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Ray Wilkins’ diving header — history
Friday, 6th Mar 2015 08:16 by Clive Whittingham

As Tottenham return to Loftus Road on Saturday, LFW looks back to a meeting between the two sides in 1992 when four second half goals, including a header from Ray Wilkins, sealed an emphatic victory for the R’s.

Recent Meetings

Tottenham 4 QPR 0, Sunday August 24, 2014, Premier League
QPR were given a rude reminder of how tough the Premier League can be in their first away game of the season at Spurs back in August. Lining up with Harry Redknapp’s much talked about back three formation, the R’s were blown away in the first half an hour. Minimal resistance was posed as Nacer Chadli scored twice and Eric Dier headed in at the near post from a corner. Half time changes stemmed the tide, but little more, and Emmanuel Adebayor added a fourth on the hour. Rangers ditched the system after just two matches and won their next game 1-0 at home against Sunderland.

Spurs: Lloris 6; Dier 8, Kaboul 7, Vertonghen 7, Rose 7; Bentaleb 7 (Dembélé 59, 6), Capoue 7; Eriksen 8, Lamela 8, Cadli 8 (Kane 69, 6); Adebayor 7 (Soldado 80, 6)

Subs not used: Lennon, Holtby, Friedel, Davies

Goals: Chadli 12 (assisted Adebayor), 37 (assisted Lamela), Dier 30 (assisted Lamela), Adebayor 65

QPR: Green 6; Caulker 5, Ferdinand 5, Dunne 2 (Onuoha 46, 6); Isla 4, Traore 5; Barton 5, Fer 4 (Faurlin 68, 6), Mutch 4; Phillips 3 (Zamora 74, 6), Remy 3

Subs not used: Simpson, Wright-Phillips, Murphy, Hoilett

Bookings: Fer 63 (foul)

QPR 0 Tottenham 0, Saturday January 12, 2013, Premier League

Although the 2012/13 Premier League season was something of disaster for QPR, there was a little period in January when the bunch of mercenaries of arseholes actually pulled together and showed some sort of feeble resistance to the inevitable onset of relegation. That rear-guard action was led by veteran centre half Ryan Nelsen ahead of his move to Toronto at the end of January, and goalkeeper Julio Cesar who, for a few weeks at leats, showed why he’d been so highly rated before arriving at Loftus Road and why everybody was initially so excited about his signing. Against Spurs at Loftus Road, Cesar was in inspired form and QPR, with Adel Taarabt playing in a “false nine” position held on for grim death against their Champions League chasing visitors. Draws against high flying Man City, and at West Ham, sat either side of this creditable effort but Cesar, and QPR, soon reverted to type and went down with a whimper.

QPR: Cesar 8, Onuoha 7, Nelsen 7, Hill 7, Da Silva 7, Derry 7, Park 5, Mbia 7, Mackie 6, Wright-Phillips 7, Taarabt 7

Subs not used: Green, Ferdinand, Ben Haim, Faurlin, Cisse, Bothroyd, Campbell

Bookings: Mbia 69 (handball)

Spurs: Lloris 7, Walker 6, Vertonghen 7, Dawson 7, Naughton 6, Sandro 7 (Parker 25, 7), Dembele 7, Bale 6, Lennon 7 (Sigurdsson 79, 6), Defoe 7, Adebayor 5 (Dempsey 69, 6)

Subs not used: Friedel, Assou-Ekotto, Caulker, Huddlestone

Bookings: Dembele 38 (foul)

Spurs 2 QPR 1, Sunday September 18, 2012, Premier League

Things had all looked so different when the two teams met for the first time that season at White Hart Lane. QPR, then under the charge of Meticulous Mark Hughes, may have lost but they could count themselves very unfortunate to have done so. Only two superb saves from Brad Friedel prevented Junior Hoilett giving QPR the lead in the first half before Bobby Zamora snuck in behind the home defence, seized a pass from Ale Faurlin and smacked in a deserved opening goal. QPR looked good, but they were stung by a mad 60 seconds after half time when first a cross bobbled into the net off Faurlin amidst some penalty box confusion, and then Jermain Defoe slammed in a second with the R’s appealing for a free kick downfield. Even then there was a late chance to equalise for Hoilett but he delayed his shot too long. The feeling afterwards was nevertheless positive among the QPR ranks, and the Spurs fans were complimentary about the Rangers’ performance. Then the season fell apart.

