A version of this article first appeared on the BBC Sport website in April 2020.
If City beat Inter Milan on Saturday to win the Champions League for the first time, the aftermath could witness echoes of their first and – so far – only European triumph, 53 years ago.
Haaland might need to up his game, too. According to popular legend, City’s celebrations after lifting the European Cup Winners’ Cup in April 1970 involved the matchwinner, England forward Francis Lee, dancing on a piano wearing only his briefs.
After talking to Lee, it turns out that particular tale is only partially true but there were plenty of unusual elements to City’s success that were completely factual.
They include why the game was watched by a record number of travelling fans from England, but by absolutely no-one back home – although it still gave commentary legend Barry Davies his big break at the BBC.
A torrential downpour ruined the night in Vienna for City’s WAGS but did not prevent the players from partying and, three decades before City were banned then readmitted to Europe, the victorious Blues threatened to stage their own boycott afterwards.
What is also undisputed is that a club so often derided by rival fans for having “no history”, let alone any track record in Europe, were ahead of some now established Champions League giants when it came to pioneering success on foreign fields.
City’s 2-1 triumph in Austria against crack Polish side Gornik Zabrze meant they brought home a continental trophy to go with their domestic silverware before the likes of Liverpool (1973 Uefa Cup) and Juventus (1977 Uefa Cup).
Even the mighty Barcelona (1979 Cup Winners’ Cup) had to wait another nine years for a Uefa-sanctioned title to go with their wins in the Inter City Fairs Cup, which would evolve into the Uefa Cup but was an independent invitational competition, initially only open to cities hosting international trade fairs, for many of the years when Barca dominated it in the 1950s and 60s.
Franny’s Grand Slam
Pep Guardiola’s current City side are well known for collecting trophies, with two already this season follow 11 others in the previous five campaigns – but in Lee’s day they also had a ferocious appetite for silverware.
Under the genial Joe Mercer and his innovative assistant Malcolm Allison, an all-English City side with an exciting attack-minded style had won every domestic competition going in the previous 24 months, and they were far from finished.
“In that 1969-70 campaign, I used to talk to the other players about ‘Franny’s Grand Slam’,” Lee explained in 2020, on the 50th anniversary of their victory in Vienna. “I had the attitude that we should try to win everything we took part in.
“We were going down to London on the train for a league game near the start of the season and in the middle of playing cards when Glyn Pardoe said ‘look, there’s Wembley!’
“I said ‘get used to the view, because that is where we are going to do the Grand Slam this year’.”
Lee was half right. He had wanted the quadruple but had to settle for a unique double instead.
While City lost against neighbours Manchester United in the fourth round of the FA Cup and slid down the league table after Christmas, they made it to Wembley in March and beat West Brom in the League Cup final.
Not many people would get to see them add the Cup Winners’ Cup to their haul a few weeks later, however.
The forgotten final, missed by millions
On the same evening City played Gornik, the infamous FA Cup final replay between Chelsea and Leeds was screened live by both BBC One and ITV, with 28.5m people watching – still the sixth-biggest audience for any event in British television history.
Programme
Date
Audience (millions)
1966 World Cup final
30 July 1966
32.3
Funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales
6 September 1997
32.1
Royal Family documentary
21 and 28 June 1969
30.7
2020 European Championship final
11 July 2021
29.9
Apollo 13 Splashdown
17 April 1970
28.6
1970 FA Cup final replay
29 April 1970
28.5
There were only three TV channels in the country at that point – BBC Two being the other – so City had to settle for a highlights show late that evening, instead of being the main event.
Barry Davies was sent to Austria to provide the commentary, but it remains the only European final featuring an English team not to be shown live in England.
“I was trying to work out why the hell I was doing that match,” Davies told BBC Sport. “That answers the question.
“I had only joined the BBC the previous September so in normal circumstances I would not have got a European final.
“The Cup Winners’ Cup was a big deal at the time. Not as much as the European Cup of course, but even so it was considered a very important trophy. I am surprised the final was played the same night as the FA Cup final replay.”
As well as Davies, at least 4,000 City fans had made the 1,000-mile journey to Austria too.
At the time, it was the biggest away support an English club had taken abroad – but the total crowd in the vast 90,000-capacity Prater Stadium was a disappointing one.
With Poland behind the Iron Curtain, only a handful of Gornik fans were given visas allowing them to attend, and some horrific weather deterred all but the most hardy neutrals.
“The thing that everyone who was there will remember from it was the horrendous conditions that the match was played in,” added Davies.
“The rain was torrential and it was non-stop, but there was no roof on the stadium, in fact there was no cover anywhere at all with the exception of the commentary box that I was in.
“So I do remember there was a very small crowd, and all of them got absolutely drenched very quickly once the rain started. At least half of them were City fans, and despite the weather they were a good bunch.
