Sheffield United’s June victory handed Liverpool the title - sporting bygones
On Wednesday, the modern-day Blades, seventh in the top division and FA Cup quarter-finalists, travel to Aston Villa two days before England were due to play the second game in their European Championships campaign, as Liverpool close in on their first Premier League title.
Seventy-three years ago yesterday they were sixth in the top-flight, having reached the last eight of the FA Cup, and completed their season with a home match against Stoke City which would send the first post-War title to Anfield. It was a dramatic end to what until now had been the longest season in the history of English league football.
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Hide AdCoronavirus has wreaked havoc with 2019-20 but the country’s first campaign after World War Two was strung out by something more mundane – the unpredictable British weather.
For the Blades, it had started in a monsoon at Bramall Lane on August 31, 1946.
Liverpool were the visitors, and although they claimed a 1-0 victory under dark thunder clouds, it was anything but convincing.
Debutant Len Carney’s ‘gliding header’ snatched the two points, but the Liverpool Echo complained “No-one, least of all the board, is going to be satisfied until the front line show more punch.”
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Hide AdAlthough Carney, an amateur, would only make one more, scoreless appearance for them, Liverpool would settle down after an erratic first four games of the season. So would the Blades, winning three of their six matches in an unbeaten September. The weather, though, would not.
September, 1946 was an Indian summer, yet soon the country was hit by freezing fog and gale-force winds.
That turned to snowstorms which threatened to grind the country to a halt as it struggled to recover from a ruinously expensive World War.
After so long without football, gates boomed at the start of the season, but in the winter the Government ordered a widespread industrial shutdown as rail and road travel became increasingly difficult and many factories were forced to close, adding millions to the ranks of the unemployed.
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Hide AdFootball programmes became one-sheet affairs because of paper shortages. At one stage, the Government even tried to stop midweek football because with no floodlights, matches were played in the afternoons, and blamed for absenteeism at work.
February was the coldest on record in 37 years, and for 55 days between January and March, 1947 it snowed somewhere in the UK every day.
The worst day was February 22, when more than half the day’s scheduled games were called off. The game at Bramall Lane went ahead, although the Blades might have wished it had not, their 1-0 defeat to Blackburn Rovers the first of six in seven games.
In all, over 100 league matches were postponed that season.
Eventually, the Football League agreed to extend the season by six weeks. For Liverpool, it concluded with a trip to Wolverhampton Wanderers on May 31. On the hottest day of the year so far, the match officials dropped their usually all-black kits for white jerseys.
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Hide AdNot that Liverpool were complaining, they won 2-1 to go top of the league. It took them a point above Manchester United, who had signed off with a 6-2 win over the Blades on May 26 which ensured they finished above third-placed Wolves on goal average.
Now Liverpool faced a wait to find out if they would be champions.
Stoke would stop them, but would have to wait for Sheffield United who had a home game against Arsenal – who they host in the Cup at the end of this month – to get out of the way first, delaying the title-decider until June 14.
The Blades beat the Gunners 2-1 in front of a crowd of 14,939, setting them up for the final match of the season, 10 months after the start and seven weeks after the FA Cup final.
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