Irish Daily Mirror

IT WAS WRITTEN IN THE STARS (WELL, IN BIRO ANYWAY)

V Watford won 7-1 AND on pens, and their greatest cup comeback still haunts ex-saints boss Mcmenemy

- WATFORD SOUTHAMPTO­N FA Cup Fourth Round: Tomorrow KO 2pm MIKE WALTERS

EXCLUSIVE BY

IT’S the forgotten cup miracle, probably the greatest comeback of them all, and in the thunderous drama Watford won on pens.

After a 4-0 drubbing at Southampto­n in the first leg, the Hornets produced an incredible 7-1 win at a disbelievi­ng Vicarage Road.

And when they gave away yellow biros with the inscriptio­n ‘Watford 7-1 Southampto­n’ at the next home game at the turnstiles, dozens of fans sent their ballpoint souvenirs to Saints boss Lawrie Mcmenemy to remind him.

Years later, at the Hornets’ centenary gala dinner at Wembley, Mcmenemy’s speech brought the house down when he revealed there was no escape from the worst night of his managerial career because of “all those f ****** pens” he received through the post.

It was September 1980 when Watford answered Hornets messiah Graham Taylor’s admission that his side’s “inept and woeful” defeat in the first instalment had seriously embarrasse­d him.

And in an era before pretentiou­s squad rotation, Mcmenemy – who had pulled off a huge transfer coup by signing Kevin Keegan that summer – felt safe enough to rest the England captain from the mere formality of the return leg.

Oops.

Some 44 years after that League Cup miracle – Sir Geoffrey Boycott scored a century for England in the Centenary Test against Australia at Lord’s on the same day, if that helps to jog the memory – Watford and Southampto­n renew acquaintan­ces in the FA Cup.

They met in the semi-final at Villa Park 21 years ago and now Saints, unbeaten in a club-record 21 games, may have bigger fish to fry in the Championsh­ip promotion race.

But south coast royalty Mcmenemy, the man who led them to FA Cup glory in 1976 when they beat Manchester United 1-0, remains gracious about the night the pen was mightier than the score.

Now 87 and still in robust health, he said: “It was my own fault. I rested one or two players because I was thinking we were 4-0 up from the first leg and they were playing catch-up.

“To lose the second leg 7-1 was probably the biggest defeat of my career – and certainly the worst.

“About 10 years later, I worked with Graham Taylor as part of his England set-up and I’m sure he reminded me of that night now and again.

“It was one of those occasions when you have to put your hand up and say: ‘My mistake, blame me.’

“I probably had a right go at the players in the dressing room because I had to face the press afterwards and explain how we lost a tie from being 4-0 up.

“You can’t run away and hide when something like that happens. You have to face up and take what’s coming. Even if it’s a stream of biros in the post.”

 ?? ?? A LAWRIE LOAD Mcmenemy was sent hundreds of ‘7-1’ pens by Watford fans and (inset) happier times with the FA Cup in 1976
A LAWRIE LOAD Mcmenemy was sent hundreds of ‘7-1’ pens by Watford fans and (inset) happier times with the FA Cup in 1976

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