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Racism, Wright-Phillips and Robinson from the halfway line — history
Friday, 31st Oct 2014 20:05 by Clive Whittingham

Ahead of the trip to Stamford Bridge tomorrow, LFW looks back at the controversial recent history of the fixture, and a memorable League Cup quarter final from the 1980s.

Recent Meetings

Chelsea 0 QPR 1, Wednesday January 2, 2013, Premier League

QPR, destined for relegation, won for only the second time in 2012/13 with a memorable success at Stamford Bridge on their last visit to this ground. Chelsea were in open war, with players and fans alike rebelling against the appointment of Rafael Benitez as boss, and even a team as poor as QPR were able to take advantage. With Adel Taarabt magnificent in a lone striker role, the R's frustrated their hosts thanks to a fine defensive effort from goalkeeper Julio Cesar and centre back Clint Hill among others. Harry Redknapp's side then struck the only goal of the game with ten left to play when Taarabt beautifully cushioned the ball to Shaun Wright-Phillips to score his only ever goal for the club against his former employers. Big night.

Chelsea: Turnbull 7, Azpilicueta 6, Ivanovic 6, Cahill 6, Bertrand 5, Luiz 7, Lampard 6 (Ramires 79, 5), Oscar 6, Moses 5 (Mata 75, 6), Marin 5 (Hazard 60, 6), Torres 4

Subs not used: Hilario, Cole, Ferreira, Piazon

Bookings: Marin 3 (foul)

QPR: Cesar 8, Onuoha 7, Hill 8, Nelsen 7, Da Silva 8, Derry 8, Granero 7 (Park 90, -), Mbia 8, Mackie 7, Hoilett 6 (Wright-Phillips 15, 5), Taarabt 9 (Dyer 90, -)

Subs not used: Cisse, Faurlin, Ferdinand, Green

Goals: Wright-Phillips 78 (assisted Taarabt)

Bookings: Hill 85 (foul)

QPR 0 Chelsea 0, Saturday September 15, 2012, Premier League

The pre-match talk was all about whether Anton Ferdinand would shake John Terry’s hand as the controversy over the Chelsea skipper’s racist remarks in a previous meeting at Loftus Road escalated. Afterwards though both teams were left to reflect on late missed chances to win the game. Ferdinand ignored both Terry and Ashley Cole in the pre-match line up, but had Bobby Zamora been able to convert a winner after rounding Cech in the second half it would have been a far more effective message to for Rangers to deliver to the visitors. The R’s deserved to win, but could easily have lost having turned down that opportunity because Eden Hazard should have at least hit the target with a last minute sitter from eight yards out. On a day of high tension it seemed that both teams were happy to escape with a low key draw.

QPR: César 8, Bosingwa 7, Ferdinand 8, Nelsen 8, Fabio 7 (Onuoha 21, 6), Wright-Phillips 6 (Cissé 70, 6), Granero 8, Faurlin 8, Park 7, Johnson 7 (Mackie 33, 6), Zamora 7

Subs: Green, Taarabt, Dyer, Hoilett

Chelsea: Cech 7, Ivanovic 7, Luiz 6, Terry 7, Cole 7, Lampard 6, Mikel 6, Ramires 7, Hazard 6, Bertrand 6 (Moses 58, 7), Torres 5 (Sturridge 81, 7)

Subs: Turnbull, Romeu, Oscar, Cahill, Azpilicueta

Bookings: Ramires 14 (foul), Bertrand 27 (foul)

Chelsea 6 QPR 1, Sunday April 29, 2012, Premier League

Rangers looked all set for relegation after a capitulation to a rampant Chelsea side when they visited Stamford Bridge in April 2012. In front of a live television audience the R’s shipped the first goal to Daniel Sturridge after a minute and conceded at regular intervals thereafter. John Terry got his inevitable goal from a corner and Fernando Torres notched a quick fire double to make it 4-0 before the half hour mark. He completed his hat trick in the second half and Malouda helped himself to one as well before Djibril Cisse notched a consolation strike and celebrated like he’d won the World Cup. Rangers did, miraculously, stay up.

