Coventry City's
relegation-threatened team are just ninety minutes from Wembley after
a successful penalty shoot-out at Swansea's Liberty Stadium on
Tuesday evening. After a stuttering ninety minutes the young Sky
Blues team made their experience count from the penalty spot with
George Thomas, Gael Bigirimana, Kyel Reid and Ruben Lameiras all
netting and Reice Charles-Cook saving two of the four Swansea
efforts.
The penalty shoot-out
success ended a run of three losses from similar sudden death
endings. Last season they lost shoot-outs at Rochdale and Yeovil and
in 2013 they lost at Leyton Orient, managed at the time by Russell
Slade. The last victory from a penalty competition before Tuesday was
a Football League Trophy game against Sheffield United in 2012 when a
Joe Murphy master-class helped the Sky Blues to a 4-1 victory. City's
record in all shoot-outs since their first at Reading in the Simod
(Full Members) Cup in 1988, is now played nine, won four and lost
five.
Saturday's league
defeat to Fleetwood was manager Russell Slade's fifth league game in
charge and he has still to record a victory. Several people asked me
whether this is a record for a new Coventry manager. I've looked back
at previous incoming managers (excluding caretakers) and Russell has
some way to go to break the record, set in 1967 by Noel Cantwell. The
Irishman, in his first management post, took over from Jimmy Hill
before the Tottenham home game on October 14th and did not
record his first victory until December 16th when a Bobby
Gould hat-trick helped secure a 5-1 victory over Burnley. In his
first nine league games in charge the team drew four and lost five.
Other incoming managers
who had poor starts are Joe Mercer in 1972 – his team failed to win
any of their first six games, and Terry Butcher who despite a
thrilling 5-4 League Cup win over Nottingham Forest, similarly failed
to win six league games after succeeding John Sillett in 1990.
On the flip side, the
best incoming manager has to be Roland Nilsson who was unbeaten in
his first 11 league games after replacing Gordon Strachan in
September 2001. The great Harry Storer won his first five games at
the start of his second stint as manager in 1948 – pulling the team
away from the Second Division basement. In 1961 Jimmy Hill won four
of his first five games in charge after replacing Billy Frith.
Chatting to former City
chairman Joe Elliott recently he mentioned that his first ever City
game was a friendly against Preston North End in 1956 and could I
provide some details. The game took place on 28 January 1956, the day
of the FA Cup Fourth Round. Both sides were out of the Cup so
organised a friendly game at Highfield Road. First Division North End
fielded 10 of the players who had beaten league leaders Manchester
United 3-1 seven days previously, including one of the country's top
stars Tom Finney.
City, fifth in Division
Three South, had recently lost their manager, Jesse Carver, who had
returned to Italy just months after arriving with a fanfare. His
number two George Raynor was in charge and named the following team:
Reg Matthews: Frank
Austin, Charlie Timmins: Iain Jamieson, Roy Kirk, Noel Simpson: Eric
Johnson, Denis Uphill, Ken McPherson, Peter Hill, Ray Sambrook.
The weather was dismal
with driving rain turning the pitch into a muddy quagmire and keeping
the crowd down to 13,700. Many of the crowd came to see Finney – in
those days before television was saturated with football, top stars
had to be seen in the flesh and Finney had never played before at
Highfield Road. They weren't disappointed as the England
international right-winger turned on a magical display and Nemo wrote
in the Coventry Telegraph: 'try as they might, neither Charlie
Timmins nor Frank Austin, who swopped with his full-back partner in
the second half, could do a thing with the Preston wizard'.
McPherson gave City a
second minute lead following a 'gigantic goal-kick by Matthews' but
Finney equalised from the penalty spot soon afterwards. Evans made it
2-1 for the visitors just before the break but in the second half
North End were the superior side described by Nemo 'playing some of
the best precision passing I have seen on a heavy pitch'.
Finney and Foster
scored further goals with 'unstoppable shots' as Preston ran out 4-1
victors. Poor old Timmins failed to stop Finney once, 'I had not
enough energy left to even shake hands with Finney afterwards',
laughed Charlie after the game.
Two days later City
hosted another top side in a friendly, San Lorenzo of Argentina.
That, however, is a story for another day.
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