Spurs: Friedel 8, Walker 6, Gallas 6, Vertonghen 8, Bale 7, Dembele 6, Sandro 6, Sigurdsson 5 (Caulker 46, 6), Dempsey 7 (Huddlestone 88, -), Lennon 7 (Townsend 90, -), Defoe 7

Subs: Lloris, Dawson, Falque, Mason

Goals: Faurlin (OG 60), Defoe (61)

QPR: César 8, Bosingwa — (Dyer 3, 8), Hill 7, Nelsen 7, Onuoha 7, Wright-Phillips 7 (Mackie 77, 6), Granero 7, Faurlin 7, Park 7, Hoilett 7, Zamora 8 (Cissé 73, 6)

Subs: Green, Diakite, Derry , Ehmer

Goals: Zamora 34 (assisted Faurlin)

Booked: Granero 54 (repetitive fouling), Dyer 87 (foul)

QPR 1 Spurs 0, Saturday April 21, 2012, Premier League

QPR secured a much needed victory against Spurs in April last year as they continued their fight against relegation from the Premier League. Adel Taarabt haunted his former club with a long range free kick in the first half that dipped down into the bottom corner as Brad Friedel struggled to deal with the sun. Rangers were good value for that lead but found themselves clinging on for grim death at the end after Taarabt had then been sent off by referee Mark Clattenburg for kicking the ball away — a second yellow card handed out before the referee had realised he’d already shown him a first. This was one of five consecutive wins at Loftus Road at the end of the season that secured safety for the Super Hoops.

QPR: Kenny 8, Onuoha 7, Ferdinand 8, Hill 8, Taiwo 8, Mackie 7, Barton 7, Derry 7, Diakite 7 (Buzsaky 69, 6), Taarabt 7, Zamora 8

Subs Not Used: Cerny, Gabbidon, Traore, Helguson, Cisse, Wright-Phillips

Sent Off: Taarabt 78 (two bookings)

Booked: Zamora (foul), Taarabt (foul), Onuoha (foul), Hill (foul), Taarabt (kicking ball away)

Goals: Taarabt 24 (free kick, won Taarabt)

Tottenham: Friedel 5, Walker 7, Gallas 5, King 5, Assou-Ekotto 4 (Rose 66, 6), Sandro 5 (Lennon 46, 6), Modric 7, Parker 6 (Giovani 84, -), Bale 6, Van der Vaart 6, Defoe 5

Spurs 3 QPR 1, Sunday October 30, 2011, Premier League

Tottenham’s performance against QPR back in October was about the best I saw from a Premiership team live last season and it needed Rangers to be at their very best just to hang onto their coat tails. A breathtaking first half in which QPR’s defence clung on by its finger nails while the attack was hindered by Adel Taarabt’s worst performance for the club saw the home side surge into a two goal lead. Gareth Bale finished expertly after 20 minutes and Rafael Van der Vaat added a second just under a quarter of an hour later in front of the Sky Sports cameras. Harry Redknapp told reporters afterwards his team had heard some serious arguments coming from the away dressing room at half time and sporting a new look team with Jay Bothroyd and Jamie Mackie added to the mix Rangers started to make a game of it. They had Spurs worried when Bothroyd halved the deficit just after the hour mark but a flowing move and sumptuous strike from Bale ten minutes later made the points safe for the home side.

Tottenham: Friedel 7, Walker 7, Kaboul 7, King 7, Assou-Ekotto 6, Lennon 7, Parker 9 (Sandro 86, -), Modric 9, Bale 8, Van der Vaart 8, Adebayor 6

Subs Not Used: Cudicini, Pavlyuchenko, Gallas, Defoe, Bassong, Livermore

Goals: Bale 20 (assisted Lennon), Van der Vaart 33 (assisted King), Bale 72 (assisted Lennon)

QPR: Kenny 8, Young 6, Ferdinand 7, Hall - (Gabbidon 9, 6), Traore 6, Faurlin 7, Derry 5 (Mackie 46, 7), Wright-Phillips 7, Barton 7, Taarabt 4 (Bothroyd 46, 8), Helguson 7

Subs Not Used: Murphy, Hill, Buzsaky, Smith

Goals: Bothroyd 62 (assisted Helguson)

Spurs 1 QPR 0, Saturday December 9, 1995, Premier League

By the time QPR arrived at White Hart Lane in December 1995 they were on a disastrous run of ten league games without a win — a run that had been triggered by a collapse in the home fixture with Spurs in September that we’ll move onto shortly. Considering Ray Wilkins’ team actually finished the season quite strongly it was this dreadful run through October, November and December that would eventually cost them their Premiership place. Meak surrenders were the order of the day and having allowed Teddy Sheringham to open the scoring with the time still in single figures Rangers rarely, if ever, looked like getting back into the game. As I’ve said so often about games from our last Premiership campaign, when you look at the QPR team on paper it’s not hard to see why it struggled.