“City had a really fine side at that point too of course. I knew a lot of them because of my time working for Granada (regional ITV in the north-west) in 1968, when they won the title.
“Mike Summerbee, who missed the final because he was injured, was a lovely player. Colin Bell was a class act and I was big fan of Franny’s as well.”
‘The score did not reflect City’s dominance’
It was Lee who was the star of the show on this particular night, ably assisted by Neil Young on the left flank.
Young swept home the rebound to put City ahead in the 12th minute, after Lee’s shot had been spilled by the Polish side’s keeper Hubert Kostka.
Then Lee doubled City’s lead from the spot just before half-time, after Young had been taken out by Kostka as he ran in on goal.
“Neil played very well that night. That foul on him was so bad the keeper would have been sent off twice these days,” added Lee, who despatched his penalty with typical conviction.
Round
Opponent
First leg
Score
Aggregate
First round
Athletic Bilbao (Spain)
3-3 (away)
3-0 (home)
6-3
Second round
Lierse (Belgium)
3-0 (away)
5-0 (home)
8-0
Quarter-final
Academica (Portugal)
0-0 (away)
1-0 after extra time (home)
1-0
Semi-final
Schalke (West Germany)
0-1 (away)
5-1 (home)
5-2
Gornik replied midway through the second half but City comfortably held on for the win.
“We were very confident, we were a good side and we always thought we would win,” recalled Lee. “It was raining very hard and there were puddles on the pitch but we knocked it about well and we created several chances.
“The guy who was marking me was called Jerzy Gorgon, and he was as big as Desperate Dan, but I still did pretty well against him.
“We were 2-0 up by half-time but it could have been three or four by then. They scored a good goal to pull one back in the second half but the final score was not a true reflection of what the game was about.”
Celebrations that carried on and on
This was a night to remember for City’s players, but possibly not for their partners.
“The thing that stands out in my mind is that there was a Uefa banquet afterwards for the team and the officials, and the players’ wives were all there too,” Davies added.
“The weather during the day was quite nice so they had got themselves ready before the match but, like everyone else, they had no shelter from the rain at the stadium.
“By the end of the game they were a bedraggled bunch and I felt so sorry for them when I saw them.”
That did not seem to affect City’s celebrations for long, however.
“It was very late when we got back to the hotel because Uefa put on one thing and another, and then all our wives were there which slowed things down a bit,” added Lee, who had turned 25 on the day of the final.
“But their hair was still bedraggled after dinner and they did not want to come out, so us lads all went out on our own.
“It was my birthday the same night, so I had a lot to celebrate, then we eventually got back to Manchester about 4pm the following day and we went out and had another celebration dinner there. That took care of Thursday night too – it went on and on.
“It was some time on Friday before I got home, and I had not been to sleep since before the game.”
As for the story about Lee dancing on a piano in Vienna that Allison used to tell?
“Yes, I was on top of the piano while our chief scout, Harry Godwin, was playing away,” explained Lee.
“But I was sat on it not stood up, and I was giving them a song or two – not dancing. I would definitely have been fully clothed as well, because I was not one for walking around without my trousers on.”
‘Our name is on it and history can never erase it’
City’s then vice-chairman Frank Johnson evidently did not enjoy Vienna as much as Lee and his team-mates did.
Johnson threatened to pull the club out of Europe the following season because of Uefa’s choice of venue for the final, and complained they had lost money on the tie because of the small crowd.
“That is typical of the old directors’ view of looking at it,” said Lee, who had a place in the boardroom himself when he was City’s chairman between 1994 and 1998.
“I don’t think it mattered if you lost money or made money – we won the trophy, which was an important trophy in Europe, and it made a big difference to the reputation of the club.”
The Cup Winners’ Cup no longer exists but was held for 39 seasons before being absorbed into the Uefa Cup – now itself known as the Europa League – in 1999.
City got as far as the semi-finals when they defended their title in 1970-71 before losing to eventual winners Chelsea.
Before this season, they had only got past the last four in any European competition on one occasion since – when they lost in the final of the Champions League in 2021, again to Chelsea.
In contrast to 1970, the world will be watching when they try to end their long wait for more European glory in Istanbul in front of an estimated global TV audience of 450m.
“Of course European success is important for what City are trying to achieve now,” added Lee. “But it was the same for us.
“I am proud of what we did, and the way we did it. Our name is on the trophy and history can never erase it.”
Hallgrimsson has taken over a side who won just 11 out of 40 games under Stephen Kenny and their lack of confidence did not go unnoticed by the new boss, who included his players’ unwillingness to shoot and cross from promising positions in his analysis.
