English club ban Pressure mounted to ban English clubs from European competition. On 31 May 1985, British Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher asked
The Football Association (the FA) to withdraw English clubs from European competition before they were banned, but two days later, UEFA banned English clubs for "
an indeterminate period of time". On 6 June, the
International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) extended this ban to all worldwide matches, but this was modified a week later to allow friendly matches outside Europe to take place. In December 1985, FIFA announced that English clubs were also free to play friendly games in Europe, though the Belgian government banned any English clubs from playing in their country. Though the
England national team was not subjected to any bans, English club sides were banned
indefinitely from European club competitions, with Liverpool being provisionally subject to a further three years' suspension as well. In April 1989, following years of campaigning from the English football authorities, UEFA confirmed the reintroduction of English clubs (with the exception of Liverpool) into its competitions from the 1990–91 season onward effective from 11 July 1990. In April 1991 UEFA's executive committee voted to allow Liverpool back into European competition from the 1991–92 season onward, a year later than their compatriots, but two years earlier than initially foreseen. In the end, all English clubs served a five-year-ban, while Liverpool were excluded for six years. According to former Liverpool striker
Ian Rush, who signed with Juventus a year later, he saw pronounced improvement in the institutional relationships between both the clubs and their fans during his career in Italy. Throughout the ban, England's points were kept in the ranking until they would have naturally been replaced. The places vacated by English clubs in the UEFA Cup were reallocated to the best countries who would usually only have two spots in the competition—countries ranked between ninth and twenty-first. For the
1985–86 UEFA Cup, the Soviet Union, France,
Czechoslovakia, and the Netherlands were granted an additional spot each, while in
1986–87,
Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, France, and
East Germany were the recipients. The
1987–88 season saw Portugal, Austria, and Sweden gain an additional place, with Sweden and Yugoslavia gaining the places for the
1988–89 competition. The final year of the English ban,
1989–90 saw Austria receive a spot, while a play-off round was played between a French and a Yugoslav side for the final space—due to the two countries having the same number of points in the ranking. England was removed from the rankings in 1990 due to having no points. England did not return to the top of the coefficient rankings until 2008.
Banned clubs The following clubs were denied entry to European competitions during this period: The number of places available to English clubs in the UEFA Cup would however have been reduced had English teams been eliminated early in the competition. By the time of the re-admittance of all English clubs except Liverpool in 1990–91, England was only granted one UEFA Cup entrant (awarded to the league runners-up); prior to the ban, they had four entry slots, a number not awarded to England again under regular means. Welsh clubs playing in the
English league system, who could qualify for the
European Cup Winners' Cup via the
Welsh Cup, were unaffected by the ban.
Bangor City (
1985–86),
Wrexham (
1986–87),
Merthyr Tydfil (
1987–88),
Cardiff City (
1988–89), and
Swansea City (
1989–90) all competed in the Cup Winners' Cup during the ban on English clubs, despite playing in the English league system. In the meantime, many other clubs missed out on a place in the UEFA Cup due to the return of English clubs to European competitions only being gradual—in 1990, the league had no UEFA coefficient points used to calculate the number of teams, and even though
Manchester United won the Cup Winners' Cup in the first season of returning in
1990–91, it took several more years for England to win back the points to the previous level, due to the coefficient being calculated over a five-year period and there being a one-year delay between the publication of the rankings and their impact on club allocation. Liverpool's additional year of exclusion from Europe meant that there was no English representation in the
1990–91 European Cup, as they were
1989–90 Football League First Division champions.
Repercussions on UEFA Cup qualification Due to the weak coefficient,
Football League Cup winners
Nottingham Forest also missed out on UEFA Cup places in
1990–91, along with
Tottenham Hotspur and Arsenal. The teams who missed out on the
1991–92 UEFA Cup, for the same reason were
Sheffield Wednesday,
Crystal Palace, and
Leeds United. Arsenal and
Manchester City were unable to take part for the
1992–93 competition. For
1993–94,
Blackburn Rovers and
Queens Park Rangers would have qualified. Leeds United missed out in
1994–95 and initially
1995–96, though they qualified for the latter via the new
UEFA Fair Play ranking, which at the time gave their three top-ranking associations' highest-placed team who've not already qualified for Europe a UEFA Cup spot. Remaining outside the top three of the coefficient rankings, England retained its three UEFA Cup berths instead of four. Sixth-placed
Everton lost a Fair Play berth for
1996–97 by UEFA, as punishment for the FA due to Tottenham Hotspur and
Wimbledon fielding weakened teams in the
1995 UEFA Intertoto Cup. By this point, while England's coefficient was no longer directly affected by the ban due to its being outside the five-year window, their coefficient continued to be affected by years of under-representation in the competition. As a result,
Aston Villa missed out via their league position for
1997–98 and
1998–99 but qualified for both through Fair Play. Restructuring of UEFA competitions for 1999–2000 gave the top six associations of the coefficient ranking three UEFA Cup berths (the top three gained four
Champions League berths, whilst 4–6 got three), which England now reached, whilst associations ranked seventh and eighth were given four berths for the competition. == Commemorations ==