Sunday, 5 May 2013

Unashamed football geek: the story of the last day of the 2012-13 season in the Championship



Okay, this is unashamedly football-geeky. I’m going to tell the story of the last day of the season in the Championship (aka the Second Division) … which is (trivia) the fourth most supported division in Europe, apparently. If you haven’t heard how it went, I hope you’ll find the story as well-constructed and tense as I did, following it at the time.

It’s one of those stories with three simultaneous and interdependent threads, with different characters, whom I shall now introduce. At the top of the table, fighting for one automatic promotion to the Premier League, were Hull City and Watford. Hull had slumped in recent weeks, but still remained one point above Watford, so if both teams got the same result, Hull would go up. They had identical goal differences, so if Hull lost and Watford drew, Watford would go up. Hull were playing the division champions, Cardiff City; Watford faced once-great Leeds United, who had ended the season strongly.

Thread Two involved two places in the end-of-season play-offs for the final promotion place. Four teams were fighting for two places: Crystal Palace, Bolton, Nottingham Forest, and Leicester. With four points separating these four teams, Palace could afford to draw unless Bolton and Forest both won, while up and coming Leicester needed Forest to lose, and Bolton to draw or lose. Leicester were playing Forest, which added some winner-takes-all spice to an already intense local derby.

Thread Three involved teams facing relegation, of whom there were no fewer than seven: five main players and two bit-part players. The  bit-part players, 51-point Wolverhampton Wanderers and 57-point Blackburn, needed a combination of unlikely circumstances and a goal deluge to change their status – and no such miracles occurred, so Wolves went down and Blackburn were safe. But this left 5 teams separated by 3 points: Barnsley (54), occupying the final relegation spot at the start of the day; Peterborough (54); Sheffield Wednesday (55); FA Cup semi-finalists Millwall (56); and Huddersfield (57, but with the poorest goal difference of all 5 teams). To add spice, Barnsley were playing Huddersfield (another local derby), while Peterborough were trying to put a dent in Crystal Palace’s promotion hopes.

As is normal on the last day of the season, all the matches started simultaneously, so that no team would find itself ending its game knowing exactly how many goals they had to score to achieve their goal. And for anyone completely new to English football, teams get three points for a win and one point for a draw; if teams are level on points then the placings are decided by goal difference (total goals scored minus total goals conceded).

And now, the drama begins …

5 minutes: Notts Forest 1 Leicester 0. Forest move above Bolton into the play-off zone.

11 minutes: Sheffield Wednesday 1 Middlesbrough 0. Wednesday climb to the top of the pack of those trying to avoid relegation.

16 minutes: Huddersfield 0 Barnsley 1. Peterborough drop into the relegation zone; but if Peterborough score, Huddersfield will drop four places in the table (that kind of move is normally seen only in the early season)  into the relegation slot.

25 minutes
Bolton 0 Blackpool 1
N Forest 1 Leicester 1
Despite conceding a goal, Bolton still sneak back into the play-off place, above Forest on goal difference. 

30 minutes: Crystal Palace 0 Peterborough 1. Is the mass escape on? Huddersfield drop into the relegation zone!  Palace’s position is unchanged, for now.

32 minutes
Sheffield Wednesday 2 Middlesbrough 0
Bolton 0 Blackpool 2. 
Bolton still hold the final play-off place, but a goal for either Leicester or Forest would eject them.

In other potentially significant news: Watford lost their first choice goalkeeper with an injury in training before the match. Now their second choice keeper has been hurt quite badly. Their third choice goalkeeper, a teenager, comes on. And the length of time spent treating the injury means that Watford’s match is now running fifteen minutes behind all the others. 

35 minutes: Hull’s top scorer Jay Simpson has to be substituted. His replacement, Nick Proschwitz, has only scored four goals all season. This is not good news for a team who haven’t scored any goals in their previous three games.

42-45 minutes (except at Watford):
N Forest 1 Leicester 2
Watford 0 Leeds 1
Bolton 1 Blackpool 2
Crystal Palace 1 Peterborough 1
Bolton 2 Blackpool 2
Whew! Leicester’s goal knocks Bolton out of the play-offs, but  two goals in two minutes for Bolton mean Leicester are hanging on to a play-off place by goal difference. Leeds’ goal means that Hull, still drawing 0-0 with Cardiff, can afford to lose and still be promoted. And Palace’s goal maintains their position at the head of the four play-off contenders, and drops Peterborough back into the relegation zone.

42-45 minutes (at Watford):
Watford 1 Leeds 1. We’re back to the situation where If Watford score or Hull concede, Watford will take the automatic promotion place.

The Interval: Thread One, arguably the most important, has been quiet up till now, but there has been plenty of action in Threads Two and Three; the key positions have changed hands three or four times already, and the five teams fighting to avoid relegation are still separated by three points, but in a different order!  So are you ready for the second half?

55-60 minutes:
N Forest 2 Leicester 2
Hull 0 Cardiff 1
Huddersfield  1 Barnsley 1
Watford now occupy the promotion place, and Bolton the last play-off place. And Barnsley drop back into the relegation spot, below Peterborough on goal difference.

60 minutes: Proschwitz misses a sitter. Hull remain 1-0 down.

60-75 minutes:
Hull 1 Cardiff 1
Hull 2 Cardiff 1
Crystal Palace 1 Peterborough 2
Promotion is Hull’s again, with two goals in four minutes, the first from Proschwitz. If they win, there’s nothing Watford can do to catch them. And are Peterborough now safe?

75-80 minutes: Huddersfield 1 Barnsley 2. Now just one point covers the five teams trying to avoid relegation, and once again it’s Huddersfield at the bottom of the pile.

65 minutes at Watford: Watford have a man sent off.

80 minutes:
Huddersfield 2 Barnsley 2. Once again, Barnsley replace Huddersfield as relegation candidates.
Crystal Palace 2 Peterborough 2. And once again, Peterborough require goal difference to keep them out of the relegation spot.
Derby 1 Millwall 0. If Barnsley and Peterborough both take the lead again, it’ll now be Millwall in the relegation zone rather than Huddersfield.

85 minutes:
Crystal Palace 3 Peterborough 2
N Forest 2 Leicester 3
Five minutes to play, and the sixth change to the relegation zone this afternoon sees Peterborough holding the unwanted prize. And Leicester are back in the play-offs, along with Crystal Palace. 

88 minutes:
Penalty to Hull! It’s taken by Proschwitz and … it’s saved! Cardiff break down to the other end, and in the ping-pong chaos of Hull’s penalty area, one of their defenders handles the ball. Penalty to Cardiff!

90 minutes:
Hull 2 Cardiff 2. And the final whistle goes here, and in all the other matches apart from Watford’s. Watford have fifteen minutes to score one goal that would see them promoted to the Premier League.

85 minutes at Watford: Still 1-1. Some Hull players are watching TV; others cannot bear to watch, and are sitting with their heads in their hands or are walking up and down corridors. 

88 minutes at Watford: There’s a goal! And it’s gone to … Leeds! A mistake by Watford’s third choice goalkeeper lets Ross MacCormack in for a goal that surely seals Hull’s promotion to the Premier League!

90 minutes at Watford: The final whistle sees despair at Watford and jubilation in Hull. Hull City have been promoted to the Premier League; in a newspaper article the next day, Hull’s manager calls their promotion “ridiculous”. Leicester achieve the combination of results that they needed to grab the last play-off place, along with Crystal Palace. And the churning washing machine at the bottom of the league finally spits out Peterborough as the losers in the race to avoid relegation.



So the curtain falls for another season. Apart from the play-offs, that is. Watford against Leicester could be quite a game …

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