Chelsea: Cech 6, Ferreira 7, Bosingwa 8 (Hutchinson 81, -), Terry 8, Cole 7, Mata 9 (Malouda 67, 7), Essien 8, Lampard 8, Sturridge 8, Torres 9, Kalou 8 (Ramires 73, 7)

Subs Not Used: Turnbull, Romeu, Drogba, Meireles

Goals: Sturridge 1 (unassisted), Terry 13 (assisted Mata), Torres 19 (assisted Kalou), 25 (unassisted), 64 (assisted Mata), Malouda 80 (assisted Ramires)

QPR: Kenny 3, Onuoha 4, Ferdinand 3, Hill 2, Taiwo 2, Barton 4, Derry 2, Buzsaky 2 (Traore 66, 3), Mackie 4, Cisse 4, Zamora 2 (Wright-Phillips 78, -)

Subs Not Used: Cerny, Gabbidon, Campbell, Young, Smith

Booked: Barton (repetitive fouling)

Goals: Cisse 84 (assisted Onuoha)

QPR 0 Chelsea 1, FA Cup, Saturday January 28, 2012

With all the furore surrounding the first meeting between these sides at Loftus Road earlier in the year the last thing anybody really needed was for them to meet again three months later in the FA Cup. Rangers scraped through a replay against League One MK Dons, a first FA Cup win of any sorts for 11 years, to set up a lunchtime showdown in W12. Once again the post game focus was on controversial refereeing decisions, although this time it was Chelsea who benefitted having felt aggrieved at their treatment in the league match. Midway through the second half of a poor game Daniel Sturridge took a dive at the far post under a cross that had already passed him by and referee Mike Dean fell for it hook line and sinker. Juan Mata converted the resulting spot kick and Chelsea have since progressed all the way to the final.

QPR: Kenny 7, Hill 6, Ferdinand 7, Hall 7, Young 7, Mackie 6, Buzsaky 6 (Hulse 79, 7), Barton 6, Wright-Phillips 5, Helguson 7 (Macheda 46, 4), Smith 6

Subs Not Used: Cerny, Orr, Derry, Ephraim, Onuoha

Booked: Wright-Phillips, Hall

Chelsea: Cech 7, Ivanovic 6, Luiz 6, Terry 7, Cole 7, Meireles 6, Ramires 7 (Romeu 79, 6), Sturridge 7, Malouda 6, Mata 8 (Essien 90, -), Torres 3

Subs Not Used: Turnbull, Bosingwa, Lukaku, Cahill, Bertrand

Booked: Cole, Romeu

Goals: Mata 62 (penalty, won Sturridge)

QPR 1 Chelsea 0, Premiership, Sunday October 23, 2011

The first competitive meeting with Chelsea in the Bush for more than 15 years turned into a controversial humdinger with Rangers eventually coming out on top by a single goal. That strike, a penalty from Heidar Helguson after David Luiz had foolishly shoved him in the back, was one of the first key moments on an afternoon of high drama in W12. Rangers were in with a good chance of making it two when Shaun Wright-Phillips accelerated away from Jose Bosingwa and the Portuguese defender was sent off for hauling him down. By half time Chelsea’s discipline had gone completely in the face of a hostile atmosphere and Didier Drogba was also dismissed for a dreadful two footed tackle on Adel Taarabt. Playing with nine men Chelsea should have been on a damage limitation exercise but when Helguson missed a great chance to make it 2-0 it left the door open and Andre Villas-Boas’ side came close to equalising on several occasions. They had two large penalty shouts of their own when Luiz and Lampard were hauled back by Helguson and Hall in the QPR box and there were several near misses apart from that. Ashley Cole was lucky not to be the third man sent off for a poor challenge in stoppage time but referee Chris Foy decided to draw the game to a close instead. The after match discussion was dominated by an alleged racist remark made by Chelsea captain John Terry to QPR’s Anton Ferdinand.

QPR: Kenny 7, Young 7, Ferdinand 9, Hall 8, Hill 8, Derry 7 (Mackie 81, -), Faurlin 7, Wright-Phillips 7, Barton 7, Taarabt 7 (Smith 61, 6), Helguson 8

Subs Not Used: Murphy, Orr, Bothroyd, Buzsaky, Puncheon

Booked: Derry (foul), Barton (foul)

Goals: Helguson 10 (penalty, won Helguson)

Chelsea: Cech 6, Bosingwa 5, Terry 6, Luiz 5, Cole 6, Mikel 6, Meireles 7 (Malouda 72, 6), Lampard 7, Sturridge 6 (Ivanovic 36, 6), Drogba 5, Mata 6 (Anelka 45, 7)

Subs Not Used: Turnbull, Romeu, McEachran, Kalou

Sent Off: Bosingwa (33), Drogba (41)