After a difficult first half, however, Hallgrimsson was heartened by what he felt was an improved second-half display, perhaps aided by England taking their foot off the gas after building a two-goal lead.
The Republic of Ireland’s cause was not helped by a lack of cutting edge, though, with Jayson Molumby and Sammie Szmodics passing up presentable chances to score.
“It was more initiative, we got a little bit higher. We were more compact,” Hallgrimsson said of the second half.
“Easy to say when you are winning 2-0, you probably take the foot off the gas a little bit.
“But I think we can learn from this, grow from this and improve step by step from what we were doing instead of changing personnel or changing formations in the next game.”
Clarke’s preferred formation is usually some variation of a five-back formation. However, Scotland lined up with a back four against the Poles.
With no Kieran Tierney, Aaron Hickey or Nathan Patterson in the squad through injury, can we expect that to be the case again in Portugal?
Former Scotland manager Craig Levein: “I’m not 100% sure. We tried to crowbar [Andy] Robertson and [Kieran] Tierney onto the same side. I thought we had found a solution by playing a back five with one at left wing-back and one at left centre-back.
“However, Tierney isn’t available, so I’m not sure. The five gives us a wee bit more safety, but if you play a five, your wing backs have to be adventurous. If they’re not, then progress up the pitch is limited.”
Former Scotland midfielder Leanne Crichton: “I don’t think the personnel lends itself to a back five. I don’t think we’ve got a right-sided wing back.
“It’s not Anthony Ralston’s position. He needs to be deeper when receiving the ball.
“Max Johnston could be a wing-back, but he has not enough minutes played this season. Would it be reckless to start him?
“When you don’t have Aaron Hickey or Nathan Patterson, it’s a real struggle to go with a back five.”
Former Scotland centre-half Willie Miller: “It would be the three centre backs for me after watching us play with two on Thursday.
“I’m not sure about the personnel, or the formation, but you’ve got much more responsibility if it’s only the two of you.
“Another centre-back contracts the space that the opposition can expose and you need to do that at the top level. I would ask Grant Hanley to play in the middle, with Scott McKenna on one side and either John Souttar or Ryan Porteous on the other side.”
What pleased Wright most was his players’ application throughout the contest.
While Ben Futcher’s side enjoyed the majority of possession and opportunities, Pierce Charles was largely comfortable in the Northern Ireland goal and England created no gilt-edged openings. When NI used their high press aggressively, they forced England into mistakes and were a threat on the break.
“We want to try and develop a culture where Northern Ireland don’t just get 10 men behind the ball,” said Wright.
“At times we had to do that, but we don’t want to do it for 90 minutes because it normally ends up with the same result, a 1-0 defeat. Yes, they penetrated, yes, they had chances, but I wouldn’t say they had a glaring miss or anything.
“Pierce made good saves, maybe one exceptional save, we put bodies on the line and in the end with England pressing forward we knew we could hit them on the counter attack which we nearly did.
“Now going forward, can we have more possession? Can we do better when we win the ball back?”
Thirty years on from reaching the World Cup semi-finals with a team spearheaded by Hristo Stoichkov, Bulgarian football has fallen on hard times of late.
While it was not so long ago that they could call on the likes of Dimitar Berbatov – the former Manchester United and Tottenham striker played his youth football at Feeney’s old side Pirin – Martin and Stylian Petrov, Illian Illiev’s current squad does not possess the star power of old.
After Thursday’s 0-0 draw with Belarus, their only win in their last 16 games came against Tanzania and they finished bottom of their group in qualifying for Euro 2024.
Feeney, though, warns against underestimating their ability.
“When they finished fourthth at in the World Cup, they had some of the world’s greatest players at that time, [Hristo] Stoichkov, [Yordan] Letchkov. A lot of their players were out of the country, playing in Germany and Italy.
“But you just have to look at the [domestic] football as well. Remember Ludogorets, who are one of the top teams out there, beat Crusaders 9-0 [on aggregate in the Champions League qualifiers of 2018].
“It is a big football country with very good players. You can’t underestimate Bulgarian football. It can be a lot slower, but they’re technically very, very good players.
Chelsea’s co-owners are looking to buy each out amid a rift at board level.
Chairman Todd Boehly and majority owners Clearlake Capital are both prepared to take full control of the club.
Boehly has gradually lost power despite being named co-controlling owner after the club’s purchase from Roman Abramovich for £2.5bn in July 2022, with Clearlake – which owns a 61.5% stake – in primary control at Stamford Bridge.
Clearlake co-founder Behdad Eghbali has become the most hands-on figure within the ownership group since Boehly stepped down as interim sporting director in January 2023.
Multiple figures in the senior hierarchy now recognise there is a rift between two main blocs – Clearlake and the group allied to Boehly, including billionaire partners Hansjorg Wyss and Mark Walter, which owns the other 38.5% of the club.
