, collecting the waste paper and so on.  The business was growing and I felt that if I wasn’t wanted then I’d concentrate on that.  It was always my fallback. 

I know how stories can get exaggerated over the years, but is it true that in between games you were going around collecting the waste paper?

I used to drive my lorry during the week and even on the Thursday or Friday before a game I’d be collecting waste paper.  I used to put on a flat cap and muffler so that nobody would recognise me!  In the end I was driving articulated lorries and it was getting to be a very good business.  My last pick up was the day before I signed for City!  I roped and sheeted about 15 ton of paper and cardboard from a spinning mill in Bolton.  Took it to the Sun Paper Mill in Blackburn and when I got back about 5pm I got a call from Joe Mercer.  He didn’t give his name at first but I recognised him.  “Who is that?”  He said:  “Tom Jones.”  I said: “It doesn’t sound like Tom Jones, sounds more like a man called Mercer!” and he asked:  “Where’ve you been?”  I told him I’d been playing golf – I couldn’t play the game at all then but I couldn’t tell him what I had been doing! 

This is Your Life Joe Mercer 1970 MCFC squad

Did you immediately want to sign for City?

Other teams had shown interest in signing me.  Liverpool offered £100,000 I understand but then when I wasn’t playing it affected my price.  In later years Shanks often used to grab me and say in that strong Scottish accent:  “Son, I should’ve signed ya the night I saw ya!”

City was just right of course.  It meant the business could carry on.  I don’t know if Bolton had told Joe about my contract or the £150 offer but the first thing he said to me before we talked it through was:  “I’ll be honest with you son.  We’ve no money.  We’re skint!”  I said:  “It doesn’t matter.  I’ll just be delighted to start playing again.”  I meant it as well.

I signed for City for £60 a week – remember I’d turned down £150 at Bolton!  But it was well worth it.  The way the team developed and, of course, when I realised my ambition and played for England.

I left a lot of friends of mine at Bolton – Freddie Hill, Tommy Banks, Roy Hartle, Gordon Taylor – and we had some great times.  Those of us who had come through the ranks were poorly paid for the job we were doing at the time, but we enjoyed ourselves.  I never had any argument with the players, fans or people at Bolton, it was just those that ran it.  I loved my time at Bolton.

When you joined City the Blues were ninth in Division One after losing 5 of the 11 games played.  But the side was transformed from the moment you came.  Unbeaten in your first 11 League games.  Were you the difference?

The team just clicked and I was only part of a good group of players.  We had that great run up to Christmas, then a bit of a blip, but in the New Year we just rattled on.  It was a terrific period.  Mike Summerbee was playing at centre-forward and our culture at the time was to play with five forwards.  It was very unusual for the time.  The only system we played was that we all played – we had ten players who went up together, and ten who defended together.  When we won the League at Newcastle at the end of the season it was wonderful and particularly special because none of us had ever won anything significant.  This was our first major success and that’s why the following season the ordeal of playing a European Cup tie was so tough.

Francis Lee after scoring at Newcastle

Was it just inexperience that caused City to lose the Fenerbahce European Cup tie 2-1 on aggregate?

None of us had played in Europe before.  Mike Summerbee had only made his England debut against Scotland in February 1968.  Colin Bell had played in two England friendlies, but apart from that none of us had any concept of what it could be like in Turkey.  Had we played the first leg in Istanbul and the second at Maine Road I think we’d have gone through, but the goalless 1st leg at Maine Road killed us really.  We worked hard in Istanbul and it was a creditable result over there but we were out and it was because we were inexperienced.  It was a culture shock.

Confidence was at a real low after that game.  We’d had a bad run and only had a small squad so we struggled.  But that was the way it was.  Back then the motivation for all of us was to be in the team and to keep your place. 

I think younger readers may be surprised to read that City tried to keep the same eleven players game after game, competition after competition.  Would you have enjoyed a squad rotation policy when you played?

The aim of a footballer is to play.  Why would anyone want to be rested?  If a manager had said to me ten minutes before full time that he wanted to bring me off even though I was playing well, I’d have told him “no way!  I’m enjoying myself.  This is what you bought me for, now let me do it!”  It wouldn’t matter what the manager says I’d want to stay on.  That’s what the game is about – enjoyment!  Every player wanted to play.  None of us wanted to be on the bench. 

