A look back at our previous playoff campaigns

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Still a mystery how he could galvanise us the previous season and seemingly completely lose the plot by the next as we all witnessed by the baffling starting line up for the first game of the season against Bristol City.
I think he was naturally a very cautious manager as his tactics in 2014-15 showed, which didn’t work when we had the biggest budget and arguably the best team in the league. Clough had nothing to lose the previous season so was able to get the team attacking and winning. Was he too stubborn to realise it wasn’t working in the second season?
 

Time to relive the pain...

1988 – Lost in Division 3 semi-final v Bristol City (0-1, 1-1)

Manager: Dave Bassett

Should we have done better? No – team was poor and had too many new players due to rapid Bassett turnover

Did failure hurt us long term? Not at all. Back to back promotions, good cup runs and 4 seasons in the top flight followed

Highlight: Colin Morris’ superb goal in his last appearance

Lowlight: Paul Williams’ miss

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Paul Williams

Most vivid personal memory: the newness and strangeness of it all


1997 – Beat Ipswich in Division 1 semi-final (1-1, 2-2 aet, won on away goals), lost final 0-1 to Palace

Manager: Howard Kendall

Should we have done better? Yes - Once we got past Ipswich, we should have beaten Palace. We had an excellent squad

Did failure hurt us long term?
Yes. The club was regarded by many as a PL club in waiting at the time, and this failure set us back years.

Highlight: drawing at Ipswich against all odds. Longest night of my life, and the only time we’ve advanced from a second leg away.

Lowlight: David Hopkin

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Howard Kendall, whose timidity away from Bramall Lane post-Christmas and lax preparation cost us dearly.

Most vivid personal memory: Katchouro’s opener at Portman Road, which silenced an Ipswich victory party that had started before the game


1998 – Lost in Division 1 semi-final v Sunderland (2-1, 0-2)

Manager: Steve Thompson

Should we have done better?
No – Sunderland were too good for us after we’d sold many of our better players.

Did failure hurt us long term? Yes. See 1997.

Highlight: Borbokis free kick as we dug deep and beat a superior Sunderland team in the first leg

Lowlight: Nicky Marker’s unlucky own goal

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Charles Green and Mike McDonald

Most vivid personal memory: Being impressed how superior Sunderland were early on and amazed we came back to beat them in the first leg


2003 – Beat Forest in Division 1 semi-final (1-1, 4-3 aet), lost final 0-3 to Wolves

Manager: Neil Warnock

Should we have done better? Yes – after all we’d been through we should have had enough to beat Wolves. Their superiority was surprising above all else

Did failure hurt us long term? No really. We went up 3 seasons later after 2 near misses

Highlight: the win vs Forest was arguably the best game this century, yet alone in the playoffs

Lowlight: Brown’s penalty miss in the final capping a miserable 90 minutes

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Brown the obvious pick, despite his great season. Windass and Warnock didn’t cover themselves in glory before and during the final either.

Most vivid personal memory: “Oh my God! Oh my God!”


2009 – Beat Preston in Championship semi-final (1-1, 1-0 aet), lost final 0-1 to Burnley

Manager: Kevin Blackwell

Should we have done better? No, not with Blackwell in charge and the limited forward line options we had

Did failure hurt us long term?
Yes. It took a decade to get back to this position again.

Highlight: Kyle Walker’s early appearances: looked like a PL player from the start. Also Halford’s goal capped a fine season by him.

Lowlight: Mike Dean turning down penalty appeals and the shambles of the last few minutes

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Blackwell for his naivety when Burnley beat us in the same way as they had a few weeks previously, with honourable mentions for those morons Ward and Hendrie

Most vivid personal memory: Craig “shit bastard” Beattie being outjumped and outfought and whining about it for 90 minutes


2012 – Beat Stevenage in League One semi-final (0-0, 1-0), lost final 8-7 on pens to Huddersfield after 0-0 draw aet

Manager: Danny Wilson

Should we have done better? Yes. Whilst everything had conspired against us, to lose that penalty shootout was criminal

Did failure hurt us long term? Yes. 5 more years in League One beckoned and this was our best chance to get out before Wilder came

Highlight: My Dad sat next to Kyle Walker in the first leg at Stevenage. Plus Chris Porter goals are always fun

Lowlight: Simonsen’s pen, of course

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Probably Simonsen, but ”penalty specialist” Andy Taylor and Ched Evans were not in my good books afterwards.

