The Road to Redemption: Arsenal from the fall of Bertie Mee to Wembley 1979

Author introduces his new book on the Gunners in the 1970s



The Road to Redemption: Arsenal from the fall of Bertie Mee to Wembley 1979


When Bertie Mee, the ultimate establishment man, was appointed manager of the Bank of England football club, he roused Arsenal from their ‘long sleep’ of post-war mediocrity. A key ally to Mee’s administrative brilliance was the strategic and tactical sophistication and thoroughness of Don Howe, and together they returned Arsenal to the glory days of the past. The 1970 Fairs’ Cup and the glorious ‘double’ of 1971 stand as testaments to both men, and also to Arsenal warriors such as McLintock, Wilson, Storey, Radford, and George.

Mee’s appointment had been made in response to the failed experiment of Billy Wright, and had proved a great springboard to success; but then following the unmitigated disaster of Howe’s clumsy departure from Highbury, the ‘double’ team broke up; and that familiar post-war air of frustration and under-achievement descended upon Highbury once again like a deep, silent fall of snow.

It was then that Arsenal’s old Etonian chairman, Denis Hill-Wood, broke the spell of disenchantment with a gamble, appointing Arsenal’s youngest ever manager: Terry Neill. Following fast upon the heels of Neill’s appointment was a PR stroke of genius, the signing of the ultimate English ‘galácticos’: Supermac, the domestic goal-machine Malcolm Macdonald.

And then, 12 months later, almost unnoticed, came Neill’s one true managerial masterstroke: the re-appointment of Don Howe as Head Coach. The Gunners quickly became the ‘likely lads’ of London football, a young, vibrant, exciting team which now also bore all the hallmarks of Howe’s disciplined organisation and resilience.

Under the leadership of Neill and Howe they became the archetypal cup team. In 1978 Wembley beckoned and early glory but Arsenal just didn’t turn up and the big day out ended not with a bang but a whimper. After the game Neill promised ‘we would be back next year, and would win the cup’. 1978/79 thus became the long road to redemption which climaxed in five minutes of agony and euphoria!

This book remembers that journey to redemption, from the bleak days when Mee’s empire began to decline and fall apart, to the ‘Highbury Spring’ of Neill, and ultimately that intense deliverance experienced on the 12th May, 1979. There were some great games, some great players, and some great goals: and ultimately some great memories of a lost football context, a lost world where football was different.

The Arsenal and their history have always absorbed my interest for it is the story of an institution, which now under Unai Emery grows and develops in new and exciting ways. This small story is part of that never-ending journey, one that has visited greatness and travels on to who knows where. We will go with it and travel together, proud of our history, excited about the future. Victoria Concordia Crescit.

David Fensome’s ‘The Road to Redemption: Arsenal from the fall of Bertie Mee to Wembley 1979’ is now available for download to kindle on Amazon for £3.49 here.


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comments

  1. Moscowgooner

    Dec 28, 2018, 10:33 #112758

    RobG - I think the 1980 experience was the real deflator of the Neil years. What a superb season for drama - it deserves a book in its own right - Highfield Road for the semi versus Liverpool, the first leg of the ECWC semi versus Juve etc etc. Huge eventful games played against the backdrop of atmospheres that redfined the term 'electric'! But we ended up with absolutely nothing; I recall particularly the feeling after the Valencia game in the Heysel. And then we still managed to screw up UEFA Cup qualification by losing at Wolves and Middlesboro (as I remember it). I think the players just had nothing left to give. Chippy Brady's last season as well to add to the mix....

  2. RobG

    Dec 28, 2018, 10:06 #112757

    Aaaahhhhhh.....the 1978 Cup Final. Obviously I was much younger then. But I can't ever remember leaving a football ground so deflated after that. I have subsequently been more annoyed ; but never more crest fallen. Full credit to Ipswich as they were brilliant on the day and if it were not for Big Pat Jennings we'd have lost be a cricket score. I was so shell shocked after the game, I didn't know what to do and eventually went back to Highbury and sat forlornly on the steps to the main entrance, seeking solace. Such is, football supporting life.