Spurs: Walker, Calderwood (Edinburgh 84), Campbell, Mabbutt, Wilson, Howells, Dozzell, Rosenthal, Fox, Sheringham, Armstrong

Subs:Day, McMahon

Goals: Sheringham 3

Bookings: Howells

QPR: Sommer, Bardsley, Yates, McDonald, Challis, Impey, Barker (Charles 78), Holloway, Sinclair, Hateley, Gallen (Osborn 63)

Subs: Maddix

Bookings: Barker, McDonald

QPR 2 Spurs 3, Monday September 25, 1995, Premier League

It’s hard to believe, now we know everything that went on subsequently, but there was actually a decent amount of optimism around Loftus Road when Spurs visited for a live Monday Night Football encounter in September 1995. A pretty lousy start to the first post-Les Ferdinand season at Loftus Road had given way to victories over Man City and, memorably, away at Leeds 3-1 and more importantly Ray Wilkins had gone out and spent some money on a Ferdinand replacement. Sadly that replacement was Mark Hateley, who was paraded in front of the supporters before this game on crutches. Nevertheless Rangers set about Spurs well and former boss Gerry Francis could only watch in stunned silence as Danny Dichio gave QPR the lead, and then straight after half time Andy Impey nodded in Rufus Brevett’s looping back post cross. Then, disaster. Within a minute of doubling the lead QPR found it halved in controversial circumstances — Teddy Sheringham embarrassingly flinging himself over the back of Karl Ready as the defender turned to chase a ball that had long since cleared the area and was no longer anywhere close to either of them. David Ellery always was an obliging referee for Sheringham, and Spurs, and awarded the softest of soft penalties. From then on a collapse always looked likely and Sheringham and Dozzell scored a goal each in three devastating minutes midway through the half. QPR did recover to win at Bolton a week later but then won only two of their next 18 matches in the league and were eventually relegated.

QPR: Sommer, Maddix, McDonald, Ready, Brevett, Impey, Holloway, Barker, Osborn (Allen 79), Sinclair, Dichio

Subs: Gallen, Challis

Goals: Dichio 36, Impey 46

Spurs: Walker, Austin, Calderwood, Mabbutt, Wilson, Anderton (Edinburgh 65), Dozzell, Howells, Rosenthal, Armstrong, Sheringham

Subs: Campbell, Thorsvedt

Goals: Sheringham 48, 75, Dozzell 73

Bookings: Calderwood, Howells, Armstrong

Previous Results

Head to Head >>> QPR wins 14 >>> Draws 17 >>> Spurs wins 21

2014/14 Spurs 4 QPR 0

2012/13 QPR 0 Spurs 0

2012/13 Spurs 2 QPR 1 (Zamora)

2011/12 Q{R 1 Spurs 0 (Taarabt)

2011/12 Spurs 3 QPR 1 (Bothroyd)

1995/96 Spurs 1 QPR 0

1995/96 QPR 2 Spurs 3 (Dichio, Impey)

1994/95 QPR 2 Spurs 1 (Ferdinand)

1994/95 Spurs 1 QPR 1 (Impey)

1993/94 Spurs 1 QPR 2 (Sinclair 2)

1993/94 QPR 1 Spurs 1 (Ferdinand)

1992/93 Spurs 3 QPR 2 (Peacock, White)

1992/93 QPR 4 Spurs 1 (Penrice 2, Holloway, Wilkins)

1991/92 QPR 1 Spurs 2 (Sinton)

1991/92 Spurs 2 QPR 0

1990/91 Spurs 0 QPR 0

1990/91 QPR 0 Spurs 0

1989/90 QPR 3 Spurs 1 (Wilkins, Sinton, Barker)

1989/90 Spurs 3 QPR 2 (Bardsley, T Francis)

1988/89 QPR 1 Spurs 0 (Falco)

1988/89 Spurs 2 QPR 2 (Falco, T Francis)

1987/88 QPR 2 Spurs 0 (Kerslake 2)

1987/88 Spurs 1 QPR 1 (Coney)

1986/87 Spurs 1 QPR 0

1986/87 QPR 2 Spurs 0 (M Allen, Byrne)

