Arsenal's campaign to retain the Championship in 1989–90 began well once they recovered from a 4–1 drubbing by
Manchester United on the opening day, and in November they were on top. But the signs were not good; few of their victories were comfortable. The 4–3 home victory over
Norwich on the first Saturday of November was particularly uncomfortable. The game marked
David O'Learys 622nd major match for Arsenal, a club record, and it was an eventful occasion. O'Leary scored an equaliser as Arsenal recovered from 3–1 down and was also shown the yellow card. Then a last-minute penalty which gave Arsenal victory sparked a fracas involving 19 players. Three weeks later the FA Disciplinary Committee fined Norwich £50.000 and Arsenal £20.000. It was the first time clubs had been responsible for their players in such an incident. Arsenal's wheels wobbled in the fourth round of the
Littlewoods Cup in November. After a two-leg, 8–1 victory over
Plymouth and a 1–0 victory over
Liverpool at
Highbury, a visit to
Second Division Oldham did not seem so awesome. Yet they were beaten 3–1 and, from Christmas onwards, their season fell apart. Five out of six successive away games were lost, with only one goal scored.
Niall Quinn scored the winning goal against
Stoke City in the FA-cup third round on 6 January 1990, which was to be his last game for Arsenal. After only 6 appearances in the League, Quinn left to join
Manchester City for £700,000 in March 1990. FA-cup defeat at
Queens Park Rangers followed,
David Rocastle and
Michael Thomas suffered dramatic losses in form and the goals dried up for
Alan Smith, only 10 compared to 23 the previous season. On the other hand, the introduction of
Kevin Campbell was an exiting indication of the future. As Arsenal had seen before, winning the championship and retaining it were different propositions. A final position of fourth was no disgrace, but it was 17 points behind
Liverpool F.C. Adams, Rocastle and Smith were all in
Bobby Robson's preliminary squad to
World Cup 1990. Adams was axed in preference to
Mark Wright, Rocastle was excluded although he had played in five of England's six World Cup qualifying matches. Smith was omitted in favour of
Steve Bull. The only Arsenal player to make an appearance in the World Cup 1990 was David O'Leary who scored the last decisive penalty that took
Ireland to the quarter finals. ==Results==