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A = Away; H = Home; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Lost; = Champions, Disqualified to 1986–87 European Cup; = Disqualified to 1986–87 UEFA Cup; = Relegated to Division Two On June 2, 1985 English teams were banned by UEFA from its competitions from the season 1985–86 on until the season 1990–91 because of the Heysel Disaster in 1985, involving ...
16 February 1985 Round 5 Telford United: H 3–0 Reid, Sheedy , Steven: 47,402 9 March 1985 Round 6 Ipswich Town: H 2–2 Sheedy, Mountfield: 36,468 13 March 1985 Round 6 Replay Ipswich Town: A 1–0 Sharp 27,737 13 April 1985 Semi-final Luton Town: N: 2–1 Sheedy, Mountfield: 45,289 18 May 1985 Final: Manchester United: N: 0–1 100,000
The 1986 FA Charity Shield (also known as the General Motors – FA Charity Shield for sponsorship reasons) was the 64th Charity Shield, a football match contested by the holders of the Football League First Division and FA Cup. This edition featured a Merseyside derby between Liverpool and Everton at Wembley Stadium.
1 February 1986: Everton won 1–0 at home against Tottenham. Liverpool lost 2–1 to Ipswich. [69] Stiles resigned after four months as West Bromwich Albion's manager. [citation needed] 2 February 1986: Manchester United lost 2–1 to West Ham. [70] 4 February 1986: Everton signed striker Warren Aspinall from Wigan Athletic for £150,000. [6]
The 1985 European Cup Winners' Cup Final was a football match contested between Everton of England and Rapid Wien of Austria. It was the final match of the 1984–85 European Cup Winners' Cup and the 25th European Cup Winners' Cup final. The final was held at Feijenoord Stadion in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on 15 May 1985.
The match was played on 10 August 1985 at Wembley Stadium and contested by Everton, who had won the 1984–85 First Division, and Manchester United, who had won the 1984–85 FA Cup. Everton won 2–0 with goals from Trevor Steven and Adrian Heath. Trevor Steven put Everton into the lead when he swept home from six yards after a cross from the ...
In Everton's title-winning season of 1927–28, Dean scored a record 60 league goals in a single season – still an English record. Everton originally played at Anfield until a dispute with their landlord in 1892 saw the club exit the ground, which was re-occupied by the newly formed Liverpool, who gradually became Everton's fierce local rivals.
Everton beat Liverpool 1–0, their third such win over the deposed champions this season. John Wark misses a penalty. [21] 26 May 1985: Coventry beat Everton 4–1 to complete their "great escape." Milk Cup winners Norwich are relegated despite finishing on 49 points, the highest total ever recorded by a team relegated from the top flight. [21]