In 1972 We Won The UEFA Cup For The First Time With England International Duo Alan Mullery And Martin Chivers Very Much To The Fore. The Pair Look Back On Another Glory Night In Our History
We lifted the inaugural UEFA Cup with amazing scenes at a packed White Hart Lane where skipper Alan Mullery concluded his Spurs career by cementing his own unique place in our history.
We had qualified for the competition by beating Aston Villa in the League Cup Final the previous season and straightforward victories followed over Keflavik, Rapid Bucharest and UT Arad.
However Nantes provided a tough hurdle in the second round when a Martin Peters goal at the Lane proved the decisive moment.
We also came up against AC Milan in the semi-final with Steve Perryman scoring twice in the home first leg while Mullery’s strike in the return was again key as we went through 3-2 on aggregate.
At the conclusion of our European challenge, it was disappointing to then face Wolverhampton Wanderers at the competition’s most important moment. Like Spurs that season, they were very much a mid-table side in Division One, so the final lacked that vital spark of excitement that novelty in terms of opposition would have brought.
Because, with all due respect to Wolves, a Euro final demands new frontiers and the men from Molineux shared that view.
However, our domestic meetings gave us confidence as we had drawn 2-2 at Molineux on the opening day and then hammered them 4-1 in the October return.
Martin Chivers scored three goals against Wanderers over both games and he would prove to be their nemesis once again as we ended their European dream by winning 2-1 on their ground and then completing the job with a 1-1 draw at the Lane.
It would prove to be Wolves’ most successful season to date in Europe – and we upset them again the following year when we knocked them out of the League Cup in the semi-finals to regain a UEFA Cup place after also overcoming Norwich City at Wembley.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
OBITUARY – JOHNNIE HILLS
We were saddened to hear of the passing of John ‘Johnnie’ Hills, a defender who spent 11 years at the Club as an amateur and professional between 1950-61. He passed away at home in Brussels, Belgium, on Friday, 26 November, aged 87.
PAPER CHASE
Club historian John Fennelly looks back at what supporters were reading on their way, at half-time and heading home afterwards when NORWICH CITY visited in March 1938.
RIDE FOR UGO
Laurence Gant, Head of Academy Sports Medicine and Science, is set to take part in a five-day charity cycle in memory of his friend, and our former Under-23s coach Ugo Ehiogu.
DEVELOPMENT SQUAD
BIG WIN OVER EVERTON
SPURS WOMEN
INTERNATIONAL ROUND
GAME ZERO ACHIEVES NET ZERO CARBON STATUS
Sky this week published a case study revealing that Game Zero, our Premier League match against Chelsea here in September, achieved net zero carbon emissions.
LIVING IN THE MOMENT
Exclusive interview with our young midfielder OLIVER SKIPP, now an established member of our first team and also a familiar face to today’s opponents, who is enjoying every moment in the Premier League spotlight.
MEET OUR FIRST-YEAR UNDER-18S PLAYERS
TOUGH DAY AGAINST COTTAGERS
TREBLE TOP
Looking back at Spurs hat-tricks scored against tonight’s opposition.
WHERE ARE THEY NOW ?
A creative midfielder who was full of heart and desire, LEWIS HOLTBY made his Spurs debut against this afternoon’s opposition back in January 2013 and went on to make 42 appearances in our colours, scoring three goals. We caught up with the Germany international to discuss his time at the Club and find out what he is up to now…