With the FA Cup working itā€™s magic once again and throwing us a surprise Wear-Tyne Derby, I thought Iā€™d delve into the past and look a little bit into the history of the fixture. The teams have met on 156 previous occasions, with Sunderland gaining a massive 53 wins in that time compared to Newcastleā€™s paltry 53. The first meeting was all the way back in 1888, with the most recent being Newcastleā€™s famous 1-1 win in 2016. Letā€™s have a completely unbiased look at some of the more interesting ones.

Newcastle 0 - 2 Sunderland - 16/05/1990

The last time these two rivals clashed in a knockout competition was the 1990 Division Two Play-Offs. After a cagey 0-0 draw at Sunderland, the Black Catsā€™ ā€˜G-Forceā€™ strike partnership of Eric Gates and Marco Gabbiadini struck to send Sunderland through to play Swindon Town in the final. The game is remembered for a pitch invasion by the Mag supporters after Sunderlandā€™s second goal in an effort to get the match abandoned. The referee was having none of this however, and after a lengthy delay the final few minutes were played.

What makes this all the funnier is that Sunderland lost the final to Swindon, but were still promoted after Swindon were found guilty of some financial irregularities.

Newcastle 1 - 9 Sunderland - 05/12/1908

The biggest win ever in the fixture came 115 years ago, and itā€™s a game I and many other Sunderland fans remember well. Sunderland took the lead in the first half but were pegged back by the Geordies, and went in at half-time at 1-1. Whatever the gaffer said at half-time must have worked, as Sunderland came out and scored eight second half goals as the match finished 9-1.

Weirdly, this humbling from their neighbours to the south must have invigorated Newcastle, as they went on to win the league that season.

Newcastle 0 - 3 Sunderland - 14/04/2013 & 01/02/2014

When people ask me what my favourite 3-0 win over Newcastle in the Premier League at St. Jamesā€™ Park in the early-to-mid 2010s was I say I donā€™t know, because itā€™s too hard to pick one. With that said, letā€™s look at both.

The 2013 edition came completely out of the blue, with Sunderland having recently sacked Martin Oā€™Neill and being woefully out of form. Stephane Sessegnon, a favourite of the ā€˜streets wonā€™t forgetā€™ connoisseurs, opened the scoring for the Black Cats with a low drive from 20 yards, before NAME REDACTED double the visitors lead after cutting inside from the right and curling one past Rob Elliot. I remember Rob Elliot making his mouth go on Twitter the night before, saying how badly they were going to beat us, so this was especially nice. The rout was complete in the second half when David Vaughan struck the sweetest strike of his career, sealing the fate of poor Bud the Horse, who was brutally assaulted not long after. RIP Bud, gone but not forgotten x

Now for the 2014 vintage. Gus Poyet was in charge for this one, with a win over the Mags under his belt already the previous October. We fucking dominated this one. An early penalty from the gorgeous Fabio Borini set us on our way, before NAME REDACTED, the first of two boyhood Newcastle fans to score for Sunderland on the day, once again doubled the visitorā€™s lead. The rout was completed by Jack Colback bagging and shushing the Geordie hordes, before Jozy Altidore kept it in the corner for about 25 minutes to see the game out. Poyet would go on to win one more against the Mags, so that was nice. No horses were harmed after this one.

Sunderland 2 - 1 Newcastle - 25/10/2008

Kieran Richardsonā€™s absolute thunderbastard of a free kick was the difference in this one, as Sunderland claimed a first derby victory in eight years.

The first goal came with two of Franceā€™s most famous sons combining, as a mishit Steed Malbranque cross-cum-shot found itā€™s way to the feet of Djibril Cisse, who made no mistake. Shola Ameobi, a man who played like Lionel Messi against Sunderland and Lionel Blair against everyone else, equalised for the Magpies, before mad bastard El Hadji Diouf was fouled on the edge of the box. What came next was Richardson unleashing the power of fucking Mjolnir and smashing it into the back of the net before Shay Given had even had time to register what was going on. Itā€™s a good job he didnā€™t get anything on it, else it would have taken his hand with it and ended up going in anyway.

Newcastle 1 - 2 Sunderland - 25/08/1999

Ruud Gullit was an excellent footballer, but ask any Newcastle fan and theyā€™ll tell you heā€™s not as good a manager.

In monsoon conditions, the Dutchman decided to leave out star strikers Alan Shearer and Duncan Ferguson in favour of youth player Paul Robinson, a boyhood Sunderland fan. The decision looked to have been justified when the lad got an assist for Kieron Dyer as the Geordies took the lead, but Kevin Phillips and Niall Quinn showed Ruud that it probably makes sense to play your best strikers, as they both bagged to get Sunderland the win. Gullit resigned three days later.

  • fediverser@alien.top
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    Ā·
    10 months ago

    This post is an automated archive from a submission made on /r/soccer, powered by Fediverser software running on alien.top. Responses to this submission will not be seen by the original author until they claim ownership of their alien.top account. Please consider reaching out to them let them know about this post and help them migrate to Lemmy.

    Lemmy users: you are still very much encouraged to participate in the discussion. There are still many other subscribers on [email protected] that can benefit from your contribution and join in the conversation.

    Reddit users: you can also join the fediverse right away by getting by visiting https://portal.alien.top. If you are looking for a Reddit alternative made for and by an independent community, check out Fediverser.

  • ChiliConCairney@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    Ā·
    10 months ago

    Lol just looked up who NAME REDACTED is, thought it was just going to be someone who Sunderland fans hated, nope

  • DEGRAYER@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    Ā·
    10 months ago

    Considering most Mackems canā€™t read or write, youā€™ve actually done a good job there.

  • Donnermeat_and_chips@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    Ā·
    10 months ago

    Thank you for your unbiased write up. I await your further articles on important regional histories such as 'Kevin Philips vs Shearer: an unblinkered appraisal, ā€˜Pease pudding: who really invented it?ā€™ and Ballot counting, glass blowing and why smaller bridges are actually more impressive if you think about itā€™

    Iā€™m sure the SoL will be rammed, just like that poor Seagullā€™s arse

  • Not-that-hungry@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    Ā·
    10 months ago

    The teams have met on 156 previous occasions, with Sunderland gaining a massive 53 wins in that time compared to Newcastleā€™s paltry 53.

    The record is 53-50-53? That is incredibly even.

  • Adammmmski@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    Ā·
    10 months ago

    The question remains as to whether U12s will be offered a decent ticket price in the away end to cater to the Newcastle ownerships wives?

  • edi12334@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    Ā·
    10 months ago

    Whenever something starts with ā€œtotally unbiased lookā€ you know it s gonna be brilliant and this did not disappoint, fair play, thanks for the history