Most vivid personal memory: turning off my laptop at the end of extra time, because I knew we would lose the shootout. Didn’t think it would be like that, though


2013 – Lost to Yeovil in League One semi-final (1-0, 0-2)

Manager: Chris Morgan

Should we have done better? No. All 3 teams were better than us, and everyone knew it (see the first leg attendance for proof)

Did failure hurt us long term: Yes, see 2012

Highlight: Er…winning the first leg I suppose

Lowlight: Knowing a 1-0 lead wouldn’t be enough against Yeovil

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Kevin McCabe, who made a series of idiot decisions that saw us go from automatic promotion contenders to having no chance in the playoffs

Most vivid personal memory: not bothering to watch the second leg, because the result was obvious in advance


2015 – Lost to Swindon in League One semi-final (1-2, 5-5)

Manager: Nigel Clough

Should we have done better? No. The other semi-finalists were better, we were in awful form going in, and Clough was having a terrible year

Did failure hurt us long term: No, though there was the pain of 2015-6 to get through before better times came

Highlight: The comeback in the most bizarre playoff match of all time

Lowlight: The biggest impediment to our progress being the manager

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Kevin McCabe, who made a series of idiot decisions that saw us go from automatic promotion contenders to having no chance in the playoffs

Most vivid personal memory: the rage after a back 4 featuring 4 full backs gave up a 3-0 lead in the first 15 minutes at Swindon


8 fun playoff facts
  1. Michael Brown is the only Blades player to score more than once for us in the playoffs.
  2. 8 playoff campaigns without winning one is a record.
  3. One other team has lost 4 finals without winning one: Reading. They have at least bothered to score a few goals in those games.
  4. Billy Sharp has been on United’s books for 2 playoff campaigns – 2009 and this year. He missed the 2009 games due to injury, and the signs are that this will happen again this year.
  5. United have never won an away game in the playoffs, though we have only lost once at home.
  6. Neil Warnock had won all 4 playoff tournaments he’d contested before losing with us in 2003. He did one more after leaving us, and lost that one too.
  7. Kyle McFadzean scored our winner against Yeovil in the 1st leg in 2013, but never scored a league goal for us.
  8. The biggest crowd to watch us was 80,518 for the 2009 final. The smallest was 5,802 at Stevenage in the 2012 semi final.

5 Common themes in our playoff campaigns

Boring playoff finals with hardly any goalmouth action: 1997 and 2012 (and arguably 2009)

Seasons we have gone into the playoffs with key forwards unavailable for one reason or another: 1998, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2022

Seasons where it might have helped if the team had trained more and drunk less: 1997, 2003, 2015

Seasons where the manager who began the season was not manager in the playoffs: 1988, 1998, 2013, 2022

Seasons in which we won the last game before the playoffs: 1988 and 2022

But apart from that, Mrs. Lincoln, did you enjoy the play?….
 
Time to relive the pain...

1988 – Lost in Division 3 semi-final v Bristol City (0-1, 1-1)

Manager: Dave Bassett

Should we have done better? No – team was poor and had too many new players due to rapid Bassett turnover

Did failure hurt us long term? Not at all. Back to back promotions, good cup runs and 4 seasons in the top flight followed

Highlight: Colin Morris’ superb goal in his last appearance

Lowlight: Paul Williams’ miss

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Paul Williams

Most vivid personal memory: the newness and strangeness of it all


1997 – Beat Ipswich in Division 1 semi-final (1-1, 2-2 aet, won on away goals), lost final 0-1 to Palace

Manager: Howard Kendall

Should we have done better? Yes - Once we got past Ipswich, we should have beaten Palace. We had an excellent squad

Did failure hurt us long term?
Yes. The club was regarded by many as a PL club in waiting at the time, and this failure set us back years.

Highlight: drawing at Ipswich against all odds. Longest night of my life, and the only time we’ve advanced from a second leg away.

Lowlight: David Hopkin

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Howard Kendall, whose timidity away from Bramall Lane post-Christmas and lax preparation cost us dearly.

