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Man City v Chelsea Champions League final a world away from forgotten Wembley clash

Manchester City and Chelsea head into Saturday's Champions League final as English football superpowers, but 35 years ago both clubs had endured such hard times that reaching the much-maligned

(FILES) In this file photo taken on April 17, 2021 Manchester City’s Spanish manager Pep Guardiola (2L) shakes hands with Chelsea’s German head coach Thomas Tuchel after the English FA Cup semi-final football match between Chelsea and Manchester City at Wembley Stadium in north-west London. – Pep Guardiola’s City is seeking their first Champions League title in Porto on May 29, 2021, while Thomas Tuchel’s Chelsea is aiming to become European champions for the second time in their history. (Photo by Ben STANSALL / POOL / AFP)

Manchester City and Chelsea’s head into Saturday’s Champions League final as English football superpowers, but 35 years ago both clubs had endured such hard times that reaching the much-maligned Full Members’ Cup final was cause for celebration.

While City’s showdown with Chelsea in Porto is a high-stakes clash, their first-ever meeting in a final came in a competition that was shunned by the elite and no longer exists.

At the start of the 1985/86 season, the beautiful game was an ugly mess in England as rampaging hooligans clashed in decaying stadiums and attendances fell.

Just months earlier, 39 people died during riots sparked by Liverpool fans before the European Cup final against Juventus at the Heysel Stadium in Brussels.

The Full Members’ Cup was born out of the ashes of that tragedy, an ill-conceived creation aimed at filling the fixture void left by the post-Heysel ban on English clubs from European competitions.

Liverpool, Manchester United, Arsenal, Tottenham and Everton all opted out of the competition, leaving City and Chelsea among only five top-flight clubs taking part.

Fans initially treated it with derision and just over 4,000 witnessed City’s 6-1 win against Leeds in the group stage, a record-low home attendance at that point in the club’s history.

Yet by the time City beat Hull and Chelsea dispatched Oxford to reach 1986 final, the tournament had become a beacon of hope after decades of distress in east Manchester and west London.

For Chelsea, it was their first final since winning the European Cup Winners’ Cup 15 years earlier.

They were in only their second season back in the top-flight after coming within a whisker of crashing down to the third tier in 1983.

Chelsea was among the clubs most affected by the hooligan disease and Blues chairman Ken Bates briefly resorted to erecting an electric fence at Stamford Bridge in a bid to contain the violence.

– ‘Memorable day‘ –
City was in equally straitened circumstances as they prepared for their first Wembley appearance since the 1981 FA Cup final.

In their first season back in the top-flight after two years in second-tier purgatory, cash-strapped City were light years away from the current dynasty bankrolled by their Abu Dhabi-based owners.

In a sign of the chaotic thinking that bedevilled English football at the time, the final was played just 24 hours after both clubs were in First Division action.

City was weary after a draw with bitter rivals Manchester United, while Chelsea beat Southampton, with 10 players from each side featuring in both the league game and the final.

The fans did not care as around 67,000 watched one of the most entertaining, if long-forgotten, finals ever staged at the old Wembley.

“It was important. We all had aches and pains after the derby but we jumped straight on the bus to Wembley,” said City’s Mark Lillis.

Chelsea raced into a 5-1 lead fuelled by David Speedie’s hat-trick — the first Wembley treble since Geoff Hurst’s for England in the 1966 World Cup final.

Thanks partly to two goals from Lillis, City closed the gap to 5-4 but Chelsea held on to win their first trophy for 15 years.

“In the early rounds it wasn’t taken seriously but Chelsea hadn’t been to Wembley for a long time,” said former Chelsea winger Pat Nevin, who played in the match.

“It was a really memorable game. Any Chelsea fan that was there will never forget it. Boy did they make some noise.”

The Full Members’ Cup went extinct after 1992 and it would be a surprise if City manager Pep Guardiola or Chelsea boss Thomas Tuchel had even heard of it.

But for one sun-splashed spring afternoon at Wembley, the competition provided a welcome glimpse into the future for two downtrodden clubs who can now bask in their status as European heavyweights.

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