Actually going to aways in 1987 was a brilliant time. Bradford, Huddersfield, Barnsley etc. some great memorable away trips.
We used to share the record for away wins in the old second division with Small Heath. Thirteen wins each, us in '87-'88, them in '84-'85. Not sure if we still do. After losing to Hull in August we went thirteen games unbeaten away (eleven wins, two draws) until we lost at Boro in Feb. I'm not sure if the record still stands or not.
Quote from: Damo70 on February 03, 2015, 09:59:42 PMWe used to share the record for away wins in the old second division with Small Heath. Thirteen wins each, us in '87-'88, them in '84-'85. Not sure if we still do. After losing to Hull in August we went thirteen games unbeaten away (eleven wins, two draws) until we lost at Boro in Feb. I'm not sure if the record still stands or not. That game was The Big Match on ITV on a Sunday afternoon, wasn't it? I remember it being a pretty big thing that they chose a Division 2 game. We lost 2-1. I seem to remember Bernie Slaven scoring at least once for them.
Only scenario I'd take is Newcastle a few years back who totally walked the championship and then came up and finished 5th in the premier league before reverting back to mediocrity.
Quote from: SoccerHQ on February 03, 2015, 10:29:55 PMOnly scenario I'd take is Newcastle a few years back who totally walked the championship and then came up and finished 5th in the premier league before reverting back to mediocrity. I think they had three games where the crowd was under 40,000 that year, and averaged about 45,000. I think we'd average closer to 25,000 if we were lucky. They also kept hold of most of their decent players, and had a very settled side in the year they came back up, with Carroll, Coloccini, Nolan all playing most of their games. Nolan scored 17 goals that season, our midfielders as a whole wouldn't have that many shots.