People talk about the number of games played today but in 1969-70, ignoring friendlies, you played 72 competitive games for England and City.  Would squad rotation have helped?

No. Playing is always better than being on the training pitch and I used to love playing, so I tried not to miss a game.  It didn’t matter whether it was an England friendly, Anglo-Italian cup or whatever, I wanted to play and represent my club and my country.  I think it’s best for all players.  Look at Tevez.  He’s improved his fitness and form by playing, and I think a lot of players are like that.  He needs to play, and that’s what I always wanted. 

Some of the other players from the 1969-70 season have talked about Franny’s Grand Slam.  Your aim to win four trophies in one season inspired them.  What do you remember of that?

Well, we wanted to win every game so it seemed natural to me that we should go for all four.  We won the League Cup and Cup Winners’ Cup, so that wasn’t bad.  In the FA Cup we ended up suffering a rare defeat at United.  We were doing okay in the League then we had a few injuries – Mike, Colin Bell and Neil Young were injured at key times – otherwise I think we would have won three trophies.  But the thing about the ‘Grand Slam’ was that it was the ambition of the place.  I remember we were going to London on the train and could see Wembley, and I shouted to the lads to take a look because two of our ‘Grand Slam’ games would be played there!

1970 ECWC

Moving forward a couple of years, we missed the title by a point in 1972.  Why?

Rodney Marsh has told you himself that his signing affected the 1971-72 season.  Malcolm played Rodney and disrupted a team that I’m convinced would have won the League that year.  I don’t blame Rodney.  There was one game near the end where we should have had a couple of penalties for hand ball but, because this was the season when we got that record number of penalties, they weren’t given.  That season our luck changed and everything went against us. 

A lot has been made about you ‘diving’ but the factual evidence is that the majority of those penalties were given for things like handball or fouls on other players.  Nevertheless, the myths survive.  So, big question, did you ever dive?

I couldn’t say that I always stayed on my feet unless I was absolutely knocked down.  In those days you used to get some horrendous treatment by the defenders, but I will tell you that the season before those penalties we only had a couple, and before that I think it was one.  The reason we got so many in 1971-72 is that they had changed the law, plus we were going for the title so we were putting sides under a lot of pressure and they reacted.  I was fouled only 5 times out of the 13 league penalties we got.

When I was attacking I used to play the odds.  If a defender was coming towards me I’d carry on, or I’d run towards the defender because there were only three things that could happen – he pulls me down, he gets the ball off me – well done, or I get a cracking shot at goal.  So the odds were in my favour.  You have to play them.

I think the reason people go on about penalties with me is because I was the one taking them.  It didn’t seem to matter what they were given for, the headlines were that I had scored from a penalty.  The season after I think we only got one penalty.  I would say that for every dubious penalty that was awarded there were another twenty that we should have had.

Francis Lee’s first penalty for City January 1968 v Sheffield United

Was the move to Derby something you really wanted?

By that time my business was substantial so going to Derby was going to cause problems.  Derby offered City more than anyone else and that was that.  We won the title in my first season – I’d only signed a contract for a year – and they were a very good side, so I stayed with them for another season.  The pitch was awful – even Maine Road’s pitch was better – but I felt we could have won the European Cup that second season.  We beat Real Madrid 4-1 but I missed the return game because I’d been sent off in the Hunter incident against Leeds.  We lost 5-1.

They actually changed the rule after that saying it was unfair to automatically ban a player from a European game after a domestic match when the player had yet to be proved to be guilty.  There wasn’t much chance of me being ‘not guilty’ – the footage was there for everyone to see!

People often suggest that City sold you too soon and that had you stayed a couple of seasons longer we might have won the title again.  Do you hold this view?

I think if I’d have stayed and Mike Summerbee – remember he was sold a year after me – then I do think we’d have mounted a serious challenge for the title.  Mike had plenty to offer and should not have been sold.

You came back to Maine Road and scored for Derby (28/12/74).  I was in Platt Lane that day and I remember a surreal moment when City fans cheered your goal.  Did that actually happen?

Yes, it did.  Then I think they thought:  “What have we done, he’s playing for them!”

I enjoyed my football and I loved scoring.  I loved that goal.  I picked it up with my back to the line, went through two people and on to score the goal.  The film shows me smiling because I’d scored what I thought was a good goal.  It had nothing to do with City or revenge or anything like that.  I think I enjoyed about 95% of every game I ever played.  It was fun.  A great way to earn a living, so on that day I was happy.

