The
Coronavirus and subsequent suspension of professional football has
brought Coventry City's surge to promotion from League One to a
shuddering halt. Football pales into insignificance to people's
health but Sky Blues' fans will still be concerned about the outcome
of the 2019-20 season and whether the campaign will be seen through
to a satisfactory conclusion. City's final game before the suspension
two weeks ago was another away victory, at Ipswich, and the seventh
win on the road in eight since Christmas Day. Portman Road has always
been a difficult ground for City and before this season they had only
won twice there in 29 league visits stretching back to the early
seventies. Now we have won twice there in three months!
The
away form since Christmas has been the difference between City being
a top six side hoping for a play-off place and being league leaders
and promotion favourites with the bookies. To put it into context,
Jimmy Hill's 1967 promotion team only won six away games in the whole
season.
If
and when the season re-commences there are a number of club records
that Mark Robins' team may threaten in the final ten games. At the
moment the team have lost only three league games all season, one at
home (Tranmere) and two away (Rotherham and Shrewsbury). The club
record for the lowest number of defeats in a season is six, set in
the1963-64 Division Three championship season (46 games) and equalled
in the 1966-67 Division Two season (42 games). The fewest home
defeats in a season is one, achieved in 1935-36, 1946-47, 1958-59 and
1966-67 (three of those seasons were promotion campaigns). The fewest
away defeats in a season is five, again set in 1966-67, and this is
one record that the team might threaten.
The
other record well within their sights is a record points total. Since
three points was introduced for a win in 1981 the highest number of
points is 75, set by Robins' team in reaching the play-offs two years
ago. With a current total of 67 a new record is well within their
sights. If pre-1981 points' totals are recalculated on a three points
basis the best ever season was 1958-59 in Division Four when 84
points would have been won from a 46-game season. The next best was
82 in 1963-64 and 1966-67.
One
record which won't be broken this season is the incredible unbeaten
league run of Jimmy Hill's 1966-67 team. After losing at Huddersfield
in November the Sky Blues went 25 games unbeaten until the end of the
season. The current run is 14 unbeaten and the team can only reach 24
this campaign. That 1967 run did however include an FA Cup defeat to
Newcastle and the club's record run in all competitions is a more
modest 22, set in the weather battered 1962-63 season. That campaign,
Jimmy Hill's first full season in charge, the Sky Blues lost a League
Cup tie at Portsmouth in October and then remained unbeaten in 22
league and FA Cup games before Manchester United lowered City's
colours in the FA Cup quarter finals on the last Saturday in March.
Robins' team have now gone 18 unbeaten (counting the Blues' Cup loss
as a draw) and are only four away from the record.
Mark
Robins deservedly won the League One Manager of the Month award for
February and became the first Coventry City manager to win three
awards. The team's results during the month were nothing short of
spectacular with five wins and one draw and the draw coming against
the then league leaders. Mark's previous awards with City were in
December 2012 and October 2018 and he has also won awards with
Rotherham (twice) and Scunthorpe. The only other City manager to win
more than one award was Gordon Strachan who won in December 1996 and
February 1998.
I
have to report the passing two weeks ago of a close friend, Geoff
Moore. Geoff, a former pupil of Bablake and Liverpool University who
taught Chemistry at Lawrence Sheriff School in Rugby, had followed
the Sky Blues
from the 1960s. He was a proud member of the 92 Club (he achieved that at Cheltenham two years ago) and had watched
the Sky Blues play at all current 91 clubs except Macclesfield and Salford. His
first away ground was Swindon's County Ground for an FA Cup third
round tie in 1966 and since then has seen City play on 118 different
English grounds not including both Wembley Stadiums, Sutton United and
Motherwell in Scotland where he attended a Texaco Cup game in the
1970s.. Geoff kept a lot of quirky
stats about City including a spreadsheet of the average age of every
City team that ever played and the number of players of different
nationalities that played at the Ricoh. His football friends will
hugely miss his company in Coventry hostelries (he always found the
right place for a pre-game drink!) and in the stands at the Ricoh and
St Andrews. I am sure all who knew Geoff send their condolences to
his wife Jackie and sons Andrew and Chris who are both massive City
fans. RIP Geoff.
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