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  2. 1984–85 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984–85_Huddersfield_Town...

    1984–85 season; Chairman: Keith Longbottom: Manager: Mick Buxton: Second Division: 13th: FA Cup: Fourth round (knocked out by Luton Town) League Cup: Second round (knocked out by Sheffield Wednesday) Top goalscorer: League: Dale Tempest (15) All: Mark Lillis Dale Tempest (16 each) Highest home attendance: 15,640 vs Manchester City (12 January ...

  3. 1984–85 Football League - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984–85_Football_League

    1984–85: Champions: Everton 8th English title: Relegated: Norwich City Sunderland Stoke City: Matches played: 462: Goals scored: 1,288 (2.79 per match) Top goalscorer: Gary Lineker Kerry Dixon (24 goals each) [3] Biggest home win: Chelsea 6–2 Coventry City (3 November 1984) Biggest away win: Aston Villa 0–5 Nottingham Forest (5 September ...

  4. 1984–85 Hibernian F.C. season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984–85_Hibernian_F.C...

    1984–85 season; Manager: Pat Stanton (to September) John Blackley (from September) [1] Scottish Premier Division: 8th: Scottish Cup: R3: Scottish League Cup: R3: Highest home attendance: 18,925 (v Heart of Midlothian, 1 January) Lowest home attendance: 2631 (v St Mirren, 8 December) Average home league attendance: 7425 [2] (down 909)

  5. Squad 85 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squad_85

    Squad 85 is an American comedy series created by Gregory Bonsignore that premiered on November 13, 2012, on Justin Lin's YOMYOMF Network. [1] The series premise establishes that, "In 1985 the Los Angeles Police Department experimented with a secret Time-Travel division, catapulting four of L.A.'s finest 25 years into the future.

  6. 1984–85 in English football - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984–85_in_English_football

    The 1984–85 season was the 105th season of competitive football in England. The season saw Everton build on their FA Cup success of the previous season by winning their first league title for 15 years and their first European silverware in the form of the European Cup Winners' Cup. However, they lost the FA Cup final to Manchester United.

  7. 1984–85 Arsenal F.C. season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984–85_Arsenal_F.C._season

    The 1984–85 season was Arsenal Football Club's 59th consecutive season in the top flight of English football. [1] [2] After a promising start to the season, they slipped to seventh in the Football League First Division. After the previous season's League Cup exit to Walsall, Arsenal once-again exited cup competition to lower-division opponents.

  8. 1985–86 Oxford United F.C. season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1985–86_Oxford_United_F.C...

    During the 1985–86 English football season, Oxford United competed in the Football League First Division, after promotion from the Second Division the previous season. . They secured survival with an 18th-place finish, and won the League Cup, the first major trophy win of their his

  9. 1984–85 Burnley F.C. season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984–85_Burnley_F.C._season

    Biggins 47', Grewcock 78', Hird 85' 2,505 24 November 1984 Bradford City (H) 1–2 Biggins 39' 7,060 1 December 1984 Millwall (A) 1–2 Hird 68' 5,376 15 December 1984 Swansea City (H) 1–1 Lawrence 65' 3,798 22 December 1984 Walsall (H) 1–2 Hird 5' 3,350 26 December 1984 York City (A) 0–4 6,397 29 December 1984 Bristol City (A) 0–1 ...