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Top Ten Football Rivalries

This is a discussion on Top Ten Football Rivalries within the General Football Chat forums, part of the General Football category; I've just come across an article on the top ten british rivalries and thought why not post it, I'll start ...


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  #1  
Old 19-07-2008
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Default Top Ten Football Rivalries

I've just come across an article on the top ten british rivalries and thought why not post it, I'll start off with Number Ten...

10. Newcastle United vs Sunderland

The first reported abandonment of an English football match due to crowd trouble was at a North East derby match at the turn of the century between these two clubs. As with many of the above rivalries, the local "bragging rights" have become more and more important as the two sides have continued to under-achieve. Newcastle haven't won a major trophy since the 1969 Fairs Cup (the predecessor to the UEFA Cup - and, no, I'm not including the Intertoto Cup as a major trophy!), whilst Sunderland haven't managed anything since their surprise FA Cup final win over Leeds United in 1973). Newcastle may be a division above Sunderland at the moment, and are having to make do with Middlesbrough for League rivalry at the moment, but ask them who they really dislike, and there's only one team in it.
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Number Nine...

9. West Ham United vs Millwall -

It's a simple matter of geography for these two teams from East London, though West Ham are clearly the bigger club. Both sets of supporters have, at various points, been known to have a bad reputation, and it's commonplace nowadays for away fans to be banned from their (admittedly rare) meetings in the League. There are currently Three divisions between them, though this gap could narrow of West Ham continue their current antics (though Millwall are doing a pretty good good job of trying to keep this gap open, as they are currently struggling to hold onto their place in League One, just Four years after reaching the FA Cup Final).
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Number Eight...

8. Blackburn Rovers vs Burnley

These two Lancashire clubs have only been in the same division for one season since Blackburn were promoted into the inaugural Premier League in the summer of 1992, but the two former powerhouses have a lot of history. There used to be a tradition of carrying a coffin painted in the colours of either of the clubs if they were ever relegated, and when Burnley blew a chance of promotion from Division Four in the 1980s, a Blackburn supporter hired a plane and flew it over Burnley's Turf Moor on the last day of the season with a banner saying "STAYING DOWN 4 EVER, LOVE ROVERS" trailing from it.
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Number Seven....

7. Brighton & Hove Albion vs Crystal Palace

At first glance, it may seem strange that one of English football's fiercest rivalries is between two teams 60 miles apart, one of which is one south coast, whilst the other is in South London. However, the roots of the Albion-Palace enmity go back to a number of successively more and more bad tempered between the two clubs in the mid to late 1970s, which culminated in Palace snatching the Second Division (now "The Championship") title away from Albion on the last day of the 1978-79 season. The rivalry exists to this day, though if you ask the majority of supporters of either club how it came about, it's doubtful that many of them would be able to remember.
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Number Six...

6. Everton vs Liverpool

Of course, some people in England may try to tell you that the Merseyside Derby is the "friendly" derby, but the truth is more complex. Liverpool FC were only formed when Anfield fell empty after the rent there was put out of Everton's reach in 1892. The height of the rivalry came in the mid-to-late 1980s, when the two teams competed two FA Cup Finals, including an emotion-filled day at Wembley in 1989, shortly after the Hillsborough disaster had killed 96 Liverpool fans. Everton's record in these matches has improved dramatically in recent years. When they beat Liverpool 1-0 at Goodison Park in 1979, it was was their first victory over Liverpool in any competition in 9 years.
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Number Five...

5. Manchester City vs Manchester United

Don't pay too much heed of the story of Denis Law back-heeling United into the Second Division in 1973. It's not strictly true. The former United legend had gone to Maine Road from Old Trafford the previous summer, and he did back-heel a goal on the last day of the season with United staring relegation in the face, but it wasn't the goal that relegated United - results elsewhere had already rendered the result of that particular Manchester derby meaningless. United, of course, almost always get the better of City in these matches, but occasionally City put one over their considerably bigger rivals. In 2004, they beat United 4-1 at The City Of Manchester Stadium, and in 1989 beat them 5-1 at Maine Road.
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Number Four...

4. Swansea City vs Cardiff City

The fortunes of Wales' two top teams have ebbed and flowed over the last thirty years or so to such an extent that these two teams very seldom meet, which must be something of a relief for South Wales Police, if no-one else. Matches between these two sides have frequently been marred by crowd disturbances, and there is even a story (possibly apocryphal) of a pre-match sky-diver at The Vetch Field who was blown into the Cardiff fans' end and received, well, not the best of welcomes from the visiting supporters.
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Number Three...

3. Portsmouth vs Southampton

Two relatively benign clubs from the south coast of England, whose hatred of each other seems to know no bounds. Folklore has it that the intensity of the rivalry goes back to the nineteenth century, when dockers were bussed in from Southampton to break a strike on Portsmouth docks. Pompey folk will even tell you that the word "scum" is an acronym for "Southampton Company Union Men", though that's not true. Even now, the two towns tend to be something of a no-go area on match days.
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Number Two...

2. Tottenham Hotspur vs Arsenal

When football resumed at the end of the First World War in 1919, Arsenal chairman Henry Norris talked the Football League into voting The Gunners into the First Division at the expense of... their North London rivals, Spurs. They're the only team never to have been relegated from English football's top flight since. The atmosphere at a North London Derby remains one of the most poisonous in English football, and this hasn't been helped by Arsenal's rise into the Champions League elite whilst Spurs have consistently under-achieved for almost twenty years. Spurs fans like to think back to beating Arsenal in the first ever Wembley FA Cup semi-final in 1991. For Arsenal fans, it doesn't get much better than their 5-0 win at White Hart Lane in 1979.
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Number One British Rivalry...

1.
Celtic vs Rangers

The Glasgow rivalry suits both Rangers and Celtic, but this is one of the fiercest local rivalries. As long ago as 1909, the Scottish Cup Final was abandoned because of repeated pitch invasions by supporters of both teams with battles being fought upon the pitch. Things have mellowed slightly over the last ten years or so, but The Auld Firm matches haven't even been dissipated in their passion and bile by the fact that the two teams meet four times per season in the league, as well as regularly in the two Scottish cup competitions. Socio-political feelings (some of a particularly nasty type) also underpin this fixture, but the main rage seems to be reserved for on the pitch, these days.
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