Booked: Mikel (foul), Lampard (foul), Ivanovic (foul), Luiz (repetitive fouling), Meireles (dissent), Cole (foul), Terry (ungentlemanly conduct)


Chelsea 1 QPR 0, League Cup, Wednesday September 23, 2009

The FA Cup meeting with Chelsea in 2008 came right at the start of the new money laced era at Loftus Road and six brand new signings were included in the QPR squad that day. By the time they returned to Stamford Bridge 18 months later they’d worked their way through three managers and were under the guidance of Jim Magilton. His appointment had not been met with any great deal of enthusiasm in W12 and Rangers had made a drab start to the year with a succession of draws against Blackpool, Plymouth, Peterborough and Nottingham Forest. But the R’s were about to click into form that would see them score 17 goals in four matches in a fortnight and that was preceded by a confident display at Stamford Bridge in the League Cup. Ultimately the game was decided by a scrappy Kalou goal but Wayne Routledge had clearly been fouled in the build up and Rangers were unfortunate not to take more from the game.

Chelsea: Hilario 7, Ivanovic 7, Ferreira 6, Hutchinson 7 (Terry 77, 7), Belletti 7, Malouda 6 (Lampard 46, 8),Zhirkov 7( A Cole 69, 7), Mikel 8, J Cole 7, Borini 7, Kalou 7

Subs Not Used: Turnbull, Essien, Matic, Bruma

Goals: Kalou 52 (assisted Cole)

QPR: Heaton 8, Leigertwood 8, Stewart 8, Gorkss 8, Borrowdale 7, Routledge 7, Rowlands 9 (Ephraim 73, 7), Faurlin 8, Buzsaky 7, Vine 7 (Taarabt 66, 7), Simpson 7 (Pellicori 73, 6)

Subs Not Used: Cerny, Ramage, Mahon, Agyemang

Previous Results


Head to Head >>> Chelsea wins 20 >>> Draws 18 >>> QPR wins 15

2012/13 Chelsea 0 QPR 1 (Wright-Phillips)

2012/13 QPR 0 Chelsea 0

2011/12 QPR 0 Chelsea 1**

2011/12 QPR 1 Chelsea 0 (Helguson)

2009/10 Chelsea 1 QPR 0*

2007/08 Chelsea 1 QPR 0**

1995/96 Chelsea 1 QPR 1 (Barker)

1995/96 QPR 1 Chelsea 2** (Quashie)

1995/96 QPR 1 Chelsea 2 (Allen)

1994/95 Chelsea 1 QPR 0

1994/95 QPR 1 Chelsea 0 (Gallen)

1993/94 QPR 1 Chelsea 1 (Ferdinand)

1993/94 Chelsea 2 QPR 0

1992/93 QPR 1 Chelsea 1 (Allen)

1992/93 Chelsea 1 QPR 0

1991/92 Chelsea 2 QPR 1 (Allen)

1991/92 QPR 2 Chelsea 2 (Wilson, Peacock)

1990/91 Chelsea 2 QPR 0

1990/91 QPR 1 Chelsea 0 (Wegerle)

1989/90 QPR 4 Chelsea 2 (Ferdinand 2, Falco, Clarke)

1989/90 Chelsea 1 QPR 1 (Clarke)

1987/88 Chelsea 1 QPR 1 (Kerslake)

1987/88 QPR 3 Chelsea 1 (Bannister 3)

1986/87 QPR 1 Chelsea 1 (Bannister)

1986/87 Chelsea 3 QPR 1 (Byrne)

1985/86 QPR 6 Chelsea 0 (Bannister 3, Byrne 2, Rosenior)

1985/86 Chelsea 1 QPR 0

1985/86 Chelsea 0 QPR 2* (McDonald, Robinson)

1985/86 QPR 1 Chelsea 1* (Byrne)

1984/85 Chelsea 1 QPR 0

1984/85 QPR 2 Chelsea 2 (Bannister, McDonald)

1982/83 Chelsea 0 QPR 2 (Sealy, Gregory)

1982/83 QPR 1 Chelsea 2 (Sealy)

1981/82 Chelsea 2 QPR 1 (Gregory)

1981/82 QPR 0 Chelsea 2

1980/81 QPR 1 Chelsea 0 (Langley)

1980/81 Chelsea 1 QPR 1 (Langley)

1979/80 Chelsea 0 QPR 2 (Busby, Burke)

1979/80 QPR 2 Chelsea 2 (C Allen 2)

