Tuesday, March 8, 2022

Premier League 1994 1995 Sheffield Wednedsday Nottingham Forest 1-7


1 Avril 1995 (true not a joke)
Hillsborough Sheffield

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3.0 Go
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On April Fool’s Day 1995, Nottingham Forest made a bit of Premier League history. They became the first team to score seven goals as an away side. It was another nice milestone in a superb season for Frank Clark’s lively, attacking side. Sheffield Wednesday were restricted to bystanders as they were ripped apart by a deadly Forest team on their own turf. The visitors had already passed up a great chance when Bryan Roy unselfishly attempted to pass to Lars Bohinen when clear on-goal, only for the former to badly overhit the pass. Bohinen looked perplexed but Forest soon had the lead on 17 minutes. Captain Stuart Pearce bent a curling free-kick with his powerful left foot into the top corner from an acute angle. Kevin Pressman had no chance with keeping the strike out. Three minutes later, Clark’s team had doubled their lead. Bohinen made the most of some square-on defending and threaded a ball which sprung Wednesday’s offside trap. Ian Woan raced onto it and produced his own copybook finish with the strike arrowing away from Pressman’s dive. Already, the boos were starting to ring around Hillsborough.


It remained 2-0 until half-time but not for much longer in the second half. Within the first three minutes of the resumption of play, Roy, who’d hit the underside of the crossbar just before half-time, made no mistake with his next opportunity. The Dutchman finishing off another free-flowing move which involved Bohinen, Woan and Steve Stone. His shot at the far post going underneath a deflated Pressman. Sheffield Wednesday simply had no answer to Forest’s attacking instincts but they did give themselves small hope of launching an unlikely comeback in the 52nd minute. Des Lyttle fouled Andy Sinton in the penalty area and despite the full-back’s amazement at the decision, referee Alan Wilkie stuck to his original call. It was a battle of the Marks from 12-yards and Bright easily saw off Crossley to make the scoreline 3-1. Midway through the second half, Roy put the game beyond any doubt with his second of the match. He couldn’t miss from close-range after being picked out by Stone in the penalty area. Forest now were winning by the same scoreline as they’d achieved when the sides had met in September 1994 at The City Ground. They wanted more though and got more. The home side completely fell apart as Stan Collymore finally got his name onto the scoresheet. With 12 minutes remaining, he shifted the ball onto his preferred right foot and found the bottom corner with a precise effort. Two minutes later, he was at it again. Crossley’s throw-out started another powerful counter-attack. Once again, the brilliant Bohinen and Roy were involved with the latter picking out his strike partner. Even though he took a heavy first touch, there was still not stopping Collymore from scoring his 18th league goal of the season.


The Man of the Match though was undoubtedly Bohinen. He fully deserved a goal for his efforts and he got his four minutes from time. Stone dispossessed an evidently frustrated Chris Waddle, found Roy, who passed to Bohinen and with a first-time effort, his cheeky strike evaded Pressman for number seven on the afternoon. This remained the biggest away victory in Premier League history until February 1999 when Forest themselves were on the wrong end of an 8-1 defeat from Manchester United. This result was part of a 13-match unbeaten sequence at the end of the season for Nottingham Forest, ensuring a fine third-place finish on their return to the top-flight. Sheffield Wednesday parted company with Trevor Francis once the season ended. They finished a disappointing 13th in the final standings.

Sheffield Wednesday: Kevin Pressman, Ian Nolan, Andy Pearce, Dan Petrescu, Des Walker, Chris Bart-Williams, Graham Hyde, John Sheridan (Guy Whittingham 76), Andy Sinton, Chris Waddle, Mark Bright
Nottingham Forest: Mark Crossley, Steve Chettle, Colin Cooper, Des Lyttle, Stuart Pearce, Lars Bohinen, David Phillips, Steve Stone, Ian Woan (Paul McGregor 75), Stan Collymore, Bryan Roy

 






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