Terrace
admission was at £2.20 for adults; Concessionary prices
for kids and wrinklies at £1.10; A seat in the East
Stand for as little as a fiver; Men's replica shirts at
£11.50; The matchday programme for 50p. Yes, we're back
in 1983, when you could just turn up at White Hart Lane
and get in, when all-ticket matches were a rarity, when
sell-outs were unheard of.
Having
finished fourth at the end of the 1982-83 season, that
elusive League championship seemed that bit closer for
Tottenham. The new season kicked off in the last week of
August - none of this starting towards the end of the
month which is happening nowadays. The opening day
brought a visit to Portman Road and saw debuts for the
club's big summer signings - Gary Stevens (culinary specialty Spaghetti Bolognese) and Danny Thomas
(engaging personality and keen sense of humour) from
Brighton and Coventry respectively. They were bought to
plug the notoriously leaky Spurs defence, but things
didn't quite work out with Ipswich running out 3-1
winners, with Eric Gates, allegedly Britain's ugliest
dwarf footballer of the time, scoring twice. Whether the
Spurs defence were too scared to approach him is open to
conjecture. Two days later, Coventry were the visitors
for an evening match on August Bank Holiday Monday. In
the Sky Blues side, was Terry Gibson, who, having burst
into the Spurs first team as a pint-size skinhead at the
start of the 80's, had failed to win a regular place in
the side and had left for the Highfield Road club during
the 1983 close-season (the close season was a time when
there used to be no football - a frightening prospect,
I'm sure you'll agree. But fear not, those dark days will
never return). With Tottenham leading late on through a
Glenn Hoddle penalty, Steve Archibald went off with a
twisted knee, thus reducing Spurs to ten men - these were
also the days of only one substitute and the sub on that
day, Mark Falco, had already replaced the injured Alan
Brazil. Up popped Graham Withey (not one of Coventry's
most memorable players) with a late equaliser. Final
score 1-1.
Archibald
turned up for training the next day, having recovered
from the injury which had forced him off. Tottenham
manager, Keith Burkinshaw, came to the conclusion that
Archibald hadn't been so badly injured so as to warrant
coming off before the end of the Coventry game and
accused him of letting the team down. Archibald and
Burkinshaw had a row, which wasn't kept within the
confines of the club, but fought on the sports pages of
the tabloids. The Battle of the Wounded Knee had begun.
The
season of 1983-84 had hardly started ideally for
Tottenham. One point from a possible six and a feud which
would cost the first team the services of its main
striker for the next few games.....
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