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1981–82 Football League
83rd season of the Football League
83rd season of the Football League
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| competition | The Football League |
| season | [1981–82](1981-82-in-english-football) |
| winners | Liverpool |
| prevseason | [1980–81](1980-81-football-league) |
| nextseason | [1982–83](1982-83-football-league) |
The 1981–82 season was the 83rd completed season (84th overall) of The Football League. This was the first league season with three points for win.
Overview
Three points for a win was introduced for the first time in England. Champions Aston Villa finished a disappointing 11th but made up for this by triumphing in the European Cup at the first attempt.
Liverpool made up for the previous season's slip in league form by winning the league championship for the 13th time in their history, fighting off competition from Ipswich Town, Manchester United and Spurs. Liverpool also won the Football League Cup for the second season in succession. The league triumph was made all the more significant by the fact that they had occupied 10th place on Christmas Day.
Their season of triumph was overshadowed, however, by the death of legendary former manager Bill Shankly, 68, following a heart attack in late September.
Middlesbrough and Wolves were relegated as financial problems at both clubs began to mount. They were joined by Leeds United, only seven years after playing in the European cup final.
West Bromwich Albion felt the loss of manager Ron Atkinson and key players Bryan Robson and Remi Moses as they slumped to 19th in the league and narrowly avoided relegation. This was just the beginning of a sharp decline for a club who three seasons earlier had reached the UEFA Cup quarter-finals and almost won the league title.
Swansea City were tipped for relegation by most observers as they reached the First Division for the first time in their history, having just completed their third promotion in four seasons. But John Toshack's men had a brilliant first game in the top flight, crushing Leeds United 5-1 and setting the tone for a season which would end with Leeds going down. Swansea, meanwhile, were the most unlikely title contenders, topping the league at several stages of the season before finishing sixth in the final table.
Manchester United paid a British record fee of £1.75million for West Bromwich Albion's 24-year-old England midfielder Bryan Robson. Robson's record-breaking move reflected on how the size of transfer fees had risen dramatically in a relatively short period of time. Less than four years earlier, the British record fee had been the £516,000 that West Bromwich Albion had paid for David Mills. In such a short amount of time, the British record had more than tripled.
Everton, who had struggled in the league for the past few seasons, turned to their former player Howard Kendall and appointed him as manager in hope of restoring the club to its former glory.
First Division
13th English title Middlesbrough Wolverhampton Wanderers Aston Villa Swansea City Manchester United Arsenal Southampton (26 goals) (3 October 1981) Tottenham Hotspur 6–1 Wolverhampton Wanderers (6 February 1982) Coventry City 6–1 Sunderland (27 April 1982) (10 April 1982) (4 May 1982) Liverpool Liverpool Wolverhampton Wanderers
The First Division title race saw many teams take the lead throughout the season, including traditional favourites like Manchester United, Manchester City, Tottenham Hotspur and Arsenal, as well as thriving Ipswich Town and Southampton, and most incredibly a Swansea City side who had never been in the First Division before, and who had been in the Fourth Division just a few seasons previously. In the end, however, it was Liverpool who clinched the title after a surge in the second half of the campaign which took them from mid table at Christmas to clinching the title on the final day of the season. They also retained the League Cup. Defending champions Aston Villa only finished mid-table but finished the season as European Cup winners, three months after Ron Saunders stood down as manager and was succeeded by his assistant Tony Barton.
Wolves went down to the Second Division for the second time in seven seasons, while Middlesbrough went down after eight years in the First Division. Leeds United, who had gradually lost touch with the First Division's elite since Don Revie left in 1974, lost their top flight status after 18 years.
Other memorable events of the season included the early season transfer of Bryan Robson from West Bromwich Albion to Manchester United for a national record £1.5million, and the death of legendary former Liverpool manager Bill Shankly.