1985/86 QPR 2 Spurs 5 (Bannister, Rosenior)

1985/86 Spurs 1 QPR 1 (Byrne)

1984/85 QPR 2 Spurs 2 (Bannister 2)

1984/85 Spurs 5 QPR 0

1983/84 QPR 2 Spurs 1 (Fereday, Gregory)

1983/84 Spurs 3 QPR 2 (Fenwick, Stainrod)

1981/82 Spurs 1 QPR 0*

1981/82 Spurs 1 QPR 1* (Fenwick)

1980/81 Spurs 3 QPR 1** (Stainrod)

1980/81 QPR 0 Spurs 0**

1978/79 Spurs 1 QPR 1 (Clement)

1978/79 QPR 2 Spurs 2 (Bowles, Shanks)

1976/77 Spurs 3 QPR 0

1976/77 QPR 2 Spurs 1 (Bowles, Clement)

1975/76 Spurs 0 QPR 3 (Francis 2, Givens)

1975/76 QPR 0 Spurs 0

1974/75 QPR 0 Spurs 1

1974/75 Spurs 1 QPR 2 (Bowles 2)

1973/74 QPR 3 Spurs 1 (Bowles, Givens, Francis)

1973/74 Spurs 0 QPR 0

1973/74 QPR 1 Spurs 0*** (Givens)

1968/69 QPR 1 Spurs 1 (Clarke)

1968/69 Spurs 3 QPR 2 (Clarke, Clement)

1949/50 QPR 0 Spurs 2

1949/50 Spurs 3 QPR 0

1948/49 QPR 0 Spurs 0

1948/49 Spurs 1 QPR 0

* - FA Cup final

** - FA Cup

*** - League Cup

Memorable Match

QPR 4 Spurs 1, Saturday October 3, 1992, Premiership

QPR manager Gerry Francis had complained long and hard about the requirements placed on his side at the start of the inaugural Premier League by a gruelling August fixture list. Taking part in the first ever Premiership Monday night football game on the opening weekend against Man City followed by a home match with Southampton 48 hours later Rangers would somehow end up playing five matches in 12 days.

That didn’t seem to faze them initially, a third straight win in the fourth match away at Coventry lifted the R’s to second in the fledgling table, but there were hints of fatigue setting in through September as first Arsenal and then two of the newly promoted sides Ipswich and Middlesbrough came to Loftus Road and left with draws. Still, by the time Tottenham Hotspur came to W12 on the first Saturday in October Rangers had lost just one of their opening ten league games. That said, star striker Les Ferdinand was injured for this game and replaced in attack by Dennis Bailey alongside Gary Penrice.

Spurs were under the joint managership of Doug Livermore and Ray Clemence at this stage with Terry Venables in situ as chief executive and Alan Sugar as chairman. They finished fifteenth the season before, and sacked Peter Shreeves as boss as a result, but striker Teddy Sheringham would go on to bag 21 goals this season and lead the team to slightly better things.

On a miserable day weather wise at Loftus Road things started as you might expect: Darren Peacock producing a trademark slip in the wet conditions and Sheringham stealing in to open the scoring at the Loft End in the midst of the ensuing goalmouth scramble. Tottenham held that lead through to half time.

But Francis, who would go on to manager at White Hart Lane after walking away from Rangers two years later when his relationship with chairman Richard Thompson collapsed, had inspiring words for his team at the break and QPR blew their north London visitors away in the second period. A deep cross from Ray Wilkins fell kindly for Ian Holloway who struck a powerful bouncing volley into the roof of the net for a rare goal to equalise.

Then persistent pressure around the edge of the Spurs area and an injury to Darren Caskey eventually meant space opened up down the left flank for Andy Sinton to cross low into the area where Ray Wilkins stooped to head home from six yards. Wilkins didn’t score many goals for QPR, and even fewer headers, so that was a real collector’s item and absolutely brought the house down.

It was one way traffic thereafter and Sinton was the architect of a third goal, pulling a cross from Andy Impey out of the air at the back post, skipping to the byline and hammering in a low cross that Gary Penrice could scarcely miss from four yards out. And when Impey then cleverly stepped over a low centre from David Bardsley, Penrice again found himself unmarked, on the penalty spot this time, and he lashed home emphatically to seal a memorable 4-1 win.