Most vivid personal memory: Katchouro’s opener at Portman Road, which silenced an Ipswich victory party that had started before the game


1998 – Lost in Division 1 semi-final v Sunderland (2-1, 0-2)

Manager: Steve Thompson

Should we have done better?
No – Sunderland were too good for us after we’d sold many of our better players.

Did failure hurt us long term? Yes. See 1997.

Highlight: Borbokis free kick as we dug deep and beat a superior Sunderland team in the first leg

Lowlight: Nicky Marker’s unlucky own goal

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Charles Green and Mike McDonald

Most vivid personal memory: Being impressed how superior Sunderland were early on and amazed we came back to beat them in the first leg


2003 – Beat Forest in Division 1 semi-final (1-1, 4-3 aet), lost final 0-3 to Wolves

Manager: Neil Warnock

Should we have done better? Yes – after all we’d been through we should have had enough to beat Wolves. Their superiority was surprising above all else

Did failure hurt us long term? No really. We went up 3 seasons later after 2 near misses

Highlight: the win vs Forest was arguably the best game this century, yet alone in the playoffs

Lowlight: Brown’s penalty miss in the final capping a miserable 90 minutes

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Brown the obvious pick, despite his great season. Windass and Warnock didn’t cover themselves in glory before and during the final either.

Most vivid personal memory: “Oh my God! Oh my God!”


2009 – Beat Preston in Championship semi-final (1-1, 1-0 aet), lost final 0-1 to Burnley

Manager: Kevin Blackwell

Should we have done better? No, not with Blackwell in charge and the limited forward line options we had

Did failure hurt us long term?
Yes. It took a decade to get back to this position again.

Highlight: Kyle Walker’s early appearances: looked like a PL player from the start. Also Halford’s goal capped a fine season by him.

Lowlight: Mike Dean turning down penalty appeals and the shambles of the last few minutes

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Blackwell for his naivety when Burnley beat us in the same way as they had a few weeks previously, with honourable mentions for those morons Ward and Hendrie

Most vivid personal memory: Craig “shit bastard” Beattie being outjumped and outfought and whining about it for 90 minutes


2012 – Beat Stevenage in League One semi-final (0-0, 1-0), lost final 8-7 on pens to Huddersfield after 0-0 draw aet

Manager: Danny Wilson

Should we have done better? Yes. Whilst everything had conspired against us, to lose that penalty shootout was criminal

Did failure hurt us long term? Yes. 5 more years in League One beckoned and this was our best chance to get out before Wilder came

Highlight: My Dad sat next to Kyle Walker in the first leg at Stevenage. Plus Chris Porter goals are always fun

Lowlight: Simonsen’s pen, of course

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Probably Simonsen, but ”penalty specialist” Andy Taylor and Ched Evans were not in my good books afterwards.

Most vivid personal memory: turning off my laptop at the end of extra time, because I knew we would lose the shootout. Didn’t think it would be like that, though


2013 – Lost to Yeovil in League One semi-final (1-0, 0-2)

Manager: Chris Morgan

Should we have done better? No. All 3 teams were better than us, and everyone knew it (see the first leg attendance for proof)

Did failure hurt us long term: Yes, see 2012

Highlight: Er…winning the first leg I suppose

Lowlight: Knowing a 1-0 lead wouldn’t be enough against Yeovil

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Kevin McCabe, who made a series of idiot decisions that saw us go from automatic promotion contenders to having no chance in the playoffs

Most vivid personal memory: not bothering to watch the second leg, because the result was obvious in advance


2015 – Lost to Swindon in League One semi-final (1-2, 5-5)

Manager: Nigel Clough

Should we have done better? No. The other semi-finalists were better, we were in awful form going in, and Clough was having a terrible year

Did failure hurt us long term: No, though there was the pain of 2015-6 to get through before better times came

Highlight: The comeback in the most bizarre playoff match of all time

Lowlight: The biggest impediment to our progress being the manager

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Kevin McCabe, who made a series of idiot decisions that saw us go from automatic promotion contenders to having no chance in the playoffs

Most vivid personal memory: the rage after a back 4 featuring 4 full backs gave up a 3-0 lead in the first 15 minutes at Swindon