Final table
Results
Managerial changes
| Team | Outgoing manager | Manner of departure | Date of vacancy | Position in table | Incoming manager | Date of appointment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Everton | ENG Gordon Lee | Sacked | 16 May 1981 | *Pre-season* | ENG Howard Kendall | 1 June 1981 |
| Coventry City | ENG Gordon Milne | Mutual consent | 30 May 1981 | ENG Dave Sexton | 5 June 1981 | |
| Sunderland | SCO Mick Docherty | End of caretaker spell | 1 June 1981 | WAL Alan Durban | 1 June 1981 | |
| Stoke City | WAL Alan Durban | Signed by Sunderland | 1 June 1981 | ENG Richie Barker | 11 June 1981 | |
| Middlesbrough | ENG John Neal | Signed by Chelsea | 1 June 1981 | SCO Bobby Murdoch | 19 June 1981 | |
| Brighton & Hove Albion | ENG Alan Mullery | Resigned | 5 June 1981 | ENG Mike Bailey | 9 June 1981 | |
| Manchester United | ENG Jack Crompton | End of caretaker spell | 9 June 1981 | ENG Ron Atkinson | 9 June 1981 | |
| West Bromwich Albion | ENG Ron Atkinson | Signed by Manchester United | 9 June 1981 | ENG Ronnie Allen | 30 June 1981 | |
| Wolverhampton Wanderers | ENG John Barnwell | Sacked | 5 January 1982 | 18th | ENG Ian Greaves | 8 February 1982 |
| Aston Villa | ENG Ron Saunders | Resigned | 9 February 1982 | 15th | ENG Tony Barton | 9 February 1982 |
| Birmingham City | ENG Jim Smith | 15 February 1982 | 19th | ENG Ron Saunders | 22 February 1982 |
Maps
Arsenal Tottenham West Ham
Arsenal Aston Villa Birmingham Brighton & Hove Coventry Everton Ipswich Town Leeds United Liverpool Middlesbrough Manchester City Manchester United Nottingham Forest Notts County Southampton Stoke Sunderland Swansea City Tottenham West Bromwich Albion West Ham Wolverhampton Wanderers
Second Division
Watford Norwich City Wrexham Orient (22 goals) (17 October 1981) Rotherham United 6–0 Chelsea (31 October 1981) Queens Park Rangers 7–1 Bolton Wanderers (1 May 1982) (3 October 1981) Newcastle United 0–4 Queens Park Rangers (5 May 1982) (20 March 1982) Luton Town clinched the Second Division as their cosmopolitan side ended the club's seven-year exile from the First Division, joined by runners-up Watford (in the First Division for the first time under inspirational manager Graham Taylor) and a Norwich City side who had surged from 10th place to the final promotion place during the final quarter of the campaign. Sheffield Wednesday, QPR and Leicester City just missed out on promotion, as did two surprise contenders still yet to play in the First Division - Barnsley and Rotherham United.
Cardiff City, Wrexham and Orient were relegated; Leyton Orient have not returned to this level since, whilst Wrexham would have to wait 43 years before returning to the Second Tier.
Joe Royle, the 33-year-old former Everton striker, began his managerial career at Oldham Athletic.
League table
Results
Maps
Charlton Athletic Chelsea Crystal Palace Orient Queens Park Rangers Watford
Barnsley Blackburn Rovers Bolton Cambridge Utd Cardiff City Charlton Chelsea Crystal Palace Derby County Grimsby Town Leicester City Orient Luton Town Newcastle Norwich City Oldham QPR Rotherham Sheffield Wednesday Shrewsbury Watford Wrexham
Third Division
Burnley, Carlisle United and Fulham enjoyed some success after a string of disappointments by winning promotion to the Second Division.
Going down were Wimbledon, Swindon Town, Bristol City and Chester. Bristol had completed a unique succession of three relegations, while Swindon had been League Cup winners little over a decade earlier. Wimbledon, meanwhile, would not be enduring any more disappointing season for many years after 1982.
Third Division Fulham Chester Swindon Town Wimbledon
Results
Maps
Brentford Fulham Millwall Wimbledon
Brentford Bristol City Bristol Rovers Burnley Carlisle United Chester Chesterfield Doncaster Exeter City Gillingham Fulham Huddersfield Lincoln City Millwall Oxford Newport County Plymouth Argyle Portsmouth Preston North End Reading Southend Swindon Walsall Wimbledon
Fourth Division
Fourth Division Bradford City Wigan Athletic Sheffield United began the first phase of their revival by winning the Fourth Division championship, which marked a superb start to the management career of Ian Porterfield. Also promoted were Bradford City, Wigan Athletic and Bournemouth.
Crewe Alexandra endured a terrible season and propped up the league with just 27 league points, but the other league members voted in their favour and they maintained their league status.
