It Wasn't The First Time Scunny Put Us To The Sword

16 March 2010 00:42
Last October Scunthorpe produced their first win over Newcastle since April 1964, and have happy memories of St James' Park too. Our road to Wembley in the FA Cup back in 1974 was almost stopped in the Fourth Round when it took a Terry McDermott equaliser to save our blushes at SJP. Prior to that, they did one better by knocking us out of the FA Cup in 1958 (again at SJP) when they produced the shock of the Fourth Round by winning 3-1 - against Len White, Bobby Mitchell, George Eastham, Jimmy Scoular, Alf McMichael, and all.  SCUNTHORPE v NEWCASTLE ... THE HISTORY ...  2009/2010 Tue 20 Oct Scunthorpe U. 2 - 1 Newcastle Utd. Championship    1973/1974 Wed 30 Jan Scunthorpe U. 0 - 3 Newcastle Utd. F.A. Cup     Sat 26 Jan Newcastle Utd. 1 - 1 Scunthorpe U. F.A. Cup    1963/1964 Sat 18 Apr Scunthorpe U. 2 - 0 Newcastle Utd. Second Division     Sat 07 Dec Newcastle Utd. 3 - 1 Scunthorpe U. Second Division    1962/1963 Sat 24 Nov Newcastle Utd. 1 - 1 Scunthorpe U. Second Division     Tue 04 Sep Scunthorpe U. 2 - 1 Newcastle Utd. Second Division    1961/1962 Sat 17 Mar Newcastle Utd. 2 - 1 Scunthorpe U. Second Division     Fri 27 Oct Scunthorpe U. 3 - 2 Newcastle Utd. Second Division     Wed 13 Sep Newcastle Utd. 2 - 0 Scunthorpe U. League Cup    1957/1958 Sat 25 Jan Newcastle Utd. 1 - 3 Scunthorpe U. F.A. Cup   LAST TIME WE PLAYED SCUNNY ... SCUNNY 2 NEWCASTLE 1 SCUNTHORPE: Murphy, Byrne, Jones, Mirfin, Williams, Togwell, McCann (Andrew Wright 90), Josh Wright, Woolford (Thompson 89), Hayes, Hooper (Forte 78). Subs Not Used: Slocombe, Spence, Canavan, Sparrow. NEWCASTLE:  Harper, Ryan Taylor, Khizanishvili, Simpson, Jose Enrique, Guthrie (Ranger 86), Geremi (Harewood 61), Smith, Gutierrez, Nolan, Carroll. Subs Not Used: Krul, Tozer, Kadar, Lovenkrands, Donaldson. Att: 8,921 Martyn Woolford gave Newcastle an untimely reminder of how hard life outside the Premier League can be as his double condemned them to a 2-1 defeat at Scunthorpe. The winger struck in the 53rd and 79th minutes - either side of a Kevin Nolan equaliser - to ensure Chris Hughton's Newcastle failed one of the acid tests of life in the Championship - a wet Tuesday night at Glanford Park. Newcastle's winless run now stands at four games, and this defeat, 13 years to the day that Kevin Keegan's swashbuckling side famously beat Manchester United 5-0, shows just how much work the club's modern day players have to do if they are to ever scale those heights again. Nigel Adkins' outstanding yet unfancied Scunthorpe side were more than worthy of the win, though, as they overcame a handful of early wobbles to earn a famous victory in the first League meeting between the two in 45 years. With Geremi and Jonas Gutierrez back in their starting line-up after surrendering top spot with defeat at Nottingham Forest on Saturday, Newcastle could have been two goals ahead inside the opening 10 minutes were it not for the brilliance of Joe Murphy in the Scunthorpe goal. Both chances fell to Nolan and both were made by Jose Enrique. The first opportunity saw Nolan power a header towards the top corner that Murphy did brilliantly well to turn away, before he reacted even quicker to change direction and push the midfielder's improvised back-flick clear. At that point it looked as though it was only a matter of time before Newcastle scored, but Scunthorpe managed to get a foothold on the game and were unfortunate not to go into the half-time break ahead. Gary Hooper wasted their first chance when he blazed over from six yards with a near open goal at his mercy after Marcus Williams' fizzing cross. Paul Hayes then scuffed a drive wide when he should have tested Steve Harper, before the Newcastle goalkeeper was made to work as he saved at the feet of Hooper who was sent racing clear by Grant McCann. Newcastle continued to create chances of their own too, with Nolan firing over when well set after a Gutierrez centre, while Andy Carroll forced Murphy into another fine save with a low drive. The chance of the opening half fell to Scunthorpe, though, with Woolford dragging wide from six yards after Rob Jones' knockdown four minutes before the whistle. Newcastle remained unsettled at the back after the restart, especially under the high ball, and Hooper crashed a rising effort against the angle of post and bar after Danny Simpson and Zurab Khizanishvili were outjumped by Paul Hayes. But, to the delight of a record Glanford Park crowd of 8,921, Scunthorpe did open the scoring 53 minutes in, with Woolford finally finding his range. Khizanishvili was the culprit from Newcastle's point of view, as, when facing his own goal, he allowed himself to be shrugged off the ball by Hooper, who unselfishly squared for the former York winger. Geremi could have brought his side level moments later when he lashed over, but Nolan showed him how to do it with 25 minutes to go as he grabbed his seventh goal of the season. It was a picture book goal for Nolan, as he arrived right on time on the edge of the area to hammer home into the bottom corner after a storming break from Danny Guthrie had created the chance. Nolan again went close with a diving header after Ryan Taylor's cross, but rather than sit back and defend a point, Scunthorpe pressed for a winner which duly arrived 11 minutes from the end when Woolford got on the end of Sam Togwell's header to waltz through Newcastle's absent defence before leaving Harper with no chance.  

Source: FOOTYMAD