It’s strange the things you remember, even from all those years ago. This was my first year as a season ticket holder at Loftus Road and back then the tradition was for our travelling party from Grimsby to meet with our London friends in Farmer Brown’s café in Covent Garden for breakfast. My dad had a full English that day, as per usual, but spent most of the first half returning it projectile style at the back of the P-Block. Scrambled eggs on toast for him every Saturday thereafter, for he blamed the food rather than the copious amounts of bitter supped in the Goldhawk between the breakfast and the kick off.

Rangers finished fifth in the Premier League that season, four points ahead of eighth placed Spurs who sacked the management team again at the end of the campaign and brought in former player Ossie Ardilles who’d just won the Second Division play offs as manager of West Brom.

QPR: Stejskal, Bardsley, McDonald, Peacock, Wilson, Impey, Wilkins, Holloway, Sinton, Penrice, Bailey
Highlights >>> QPR 4 Spurs 1 92/93 >>> QPR 2 Spurs 2, 84/85 >>> QPR 1 Spurs 1 82 Cup Final >>> QPR 3 Spurs 1 73/74

Player Connections

Clive Wilson >>> QPR 1990-1995 >>> Spurs 1995-1999

Although Clive Wilson played for QPR’s London rivals Chelsea and Spurs, he played the best football of his career at Loftus Road. Originally a left footed midfielder who was spotted by Manchester City in the late 1970s while at college, Wilson then made more than 100 appearances in Sky Blue through to 1987 when he embarked on a three year spell in West London at Stamford Bridge.

At City he was part of an FA Youth Cup final side in 1980, and made his debut against Stoke in the League Cup in 1981, but had to wait until 1984/85 to become a regular in the side. When Paul Power left for Everton in 1986, Wilson was tried at left back which was the position he would make his name in at Loftus Road later in his career. He joined Chelsea in 1987 after City were relegated and won the Second Division championship with the Blues in 1988/89.

Wilson was brought to Loftus Road in 1990 by Don Howe who also initially used Wilson as a midfielder. He scored memorably at the School End against Chelsea in a 2-2 draw in the 1991/92 season and — Shaun Wright-Phillips take note — danced an ecstatic dance of celebration right in front of a packed away end full of Chelsea supporters.

Gerry Francis had taken charge by then and Wilson was to form a key part of the QPR side that finished as the top London club in the first ever Premier League season 1992/93. The R’s were fifth that year and by this point Wilson had been moved back to the left side of the defence. With David Bardsley on the opposite side it gave QPR two tremendous ball playing full backs who were good defensively, but excellent going the other way long before teams started playing with genuine wing backs. Both deserved more England caps, and would surely have won them playing for a more illustrious club in the way they did for Rangers.

Wilson had another string to his bow — he was QPR’ designated penalty taker for many years as well, assuming the job after Roy Wegerle had missed a couple of never relinquishing it until the day he left W12. I never actually had that much faith in Wilson when he stepped up from 12 yards, although that’s probably because he missed one in an FA Cup third round match at Southampton in 1992 which was the first time I’d ever been to a QPR game, and then missed again in a shoot out against my hometown team Grimsby the next time I saw him step up live. But he was reliable more often than not and anybody who was there can no doubt recall the tension, and outpouring of relief, when he won an FA Cup fifth round tie at Loftus Road against Millwall in 1995 from the penalty spot with the very final kick of the game. Relief that Rangers were into the quarter final, but more so because it saved a frightening Tuesday night trip to the Den in a season where the Lions had already done for Chelsea and Arsenal in the knock out competitions.

He scored less frequently in open play, but did famously notch one at the Kop End with his first touch when QPR won at Anfield for the first time in their history in 1990/91. In an interview with QPRNet Wilson said: “I tell you, it’s not often you get a touch up there at all but to score with your first touch was a great feeling. It was a game no one expected us to win I remember it well, we were two nil up and they had got their customary dodgy penalty to get back in the game! I came on as sub and I think it was Andrew Impey crossed it from the right and Ray went to head it and in true Ray fashion he totally missed it! The ball bounced off someone’s knee and I’m running in and knock it in the net. That killed the game off, so it really was a wonderful feeling.”

While the subsequent departure of Les Ferdinand that summer is rightly remembered as a key reason for Rangers’ subsequent relegation, the quieter departure of Wilson already had a bearing. Rangers had been reluctant to offer the player a long contract when his previous deal had ended but Gerry Francis, by now the Tottenham manager, had no such issue at his new club and promptly snapped the full back up on the cheap.

