1982–83 British Home Championship

International football competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1982–83 British Home Championship was the penultimate in the series of football tournaments between the British Home Nations which stretched back 99 years to 1884. In 1983 England and then Scotland announced their withdrawal from future competition after the 1984 competition with the arrangement of the Rous Cup between the two nations to eliminate Wales and Northern Ireland,[1] who were seen as weaker opposition. The 1983 tournament was a tight contest, which England won with a final victory at home over Scotland following an opening victory over Wales and a draw in Belfast. The game at Wembley was played in midweek in an attempt to curb the large number of travelling Scottish supporters. The Scots came second with a win over Wales and a draw with Northern Ireland off-setting their final day defeat.[2] The Welsh succumbed to goal difference as the points system then in use meant that the Irish, who had drawn twice and lost once without scoring themselves gained the same number of points for a smaller goal difference despite Wales' victory over them in their final game.

Dates23 February – 1 June 1983
Teams4
Champions England (54th title)
Runners-up Scotland
Quick facts Tournament details, Dates ...
1982–83 British Home Championship
Tournament details
Dates23 February – 1 June 1983
Teams4
Final positions
Champions England (54th title)
Runners-up Scotland
Tournament statistics
Matches played6
Goals scored8 (1.33 per match)
Top scorer8 players (1 each)
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Table

More information Team, Pld ...
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 England (C) 3 2 1 0 4 1 +3 5
 Scotland 3 1 1 1 2 2 0 3
 Northern Ireland 3 0 2 1 0 1 1 2
 Wales 3 1 0 2 2 4 2 2
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Source: [citation needed]
Rules for classification: 1) points 2) goal difference. The points system worked as follows: 2 points for a win and 1 point for a draw.
(C) Champions

Results

More information England, 2–1 ...
England 2–1 Wales
Butcher 39'
Neal 78' (pen.)
Rush 14'
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More information Scotland, 0–0 ...
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More information Northern Ireland, 0–0 ...
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More information Wales, 0–2 ...
Wales 0–2 Scotland
Gray 11'
Brazil 67'
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Referee: Malcolm Moffatt (Northern Ireland)

More information Northern Ireland, 0–1 ...
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Referee: Hugh Alexander (Scotland)

More information England, 2–0 ...
England 2–0 Scotland
Robson 13'
Cowans 54'
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Note

  • Guy Oliver (1992). The Guinness Record of World Soccer. Guinness. ISBN 0-85112-954-4.

References

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