1978/79 Chelsea 1 QPR 3 (Busby, Goddard, Roeder)

1978/79 QPR 0 Chelsea 0

1977/78 Chelsea 3 QPR 1 (James)

1977/78 QPR 1 Chelsea 1 (Masson)

1974/75 QPR 1 Chelsea 0 (Thomas)

1974/75 Chelsea 0 QPR 3 (Givens 2, Francis)

1973/74 Chelsea 3 QPR 3 (Bowles 2, Givens)

1973/74 QPR 1 Chelsea 0**(Bowles)

1973/74 Chelsea 0 QPR 0**

1973/74 QPR 1 Chelsea 1 (Bowles)

1969/70 QPR 2 Chelsea 4** (Bridges, Venables)

1968/69 Chelsea 2 QPR 1 (Bridges)

1968/69 QPR 0 Chelsea 4

* - League Cup

** - FA Cup

Memorable Match

Chelsea 0 QPR 2, Wednesday January 29, 1986, League Cup

Back in the 1985/86 season the League Cup replayed drawn games rather than forcing players to take part in extra time and penalties. This became rather a pain for Chelsea that season who, after squeezing past Mansfield over two legs in their first tie, required a second bite at the cherry to get past local neighbours Fulham and First Division rivals Everton. On both occasions Chelsea drew the first match on home soil, only to then complete the job away from home, but in the quarter final they started on the road in W12.

QPR had come through ties with Hull City, Watford and Nottingham Forest with a minimum of fuss — scoring 12 times and conceding only two in four matches — to set up the quarter final tie with their arch enemies. Later in the season then fourth placed Chelsea saw their title hopes evaporate during a disastrous Easter period where they lost 4-0 to West Ham and 6-0 to Jim Smith’s QPR side at Loftus Road. In January though they remained on course and forced a draw on QPR’s plastic pitch, John Byrne bagging the Rangers goal in a 1-1 draw.

That set up a midweek replay on the mud bath pitch at Stamford Bridge and while Smith insisted the tie wasn’t over, Chelsea were clear favourites having brought the tie back to their own patch. But QPR set about their work well, John Byrne volleying wide from the edge of the area and then chipping then-Chelsea goalkeeper and eventual QPR coach Eddie Niedzwiecki with a clever cross that no Rangers player had gambled enough to convert at the back post. Niedzwiecki had to be alert to block Byrne’s next effort with his legs after a long free kick from Alan McDonald had caused panic at the heart of the Chelsea penalty area and seconds later Robbie James picked out Bannister at the back post and his crisp volley flew straight at the keeper.

So, a highly satisfying first half for QPR then and although they hadn’t made their pressure tell with a goal they came out for the second period in much the same mood as they’d left the first. Robbie James continued to make light work of a difficult pitch with a purposeful run and powerful shot that Niedzwiecki had to watch into his gloves.

There was, as ever, plenty of needle in the fixture and things spilled over midway through the first half when Ian Dawes cynically hauled back Scottish forward Kevin McAllister as he threatened to break away down the Chelsea right. A round of handbags ensued with David Speedie ploughing into the fray in typical style, and Alan McDonald clearing him straight back out of it in his own trademark way. Perhaps Speedie still had his mind on causing a row rather than opening the scoring because when the resulting free kick was worked cleverly into his path he lobbed a header over Paul Barron the QPR goalkeeper but hopelessly wide of the target when it seemed easier to score. He almost made amends for the miss with a neat turn and pass through to pat Nevin moments later but McDonald muscled him out of the situation with appeals for a penalty rightly falling on deaf ears.

In the closing quarter of an hour the game became a nervy affair with Fillery’s run and cross and substitute Martin Allen’s back header causing alarm in the Chelsea box at one end, and Speedie finding the net at the near post only to be flagged offside at the other. A second 90 minutes in a week hadn’t been enough to separate the teams and so they lined up for an extra 30 minutes.

There were no penalty shoot outs in the competition at this stage so a third replay beckoned if the deadlock couldn’t be broken. With Liverpool to play in the semi final perhaps it shouldn’t have come as a surprise to see Michael Robinson, who’d moved to Loftus Road from Anfield the season before, doing more than most to get his team through. Persistent play down the left flank in the second half of extra time won a corner from which Alan McDonald powered home the opening goal — beating Niedzwiecki to the ball right under the cross bar to convert James’ cross.

