1988–89 Leicester City F.C. season

Leicester City
1988–89 season
Chairman Terry Shipman
Manager David Pleat
Second Division 15th
FA Cup Third round
League Cup Fourth round
Full Members Cup First round
Top goalscorer League: Newell (13)
All: Newell (15)
Average home league attendance 10,701

During the 1988–89 English football season, Leicester City F.C. competed in the Football League Second Division.

Season summary

In the 1988–89 season, Leicester failed to put consecutive wins in the league for the first time since the 1977–78 relegation season from the top flight. The only highlight in the league for the Foxes was a 2-0 win over champions Chelsea which delayed their promotion celebrations and also ending their 27 match unbeaten run. Leicester's 15th-place finish meant the Foxes finished in the bottom half of the Second Division for a second season running, which they hadn't done since 1951.

Final league table

Pos Team Pld W D L F A W D L F A F A GD Pts Notes
1 Chelsea 4615625025146346259650+4699
2 Manchester City 4612834828115729257753+2482
3 Crystal Palace 461562421786929327149+2281 [notes3 1]
4 Watford 461454411887833307448+2678
5 Blackburn Rovers 4616435022671024377459+1577
6 Swindon Town 461382351578833386853+1576
7 Barnsley 461283372186929376658+874
8 Ipswich Town 4613374223941029387161+1073
9 West Bromwich Albion 4613734318511722236541+2472
10 Leeds United 4612653420510825305950+967
11 Sunderland 4612834023471220376060±063
12 Bournemouth 4613373220551321425362–962
13 Stoke City 4610943325551324475772–1559
14 Bradford City 4681142922561223375259–756
15 Leicester City 46116631202101125435663–755
16 Oldham Athletic 46910449322111026407572+354
17 Oxford United 4611664034361422366270–854
18 Plymouth Argyle 4611483522381220445566–1154
19 Brighton & Hove Albion 4611573624341621425766–951
20 Portsmouth 4610673321361420415362–951
21 Hull City 467973125451421435268–1647
22 Shrewsbury Town 4641182531471215364067–2742
23 Birmingham City 4664132133271410433176–4535
24 Walsall 46310102742261514384180–3931
  1. Crystal Palace won the play-offs and were promoted.
Key
Division Champions, promoted
Promoted
Participated in play-offs
Promoted through play-offs
Relegated

Results

Leicester City's score comes first[1]

Legend

Win Draw Loss

Football League Second Division

DateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
27 August 1988 West Bromwich AlbionH1–113,082Mauchlen
29 August 1988 PortsmouthA0–210,737
3 September 1988 Birmingham CityA3–27,932Newell, Cross, Quinn
10 September 1988 Ipswich TownH0–110,816
17 September 1988 Oxford UnitedA1–16,610Cross
21 September 1988 Plymouth ArgyleH1–09,117Newell
24 September 1988 WatfordH2–210,957Walsh, Reid
1 October 1988 ChelseaA1–27,050Quinn
4 October 1988 Hull CityA2–25,079McAllister, Williams
8 October 1988 Brighton & Hove AlbionH1–09,021Quinn
15 October 1988 Stoke CityH2–010,312Newell (2)
22 October 1988 Leeds UnitedA1–117,263Quinn
26 October 1988 Swindon TownH3–39,751McAllister (2, 1 pen), King (own goal)
29 October 1988 Shrewsbury TownA0–35,178
5 November 1988 Manchester CityH0–014,080
12 November 1988 WalsallA1–06,895Newell
19 November 1988 Crystal PalaceA2–48,843Newell, McAllister
26 November 1988 Bradford CityH1–09,533Quinn
3 December 1988 Oldham AthleticA1–15,789Quinn
10 December 1988 SunderlandH3–111,093Newell, Cross, Reid
17 December 1988 BarnsleyA0–36,477
26 December 1988 BournemouthH0–113,896
31 December 1988 Blackburn RoversH4–010,820Turner, Cross, Newell, McAllister
2 January 1989 Ipswich TownA0–214,037
14 January 1989 PortsmouthH2–110,567Turner, Reid
21 January 1989 West Bromwich AlbionA1–120,785Reid
4 February 1989 Hull CityH0–29,996
11 February 1989 Brighton & Hove AlbionA1–19,572McAllister
18 February 1989 Leeds UnitedH1–214,151Cross
25 February 1989 Stoke CityA2–29,666Reid, Walsh
28 February 1989 Swindon TownA1–27,456Newell
4 March 1989 WalsallH1–09,375Cross
11 March 1989 Manchester CityA2–422,266McAllister, Newell
15 March 1989 Shrewsbury TownH1–17,750McAllister
18 March 1989 Plymouth ArgyleA1–16,703Cross
25 March 1989 Birmingham CityH2–09,564Mauchlen (2)
27 March 1989 BournemouthA1–28,913McAllister
1 April 1989 Oxford UnitedH1–08,187McAllister
8 April 1989 Blackburn RoversA0–08,103
11 April 1989 BarnsleyH0–17,266
15 April 1989 ChelseaH2–019,468Reid, Cross
22 April 1989 WatfordA1–211,262Newell
29 April 1989 Bradford CityA1–28,703Paris
1 May 1989 Oldham AthleticH1–27,223Newell
6 May 1989 Crystal PalaceH2–29,917North, Cross
13 May 1989 SunderlandA2–215,819McAllister, Newell (pen)

FA Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
R37 January 1989 Manchester CityA0–123,838

League Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
R2 1st leg 28 September 1988 WatfordH4–19,512Reid, Walsh, Cross, McAllister (pen)
R2 2nd leg 11 October 1988 WatfordA2–2 (won 6-3 on agg)9,087Mauchlen, Newell
R32 November 1988 Norwich CityH2–014,586Newell, Reid
R430 November 1988 Nottingham ForestH0–026,764
R4R14 December 1988 Nottingham ForestA1–226,676Clarke

Full Members Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
R18 November 1988 WatfordA0–2 (a.e.t.)3,626

Squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
- England GK Martin Hodge
- Scotland MF Ali Mauchlen (captain)
- England DF Tony Spearing
- Northern Ireland MF Paul Ramsey
- England DF Steve Walsh
- England DF Grant Brown
- England MF Paul Reid
- England FW Nicky Cross
- England FW Mike Newell
- Scotland MF Gary McAllister
- England MF Phil Turner
- Northern Ireland FW Jimmy Quinn
- England GK Paul Cooper
- England DF Alan Paris
No. Position Player
- Scotland MF Peter Weir
- England GK Carl Muggleton
- England DF Simon Morgan
- Republic of Ireland MF Martin Russell
- England MF Darren Williams
- England MF Paul Groves
- Republic of Ireland DF Tony Brien
- England MF Gary Mills
- Republic of Ireland MF Mick Kennedy
- England DF Gary Charles (on loan from Nottingham Forest)
- England FW Marc North
- Republic of Ireland DF Peter Eccles
- England MF Dave Puttnam
- England FW Steve Wilkinson

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.