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England
1985–86
Season information
First Division Liverpool
Second Division Norwich City
Third Division Reading
Fourth Division Swindon Town
Alliance Premier League Enfield
FA Cup Liverpool
League Cup Oxford United
Charity Shield Everton
 ← 1984–85
1986–87 → 

The 1985–86 season was the 106th season of competitive football in England.

FA Cup[]

Main article:1985–86 FA Cup

Liverpool beat Everton 3–1 in the final – with Rush scoring twice – to complete the third league championship and FA Cup double of the 20th century.

League Cup[]

Main article:1985–86 Football League Cup

After being promoted to the First Division the season before, Oxford United won the League Cup, beating the Queens Park Rangers 3–0 in the final.

Football League[]

Main article:1985–86 Football League

First Division[]

Main article:1985–86 Football League#First Division

Liverpool narrowly reclaimed the league title from Everton. They completed their first and only league and cup double by defeating Everton in the FA Cup final.

As a result of the previous year's Heysel Stadium disaster, both Liverpool and Everton missed out on the European Cup and European Cup Winners' Cup respectively, while West Ham United, Manchester United and Sheffield Wednesday all missed out on the UEFA Cup, as did Oxford United.

West Bromwich Albion fell back into Division Two after ten seasons, following a campaign in which they only won four games. Birmingham City performed almost as poorly and made an immediate return to Division Two. Coventry City had spent most of the season in the relegation zone until a late revival after George Curtis and John Sillett took over as co-managers with three games remaining.

Second Division[]

Main article:1985–86 Football League#Second DivisionNorwich City won the Second Division title, and was promoted back to the First Division. Charlton Athletic, despite having suffered a financial crisis over the previous years and leaving their home ground The Valley to ground share with Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park, returned to the First Division for the first time since 1957. Wimbledon, who had been in the Fourth Division only three years prior and were in only their second-ever season in the second tier, managed to claim the third and final promotion spot.

Fulham were relegated to bottom place after mounting financial pressures had forced them to sell off most of their squad during the summer. Middlesbrough suffered their second-ever relegation to the third tier, as their own financial situation worsened to the point where they were locked out of their Ayresome Park ground and nearly expelled from the Football League between the end of this season and the beginning of the following one.

Third Division[]

Main article:1985–86 Football League#Third Division

Reading won the Third Division title after beginning the season with 13 successive victories, meaning they would be playing in the Second Division for the first time since 1931. Plymouth Argyle took the runner-up spot, and Derby County was the third promoted side.

The bottom two positions were occupied by Swansea City and the Wolverhampton Wanderers. Cardiff City and Lincoln City filled the other relegation spots.

Fourth Division[]

Main article:1985–86 Football League#Fourth Division

Swindon Town won promotion by a record-breaking 18 points, and became the second team (after York City two years previously) to exceed 100 points in a season, and was also awarded the board's decision to reinstate manager Lou Macari days after his controversial dismissal at the end of the previous season. Chester City, who had finished bottom of the league just two years prior, were promoted as runners-up. Mansfield Town and Port Vale took the two remaining promotion spaces.

Torquay United, Preston North End, Cambridge United, and Exeter City were made to apply for re-election. Preston, the inaugural First Division champion back in 1888–89, saw its lowest finish ever at 23rd position almost a century from their two back-to-back titles.

Top goalscorers[]

First Division

Second Division

  • Kevin Drinkell (Norwich City) – 22 goals

Third Division

  • Trevor Senior (Reading) – 27 goals

Fourth Division

  • Richard Cadette (Southend United) – 25 goals

Famous debutants[]

  • 31 August 1985: Ian Wright, 21-year-old striker, made his debut for Crystal Palace in a 3–2 defeat by Huddersfield Town at Selhurst Park in the Second Division soon after joining the club from non-league Greenwich Borough.
  • 28 September 1985: David Rocastle, 18-year-old midfielder, made his debut for Arsenal in a 1–1 draw with Newcastle United in the First Division at Highbury.
  • 23 November 1985: Martin Keown, 19-year-old defender, made his debut for Arsenal in a goalless draw with West Bromwich Albion at The Hawthorns.
English football seasons
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Women's football

2019–20 · 2020–21 · 2021–22 · 2022–23 · 2023–24 · 2024–25 ·

Template:1985–86 in English football

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