The highlights have been few and far between for West
Ham United's long-suffering fans over the years - three
FA Cup wins, a European Cup-Winners' Cup victory,
various other cup runs that failed on the verge of
success and, of course, the enjoyment of watching great
players such as Bobby Moore, Geoff Hurst and Trevor
Brooking. Throughout the 47 seasons the East London club
has spent in the top flight of English football, the
prospect of challenging for the League Championship
title has been little more than a pipe dream. Except for
one season: 1985-86.A 16th-place finish in 1984-85 had
hardly filled the fans with optimism for the coming
campaign, and the loss of young star Paul Allen to
arch-rivals Tottenham Hotspur had some supporters
questioning the ambition of the club. They were in for a
shock. Little did he know it at the time, but manager
John Lyall's summer purchases of young unknown Scottish
striker Frank McAvennie from St Mirren for 340,000 and
diminutive winger Mark Ward from Oldham Athletic for
250,000, were the final pieces in a jigsaw that fell
into place spectacularly to provide West Ham fans with a
campaign they would never forget.On the final Saturday
of the season, the Hammers faced West Bromwich Albion
still holding genuine hopes of finishing as League
Champions. With Liverpool playing at Chelsea that day,
Lyall's men knew that if they beat the Baggies and the
Blues triumphed at Stamford Bridge, they only needed a
victory against Everton two days later to secure their
first-ever league title. Despite victory at the
Hawthorns, though, news filtered through that Liverpool
player-manager Kenny Dalglish had hit a winner against
Chelsea to ensure that the Reds couldn't be caught.
Eighteen years on, this book reflects in detail on the
one and only season in which the claret-and-blue army
were really able to chant 'We're gonna win the
league'. |
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