Why did you retire in 1976 only a few weeks after your 32nd birthday?

My business was taking over.  I had about 110 people working for me and was travelling all over the country.  Had I been playing closer to Bolton then I may have carried on.  Derby wanted me to stay on, and I made a promise to Dave Mackay that if I was to play again then I’d do it for him.  Tommy Docherty tried to persuade me to join United but I wouldn’t break my promise to Derby.

Your business and horse racing interests grew, but then in 1993 you were back, mounting a takeover of City.  Why?

I wasn’t looking to get back into the game at all during those years.  I had a successful career and was happy.  But City were in a desperate state and I genuinely felt that I could not let a club I cared passionately for struggle like that.

When we finally gained control there were so many issues.  So many skeletons coming out of the cupboards.  The financial state of the club was appalling.  I should have known then that it wouldn’t work! 

The biggest problem at the start was having to build the new Kippax Stand –there really wasn’t a workable plan in place before we arrived and yet the stand had to be replaced within months of us arriving.  We ended up spending about £16m in the end – even removing the waste from underneath the old terracing cost £1.8m because it was contaminated.  I thought then that my luck had changed.  Everything we tried to do became an issue and the Kippax was a millstone.  

1994-95 the new Kippax takes shape

It’s extraordinary when you think that prior to us, Blackburn and Everton, no one ever put money into a football club.  People bought shares but never invested, we did invest. 

Off the pitch things did improve significantly, but on the pitch we struggled.  What’s your view?

People like John Dunkerley worked very hard during that spell and the training facilities were improved and so on.  Then, just when we finished the Kippax, Manchester Council started to talk to me about becoming tenants of the new stadium – now that turned out to be the best thing that happened to City during the decade that followed.  We spent a lot of time working with them and talking with various people to make it happen.  Full marks must go to the Council for having the foresight and it became very important for City to become anchor tenants.  I think I had a lot of bad luck as Chairman and things certainly didn’t work on the pitch, but I do think that was one thing that the club got right.

Finally, thinking of your time as a player, many people claim the 1970 League Cup Final was your greatest City game, do you feel that?

I don’t think of individual games in that way.  You have to look at the club during your time there and see what that club won and what you contributed to the overall success of the club, not necessarily individual games. 

1970 League Cup final. Francis Lee facing ball and Glyn Pardoe

My role was to make things happen, and if I was making things happen, especially if it was causing some aggravation for the opposition, then I was happy.  When you hear the opposition players shouting things like: “don’t let him turn!” that’s a real pat on the back.  You know you’re getting to them.

In terms of individual games or goals…  I think one of the goals I scored at West Ham (18/11/67) was the best goal I’ve ever scored.  I was playing against Bobby Moore and I think I had a fantastic game.

I always think that a top class player should go on to the pitch and have enough confidence in his own ability to know that it is very rare for him to have a bad game.  It’s not arrogance or anything, but it is the mark of a top class player.  If you go onto the pitch feeling that then more often than not you will have a good game.  The next step is to take it up the levels until you walk on to the pitch believing you’ll have a great game and score a couple of goals. 

At City most of us developed that confidence and on some days, when the entire team was at that level, we had some tremendous games.  There are signs that the current side are heading in that same direction.

You can read more on Francis throughout the website. Use the Francis Lee tab lower down on this page or search using his name. As an example, here’s a detailed profile of him I wrote a few years back:

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Subscribe to access great content and support Gary’s research

If you’ve enjoyed this piece then why not subscribe and read the rest of the great material on here. At the same time you’ll be supporting my research and writing (I’m not employed by anyone and my research/writing is self-funded). It costs £3 per month (above) or £20 per year (here; access everything posted since December 2020). You’ll also get to read all content posted during your subscription. Thanks.

Manchester City Break-In

On this day (28 April) in 1903 it was reported that the Manchester City offices had been broken in to. Season tickets, stamps, keys and other articles were stolen (had this been the 1980s I’m sure some comedian would’ve claimed ‘thieves broke into MCFC and stole everything of value… police are looking for a sky blue carpet!’).

