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On 23 March 1986 Chelsea won the 1986 Full Members Cup Final 5–4 at Wembley Stadium against Manchester City with David Speedie (the club's joint top scorer in the league along with Kerry Dixon on 14 goals) scoring Chelsea's only Wembley hat-trick. Colin Lee scored Chelsea's other two goals.
Full Members Cup: Fourth round: Top goalscorer: League: Kerry Dixon (10) ... The 1986–87 season was Chelsea Football Club's seventy-third competitive season. Table
The 1986 Full Members' Cup final was a football match which took place at Wembley Stadium on 23 March 1986. It was the final of the inaugural Full Members' Cup, the competition created in the wake of the 1985 ban on English clubs from European competitions following the Heysel disaster. Contested between First Division sides Chelsea and ...
The 1985-86 Full Members' Cup was the first edition of the tournament created to compensate for the ban on English clubs from European football following the Heysel Stadium disaster. It was won by Chelsea, who beat Manchester City 5–4 in the final at Wembley Stadium. The tournament attracted just 21 entries from the 44 eligible clubs.
Pages in category "Chelsea F.C. matches" The following 62 pages are in this category, out of 62 total. ... 1986 Full Members' Cup final; 1990 Full Members' Cup final; L.
14 March 1986: Portsmouth signed Oldham Athletic striker Micky Quinn, who had scored 34 goals since he joined the Latics in January 1984, for £150,000. [89] 15 March 1986: Liverpool won against Southampton 2–1 at the Dell. Norwich beat Carlisle United 2–1 at Carrow Road. [90] 16 March 1986: Everton drew 1–1 with Chelsea. [91]
The first Chelsea team in September 1905. This is a list of all seasons played by Chelsea Football Club in English and European football, from their inaugural season in 1905–06 to their last completed season . It details their record in every major competition entered, as well as the top goalscorers for each season.
In 1986, with Ken Bates owner of the club, Chelsea's crest was changed again as part of another attempt to modernise and because the old rampant lion badge could not be trademarked. [127] The new badge featured a more naturalistic non-heraldic lion, in white and not blue, standing over the C.F.C. initials.