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Leicester City 6–6 Arsenal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Leicester City 6–6 Arsenal
Event1929–30 First Division
Date21 April 1930
VenueFilbert Street, Leicester
Attendance27,241

The 1929–30 season First Division match between Leicester City and Arsenal at Filbert Street took place on 21 April 1930. The game finished as a 6–6 draw, the highest scoring draw in the history of first class English football.[1] The record still stands today though was matched in a Second Division fixture between Charlton Athletic and Middlesbrough in October 1960.[2][3]

Details

Leicester City6–6Arsenal
Adcock (2)
Lochhead (2)
Hine
Barry
Halliday (4)
Bastin (2)
Attendance: 27,241
Leicester City
Arsenal
GK 1 England Joe Wright
RB 2 Scotland Adam Black
LB 3 England Jack Brown
RH 4 Scotland Johnny Duncan
CH 5 England Arthur Woolliscroft
LH 6 England Norman Watson
OR 7 England Hugh Adcock
IR 8 England Ernie Hine
CF 9 England Arthur Chandler
IL 10 Scotland Arthur Lochhead
OL 11 England Len Barry
Manager:
Scotland Willie Orr
GK 1 Wales Dan Lewis
RB 2 England Tom Parker
LB 3 England Horace Cope
RH 4 England Alf Baker
CH 5 England Alf Haynes
LH 6 Wales Bob John
OR 7 England Joe Hulme
IR 8 England David Jack
FW 9 Scotland Dave Halliday
IL 10 Scotland Alex James
OL 11 England Cliff Bastin
Manager:
England Herbert Chapman

Summary

The game took place five days before Arsenal's FA Cup final against Huddersfield Town and the club rested a number of players. Arsenal's David Halliday scored four goals[4] as Arsenal came back from a half-time scoreline of 3–1 to draw the game 6–6[5] The Gunners also had a goal disallowed.[5][6][7]

Aftermath

Arsenal played in the FA Cup final later in the same week. Despite his four goals Halliday was not selected for the game.[4] Arsenal went on to lift the trophy, defeating Huddersfield Town 2–0.[8] Halliday now had five goals from his last three Arsenal first team's games.[4] However, after the Leicester 6–6 draw he never played for Arsenal's first team again.[4]

Halliday later became Leicester's manager.[4][9]

References

  1. ^ Harding, John (21 April 2011). "On This Day In History: April 21". Give Me Football. Archived from the original on 11 July 2011. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  2. ^ Arsenal's A to Z... L is for Ljungberg | News Archive | News | Arsenal.com
  3. ^ "On this day | Trivia | This Is Bristol". Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Queens Legends, Dave Halliday" www.qosfc.com
  5. ^ a b "The Montreal Gazette - Google News Archive Search".
  6. ^ Forward, Arsenal! – Google Books
  7. ^ Donnelley, Paul (4 October 2010). Firsts, Lasts & Onlys of Football: Presenting the most amazing football facts from the last 160 years. ISBN 9780600622543.
  8. ^ Motson's Fa Cup Odyssey: The World's ... – Google Books
  9. ^ Bagchi, Rob (6 October 2011). "The forgotten story of … Leicester City: Ice Kings | Rob Bagchi". The Guardian.
This page was last edited on 15 August 2023, at 20:37
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