Here’s a brief cutting from the period. The punishment? The boys received six strokes each from the birch! In the 1970s Manchester United boss Tommy Docherty (and he wasn’t alone – City’s secretary Bernard Halford agreed with him) suggested that football hooligans should be brought on to the pitch at half time and birched in front of fans!

Manchester’s First Women’s League Derby

Last Wednesday an article I wrote on the first women’s Manchester Derby in a league between City and United was published in the Mirror’s Women’s Football News. For those that think competitive league derbies are a recent thing, it’s worth noting that the game occurred more than three decades ago. It also made reference to my research into Manchester Corinthians. You can read it here:

You can also read about the new Corinthians book here:

City 1 Leicester 0, the FA Cup Final

On this day (April 26) in 1969 Manchester City defeated Leicester City in the FA Cup final. It is worth pausing to consider how the Blues compared to football’s other successful sides in the competition at this time in football history.  City’s four FA Cup successes placed them 7th in the all-time list of FA Cup winners – can you guess the clubs they were behind? Liverpool? No! MUFC? No! Arsenal? No! Keep going…

They were behind Aston Villa (7), Blackburn Rovers (6), Newcastle United (6), Tottenham Hotspur (5), The Wanderers (5) and West Bromwich Albion (5).  Bolton, Sheffield United and Wolves had, like City, each won four FA Cups, while Manchester United and Arsenal had only won three, Liverpool one and Chelsea had not yet won the trophy.  In fact Chelsea had only won one major trophy (the League Championship) at this point in their history.  

Here for subscribers is a long read on that final and the events surrounding it:

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Manchester City V Brighton – The Story And Film Of The First Ever Meeting

Tonight (25 April 2024) Manchester City and Brighton meet in the Premier League. The first game between the two clubs came 100 years ago in 1924. This game was a newsworthy FA Cup tie due to the return of a legend to the City team. In fact it was so newsworthy that a movie company sent their camera (you’ll see from the footage it never moved!) to Brighton’s Goldstone Ground to capture the return of a true Blue hero.

Here’s film of that game, though sadly we don’t see Meredith or the goal. City are the dark shirted team (actually the club’s ‘Lucky Scarlet’!):

https://player.bfi.org.uk/free/film/watch-football-the-cup-action-from-the-third-round-of-the-fa-cup-653-1

Subscribers can also read an article about that day here:

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Covid and the 2021 League Cup Final

How time flies! Today marks the anniversary (April 25) of the 2021 League Cup Final between Manchester City and Tottenham. It was the first (and only) League Cup Final played during any form of Covid lockdown in England. The 2020 final had been the last major final played in the country before the pandemic led to various lockdowns and then the continuation of football without fans.

Some football clubs, including Tottenham, had been allowed to have a limited number of supporters at their home games during the early stages of the 2020-21 Premier League season, but Manchester City had not as they were in a regional tier that prevented crowds. So, for many of us, the last physical game we attended was the 2020 League Cup final (some City fans did of course attend the 1-0 FA Cup victory at Sheffield Wednesday on March 4 and the Old Trafford derby of March 8 2020).

In the period between our last ‘live’ match and the 2021 League Cup final we had to sit at home watching City’s games played in empty stadia or, occasionally, at grounds with a small number of fans in but never with any ordinary City fans in. Former City star Mike Summerbee, the club’s ambassador, would often be seen, masked-up, at games when TV camera crews recognised him and it was always nice to know there was at least one person steeped in MCFC history there.

When the announcement came that the delayed League Cup Final (it was postponed until April in the hope that fans could attend) was to have up to 8,000 fans at Wembley there were then several dilemmas for fans. This was to be a test event and almost 2,000 tickets were to be issued to each competing club, which fans would have to pay for, and 4,000 would be given away to residents around Wembley and some NHS staff. 

Many fans felt it was unfair that Wembley residents would be given tickets (each could apply to bring a guest too) while fans paid and there were the usual concerns about balance of support – would the fact that tickets were to be given to local residents benefit Spurs for example? 

Most fans had no issue with NHS staff being given tickets with some Blues suggesting that NHS staff (and other key workers) who were season ticket holders of the two clubs should be offered the tickets. Lots of other suggestions were made plus, of course, some fans felt it would only be appropriate to attend a major game like this when ALL fans would be allowed back, though that still seemed some way off in April 2021.

