1989–90 Port Vale F.C. season

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2015}}

{{Use British English|date=March 2015}}

{{Infobox football club season

| club = Port Vale

| season = 1989–90

| manager = John Rudge

| chairman = Bill Bell

| stadium = Vale Park

| league = Football League Second Division

| league result = 11th (61 Points)

| cup1 = FA Cup

| cup1 result = Fourth Round
{{nowrap|(knocked out by Aston Villa)}}

| cup2 = League Cup

| cup2 result = Second Round
(knocked out by Wimbledon)

| cup3 = Full Members Cup

| cup3 result = Second Round
{{nowrap|(knocked out by Middlesbrough)}}

| cup4 = {{nowrap|Player of the Year}}

| cup4 result = Neil Aspin

| league topscorer = Darren Beckford (17)

| season topscorer = Darren Beckford (21)

| highest attendance = {{nowrap|22,075 vs. Stoke City, 3 February 1990}}

| lowest attendance = 4,441 vs. Walsall, 28 August 1989

| average attendance = 8,978

| largest win = {{nowrap|5–0 vs. Ipswich Town, 1 January 1990}}

| largest loss = 0–6 vs. Aston Villa, 27 January 1990

| pattern_la1 = _blackpanel

| pattern_b1 = _blackshoulders

| pattern_ra1 = _blackpanel

| pattern_sh1 = _white stripes

| pattern_so1 = _color_3_stripes_black

| leftarm1 = ffffff

| body1 = ffffff

| rightarm1 = ffffff

| shorts1 = 000000

| socks1 = ffffff

| body2 = ffff00

| leftarm2 = ffff00

| rightarm2 = ffff00

| pattern_b2 = _shoulder_stripes_black_stripes

| pattern_sh2 = _whitehavenhome

| pattern_so2 = _2 black stripes

| shorts2 = ffff00

| socks2 = ffff00

| prevseason = 1988–89

| nextseason = 1990–91

}}

The 1989–90 season was Port Vale's 78th season of football in the English Football League and first (33rd overall) season back in the Second Division following their promotion from the Third Division.{{cite book|last=Kent|first=Jeff|title=The Valiants' Years: The Story Of Port Vale|publisher=Witan Books|year=1990|pages=258–290|chapter=From Rags to Riches (1979–1990)|isbn=0-9508981-4-7}} They were playing in the second tier, and at the same level as rivals Stoke City, for the first time since 1956–57. John Rudge led his side to a comfortable mid-table finish, whilst Stoke suffered relegation in bottom place despite the two derby matches finishing in draws. After beating top-flight Derby County, Vale exited the FA Cup in the Fourth Round with their biggest-ever loss in the competition, losing 6–0 to Aston Villa at Villa Park. They left both the League Cup and the Full Members Cup at the Second Round.

Overview

=Second Division=

The pre-season saw John Rudge sign solid young defender Neil Aspin from Leeds United for £150,000; 28-year-old forward Nicky Cross from Leicester City for £125,000; and veteran winger Ian Miller on a free transfer from Blackburn Rovers (as cover for an injured Gary Ford). The Burslem club had never previously spent anything close to the £275,000 spent in summer 1989. Yet, other clubs in the division far outspent the Vale. Vale Park was also upgraded at £250,000, though grants helped to halve the cost for the club itself. Inspectors closed the Bycars End down despite this effort due to safety issues. They reduced the stadium's capacity to 12,000 after cutting the capacity of the Railway Paddock by two-thirds. Season ticket sales more than doubled to 2,231. Phil Sproson attempted to return to the game, and so the club accepted a £50,000 transfer payment from Birmingham City. Meanwhile, the Vale were the bookmakers favourites for relegation, having started the season with six players out injured, including Ray Walker.