8 fun playoff facts
  1. Michael Brown is the only Blades player to score more than once for us in the playoffs.
  2. 8 playoff campaigns without winning one is a record.
  3. One other team has lost 4 finals without winning one: Reading. They have at least bothered to score a few goals in those games.
  4. Billy Sharp has been on United’s books for 2 playoff campaigns – 2009 and this year. He missed the 2009 games due to injury, and the signs are that this will happen again this year.
  5. United have never won an away game in the playoffs, though we have only lost once at home.
  6. Neil Warnock had won all 4 playoff tournaments he’d contested before losing with us in 2003. He did one more after leaving us, and lost that one too.
  7. Kyle McFadzean scored our winner against Yeovil in the 1st leg in 2013, but never scored a league goal for us.
  8. The biggest crowd to watch us was 80,518 for the 2009 final. The smallest was 5,802 at Stevenage in the 2012 semi final.

5 Common themes in our playoff campaigns

Boring playoff finals with hardly any goalmouth action: 1997 and 2012 (and arguably 2009)

Seasons we have gone into the playoffs with key forwards unavailable for one reason or another: 1998, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2022

Seasons where it might have helped if the team had trained more and drunk less: 1997, 2003, 2015

Seasons where the manager who began the season was not manager in the playoffs: 1988, 1998, 2013, 2022

Seasons in which we won the last game before the playoffs: 1988 and 2022
One of the best post/threads in s24su history!

Although it doesn’t fill me in confidence, and I was confident before reading it !
 
Ipswich away they split us up into 2 groups either end of the stand ....it didn't work ...what a great night ....
I ended up Sha#$ing one of their ex players birds that night .....😀
 
Ipswich away they split us up into 2 groups either end of the stand ....it didn't work ...what a great night ....
I ended up Sha#$ing one of their ex players birds that night .....😀
Boncho Guenchev ..think that was his name .....Result ...mind you she wasn't your average wag ...but I wasn't choosy back then
 
1998 – Lost in Division 1 semi-final v Sunderland (2-1, 0-2)

Manager: Steve Thompson

Should we have done better?
No – Sunderland were too good for us after we’d sold many of our better players.

Did failure hurt us long term? Yes. See 1997.

Highlight: Borbokis free kick as we dug deep and beat a superior Sunderland team in the first leg

Lowlight: Nicky Marker’s unlucky own goal

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Charles Green and Mike McDonald

Most vivid personal memory: Being impressed how superior Sunderland were early on and amazed we came back to beat them in the first leg

Lowlight for me in that Sunderland first leg was the 3 on 1 we had in the last minute - we didn't even get a shot away. Had we made it 3-1 we would have had a significantly better chance in the 2nd leg.

Then of course Perez pulled off a couple of worldies in the 2nd half of the second leg - which in fairness probably repaid Sunderland for the clangers he dropped in the first leg.
 
Fjortoft giving that twat Tarrico grief after the final whistle. Never seen that before. Weird that Andy Walker was banished the season after, not sure if Marcelo was an upgrade?


That was class Fjortoft giving Tarrico shit at full time 🤣😍
 
Time to relive the pain...

1988 – Lost in Division 3 semi-final v Bristol City (0-1, 1-1)

Manager: Dave Bassett

Should we have done better? No – team was poor and had too many new players due to rapid Bassett turnover

Did failure hurt us long term? Not at all. Back to back promotions, good cup runs and 4 seasons in the top flight followed

Highlight: Colin Morris’ superb goal in his last appearance

Lowlight: Paul Williams’ miss

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Paul Williams

Most vivid personal memory: the newness and strangeness of it all


1997 – Beat Ipswich in Division 1 semi-final (1-1, 2-2 aet, won on away goals), lost final 0-1 to Palace

Manager: Howard Kendall

Should we have done better? Yes - Once we got past Ipswich, we should have beaten Palace. We had an excellent squad

Did failure hurt us long term?
Yes. The club was regarded by many as a PL club in waiting at the time, and this failure set us back years.

Highlight: drawing at Ipswich against all odds. Longest night of my life, and the only time we’ve advanced from a second leg away.

Lowlight: David Hopkin

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Howard Kendall, whose timidity away from Bramall Lane post-Christmas and lax preparation cost us dearly.