That lead was maintained by a splendid late save from Barron to deny Speedie, and then extended in dramatic fashion with a gal that has gone down in QPR folklore. Invited to run out of his area and launch a long ball forward for a final attack Niedzwiecki fell victim to the quagmire playing surface and miscontrolled under pressure from Bannister. The loose ball rolled to Robinson on the halfway line who calmly lofted it half the length of the field and into the empty net. The linesman, believing Robinson had played a ball in for the now offside Bannister, put his flag up leading to a moment of confusion when the goal appeared to have been disallowed. But, eventually, it stood and Rangers were able to deliriously celebrate progression into the semi final.

Rangers went one better in the semi final, beating champions elect Liverpool over two legs, but then infamously crashed to a 3-0 defeat in the final against Jim Smith’s former club Oxford United.

QPR: Barron, Neill, McDonald, Wicks, Dawes, James, Robinson, Fereday, Fillery, Bannister, Byrne (M Allen)

Highlights >>> QPR 4 Chelsea 2, 1989 >>> QPR 6 Chelsea 0, 1986 >>> Chelsea 0 QPR 2, 1986 >>> Chelsea 1 QPR 3, 1979 >>> Paul Furlong QPR career highlights

Player Connections

Terry Venables >>> Chelsea 1960-1966 >>> QPR 1969-1974, (manager) 1980-1984

Terry Venables rose up through the ranks at Chelsea representing England at every level from schoolboy and amateur level through to the senior side where he won his first full cap in 1965. Venables was a League Cup winner with the Blues that season, scoring in a final win against Leicester, after initially joining them as a 15-year-old in 1958 and winning promotion from the Second Division in 1963.

The League Cup win and England call up was followed by an £80,000 move across town to Tottenham Hotspur after he, and several other players, fell out with manager Tommy Docherty over a breach of pre-match curfew rules . At White Hart Lane he haunted his former club by helping to beat them in the 1967 FA Cup final.

Which all made his decision to join newly relegated Queens Park Rangers for £70,000 in the summer of 1969 rather strange. It took four years for the R’s to regain their spot in the top division but Venables was captain when it finally happened in 1973. After helping Rangers to a creditable eighth place finish in their first season back, Venables decamped to Crystal Palace despite starting five of the first six games for Rangers at the beginning of the 1974/75 season — Don Rogers came the other way in part exchange.

Venables played infrequently for the Eagles but became the manager at Selhurst Park in 1976 after serving an apprenticeship under Malcolm Allison. Palace won promotion from the Third Division in Venables’ first season in charge, scoring two goals in injury time at Wrexham on the final day to secure the two goal margin required at the start of play. Rachid Harkouk, briefly a Ranger himself, scored one of the crucial goals. Three years later they were Second Division champions and dubbed the ‘team of the eighties’ because of the high number of young players forming the backbone of the side. The Eagles finished thirteenth in their first top flight season but became mired in financial difficulties at the start of the 1980/81 campaign and sat bottom of the table in October.

A friendship with the QPR chairman Jim Gregory saw Venables leave Palace and join QPR as their new manager in the division below. Using revolutionary training methods and a strictly drilled defence operating a sweeper system Venables took Second Division QPR to Wembley for an FA Cup final against Spurs which went to a replay before going the North London side’s way. A year later he promoted Rangers as champions of the Second Division and once back in the top tier they immediately recorded a fifth place finish and qualified for the UEFA Cup.

Around this time Gregory offered Venables the chance to buy the club from him but funds could not be gathered by his consortium and the deal fell through. At the end of the campaign Gregory’s usual trick of laughing people out of his office when they came to him for more money, only to then have his secretary send them back in just as they were about to walk out the door, back fired when it turned out Venables’ outlandish claim that he was about to become the Barcelona manager was in fact true. This was all compounded by QPR’s decision to appoint the hapless Alan Mullery as his replacement.

In Spain Venables secured the 1985 La Liga title for Barcelona, their first since 1974, and won the domestic cup competition as well. They reached the 1986 European Cup final but lost to Steaua Bucharest on penalties. Venables was fired in September 1987 after failing to retain the league title, and crashing out of the UEFA Cup against Dundee United.

Venables returned to Spurs as manager, winning the FA Cup in 1991 and finishing third in the league in 1990 but he was ignored for the England job when it came up in 1990 when Graham Taylor was appointed instead. Venables became Spurs CEO alongside chairman Alan Sugar in the early 1990s but the arrangement was doomed to failure. He got the England job second time around following the failure to qualify for USA 1994 and led the team to a memorable semi-final appearance at Euro 96 on home soil. Sadly he left at the end of the tournament to concentrate on defending his name in court against allegations of fraudulent business dealings. In 1998 he was disqualified from acting as a company director for seven years for mismanaging four companies, including Tottenham.