Any rift has previously been denied by sources at the club.
Clearlake does not want to sell any of its stake in the club and is open to expanding it.
But Boehly also wants to buy out that stake and is keen to see the situation resolved quickly.
The two parties have matching rights and blocking options, should third parties come to the table.
The issue has been kept from most involved in the sporting side of the club, but some senior figures believe work on revamping or moving stadium has slowed due to the situation.
As part of a written agreement, the chairman will change every five years, which is due to see Boehly step down in 2027.
Clearlake would need to approve any sale of Boehly’s shares to a third party.
Since the 2022 takeover, Chelsea have spent over £1bn on new signings and were criticised for hoarding players during the summer transfer window, with 42 senior players on the books at one point, although that number was cut to 36.
Current manager Enzo Maresca was hired from Leicester in July to replace Mauricio Pochettino, who left Stamford Bridge after only one season in charge.
Pochettino, who departed by mutual consent, was the latest boss to leave under the new owners, who had previously sacked Thomas Tuchel and Graham Potter.
Luis ‘Duk’ Lopes has apologised to Aberdeen following his early season absence and says he “will work hard every day to try and help the team”.
The winger, 24, has not featured so far this season and the club took disciplinary action against the Cape Verde international when he did not report for training in July.
Aberdeen have confirmed Duk, who is out of contract next summer, is back in first team training “after a period of absence”.
And Duk said: “I would like to sincerely apologise to everyone associated with Aberdeen for my absence over the last period.
“I deeply regret being away. I am grateful to the club, the manager, my team-mates and supporters for giving me a chance. I will work hard every day to try and help the team.”
Chief executive Alan Burrows said Duk had recognised “his behaviour was not what we would expect from any Aberdeen player”.
And manager Jimmy Thelin, who took over during the summer, commented: “Duk has demonstrated his contrition over this situation and understands his behaviour falls well below the standards we expect here so it is our job now to work with him in training and get him ready to compete for a place in the squad again.”
Hundreds of Wales football fans due to watch their country play Montenegro on Monday have put their plans on hold after their plane collided mid-air with a bird in the sky.
They had been due to leave Cardiff Airport on Friday night, but their flight remained on the ground for safety checks following the bird strike, causing hold-ups and frustration for some of the travelling fans.
Tour operator Wonky Sheep had advised its customers to stay at home and await an update while it tried to make alternative plans, but BBC Wales has been told some fans have already booked their own separate flights from London.
“We are trying our best to find a solution,” said the operator.
“Unfortunately, incidents like this happen in aviation and, as much as we tried, everything happened too late to operate the flight as planned.
“We told supporters as soon as we could and ensured those who needed accommodation had somewhere to stay.
“We would never intentionally let our fans down and we are trying our best to find a solution.”
Wales fans Richard Grigg had been due to travel on the flight to Podgorica in Montenegro from Cardiff Airport, following Wales’ 0-0 game against Turkey at Cardiff City Stadium on Friday evening.
“We received a message at half time during the game last night telling us not to travel to the airport, and advising us to go home,” he said.
“We’re waiting for them to let us know if they’ve arranged a flight and, otherwise, we’ll need to look at other options.
“We’ve paid for this flight with Wonky Sheep and we’d rather get a direct flight from Cardiff. Otherwise we’ll need to travel to London.”
Some fans “haven’t waited and they’ve paid for a different flight from Heathrow”, he added.
“It’s frustrating having to wait for updates and we’d like to know one way or another so we can think of another plan.”
Northern Ireland U21 manager Tommy Wright says he is a “proud man” after watching his side hold England to a goalless draw in the Euro 2025 qualifier at the Ballymena Showgrounds.
At Euro 2024, every one of England’s starting XI throughout the tournament sang God Save the King.
However, this has not always been the case.
In 2022, Liverpool’s Trent Alexander-Arnold was criticised by some for failing to sing the national anthem before a Nations League defeat by Hungary in Budapest.
Former England captain Wayne Rooney often did not sing the national anthem, particularly before he was given the armband.
The Football Association backed Rooney’s decision.
“Whether a player wishes to sing the national anthem or not is purely a personal choice,” an FA spokesperson said in 2012.
But former Manchester United captain Gary Neville says he chose not to sing the national anthem because he was told he “must” sing it by former FA chairman Geoff Thompson in 1995. , external
“I didn’t sing it the first time I played for England,” said Neville.
“Partly because I thought, I’m serious about my work and I’m not singing before a game.
“He [Thompson] only ever sought out one conversation with me.
“Did he want to pick my brains on World Cup preparation? Or ask how the FA could help behind the scenes? No, Mr Thompson wanted to know why I didn’t sing the National Anthem.