CITY 2 EVERTON 0
League Cup 4th Round
15th October 1969
Attendance 45,641
scorers Bell(5), Lee(44 pen)
Ref R Tinkler
City Corrigan, Book, Pardoe, Doyle, Booth, Oakes, Summerbee, Bell, Lee, Young, Bowyer – sub Connor(unused)
Everton West, Wright, Brown, Kendall, Labone, Jackson, Whittle, Brindle, Royle, Bennett, Humphreys – sub D’Arcy(unused)
CITY’S GOALS FROM COLIN BELL AND FRANCIS LEE
…A crowd of 45,641 came that night to see the F.A. Cup holders, ourselves, take on the current leaders of Division One, and also to see whether our Blues could knock out the “other” Merseyside team, having disposed of Liverpool in the previous round. The visitors, let it be said from the outset, were severely handicapped by the enforced absence through injury of FIVE regular players, Colin Harvey, Alan Ball, Husband, Hurst and Morrissey. But sometimes the inclusion of reserves in a team can, through sheer effort, pay dividends, and City had to pull out all the stops to prevent the weakened Everton XI from making progress at their expense.
The City defence was immaculate, even arrogant at times. Joe Corrigan dealt comfortably with the few shots that came his way; few, because Tommy Booth conquered joe Royle in the air, thus crushing any chance of the Everton attack feeding off any headers that Royle might provide. The two goals that settled the game both came in the first half. After only 5 minutes Francis Lee, under pressure from Harry Bennett, managed to switch the ball to Colin Bell, whose fierce 25-yard shot singed Gordon West’s fingertips. It was then West who stood between City and an impregnable first half lead, as he pulled off a string of exciting saves from Oakes, Young and Bell. But he could do nothing about a Lee penalty slammed home shortly before the break as just punishment for a Sandy Brown handling offence.
FROM AN ARTICLE BY JOHN MADDOCKS, PUBLISHED IN THE CITY PROGRAMME 17TH NOVEMBER 1987
FROM FRANCIS LEE, TRIUMPH, TREACHERY AND TOILET ROLLS
… We’d seen off Liverpool only to draw their Merseyside rivals Everton at Maine Road! They had a few injury problems, with five regular players, Colin Harvey, Alan Ball, Jimmy Husband, John Hurst, and Johnny Morrissey, all declared unfit. Even so, we took nothing for granted.
Two goals settled it, both in the first half. Just five minutes in, I got the ball up front and passed it on to Colin Bell, who smacked a great 25-yarder beyond Gordon West. West kept us out for a while with several good saves, but Everton full-back Sandy Brown handled in the area just before half-time. I took the penalty, smacking it past West’s left hand, and Everton had no way back…