Sunday Sun

From Gazza to a total eclipse of the Toon

- Dave Morton david.morton.editorial@ncjmedia.co.uk

Nostalgia Editor YOU could say the 1990s feel so near, yet so far away.

At the start of that decade, no one had the internet and mobile phones were a very expensive, relatively primitive novelty item owned by a few.

Ten years later, the digital revolution was well underway, with Facebook, Twitter, Xbox and a host of other items that would change our day-to-day lives arriving during the 2000s.

Our selection of images reflects Newcastle during the 1990s.

It was a decade in which football would often loom large.

The exploits of former Newcastle United starlet Paul Gascoigne at the World Cup, Italia 90, sparked a new phenomenon, Gazzamania, as the Dunston-born Spurs star found himself on the front pages of the tabloid papers as often as the back pages.

In 1992, Kevin Keegan made a shock return to football as the rookie manager of Newcastle United.

The Toon were in crisis on and off the pitch and in danger of dropping into the third division for the first time in the club’s history.

King Kev would famously save the day, and within a few years the Magpies were battling for the Premier League title, breaking the world transfer record by signing Alan Shearer for £15m, and beating Barcelona in the Champions League.

There were also two FA Cup finals – both sadly lost – in 1998 and 1999, and a return to his native North East for Bobby Robson as manager of the Toon as the decade drew to a close.

Away from football, 1991 saw major disaffecti­on at large as riots broke out in Newcastle and North Tyneside, mirroring events across Britain.

In 1993, the Tall Ships Race majestical­ly into the River Tyne.

In pop music, if this was the decade of Britpop and the Spice Girls, the opening of Newcastle Arena in 1995 gave the region a venue large enough to attract the biggest acts and events.

Meanwhile, by the middle of the decade two young Newcastle entertaine­rs – Ant McPartlin and Declan Donnelly – were gaining quite a name for themselves and were well on the way to world domination!

And in 1999, Newcastle and the North East stood still momentaril­y under the shadow of a total eclipse of the sun.

Finally, on New Year’s Eve as the new millennium was about to dawn, thousands hit the Quayside as the Tyne Bridge was lit up by a spectacula­r fireworks display and, in the words of pop singer Prince, they were ready “to party like it’s 1999”.

Bring on the 2000s... sailed

Front: The Sir Winston Churchill, Newcastle Quayside, Tall Ships Race, 1993; street party to celebrate the redevelopm­ent of Scotswood, Newcastle, 1993; Paul Gascoigne with Newcastle United fans on the terraces at St James Park, 1991; Bentley’s club in Newcastle, 1990 The ever-constant presence of the Tyne Bridge, December, 1996

Newcastle United assistant manager Terry McDermott and manager Kevin Keegan, 1995; left, the Plough pub on the corner of Byker Bank and Wolsely Street, Byker, 1996

 ??  ?? Crowds turned out for Princess Diana during her visit to Newcastle, 1992
Crowds turned out for Princess Diana during her visit to Newcastle, 1992
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