Most vivid personal memory: Katchouro’s opener at Portman Road, which silenced an Ipswich victory party that had started before the game


1998 – Lost in Division 1 semi-final v Sunderland (2-1, 0-2)

Manager: Steve Thompson

Should we have done better?
No – Sunderland were too good for us after we’d sold many of our better players.

Did failure hurt us long term? Yes. See 1997.

Highlight: Borbokis free kick as we dug deep and beat a superior Sunderland team in the first leg

Lowlight: Nicky Marker’s unlucky own goal

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Charles Green and Mike McDonald

Most vivid personal memory: Being impressed how superior Sunderland were early on and amazed we came back to beat them in the first leg


2003 – Beat Forest in Division 1 semi-final (1-1, 4-3 aet), lost final 0-3 to Wolves

Manager: Neil Warnock

Should we have done better? Yes – after all we’d been through we should have had enough to beat Wolves. Their superiority was surprising above all else

Did failure hurt us long term? No really. We went up 3 seasons later after 2 near misses

Highlight: the win vs Forest was arguably the best game this century, yet alone in the playoffs

Lowlight: Brown’s penalty miss in the final capping a miserable 90 minutes

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Brown the obvious pick, despite his great season. Windass and Warnock didn’t cover themselves in glory before and during the final either.

Most vivid personal memory: “Oh my God! Oh my God!”


2009 – Beat Preston in Championship semi-final (1-1, 1-0 aet), lost final 0-1 to Burnley

Manager: Kevin Blackwell

Should we have done better? No, not with Blackwell in charge and the limited forward line options we had

Did failure hurt us long term?
Yes. It took a decade to get back to this position again.

Highlight: Kyle Walker’s early appearances: looked like a PL player from the start. Also Halford’s goal capped a fine season by him.

Lowlight: Mike Dean turning down penalty appeals and the shambles of the last few minutes

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Blackwell for his naivety when Burnley beat us in the same way as they had a few weeks previously, with honourable mentions for those morons Ward and Hendrie

Most vivid personal memory: Craig “shit bastard” Beattie being outjumped and outfought and whining about it for 90 minutes


2012 – Beat Stevenage in League One semi-final (0-0, 1-0), lost final 8-7 on pens to Huddersfield after 0-0 draw aet

Manager: Danny Wilson

Should we have done better? Yes. Whilst everything had conspired against us, to lose that penalty shootout was criminal

Did failure hurt us long term? Yes. 5 more years in League One beckoned and this was our best chance to get out before Wilder came

Highlight: My Dad sat next to Kyle Walker in the first leg at Stevenage. Plus Chris Porter goals are always fun

Lowlight: Simonsen’s pen, of course

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Probably Simonsen, but ”penalty specialist” Andy Taylor and Ched Evans were not in my good books afterwards.

Most vivid personal memory: turning off my laptop at the end of extra time, because I knew we would lose the shootout. Didn’t think it would be like that, though


2013 – Lost to Yeovil in League One semi-final (1-0, 0-2)

Manager: Chris Morgan

Should we have done better? No. All 3 teams were better than us, and everyone knew it (see the first leg attendance for proof)

Did failure hurt us long term: Yes, see 2012

Highlight: Er…winning the first leg I suppose

Lowlight: Knowing a 1-0 lead wouldn’t be enough against Yeovil

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Kevin McCabe, who made a series of idiot decisions that saw us go from automatic promotion contenders to having no chance in the playoffs

Most vivid personal memory: not bothering to watch the second leg, because the result was obvious in advance


2015 – Lost to Swindon in League One semi-final (1-2, 5-5)

Manager: Nigel Clough

Should we have done better? No. The other semi-finalists were better, we were in awful form going in, and Clough was having a terrible year

Did failure hurt us long term: No, though there was the pain of 2015-6 to get through before better times came

Highlight: The comeback in the most bizarre playoff match of all time

Lowlight: The biggest impediment to our progress being the manager

Blades Playoff anti-hero: Kevin McCabe, who made a series of idiot decisions that saw us go from automatic promotion contenders to having no chance in the playoffs

Most vivid personal memory: the rage after a back 4 featuring 4 full backs gave up a 3-0 lead in the first 15 minutes at Swindon