The season opened with a 2–2 draw with Bradford City at Valley Parade, missing out on all three points due to a late equaliser from Brian Tinnion.{{cite news |last1=Baggaley |first1=Mike |title=Strength in depth off the pitch |url=https://portvalethevaliant.substack.com/p/strength-in-depth-off-the-pitch |access-date=6 August 2024 |work=Valiant's Substack |date=5 August 2024}} This was followed by a 2–1 home win over West Bromwich Albion the following week. The club soon scrapped their all-ticket rule after poor attendances in the first games. Vale went seven games without a win in the league, though on 23 September managed a 1–1 draw with Stoke at the Victoria Ground, some 27,004 fans in attendance. Rudge commented after the match that "[the result] proves that we have closed the gap on Stoke and are now competing on equal terms"{{Cite book|first1=Liam|last1=Bullock|year=2023|isbn=978-1-80150-393-8|title=El Ceramico: The Story of the Potteries Derby|publisher=Pitch}} On 7 October, Vale came from behind to beat Leicester City by two goals to one.{{cite news |last1=Baggaley |first1=Mike |title=Vale gathering momentum |url=https://portvalethevaliant.substack.com/p/vale-gathering-momentum |access-date=7 October 2024 |work=Valiant's Substack |date=7 October 2024}} The police bills for Vale games reached as much as £1.50 a head for some games, though the police went some way to justify this cost by arresting 85 people on the day of the Potteries derby. Rudge switched from a 4–4–2 formation to 4–3–3 so as to include Miller, and a mini-revival followed, ending with a 3–0 win over Barnsley at Oakwell. Six games without a win followed, and Alan Webb broke his leg during a 2–2 draw with Newcastle United at St James' Park. In November, Vale Park opened a new 48 seat disabled stand at a cost of £100,000. Ron Futcher was then sold to Fourth Division Burnley for £60,000, though an injury crisis in defence exposed the club's lack of squad depth. With Gary West out with damaged ligaments, big defender Tim Parkin was bought from Swindon Town for £60,000. The next month the Hamil End was reopened after £175,000 worth of renewal work. Rudge switched back to 4–4–2, utilizing Andy Porter in midfield.

Vale went six games unbeaten over the new year, beating Ipswich Town 5–0 (their biggest win in the division since 1932) and fighting to a goalless home draw with Stoke in the process. The Stoke game was a disappointment as City were adrift at the foot of the table, and the pitch was 'as lumpy as porridge'. The Bycars End reopened after a £90,000 investment, 22,075 fans turned up for the game – the biggest gate for a league game since the visit of Grimsby Town in 1960. On 10 February, Vale recorded a 1–0 home win over Watford as Paul Millar put in an excellent performance after having to replace Darren Beckford, who had been taken ill overnight.{{cite news |last1=Baggaley |first1=Mike |title=Conclusions from Swindon thriller |url=https://portvalethevaliant.substack.com/p/conclusions-from-swindon-thriller |access-date=9 February 2025 |work=Valiant's Substack |date=9 February 2025}} This moved Vale to within three points of the play-offs. On 31 March, Vale came away from the Boleyn Ground with a 2–2 draw, thanks to Mark Grew, who saved penalties from both Julian Dicks and Jimmy Quinn; West Ham United manager Billy Bonds stated that Vale were "a fair side who play some good, neat football".{{cite news |last1=Baggaley |first1=Mike |title=Excitement building for a huge week |url=https://portvalethevaliant.substack.com/p/excitement-building-for-a-huge-week |access-date=1 April 2025 |work=Valiant's Substack |date=31 March 2025}} A poor March dragged them down the table, though, as the stadium's capacity was again reduced and the police bill spiralled. In April, Rudge sold David Riley to Peterborough United for £40,000, whilst £20,000 was spent bringing in Gary McKinstry from Portadown. On 11 April, Vale came from two goals down to win 3–2 at Middlesbrough with Beckford scoring a brace.{{cite news |last1=Baggaley |first1=Mike |title=Vale back in drop zone as they are outclassed… |url=https://portvalethevaliant.substack.com/p/vale-back-in-drop-zone-as-they-are/comments |access-date=11 April 2024 |date=11 April 2024}} The club's play-off dreams were killed off by a 2–1 defeat from Newcastle United, after which only two points were won from the final four games. Despite this the supporters held popular player Neil Aspin aloft following the team's final home game (a 2–1 defeat to Sunderland). The final game was a goalless draw with Oxford United at the Manor Ground, which was enough to ensure a top-half finish.

They finished in eleventh place with 61 points, their highest finish since 1933–34. Darren Beckford was top-scorer with 21 goals in all competitions, with Nicky Cross and Robbie Earle bagged 15 and 12 goals respectively. The average home attendance of 8,978 was the highest since 1963–64. The players were taken on a holiday to Spain as a reward for their efforts. Rudge retained the entire playing staff at the end of the season.

=Finances=

The club's shirt sponsors were ABC Minolta Copiers.