His record since then has been mixed. He lost a World Cup qualifying play off to Iran while manager of Australia, and left Portsmouth bottom of the First Division and heavily in debt after an 11 month spell as chairman at Fratton Park. A return to Crystal Palace under Mark Goldberg in 1998 always looked doomed to failure, but he restored his reputation with a recue act at Middlesbrough in 2001 when he was appointed as head coach to assist beleaguered Bryan Robson and lead the team away from the Premiership relegation zone. He managed Leeds at the beginning of their financial crisis but was sacked before completing the 2002/03 season with the Whites facing relegation.

Venables has worked since as a singer, writer, pundit and figure head for various betting companies.

Others >>> Shaun Wright Phillips, Chelsea 2005-2008, QPR 2011-present >>> Scott Sinclair, Chelsea 2005-2010, QPR (loan) 2007 >>> Ben Sahar, Chelsea 2006-2009, QPR (loan) 2007 >>> Michael Mancienne, Chelsea 2006-2011, QPR (loan) 2006-2008 >>> Jimmy Smith, Chelsea 2005-2009, QPR (loan) 2006-2007 >>> Paul Furlong, Chelsea, 1994-1996, QPR (loan) 2000, (loan) 2002, 2002-2007 >>> Leon Knight, Chelsea 1999-2003, QPR (loan) 2001 >>> Gavin Peacock, QPR 1984-1987, 1996-2002, Chelsea 1993-1996 >>>John Spencer, Chelsea 1992-1997, QPR 1997-1998 >>> Ray Wilkins, Chelsea 1973-1979, (coach) 2000, (coach) 2009-2010, QPR 1989-1994, (player-manager) 1994-1996 >>> Clive Wilson, Chelsea 1987-1990, QPR 1990-1995 >>> Vinnie Jones, Chelsea 1991-1992, QPR 1998-1999 >>> Mick Harford, Chelsea 1992-1993, QPR (coach) 2006-2007, (manager) 2010 >>> Paul Parker, QPR 1987-1991, Chelsea 1997 >>> Mark Stein, QPR 1988-1989, Chelsea 1993-1998 >>> Nigel Spackman, Chelsea 1983-1987, 1992-1996, QPR 1989 >>> Roy Wegerle, Chelsea 1986-1988, QPR 1990-1992 >>> Steve Wicks, Chelsea 1974-1978, 1986-1988, QPR 1979-1981, 1981-1986 >>> Clive Walker, Chelsea 1976-1984 QPR 1986-1987 >>> Tommy Langley, Chelsea 1974-1980, QPR 1980-1981 >>> Derek Richardson, Chelsea 1974-1976, QPR 1976-1979 >>> Gary Chivers, Chelsea 1978-1983, QPR 1984-1987 >>> Mike Fillery, Chelsea 1978-1982, QPR 1983-1986 >>> Clive Allen, QPR 1978-1980, 1981-1984, Chelsea 1991-1992 >>> Tommy Cunningham, Chelsea 1973-1975, QPR 1975-1979 >>> Terry Venables, Chelsea 1960-1966, QPR 1969-1974, (manager) 1980-1984 >>> John Hollins, Chelsea 1963-1975, 1983-1984, (manager) 1985-1988, QPR 1975-1979, (coach) 1993-1997 >>> Dave Webb, Chelsea 1968-1974, (manager) 1993, QPR 1974-1977 >>> Dave Sexton, Chelsea (manager) 1967-1974, QPR (manager) 1974-1977 >>> Alan Mayes, QPR 1971-1974, Chelsea 1980-1983 >>> Tommy Docherty, Chelsea 1961-1962, (manager) 1962-1967, QPR (manager) 1968, (manager) 1979-1980 >>> Barry Bridges, Chelsea 1958-1966, QPR 1968-1970 >>> Allan Harris, Chelsea 1960-1964, QPR 1967-1971 >>> Les Allen, Chelsea 1954-1959, QPR 1965-1969, (manager) 1968-1971 >>> Allan Harris, Chelsea 1960-1964, 1966-67, QPR 1967-1971 >>> Alan Wilks, Chelsea 1963-1965, QPR 1965-1971

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Pictures — Action Images

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