To attend the final Manchester City used their loyalty points system and cup scheme as usual but then there was an added layer where fans had to live in certain postcodes: M, SK, BL, OL, WA, WN, PR, FY, BB, LA, CH, CW, BD, HD and HX​ and Greater London. In addition we had to have covid tests in the build-up to the final, including a lateral flow test that had to be performed at a test centre after 1.30pm on the Saturday before Sunday’s final. 

This was difficult for many to arrange as, for example, some of the councils within the postcodes allowed did not have test sites available at weekend. Some booked to have tests close to Wembley, which caused some logistical issues on cup final day, and others had to travel in to Manchester on the Saturday. Inevitably, some did not get negative tests back in time and missed out.

Those lucky enough to get hold of tickets also had to state their method of travel with a limited number of car parking spaces meaning that option simply was not available for some fans. Specific coach and train travel was set up but the costs were prohibitive for some. Others pointed out their concern that once the trains arrived at Euston (or Watford) there would still be a need to travel to the stadium itself. To some this negated the need for travel on specific trains or coaches, but of course the conditions had been imposed by the Government and footballing authorities, not by the competing clubs.

At the stadium on match day the surrounding area seemed full of shoppers trying to pick up a bargain at the retail store but fans seemed few and far between. The photo above (Wembley Way looking towards the stadium) was taken about one hour before kick off. This would normally be packed at this time.

Close to the stadium the Wembley Way ramps that used to carry people up to the stadium have been demolished and a series of steps have been erected instead. Fans had to show their lateral flow test results, tickets, and photographic ID before being allowed up the steps to the stadium. They had to queue at these checkpoints and then, once they’d been allowed through they could make their way up to the stadium turnstiles. They were discouraged from waiting outside the stadium and were encouraged to go to the turnstile.

In previous years drinks had been allowed into the stadium if they were in plastic bottles and the lids were removed. This year no drinks, not even water, were allowed in the stadium, but staff did allow fans to carry in plastic bottles (without lids) as there were water fountains inside (typically positioned near the disabled toilets) and these could be filled up there. This is well worth remembering if you need to have drinks for medical purposes but do not want to pay Wembley’s expensive prices.

In the stadium bars and catering outlets were open as usual and while there was a considerably smaller number of fans within the concourse area, social distancing was not particularly in evidence. Having said that all fans had been tested but supporters were unclear whether Wembley staff, security, stewards and so on had been tested. 

In the bowl of the stadium all fans had been positioned in the same stand plus the corners. This was the stand containing the Royal Box and directly opposite the TV cameras. The cynic would suggest that this demonstrated, as always, that some think the TV spectacle is more important than those in the stadium. Surely congestion in the toilets and other areas could have been eased had fans been spaced out in a wider area, or even if they’d have chosen blocks around the stadium with perhaps Spurs fans on one side or end and City in the opposite stand? If it’s pure safety then that would be the logical thing to do.

In the seats we were positioned predominantly in alternate seats with the row behind and in front of us following a pattern which was supposed to mean that there would be no one directly in front or behind of you. As some fans were in groups/families who had travelled together they sometimes moved next to others in their group on the same row – officially we were told that wasn’t allowed but inevitably it happened (we all wanted to be next to the people we’d gone to the game with and didn’t want the seat gap) and no one tried to stop it. 

During the game stewards regularly reminded fans that they had to wear face masks throughout – from the moment we had shown our test results and tickets through to leaving the stadium after the presentations we had to be masked up. Of course, when eating or drinking masks were lowered.

Throughout our time in the bowl of the stadium fans would be moving along the rows to their places, and so social distancing was not possible at those times.

After the game we were free to leave en masse if we wanted. As City won the cup most City fans stayed for the presentations and left at various points during the celebrations, meaning there wasn’t a crush to get out. Spurs fans seemed more keen to leave of course, but whether this caused any issues I do not know. Presumably, social distancing is impossible to manage when an entire section chooses to leave at the same time.

If you were one of the lucky ones who had managed to get a car parking space it was refreshing to travel away from Wembley without the huge traffic jams we normally experience. There were roadworks and a few problems on the motorway but nothing like normal.

So, that was the general experience of attending as a Manchester City fan at the first game we’ve been allowed to attend as City fans in over a year. It’s not the story of the game but I hope it gives an idea as to how the crowd management happened.

Several years on this experience now seems alien again but back then it was refreshing to be able to actually attend a game.