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The F.A. Cup certainly provided plenty of interest for Leeds for they went on to meet lowly Sunderland at Roker Park, on a bitterly cold and windy day with a full house willing their struggling side to win, but the game finished level one-all, so it was then Elland Road's turn to almost burst at the seams for the re-play. A new ground record attendance of 57,892 was set, and at one point a crush barrier collapsed and people spilled onto the pitch causing a hold-up in the play until order was restored, whilst things were hectic on the field as well in a real 'needle' match, with Sunderland going ahead before Johnny Giles drove in a free-kick to level matters once more, and even extra-time failed to separate the teams. The third meeting was at Hull where the score was 1-1 yet again, with only a couple of minutes left, when Jimmy Greenhoff went down as he raced towards goal and amid pandemonium the referee awarded United a penalty. Sunderland were so incensed that they had two men sent-off for arguing, but Johnny Giles survived the turmoil to somehow, remain cool and win the tie with a perfect penalty kick.
February 1967: Peter Lorimer (arms raised) hammers in one of United's five goals in the F.A. Cup fourth round tie with West Bromwich Albion at Elland Road on a day when Leeds changed their strip. Mick Bates (white stockings) watches the ball enter the net. When Manchester City came to Elland Road in the sixth round most people expected them to defend and settle for a draw, but they attacked from the first whistle throwing Leeds out of their stride, yet Jack Charlton headed a goal against the run of play which meant a Villa Park semi-final date with Chelsea. There, it was Leeds United's turn to feel a gross injustice had been perpetrated, when, with the Londoners clinging to a one goal lead in the second half Terry Cooper had a 'score' disallowed for offside, but that was nothing to the furore that followed when United were awarded a free-kick from which Peter Lorimer duly hit the net with a scorching shot - only for the referee to order the kick to be re-taken because the Chelsea defensive wall was not fully ten yards from the ball ! That F.A. Cup semi-final defeat was particularly cruel when one considers the mammoth effort that United had made to get there, as they were caught up in an absurd congestion of fixtures around Easter, and had to plough through six matches in only 11 days. Those important games covered three different competitions - League, F.A. Cup and Fairs' Cup - with four of them away from home including one in Italy, which was the only match of the six that they lost. Bologna were the Italian side that beat United, 1-0 in the quarter-final, first leg, but the result was reversed when the two teams met in the return match at Elland Road, and it was Leeds who won the ludicrous toss of a disc to decide which club should go through to the Fairs' Cup semi-finals. So, for the second season running it was Europe that provided the best opportunity to land that elusive first major trophy, and Kilmarnock were the first team standing in the way. The first 45 minutes at Elland Road produced a scoreline of 4-2 in United's favour, with Rod Belfitt helping himself to three more goals which, added to a Johnny Giles penalty made up the home side's tally and as there was no further scoring in either that first leg match, or indeed in the return game in Scotland, it meant that Leeds United had reached the final of the European Fairs' Cup in only their second attempt. Because of fixture difficulties involving the other finalist Dynamo Zagreb of Yugoslavia, the final itself was held over until the following season, but it meant that United ended the 1966-67 campaign on a successful note and ensured something special to look forward to during the summer months. |