Sunday People

Four-goal legend Bully: My Toon rampage turned out to be best hangover cure ever!

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STEVE BULL has fond memories of Wolves playing at Newcastle – he earned a standing ovation from St James’ Park after bagging four goals.

It’s only now – almost three decades later – that, for the first time, he has admitted: “Imagine what might have happened if I was sober!”

At that time, Bull was at his rampaging best, leading the Black Country club out of the doldrums as they attempted to reach the top flight.

He had just been plucked out of the Third Division to play for England.

And he was banging them in left, right and centre as the feel- good factor returned to Molineux. He eventually retired as the club’s greatest goalscorer, with 306 strikes to his name.

Airlift

The fixture, held on New Year’s Day, 1990, went down in history after Wolves organised a huge airlift from Birmingham Airport, getting more than 1,000 fans to the North East on chartered planes.

Bull, now 53, said this week: “Of course, I remember it well – it’s not every day you score four goals at St James’ Park.

“I’ve only watched it a few times since then – just less than 100,000, I reckon.

“But I’ve often wondered what would have happened if I’d been stone-cold sober the night before.

“Our gaffer Graham Turner ( above) had said to us in the hotel, ‘You can have a few halves to celebrate New Year’. Four of us looked at each other and thought, ‘ What does that mean? Two halves? Four?

Eight? More than eight?’

“So, cracked on.

“I remember ringing up my wife sometime after midnight and going all gooey, saying, ‘Happy New

Year – I love you’.

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Mumbled

“S h e was on to it straightaw­ay.

“She said, ‘Have you been drinking?’.

“I mumbled something and just put the phone down.

“As with everything, when you have a couple, we didn’t mean to do it, it just happened.

“At breakfast the next morning, we thought, ‘Oh no, what have we done here?’ There were 3,000 Wolves’ fans making their way up. Half on Monarch airlines, the rest by road. “They were dressed up as Santas, reindeers, snowmen.

“They’d come to have a party – and we’d started it for them.

“We went out in the first half, and Mark Mcghee and Micky Quinn were playing up front for them. We were all over the place.

“They got a penalty and our keeper Mark Kendall, god rest his soul, saved it. Thank heavens for that, or else it could have been a completely different story.

“The four of us were on the pitch, looking a bit sheepishly at one another. Somehow, it was still goalless at half-time.

“But in the second half, it was just as if someone had injected us with energy. We were all over them.

“Either that, or the effects of the drink had worn off.

“We did say to the gaffer afterwards, that we’d had a few, and he looked at us and claimed that he knew we had, because we’d started so slowly.

“But I don’t know if we’d have been so honest if we hadn’t won 4-1 up there.

“And, I swear, it taught me a lesson, I never drank the night before a game for the rest of my career.”

The video is on Youtube, filed under the heading ‘Newcastle United 1 Steve Bull 4’.

Rammed

Bull said: “I just did my job. Putting the ball in the net.

“I didn’t do it on my own. It was an unbelievab­le day.

“I scored 18 hat-tricks in my career and it’s one of the best. How many people go to St James’ Park and score four?

“The ground was rammed that day, too.

“The Newcastle fans are proper die-hard, down-to-earth supporters, just like the Wolves fans.

“They all gave me an ovation as I came off with the match ball.

“To be honest, it makes the hairs stand up on my neck talking about it now.”

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