Statistics and information on Manchester United FC 
 

Home
Fixtures
Squad
History
Managers
Old Trafford
Memories
Gallery
Honours
Seasons
Quotes
Trivia
Attendances
Quiz
Audio




 

Bayern Munich 1 Manchester United 2  (26th May 1999. Champions' League Final, Nou Camp, Barcelona)

Anybody who was lucky enough to be in the Nou Camp, on that hot night of 26th May 1999, will tell you it was an occasion to savour. Every emotion known to football supporters was experienced that night........the expectation before the game, the atmosphere inside that breathtaking stadium.......the realisation that the team weren't playing to their usual high standard once the game got under way, that it wasn't going to be 'our night'.......to those final mind-blowing two minutes when everything we had dreamed about....came right.
My own personal story begins at Luton Airport....!
Unable to get on any flights from Manchester, my mate Kev and myself were forced into travelling on the 6-30am 'Easyjet' from Luton to Nice, in the South of France....completing the journey to Barcelona by hire-car, which turned out to be a longer drive than anticipated, although the countryside of  Provence made up for it.
We were staying at the Hotel Esplendide in Blanes, a half-hour drive from Barcelona. A long session on the draught San Miguel in a bar opposite the Hotel on the tuesday night , left us feeling the worse for wear, as we staggered to our beds to catch up on the sleep we missed the night before.
We were up early on wednesday morning with giant hangovers, intent on driving into Barcelona to do the sights, after parking the car conveniently close to the Nou Camp for the quick getaway after the game. Win or lose, we had to travel straight back to Nice to catch the early thursday morning flight home. The sight-seeing was completed, with frequent stops for 'liquid refreshment' in the heat of eighty degrees plus.
We decided to head for the ground on the Metro quite early, preferring to soak up the atmosphere of a European Final rather than arriving at the last minute tanked up.

The Nou Camp didn't look anything special from outside, to be quite honest. After going through the first turnstile, there was a cordon of Police searching for anything that could be used as a missile, which meant Kev could take in his bottle of water.....as long as he left the plastic top off it, outside ! We then faced another turnstile where the ticket bar-code was checked.....we were then underneath the stands, and looking for our section, which was 146. Up the few steps, and we were looking out on an incredible sight. If it looked nothing special from the outside, the Nou Camp was absolutely breathtaking from the inside.

After fixing our 'Whitefield' flag to the fence, thinking it would be seen by everybody watching on telly back home (it wasn't)....we had a look around the concourse behind the seats, and were surprised to find beer on sale, along with tables full of sandwiches, nuts, pastries, and even a barbecue area.
The stadium filled up, the pre-match entertainment of hundreds of cheerleader-type dancing girls came on, as did Russell Watson Montserrat Caballe to do the inevitable rendition of 'Barcelona'.
The atmosphere was fantastic by the time the teams appeared, which showed that even the 'neutral' areas of the ground were populated by Reds.
The match itself was no classic, until roughly the 90th minute when events changed dramatically. I was of the opinion it just wasn't our night, we had blown it big-style....when I remember seeing Schmeichel trotting up for the corner, thinking to myself that this was our last chance, now or never. I had visions of the ball being cleared, Bayern moving upfield and rolling the ball into the empty net. Obviously when Teddy scored, the first emotion was overwhelming relief.....we would do them in extra-time, no doubt about it. Less than a minute later, Ole nudged home the winner.
Cue delirium.
The only black mark was that we had to get back in the car after the match, and drive straight to Nice in time to catch the flight home, so no time for serious celebrations. Being a few years older than Kev, I exercised my authority and let HIM drive all the way back to Nice, while I took it easy, and wished we were on the Ramblas getting bladdered.

United 1 AC Milan 0 (15th May 1969. European Cup, Semi-Final, 2nd leg. Old Trafford.)