8 fun playoff facts
  1. Michael Brown is the only Blades player to score more than once for us in the playoffs.
  2. 8 playoff campaigns without winning one is a record.
  3. One other team has lost 4 finals without winning one: Reading. They have at least bothered to score a few goals in those games.
  4. Billy Sharp has been on United’s books for 2 playoff campaigns – 2009 and this year. He missed the 2009 games due to injury, and the signs are that this will happen again this year.
  5. United have never won an away game in the playoffs, though we have only lost once at home.
  6. Neil Warnock had won all 4 playoff tournaments he’d contested before losing with us in 2003. He did one more after leaving us, and lost that one too.
  7. Kyle McFadzean scored our winner against Yeovil in the 1st leg in 2013, but never scored a league goal for us.
  8. The biggest crowd to watch us was 80,518 for the 2009 final. The smallest was 5,802 at Stevenage in the 2012 semi final.

5 Common themes in our playoff campaigns

Boring playoff finals with hardly any goalmouth action: 1997 and 2012 (and arguably 2009)

Seasons we have gone into the playoffs with key forwards unavailable for one reason or another: 1998, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2022

Seasons where it might have helped if the team had trained more and drunk less: 1997, 2003, 2015

Seasons where the manager who began the season was not manager in the playoffs: 1988, 1998, 2013, 2022

Seasons in which we won the last game before the playoffs: 1988 and 2022
Wonderfully put together Revolution

Thoroughly depressing of course!

I had an inkling we'd often into a lot of these missing key forwards. Didn't realise it was quite so many, though you could add more if you included McCabe selling them off in Jan!
 
Sheffield United, Nottingham Forest and Luton are three of the worst teams in the history of the play-offs.

Huddersfield are one of the best.
 
Highlight: drawing at Ipswich against all odds. Longest night of my life, and the only time we’ve advanced from a second leg away.

Too fucking right, mate. I was only a kid at the time. I was supposed to be in bed, but my Dad periodically came in to give me updates. In the end he let me get up and listen to the second half of extra time with him in the kitchen. My abiding memory is that those 15 minutes felt like at least 60.
 
We were saved a beating at Wembley by losing to Yeovil. They were beaten 4-0 by Preston (a team with an equally bad playoff record as us prior to that season). I dread to think how many Preston would have got against us.

I went to the away leg and the abiding memory after the defeat wasn’t disappointment but just being glad the season was over.

Sorry to be pedantic, but what else are forums for :D Yeovil went on to beat Brentford 2-1 in the final that year, it was Swindon who got tanked 4-0 by Preston after they beat us in 2015. And yes, Preston would have done at least the same to us. They finished 18 points ahead of us! For context Fulham only finished this season 15 points ahead.
 
I'd completely forgotten Preston were down in the 3rd, in my head they'd been constantly in tier 2 since about 1999.
 
Fjortoft giving that twat Tarrico grief after the final whistle. Never seen that before. Weird that Andy Walker was banished the season after, not sure if Marcelo was an upgrade?



I don't think I've seen that since the time, cheers.

From what I understand it was all Walker's doing - the players were all down at 2-1 and he had to gee them a up, reminding them that we were only one goal from Wembley.

EDIT: Also that away goal rule was nonsense, we were playing away second due to finishing lower in the league but we got half an hour extra to score an away goal. For once we benefitted from a ridiculous rule.
 
Sorry to be pedantic, but what else are forums for :D Yeovil went on to beat Brentford 2-1 in the final that year, it was Swindon who got tanked 4-0 by Preston after they beat us in 2015. And yes, Preston would have done at least the same to us. They finished 18 points ahead of us! For context Fulham only finished this season 15 points ahead.
You are, of course, correct! In my defence, I’ve done my best to blank out any memories of that era!
 

Forest's playoff record is no better, they bottle it at the semi-final stage and have never played at the new Wembley.
 
All the goals were in normal time, but away goals only counted after extra time. Strange!
Thanks. That is really strange, given that the team finishing higher in the league would have been at home in the second game - effectively that rule only advantaged the sides finishing lower in the regular season. That said, the disadvantage that day was on Mauricio Taricco's Ipswich so I have zero sympathy.
 