=Cup competitions=

In the FA Cup, Vale were drawn against top-flight Derby County in the Third Round and progressed 3–2 in the replay at The Baseball Ground having 'gave as good as they received' as they drew the original tie 1–1. The win was 'another famous cup victory' for the club, as three goals were put past Peter Shilton. Another difficult fixture awaited in the Fourth Round. On 27 January, Aston Villa inflicted Vale's biggest ever cup defeat with a 6–0 win in front of 36,532 fans at Villa Park. Nevertheless, the cup run raised £150,000.

In the League Cup, Vale overcame Third Division Walsall 3–1 on aggregate, having won 1–0 at home and 2–1 at Fellows Park. They then came unstuck against First Division Wimbledon, losing 2–1 at home before getting beat 3–0 at Plough Lane.

In the short-lived Full Members Cup, Vale made it past the First Round with a 2–1 win over Sunderland at Roker Park, with Walker and Cross getting the goals. They were then eliminated by Middlesbrough at the next stage, after losing 3–1 at Ayresome Park despite Rudge playing a strong side and the Vale holding a one goal lead at half-time.{{cite news |last1=Baggaley |first1=Mike |title=Battling to stay top in a big week |url=https://portvalethevaliant.substack.com/p/battling-to-stay-top-in-a-big-week |access-date=4 December 2024 |work=Valiant's Substack |date=2 December 2024}}

League table

{{Main|1989–90 Football League}}

{{:1989–90 Football League|transcludesection=Second Division|showteam=PVL}}

Results

Port Vale's score comes first

=Football League Second Division=

==Results by matchday==

{{#invoke:sports rbr table|table|legendpos=b

|header=Round

|label1= Ground

|res1=A/H/A/H/H/A/A/A/H/H/A/A/H/A/H/H/A/H/A/H/A/H/A/A/H/A/H/H/H/A/H/A/A/H/A/H/H/A/H/A/A/H/A/H/H/A

|label2= Result

|res2=D/W/L/D/D/L/D/L/D/W/W/L/D/D/D/L/L/W/W/W/L/D/L/D/W/W/W/D/W/L/W/L/D/D/L/W/W/D/L/W/L/W/L/D/L/D

|label3= Position

|res3=10/7/13/17/12/19/18/20/20/20/13/15/16/15/15/15/16/15/14/13/13/14/15/16/14/12/9/10/9/10/9/9/10/11/11/11/11/11/11/11/11/11/11/11/11/11

|text_H=Home|text_A=Away

|color_W=green2|text_W=Win

|color_D=yellow2|text_D=Draw

|color_L=red2|text_L=Loss

|color_-6=green1|color_22-=red1

|source=Statto[http://www.statto.com/football/teams/port-vale/1989-1990/results Port Vale 1989–1990 : Results & Fixtures] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304064556/http://www.statto.com/football/teams/port-vale/1989-1990/results |date=4 March 2016 }}. Statto Organisation. Retrieved 28 April 2012.

}}

==Matches==

class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:100%; text-align:center"

!Date!!Opponent!!Venue!!Result!!Attendance!!Scorers

style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 19 August 1989

Bradford City|A2–210,242Glover (pen), Beckford
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 26 August 1989

West Bromwich Albion|H2–17,695Glover (pen), Futcher
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 2 September 1989

Brighton & Hove Albion|A0–27,218
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 9 September 1989

Blackburn Rovers|H0–07,601
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 12 September 1989

Hull City|H1–16,168Earle
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 16 September 1989

Watford|A0–18,445
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 23 September 1989

Stoke City|A1–127,004Earle
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 26 September 1989

Bournemouth|A0–16,511
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 30 September 1989

Leeds United|H0–011,156
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 7 October 1989

Leicester City|H2–17,268Beckford, Cross
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 14 October 1989

Barnsley|A3–06,475Cross (2), Earle
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 17 October 1989

Wolverhampton Wanderers|A0–218,123
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 21 October 1989

West Ham United|H2–28,899o.g., Futcher
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 28 October 1989

Newcastle United|A2–217,824Earle, Futcher
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 30 October 1989

Middlesbrough|H1–17,708Glover (pen)
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 4 November 1989

Oxford United|H1–26,994Jeffers
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 11 November 1989

Portsmouth|A0–27,708
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 18 November 1989

Swindon Town|H2–07,393Beckford, Cross
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 25 November 1989

Plymouth Argyle|A2–17,034Cross (2)
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 2 December 1989

Bradford City|H3–26,762Earle (2), Beckford
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 9 December 1989

