When Manchester United Were Last Relegated

When Manchester United Were Last Relegated

When Manchester United Were Last Relegated

There are people of working age who clearly remember Manchester United getting relegated.It is hard to countenance now but 19 years before Sir Alex Ferguson won his first titleat the club Tommy Docherty was in charge as they fell into the second tier for the firsttime since 1938. Their relegation in 1974 was a seismic footballevent, evidence of the enormous decline and mismanagement which took place in the wakeof their European Cup triumph in ’68. Sir Matt Busby–the manager in 68–was, ofcourse, the Alex Ferguson of his day. Between 1945 and 1969 he won five league titles,two FA Cups and a European Cup and would almost certainly have amassed even more silverwarehad the brilliant side he had brought together in the 50s not suffered such tragedy in 1958;when the Munich air disaster claimed the lives of– among others–eight of his playing squadand ended the careers of two more. By the late 60s he had rebuilt from thoseashes, and a team constructed around the headline stars George Best, Denis Law and Bobby Charltonhad become a force to be reckoned with. Then in 1969 with no worlds left to conquer,he retired as manager, heading “upstairs” to serve as a director. Wilf McGuinness—acoach and former player of Busby’s—took over, but his lack of immediate success andsome interpersonal issues meant Sir Matt stepped back into temporary charge during the 1970-71season. “Give it Busby till the end of the season,” as it were.He was replaced that summer by then Leicester City manager Frank O’Farrell who guided Unitedto 8th. Best, Law and Charlton were still the stars of the side with 18, 13 and 8 leaguegoals respectively and fellow ’68 European Cup winner Brian Kidd chipped in with 10.But 8th was definitely a disappointing failure to improve on the season before, and the shockwavesfrom the botched handling of Sir Matt’s departure were still being felt, as was his continuedpresence around the club. Speaking in a 2011 interview with Jim White in the Telegraph,O’Farrell said Sir Matt “was always about somewhere where the players could find him.After one game, he told me I shouldn’t have dropped Bobby Charlton. Obviously he saidthe same to Charlton, because the player was moping round the place.“Another time he told me Martin Buchan [O’Farrell’s first signing] was responsible for lettingin all these goals, when it clearly wasn’t his fault. He was interfering.”72-73 got off to a terrible start as they failed to record a win in their first 9 games,scoring just four times in those matches. By the 16th of December they’d won just fivetimes. Best’s personal issues had started to get the better of him, and his prioritieswere clearly no longer United and football. O’Farrell said “after Christmas, George startedto wander and I was then in a dilemma: do I discipline him as I should or do I keephim in the side? Because the problem was without him the rest of them would never get a win.” O’Farrell, in his defence, probably could not have done a great deal more with Bestat that stage, whose attendance and performance issues were extremely severe as he battledthe inner demons with which he would fight for the rest of his days.But the more general issues around the club persisted, and O’Farrell was apportioned moreblame for those. There had not been the required rebuilding and refreshing of the squad afterthe ’68 win and between that and the managerial uncertainty provoked by Sir Matt’s departure,and from O’Farrell’s perspective, Busby’s ongoing interference, things were not improving.After a 5-0 defeat to Crystal Palace the board took action. O’Farrell was replaced by TommyDocherty, the Scotland manager who had previously run Chelsea, Aston Villa, QPR and Porto, amongothers. He pulled the team out of its tailspin, winningseven of the final 14 games of the season to just about ensure safety. Lou Macari wassigned from Celtic in the January, scoring 5 in his 16 appearances which put him jointsecond on the top scorers list. In his final season, Bobby Charlton topped that list buteven he had only scored 6. So, Charlton retired, Law was eased out and given a free transferto Manchester City. Docherty returned Best to the fold, but that was to be a short livedexperiment. Only promising youngster Sammy McIlroy hit6 goals in the league in 73-74. On the 1st January ’74 Best played his last game forthe club, a 3-0 defeat to Queens Park Rangers. United had only registered five wins in theleague by then, and would only win a further five for the rest of the season.By the end of their campaign their home record read 21 played, 7 wins, 7 draws, and 7 losses.Not great, but not a total disaster—Sheffield United, for example, who finished well clearof relegation in 13th had an identical record at their home ground. Where things were reallybad was on the road – just 3 wins and 13 losses, with 15 scored and 28 conceded.There weren’t many pummellings. Their worst defeats came in that game against QPR andon the opening day as they lost 3-0 to Arsenal. Those were two of the five occasions in whichthey conceded 3 that season, but the others were two 3-2 defeats and a 3-3 draw. Theynever conceded more. 16 of their 22 defeats were by one goal.Perhaps because of this, or perhaps aware that the uncertainties brought about by thefour managerial changes that had taken place since 1969, the club decided to stick by TheDoc as they were relegated to the second tier. It was a wise choice. They romped the seconddivision, losing just once at Old Trafford and six times in their 21 games on the road.Their home record read played 21, won 17, drew 3, lost 1, scored 45, conceded 12 – nowonder it is a season fondly remembered by older fans.In the second division they found a new identity and new heroes. The Doc’s 4-2-4 formationmeant the football was fun again. Stuart Pearson was signed from Hull and scored 17 in theleague. Gerry Daly was signed from Dublin outfit Bohemians and scored 11. Macari matchedhim and McIlroy added 7. In Ferbruary they brought in Steve Coppell, who became a cultfavourite. In the season following their promotion theyreached the FA Cup final, losing to Southampton. The season after that they went one betterand won it. Relegation hurt, but it led to reinvention. As Barney Ronay wrote in theGuardian in December 2018 “A team haunted by past glories were cleared out and energised,freed up to play thrillingly carefree attacking football. United came back with the shacklesof the past thrown off, those red shirts treading lightly.” thanks to videotube.id