Rovers 4 - 2 Derby
#1
Posted 19 February 2006 - 13:11 PM
I think it was Scott Sellars who got the first one back and then Mike Newell fired in a beauty just before half-time. The crowd was going mad all through the break and when they came back on for the second half the place was absolutely jumping. You could see Derby thinking "what the f***" and they didn't want to know after that.
In truth we could have had 4 or 5 in the second half but just got the 2 goals from Speedie and another 1 that was wrongly disallowed. To make it even more special we went to Derby and did the business as well in another fantastic night.
#2
Posted 19 February 2006 - 14:25 PM
There were a few dicey moments at the back of the BBE I can tell you, got a bit crushed on a barrier celebrating one of the goals. On leaving the ground I actually noticed a red stripe on my shirt where the paint had come off! And this was at the end of the season!
Fantastic stuff that day, a little dangerous but what an unbelievable atmosphere. Unfortunately due to all seater stadia that sort of adrenalin rush won't be experienced again. And people wonder why some fans want terracing back? All I can say is that you just had to be there, those were the days!
#3
Posted 19 February 2006 - 15:23 PM
Brian Moore's head looks uncannily like London Planetarium.
#4
Posted 19 February 2006 - 23:01 PM
#5
Posted 20 February 2006 - 19:37 PM
I'm glad that others remember that match for the atmosphere, a very strange occasion. It was almost like collective hysteria with the Blackburn End chanting non-stop throughout half time. I don't think that has ever happened since.
It must have been just one of those days when everyone was feeling a bit bonkers.
Peter White descibed it as "A magnificent game of football...saw Blackburn Rovers supporters transformed from heartbreak to the edge of hysteria with an attacking performance that could only be described as brilliant."
Gabbadini 2 mins
Johnson 14
Sellars 35
Newall 44
Speedie 66 & 70
Rovers; Mimms; May: Wright; Cowans; Moran (Richardson 56m); Hendry; Price; Atkins; Speedie (Shearer 71m*) ; Newall; Sellars.
*Duncan, not Alan.
"The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the inequities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men.
........And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who attempt to poison and destroy my brothers."
In other words: "F**k Venkys" & Kean
#6
Posted 22 February 2006 - 13:08 PM
Long Shot on the day.
Brian Moore's head looks uncannily like London Planetarium.
#7
Posted 24 February 2006 - 20:30 PM
At 2-0 down the packed Blackburn End was stunned into silence,we'd blown it,our gobshytes in blue 'n' white had let us down yet again.....how could they?
45 minutes later and in all my time supporting Rovers I had never heard Ewood roar and sing as loud as it did that day.
'Mass hysteria' is a tame summary to describe of the events of that hot,barmy afternoon.
SPEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDIIIIIIIIIIIEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!
There may be trouble ahead,but while there's Mrs Desai,Balaji and Venkatesh,Kean,Pune and Raomance ...we may have to face the music and dance!! :-(
#8
Posted 27 February 2006 - 23:10 PM
To make it better, we were set up for the return leg where my lasting memory, apart from being stared at very hard by some strange people from the Baseball Ground's "C Stand", was Kevin Moran getting a header in from a corner where he took the ball, the goalie and what seemed like three Derby defenders into the net.
Boy, did the Rovers want to win that one!!!
#9
Posted 28 February 2006 - 10:36 AM
Adebayor, Adebayooooor his dad rides elephants and his mum's a whoooooooore
#10
Posted 10 March 2006 - 15:40 PM
League play-offs, Second Division: Blackburn Rovers 4, Derby 2
Rovers’ Speedie recovery
Stephen Bierley
WHICH set of supporters will on Wednesday night pop their corks at the Baseball Ground remains open to question.
Yesterday Blackburn Rovers, 2-0 down within 15 minutes, won a splendidly unpredictable match, and they must resume as marginal favourites.
Derby, who have lost eight home matches this season, will be committed to attack but on
the evidence of the dreadful vulnerability of Coleman and Comyn in defence they will be terribly open to counterattack.
Arthur Cox’s team could not have had a better start. A clumsy challenge by Hendry on Kitson saw Simpson whip in a curling left-foot free-kick which Gabbiadini dived to head past Mimms.
Speedie should have equalised and Sellars thudded a cross-shot against the base of a post before Johnson put Derby further ahead. McMinn and Williams instigated the move,
although it was their inability later to control midfield that cost Derby dear; Simpson’s deft chip left Johnson in the clear and Hendry and Moran arguing with each other.
At that point there were few doubts that Blackburn’s season was as good as over and that Derby would go on to Wembley at a restrained canter ready to unleash one final, drumming gallop. Then everything began to go wrong. A Simpson challenge of small intent on the histrionic Speedle saw Sellars strike a free-kick which took the most insidious of deflections.
Daiglish, unlike Cox, bought largely for the moment: old heads to he sacrificed once the Premier League was reached. The policy has often seemed dubious but on this occasion experience told, if Derby had held on to 2—I at half time things might have been different, but Newell’s shot in the 44th minute levelled the match and saw Rovers emerge after the interval with buoyant optimism, their horrid opening forgotten.
The width in Blackburn’s play so stretched Derby that huge holes opened. McMinn and Williams were overrun or bypassed and Simpson and Johnson became bystanders as Speedie wreaked havoc.
Sutton had made a fine save ‘from the former Liverpool player before an elementary mistake by Comyn saw the Scot race in to put Blackburn ahead. Then, with Derby chaffing to make a double substitution to plug the gaps, Speedie increased Blackburn’s lead.
All is not lost for Derby. Kitson, Simpson and Johnson have the pace to cause mayhem in the Blackburn defence, where Mimms inspires little confidence and Hendry is capable of the most rudimentary mistakes. It is Rovers’ fourth play-• off in five years. Nobody can say they have not had practice.
Blactcbatn, Reverts Mimes; May, Wright,
Cowans. Moran (Richardson, 56mm),
Hendry, Price, Atkins, Speedle (Shearer, 71),
Newell, Sellers
Deity county, Sutton; Kavanah, Forsyth,
McMmnn (Ramage, 71), coleman, Comyn,
Johnson, iCison. Gabbiadlni (Mlcklowhite,
11), Williams, Simpson.
Referee, K Hackett (shefileld).
"The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the inequities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men.
........And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who attempt to poison and destroy my brothers."
In other words: "F**k Venkys" & Kean
#11
Posted 23 March 2006 - 17:32 PM
Then the come back! An awsome display of football & determination left the whole ground (well 3 quarters of it) bouncing!!
#12
Posted 29 December 2011 - 19:00 PM
#13
Posted 02 February 2012 - 05:01 AM
#14
Posted 02 February 2012 - 20:20 PM
Billinge End Blue, on 19 February 2006 - 23:01 PM, said:
Love it!!
The 12 year old you allude to was actually a mate of mine who was 20 at the time. He had the freeze frame as his Facebook photo for a while!!
What a game though in the best atmosphere I can remember at Ewood. The half time break was surreal with non stop chanting and a kind of collective realisation that finally it was going to be OUR year.
#15
Posted 02 February 2012 - 23:21 PM
- ← Blackburn Rovers 1 Charlton Athletic 0
- Heaven, I'm in Heaven........
- what were those owners called all those years ago? →
Help