Hull City|A1–24,207Earle
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 16 December 1989

Sheffield United|H1–19,813Cross
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 26 December 1989

Oldham Athletic|A1–211,274Parkin
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 30 December 1989

Sunderland|A2–221,377o.g., Millar
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 1 January 1990

Ipswich Town|H5–08,617Beckford (2), Earle, Cross, Miller
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 13 January 1990

West Bromwich Albion|A3–213,575Cross, Beckford, Porter
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 20 January 1990

Brighton & Hove Albion|H2–18,666Cross (2)
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 3 February 1990

Stoke City|H0–022,075
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 10 February 1990

Watford|H1–07,064Earle
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 17 February 1990

Blackburn Rovers|A0–19,257
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 24 February 1990

Plymouth Argyle|H3–07,254Hughes, Beckford, Mills
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 3 March 1990

Swindon Town|A0–38,314
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 7 March 1990

Leeds United|A0–029,550
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 10 March 1990

Bournemouth|H1–17,131Millar
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 17 March 1990

Leicester City|A0–210,076
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 19 March 1990

Barnsley|H2–17,036o.g., Beckford
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 24 March 1990

Wolverhampton Wanderers|H3–112,506Millar, Beckford, Earle
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 31 March 1990

West Ham United|A2–220,507Beckford, Cross
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 7 April 1990

Newcastle United|H1–210,290Earle
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 11 April 1990

Middlesbrough|A3–214,973Beckford (2), Glover (pen)
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 14 April 1990

Ipswich Town|A2–310,652Earle, Cross (pen)
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"

| 16 April 1990

Oldham Athletic|H2–011,451Beckford (2)
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 21 April 1990

Sheffield United|A1–216,809Beckford
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 28 April 1990

Portsmouth|H1–17,492Beckford
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"

| 1 May 1990

Sunderland|H1–29,447Millar
style="background-color: #ffffdd;"

| 5 May 1990

Oxford United|A0–04,708

=FA Cup=

{{Main|1989–90 FA Cup}}

class="wikitable"

|+

!Round!!Date!!Opponent!!Venue!!Result!!Attendance!!Goalscorers

style="background-color: #ffffdd;"R37 January 1990Derby CountyH1–117,478Beckford
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"R3 Replay10 January 1990Derby CountyA3–221,389o.g., Walker, Cross
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"R427 January 1990Aston VillaA0–636,532

=League Cup=

{{Main|1989–90 Football League Cup}}

class="wikitable"

|+

!Round!!Date!!Opponent!!Venue!!Result!!Attendance!!Goalscorers

style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"R1 1st Leg22 August 1989WalsallA2–14,774Beckford (2)
style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"R1 2nd Leg28 August 1989WalsallH1–04,441Beckford
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"R2 1st Leg18 September 1989WimbledonH1–25,827Futcher
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"R2 2nd Leg4 October 1989WimbledonA0–32,851

=Full Members Cup=

{{Main|1989–90 Full Members Cup}}

class="wikitable"

|+

!Round!!Date!!Opponent!!Venue!!Result!!Attendance!!Goalscorers

style="background-color: #d0ffe3;"R114 November 1989SunderlandA2–17,031Walker, Cross
style="background-color: #ffd0e3;"R229 November 1989MiddlesbroughA1–36,691Jeffers

Player statistics

=Appearances and goals=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
rowspan="2" valign="bottom"|Pos.

!rowspan="2"|Name

!colspan="2" width="85"|Football League

!colspan="2" width="85"|FA Cup

!colspan="2" width="85"|League Cup

!colspan="2" width="85"|Full Members Cup

!colspan="2" width="85"|Total

Apps

!Goals

!Apps

!Goals

!Apps

!Goals

!Apps

!Goals

!Apps

!Goals

align="left"|GKalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Mark Grew

|43

0304010510
align="left"|GKalign="left"|{{flagicon|NIR}} Trevor Wood

|3

000001040
align="left"|DFalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Alan Webb

|14

0004000180
align="left"|DFalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Simon Mills

|45

1304020541
align="left"|DFalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Darren Hughes

|38

1304010461
align="left"|DFalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Gary West

|3

000000030
align="left"|DFalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Dean Glover

|44

4304010524
align="left"|DFalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Tim Parkin

|12

1000000121
align="left"|DFalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Neil Aspin