I'd completely forgotten Preston were down in the 3rd, in my head they'd been constantly in tier 2 since about 1999.

It's funny because the play-off final would have been our fifth meeting with Preston that season.

We'd already played them twice in the league and twice in the FA Cup.

In fact, we played them three times within the space of a month across January and February.
 
It's funny because the play-off final would have been our fifth meeting with Preston that season.

We'd already played them twice in the league and twice in the FA Cup.

In fact, we played them three times within the space of a month across January and February.

I was thinking actually, Preston must be the team I've seen us play most. We're often in the same league, I think we've played them in both cups in my time, plus the play-off semi finals.
 
I was thinking actually, Preston must be the team I've seen us play most. We're often in the same league, I think we've played them in both cups in my time, plus the play-off semi finals.

The main reason I remember Preston being in League One is because they ended that amazing streak of form we had in the 2013-14 season.

Nigel Clough isn't fondly remembered for his time here but he's responsible for one of the greatest runs of form in the history of the club.

We won seven league matches in a row without conceding a single goal but then drew 0-0 at Deepdale.
 
I think he was naturally a very cautious manager as his tactics in 2014-15 showed, which didn’t work when we had the biggest budget and arguably the best team in the league. Clough had nothing to lose the previous season so was able to get the team attacking and winning. Was he too stubborn to realise it wasn’t working in the second season?
Stubbornly playing 1 up top and trying to edge 1-0 wins at home to the likes of Fleetwood and Crawley was never going to endear him to the fans.
 
Great post. Quite enjoy reading about our playoff failures, not sure why. Perhaps I'm subconsciously more confident as the law of averages must mean its our time to be successful. Of course, consciously I know that's bollocks.

Despite the overall failure it is good to be reminded of the moments of success, Forest at home being the best football match of all time. Sadly, I feel a Forest win here would taint that beautiful memory, if it wasn't already tainted by our performance against Wolves and the thought of Windass shitting on a golf course.
 
Would be interesting how those teams would have done had we have won any of them.

As alluded to before without 88 we wouldn't have had 88-92, tricky to know if Bassett would have done as well had we survived.

96/97 I think Kendall may have stayed and kept us up comfortably.
97/98 not so good would have been disaster

02/03 I think we'd have just come short as per 07 but would have been good to see brown in his prime in prem for us

08/09 Blackwell would have us down by pancake day

11/12 think we'd have troubled mid table at best

13 and 15 would have been dire
 
I'd completely forgotten Preston were down in the 3rd, in my head they'd been constantly in tier 2 since about 1999.
They came down with us to 3rd tier in 2011. Didn't take quite so long as us to get out of it, mind.
 
So many memories in the play offs! Best memory, well it's got to be forest at home although the come back v Sunderland at home in 1998 was amazing at the time, I was literally crying with emotion of the joy of the goal by Borbokis. Worst memory!? Too many to mention but Hopkin last minute was the worst by far because this was the first play off defeat, forgetting the relegation play off v Bristol, and we weren't tainted by so many play off failures, I think we all thought we'd win. A common theme in the finals is that we've been crap in every one, at best we've held the opposition without creating anything. At worst we've just been awful.

I remember the Huddersfield one the most as that was the latest one and it seemed like we were actually gonna win one for a change! Only we could lose that penalty shoot out! After the game I was back in Stanmore where the car was parked ready for the 4 hour drive back and I went to a petrol station at the bottom of this hill. Bought a can of coke and a pie I recall. I dropped the bag as I came out and I could hear this hissing noise! I looked in the bag and the can was just leaking out coke all over my pie and in my anger I picked up the can and smashed it on the ground and it exploded not surprisingly! I seem to recall I said to my mate, "that tops off the day"!

Another "highlight" was after the Cardiff day out defeat to wolves taking nearly 7, yes 7, hours to get home! We kept going in the wrong lane and ended up going round in circles into Abergavenny-y-fenni! The joys! All part of following United!
 
Made me feel quite sick, all of that. Been there for them all bar the Wolves hammering (thankfully). Thanks, I’ll have nightmares tonight. 🤢
 

Well, I wasn't nervous at all until I read this thread, now I'm bricking it.

We have to break this playoff failure record at some point, surely....

I'm going to start praying to every single religious god known to cover all bases
 

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