1972 British Home Championship

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The 1972 British Home Championship was the first such football tournament (although sadly not the last), to suffer during The Troubles in Northern Ireland, when death threats from the Provisional Irish Republican Army were sent to the Scottish Football Association and Scottish players who were scheduled to play at Windsor Park. The surge in anti-british feeling which prompted these threats followed Bloody Sunday in January, and also resulted in the cancellation of the rugby union 1972 Five Nations Championship. As a result, Northern Ireland's home fixture was rescheduled to Hampden Park, effectively granting the Scottish team an extra home match. This was not the last time that The Troubles would interfere with the Home Championship, the 1981 British Home Championship would have to be abandoned following similar heightened tension after the death of Bobby Sands.

Scotland used their home advantage well, securing victory over the Irish and Welsh to take a major points advantage into the final match against England, who had lost at home to Ireland following a heavy defeat of Wales. In the last match however, England gained a slight advantage over their old rivals, winning 1-0 and thus equalling the tournament on points and resulting in a shared victory (goal difference was not at this stage used to differentiate between teams). The Welsh salvaged a point in their final home game to Northern Ireland, but still finished bottom of the table.

[edit] Table

Team Pts Pld W D L GF GA GD
England 4 3 2 0 1 4 1 +3
Scotland 4 3 2 0 1 3 1 +2
Northern Ireland 3 3 1 1 1 1 2 -1
Wales 1 3 0 1 2 0 4 -4

The points system worked as follows:

  • 2 points for a win
  • 1 point for a draw

[edit] Results

May 20, 1972
Wales 0–3 England Ninian Park, Cardiff
  Emlyn Hughes, Rodney Marsh, Colin Bell

May 20, 1972
Scotland 2–0 Northern Ireland Hampden Park, Glasgow
Denis Law, Peter Lorimer  

May 23, 1972
England 0–1 Northern Ireland Wembley Stadium, London
  Terry Neill

May 24, 1972
Scotland 1–0 Wales Hampden Park, Glasgow
Peter Lorimer  

May 27, 1972
Wales 0–0 Northern Ireland Racecourse Ground, Wrexham
   

May 27, 1972
Scotland 0–1 England Hampden Park, Glasgow
  Alan Ball