Results
Maps
Aldershot Blackpool Bournemouth Bradford C. Bury Colchester Crewe Alexandra Darlington Halifax Town Hartlepool Hereford United Hull Mansfield Town Northampton Town Peterborough Port Vale Rochdale Scunthorpe & Lindsey Sheffield United Stockport Torquay Tranmere Wigan Athletic York City
Election/re-election to the Football League
This year Runcorn, the winners of the Alliance Premier League, could not apply for election because they did not meet Football League requirements. Second placed Enfield could not apply either for the same reasons, so third placed Telford United won the right to apply for election to the Football League to replace one of the four bottom sides in the 1981–82 Football League Fourth Division. The vote went as follows:
| Club | Final Position | Votes |
|---|---|---|
| Northampton Town | 22nd (Fourth Division) | 53 |
| Crewe Alexandra | 24th (Fourth Division) | 50 |
| Rochdale | 21st (Fourth Division) | 48 |
| Scunthorpe United | 23rd (Fourth Division) | 48 |
| Telford United | 3rd (Alliance Premier League) | 13 |
As a result of this, all four Football League teams were re-elected, and Telford United were denied membership of the League.
Attendances
Source:
Division One
| No. | Club | Average | Highest | Lowest |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Manchester United | 44,571 | 57,830 | 34,499 |
| 2 | Tottenham Hotspur FC | 35,100 | 46,827 | 22,819 |
| 3 | Liverpool FC | 35,061 | 48,461 | 24,224 |
| 4 | Manchester City FC | 34,063 | 52,037 | 24,443 |
| 5 | Aston Villa FC | 26,780 | 41,098 | 18,294 |
| 6 | West Ham United FC | 26,585 | 34,026 | 17,130 |
| 7 | Arsenal FC | 25,589 | 48,897 | 13,738 |
| 8 | Everton FC | 24,674 | 51,806 | 15,328 |
| 9 | Leeds United FC | 22,109 | 33,689 | 16,385 |
| 10 | Ipswich Town FC | 21,925 | 29,050 | 17,924 |
| 11 | Southampton FC | 21,835 | 24,704 | 18,622 |
| 12 | Nottingham Forest FC | 19,937 | 26,327 | 15,037 |
| 13 | Sunderland AFC | 19,608 | 29,372 | 11,845 |
| 14 | Brighton & Hove Albion FC | 18,244 | 27,082 | 10,427 |
| 15 | Swansea City AFC | 18,236 | 24,115 | 11,811 |
| 16 | Birmingham City FC | 17,117 | 32,817 | 10,715 |
| 17 | West Bromwich Albion FC | 16,786 | 23,329 | 11,632 |
| 18 | Wolverhampton Wanderers FC | 15,242 | 28,001 | 11,099 |
| 19 | Stoke City FC | 14,635 | 25,256 | 9,120 |
| 20 | Middlesbrough FC | 13,413 | 21,019 | 9,403 |
| 21 | Coventry City FC | 13,100 | 19,329 | 9,677 |
| 22 | Notts County FC | 11,613 | 19,304 | 6,707 |
Division Two
| No. | Club | Average | Highest | Lowest |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sheffield Wednesday FC | 19,170 | 30,861 | 13,047 |
| 2 | Newcastle United FC | 17,276 | 26,994 | 9,419 |
| 3 | Barnsley FC | 15,098 | 28,870 | 9,287 |
| 4 | Watford FC | 14,631 | 23,987 | 9,018 |
| 5 | Leicester City FC | 14,182 | 21,123 | 9,524 |
| 6 | Norwich City FC | 14,182 | 18,827 | 11,626 |
| 7 | Chelsea FC | 13,132 | 20,036 | 6,009 |
| 8 | Queens Park Rangers FC | 12,574 | 22,091 | 8,753 |
| 9 | Luton Town FC | 11,881 | 16,657 | 8,776 |
| 10 | Derby County FC | 11,828 | 16,046 | 7,518 |
| 11 | Crystal Palace FC | 10,381 | 17,633 | 7,198 |
| 12 | Rotherham United FC | 9,857 | 19,841 | 6,346 |
| 13 | Grimsby Town FC | 8,406 | 13,370 | 6,141 |
| 14 | Blackburn Rovers FC | 8,405 | 15,182 | 5,207 |