Two goals down from the first leg in the San Siro, against one of the toughest defences in Europe. United had no choice but to go for it, which they did, but were unable to breach Milan's packed defence until the 70th minute. George Best brilliantly beat two defenders on the edge of the box, before laying the ball to his right for Bobby Charlton to hammer the ball home. United's tails were up now, but shortly after the goal the game was held up when Milan's goalkeeper Cudicini was felled by a missile allegedly thrown from the Stretford end. The delay took the sting out of United, but in a late goalmouth scramble Denis Law poked the ball over the line for the equalizer. A Milan defender lying on the floor managed to clear the ball. The 63,103 crowd were ready to acclaim the goal, but the French referee amazingly waved play on, having apparently been unsighted on the edge of the penalty area. TV replays later suggested the ball had crossed the line, but the holders were out of the competition, losing 1-2 on aggregate.

United 3 Blackburn R. 1 (3rd May 1993. Premiership. Old Trafford.)

United were confirmed as Champions when Oldham won 1-0 at Villa the day before. The stage was set for the Mother of all parties at Old Trafford on Bank Holiday Monday. The atmosphere inside the ground that night was unbelievable, as goals from Giggs, Ince and Pallister saw off the threat of Blackburn, who would themselves be Champions within two years.

United 3 West Bromwich A. 5  (30th December 1978. Division One. Old Trafford)

Great match, with both sides giving fine displays of attacking football. West Brom with Robson, Cunningham, Regis, etc. in their line-up, were in irresistible mood as they put five past United.......who were in the middle of a miserable run which saw them also lose to Bolton (0-3), Liverpool (0-3), and Arsenal (0-2).

United 2 Tottenham 1 (16th May 1999. Premiership. Old Trafford)

Final day of the League season, and we had to beat Spurs to clinch another Premiership Title. Our nearest challengers, Arsenal, had to hope their North London rivals would do them a favour by winning, to give them any hope of pipping us.
Ferdinand provided a glimmer of hope for the Gunners by scoring in the 25th minute, but normal service was returned two minutes before half-time when David Beckham equalized.
Andy Cole came on as substitute for the second half, and within two minutes had lobbed the ball over Ian Walker to put us 2-1 in front, triggering the biggest roar of the season at Old Trafford. We held on for the three points, and clinch the first part of the historic Treble, winning the FA Cup the week after, and the European Cup in Barcelona on the wednesday  after that.

FC Barcelona 4 United 0 (2nd November 1994. Champions' League. Nou Camp.)

Men against boys, as Barcelona tore United to shreds and looked as if they could score in every attack. The foreigners rule again cost United as Cantona and Schmeichel had to be left out, but the 114,273 Nou Camp crowd couldn't care less, and roared their approval as Romario and Stoichkov ran riot.

West Ham U. 1 United 6 (6th May 1967. Division 1. Upton Park.)

I remember this day vividly, as I was at Maine Road watching City with some blue mates ! (City v Sheff U., I think).  Didn't really take much notice of the City performance, as I was more concerned how the Reds were doing at Upton Park.
No transistor radio to keep me informed, so it was a great relief when the half-time scoreboard read.....'West Ham 0....Man Utd 4'.

Manchester City 2 United 3 (7th November 1993. Premiership. Maine Road.)

City shot into a 2-0 first-half lead with two goals from Niall Quinn. United came out for the second-half with all guns blazing though, and a defensive error left Eric Cantona clear through to put the ball past Tony Coton, to put United back in it. It was Cantona again, after a brilliant cross from Giggs, who got the equalizer to leave the Reds scenting victory. The inevitable winner came when Lee Sharpe crossed from the left, and Roy Keane arrived at the far post to blast home, leaving City and their supporters, stunned.

<Previous>

 

 

This site is in no way connected with Manchester United Football Club PLC. It is simply a personal website, painstakingly put together by me as a tribute to my team.

This site was created and is maintained by Chris Beirne. Quotes and images not my own remain in the copyright of the originator or else in the public domain. The information contained in this web site is intended for entertainment, educational, historical, and informational purposes only.