|42

0304020510
align="left"|MFalign="left"|{{flagicon|JAM}} Robbie Earle

|43

123040205212
align="left"|MFalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Andy Porter

|36

1303020441
align="left"|MFalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Ray Walker

|40

0312021471
align="left"|MFalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Kevin Finney

|8

000100090
align="left"|MFalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} John Jeffers

|40

1202021462
align="left"|MFalign="left"|{{flagicon|NIR}} Paul Millar

|23

4020010264
align="left"|MFalign="left"|{{flagicon|SCO}} Ian Miller

|21

1002010241
align="left"|FWalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Darren Beckford

|42

173143205121
align="left"|FWalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} David Riley

|2

010002050
align="left"|FWalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Ronnie Jepson

|8

000000080
align="left"|FWalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Ron Futcher

|11

3004100154
align="left"|FWalign="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} Nicky Cross

|42

133130215015

=Top scorers=

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%; text-align: center;"
width=60|Place

!width=60|Position

!width=180|Nation

!width=150|Name

!width=80|Second Division

!width=80|FA Cup

!width=80|League Cup

!width=80|Full Members Cup

!width=80|Total

1FW{{flagu|England}}Darren Beckford1713021
2FW{{flagu|England}}Nicky Cross1310115
3MF{{flagu|Jamaica}}Robbie Earle1200012
4MF{{flagu|Northern Ireland}}Paul Millar40004
DF{{flagu|England}}Dean Glover40004
FW{{flagu|England}}Ron Futcher30104
7MF{{flagu|England}}John Jeffers10012
MF{{flagu|England}}Ray Walker01012
9MF{{flagu|England}}Ian Miller10001
MF{{flagu|England}}Andy Porter10001
DF{{flagu|England}}Simon Mills10001
DF{{flagu|England}}Tim Parkin10001
FW{{flagu|England}}Darren Hughes10001
Own goals31004
colspan="3"|

|TOTALS

|62

|4

|4

|3

|73

Transfers

=Transfers in=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%; "
style="background:#000000; color:white; width:150px;"| Date from

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:50px;"| Position

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:50px;"| Nationality

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:150px;"| Name

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:150px;"| From

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:100px;"| Fee

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:25px;"| Ref.

June 1989FW{{flagicon|ENG}}Nicky CrossLeicester City£125,000{{cite book|last=Kent|first=Jeff|title=Port Vale Personalities|publisher=Witan Books|year=1996|isbn=0-9529152-0-0}}
June 1989MF{{flagicon|SCO}}Ian MillerBlackburn RoversFree transfer
28 July 1989DF{{flagicon|ENG}}Neil AspinLeeds United£150,000
8 December 1989DF{{flagicon|ENG}}Tim ParkinSwindon Town£60,000
3 April 1990FW{{flagicon|NIR}}Gary McKinstrey{{flagicon|NIR}} Portadown

=Transfers out=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%; "
style="background:#000000; color:white; width:150px;"| Date from

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:50px;"| Position

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:50px;"| Nationality

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:150px;"| Name

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:200px;"| To

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:100px;"| Fee

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:25px;"| Ref.

13 November 1989FW{{flagicon|ENG}}Ron FutcherBurnley£60,000
3 April 1990FW{{flagicon|ENG}}David RileyPeterborough United£40,000
August 1990MF{{flagicon|SCO}}Ian MillerScunthorpe UnitedFree transfer

=Loans out=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%; "
style="background:#000000; color:white; width:100px;"| Date from

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:50px;"| Position

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:50px;"| Nationality

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:150px;"| Name

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:200px;"| To

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:100px;"| Date to

! style="background:#000000; color:white; width:25px;"| Ref.

25 January 1990FW{{flagicon|ENG}}Ronnie JepsonPeterborough UnitedMarch 1990
1 March 1990FW{{flagicon|ENG}}David RileyPeterborough UnitedApril 1990
16 March 1990MF{{flagicon|ENG}}Paul AtkinsonHartlepool UnitedEnd of season
22 March 1990MF{{flagicon|ENG}}Gary FordWalsallEnd of season

References

;Specific

{{reflist}}

;General

  • {{cite book|last=Kent|first=Jeff|title=The Port Vale Record 1879-1993|publisher=Witan Books|year=1993|isbn=0-9508981-9-8}}

{{Port Vale F.C. seasons}}

{{1989–90 in English football}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:1989-90 Port Vale F.C. Season}}

Category:Port Vale F.C. seasons

Port Vale