| 15 | Bolton Wanderers FC | 7,597 | 16,577 | 5,085 |
| 16 | Oldham Athletic FC | 7,023 | 15,845 | 2,919 |
| 17 | Charlton Athletic FC | 6,657 | 11,133 | 3,379 |
| 18 | Cardiff City FC | 5,574 | 10,277 | 3,239 |
| 19 | Cambridge United FC | 5,073 | 8,815 | 3,127 |
| 20 | Shrewsbury Town FC | 4,571 | 8,103 | 2,898 |
| 21 | Leyton Orient FC | 4,419 | 9,698 | 2,090 |
| 22 | Wrexham AFC | 4,304 | 6,506 | 3,076 |
Division Three
| No. | Club | Average | Highest | Lowest |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Portsmouth FC | 8,544 | 11,299 | 4,889 |
| 2 | Fulham FC | 6,938 | 20,461 | 3,629 |
| 3 | Burnley FC | 6,936 | 18,771 | 3,377 |
| 4 | Huddersfield Town AFC | 6,746 | 10,269 | 3,468 |
| 5 | Bristol City FC | 6,511 | 11,451 | 3,404 |
| 6 | Oxford United FC | 5,851 | 10,407 | 3,843 |
| 7 | Swindon Town FC | 5,825 | 9,608 | 4,084 |
| 8 | Brentford FC | 5,693 | 10,834 | 4,124 |
| 9 | Preston North End FC | 5,497 | 7,815 | 4,171 |
| 10 | Bristol Rovers FC | 5,402 | 12,155 | 3,650 |
| 11 | Gillingham FC | 5,241 | 9,895 | 3,245 |
| 12 | Doncaster Rovers FC | 5,234 | 11,319 | 3,431 |
| 13 | Southend United FC | 5,083 | 8,108 | 3,416 |
| 14 | Plymouth Argyle FC | 4,792 | 9,458 | 2,646 |
| 15 | Chesterfield FC | 4,737 | 7,732 | 2,028 |
| 16 | Millwall FC | 4,626 | 7,474 | 2,562 |
| 17 | Newport County AFC | 4,459 | 5,915 | 2,978 |
| 18 | Carlisle United FC | 4,409 | 6,653 | 3,085 |
| 19 | Lincoln City FC | 4,222 | 8,243 | 2,218 |
| 20 | Reading FC | 4,026 | 7,171 | 2,596 |
| 21 | Exeter City FC | 3,858 | 9,144 | 2,498 |
| 22 | Walsall FC | 3,744 | 6,010 | 2,487 |
| 23 | Wimbledon FC | 2,596 | 5,554 | 1,503 |
| 24 | Chester City FC | 2,062 | 3,509 | 1,210 |
Division Four
| No. | Club | Average | Highest | Lowest |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sheffield United FC | 14,892 | 24,593 | 11,293 |
| 2 | AFC Bournemouth | 5,933 | 9,925 | 3,244 |
| 3 | Wigan Athletic FC | 5,796 | 9,021 | 3,996 |
| 4 | Bradford City AFC | 5,391 | 13,919 | 3,601 |
| 5 | Peterborough United FC | 4,698 | 13,459 | 1,897 |
| 6 | Hull City AFC | 4,270 | 7,397 | 3,040 |
| 7 | Blackpool FC | 4,224 | 9,439 | 1,824 |
| 8 | Port Vale FC | 3,639 | 8,773 | 1,924 |
| 9 | Bury FC | 3,533 | 6,650 | 1,720 |
| 10 | Colchester United FC | 2,859 | 5,194 | 1,570 |
| 11 | Mansfield Town FC | 2,685 | 8,944 | 1,394 |
| 12 | Hereford United FC | 2,592 | 4,191 | 2,060 |
| 13 | Stockport County FC | 2,547 | 5,450 | 1,357 |
| 14 | Darlington FC | 2,510 | 12,557 | 1,283 |
| 15 | Halifax Town AFC | 2,407 | 8,077 | 1,305 |
| 16 | York City FC | 2,360 | 5,560 | 1,571 |
| 17 | Northampton Town FC | 2,306 | 4,975 | 1,552 |
| 18 | Torquay United FC | 2,248 | 5,126 | 1,039 |
| 19 | Scunthorpe United FC | 2,232 | 8,105 | 1,106 |
| 20 | Crewe Alexandra FC | 2,192 | 6,716 | 1,116 |
| 21 | Aldershot Town FC | 2,168 | 4,100 | 1,171 |
| 22 | Hartlepool United FC | 2,055 | 4,548 | 1,202 |
| 23 | Rochdale AFC | 1,837 | 3,966 | 1,056 |
| 24 | Tranmere Rovers | 1,734 | 4,675 | 1,141 |
References
- Ian Laschke: Rothmans Book of Football League Records 1888–89 to 1978–79. Macdonald and Jane’s, London & Sydney, 1980.
References
- "English League Leading Goalscorers".
- https://www.european-football-statistics.co.uk/attn/archive/eng/aveeng1982.htm
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