Wilson told Ron at QPRNet: “My contract at QPR was coming to an end and at the time there was a rule that if you were over thirty three and you’d been at a club for five years you were entitled to a free transfer, that’s the stage I was at. Gerry obviously knew that from his time at QPR. Honestly and truthfully I never made contact with Gerry, he rang me up in the summer and said “you know why I’m ringing, do you want to come and have a talk?” So I said yes. I went to meet him and he made me an offer which was too good to turn down. It wasn’t just about the money, QPR had offered me similar terms to stay but the big difference was he was offering me an extra year which gave me twelve months more security and at thirty three it was too big a chance for me to say no to. If I had been twenty-five then maybe I wouldn’t have gone but I was in the twighlight of my career and I was given the chance of playing for the biggest club of my career.”

He spent another four years at Tottenham, never quite hitting the heights of his time at QPR but doing a reasonable job on the left side of the defence all the same and making 81 appearances in total with two goals against Leicester in the league and Wolves in the cup. He finished his career with a season in Division Two at Cambridge United, who consolidated their position at the higher level after promotion in 1998/99. He also served as player coach at non-league Wingate and Finchley for a period.

As well as his football media work, Wilson now teaches PE at St John’s School in Epping according to Wikipedia.

Others >>> Steven Caulker, Spurs 2009-2013, QPR 2014-present >>> Ryan Nelsen, Spurs 2012, QPR 2012-2013 >>> Luke Young, Spurs 1997-2001, QPR 2011-present >>> Adel Taarabt, Spurs 2007-2010, QPR (loan) 2009, 2010-present >>> Kyle Walker, Spurs 2009-present, QPR (loan) 2010-2011 >>> Wayne Routledge, Spurs 2005-2008, QPR 2009-2010, (loan) 2011 >>> Radek Cerny, Spurs 2005-2008, QPR 2008-2012 >>> Dean Parrett, QPR (trainee), Spurs 2007-2013 >>> Rohan Ricketts, Spurs 2002-2005, QPR (loan) 2007 >>> Stephen Kelly, Spurs 2000-2006, QPR (loan) 2003 >>> Dean Marney, Spurs 2002-2006, QPR (loan) 2004 >>> Chris Day, Spurs 1995-1996, QPR 2001-2005 >>> Dave McEwen, Spurs 2000-2001, QPR 2001-2002 >>> Peter Crouch, Spurs 1998-2000, 2009-2011, QPR 2000-2001 >>> Steve Slade Spurs 1994-1996, QPR 1996-2000 >>> Les Ferdinand, QPR 1987-1995, Spurs 1997-2003 >>> Clive Wilson, QPR 1990-1995, Spurs 1995-1999 >>> Gerry Francis, 1968-1979, 1981-1982, (manager) 1991-1994, (manager) 1998-2001, Spurs (manager) 1994-1997) >>> Andy Sinton, QPR 1989-1993, Spurs 1996-1999 >>> Paul Walsh, Spurs 1988-1992, QPR (loan) 1991 >>> Mark Falco, Spurs 1978-1987, QPR 1988-1991 >>> Neil Ruddock, Spurs 1986-1988, 1992-1993, QPR (loan) 1998 >>> Ossie Ardiles, Spurs 1978-1988, (manager) 1993-1994, QPR 1988-1989 >>> Steve Hodge, Spurs 1986-1988, QPR 1994-1995 >>>Danny Maddix, Spurs 1986-1987, QPR 1987-2001 >>> David Kerslake, QPR 1984-1989, Spurs 1994-1997 >>> Clive Allen, QPR 1978-1980, 1981-1984, Spurs 1984-1988 >>> Andy Gray, QPR 1989, Spurs 1992-1994 >>> Terry Fenwick, QPR 1980-1987, Spurs 1987-1993 >>> Terry Venables, Spurs 1966-1969, (manager) 1987-1993, QPR 1969-1974, (manager) 1980-1984 >>> Alan Brazil, Spurs 1983-1984, QPR 1986 >>>Alan Mullery, Spurs 1964-1972, QPR (manager) 1984 >>> Frank Saul, Spurs 1960-1968, QPR 1970-1972 >>> Roger Morgan, QPR 1964-1969, Spurs 1969-1972 >>> Les Allen, Spurs 1959-1965, QPR 1965-1969, (manager) 1968-1971 >>> Frank Smith, Spurs 1954-1962, QPR 1962-1966

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TacticalR added 10:39 - Mar 7
Great stuff. Thanks.

Clive Wilson was one of the super-reliable players of that era.
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