Rivalry beyond football The history of the Tyne–Wear derby is a modern-day extension of a rivalry between
Sunderland and
Newcastle that dates back to the
English Civil War when protestations over advantages that merchants in
Royalist Newcastle had over their Wearside counterparts led to Sunderland becoming a
Parliamentarian stronghold. Sunderland and Newcastle again found themselves on opposite sides during the
Jacobite risings, with Newcastle in support of the
Hanoverians with the German King George, and Sunderland siding with the Scottish
Stuarts.
Football rivalry Prior to the beginning of the twentieth century, the main rivalries in Sunderland and Newcastle were cross-town affairs. In Newcastle a rivalry existed during the 1880s between
Newcastle East End (later to become Newcastle United) and
Newcastle West End, which was ended with West End's bankruptcy in 1892. Meanwhile, on Wearside, a group of players broke away from Sunderland and formed the rival
Sunderland Albion in 1888, though Albion was forced to fold four years later. The first meeting between the two took place in 1883, with the first competitive fixture an
FA Cup tie in November 1887; Sunderland won 2–0. Around the turn of the 20th century, the rivalry began to emerge. The 1901
Good Friday encounter, late in the
1900–01 season at
St. James' Park had to be abandoned as up to 120,000 fans made their way into a ground which then had a capacity of 30,000. The news was met with anger and rioting followed, with a number of fans injured. However, in general, although the derby attracted big crowds – with fans often climbing trees and buildings for views of the game – there is little evidence to suggest any animosity between the two sets of supporters in the pre-war and immediate post-war period. On 5 December 1908, Sunderland beat Newcastle 9–1 at St. James' Park; despite this, Newcastle still won the league title that season finishing nine points ahead of their local rivals who finished 3rd. The result remains the biggest ever win in a Tyne–Wear derby, as well as the Wearsiders' biggest ever win away from home and Newcastle's biggest ever home league defeat. Newcastle's largest victory margin in a derby is 6–1, which they have achieved twice – at home in 1920 and away in 1955. On New Year's Day 1985, Newcastle-born
Peter Beardsley scored a hat trick in Newcastle's 3–1 victory in the fixture. In 1990, the sides met in a
Second Division play off semi final dubbed 'the biggest Tyne–Wear derby in history'. However, the game was resumed and Sunderland completed the win. Sunderland went on to lose the final to
Swindon Town, but were still promoted due to financial irregularities at Swindon. In a memorable derby on 25 August 1999, Newcastle manager
Ruud Gullit dropped leading scorers
Alan Shearer and
Duncan Ferguson to the bench. Sunderland went on to win 2–1 at St. James' Park thanks to goals from
Kevin Phillips and
Niall Quinn, and in the face of outrage from Newcastle fans, Gullit quit before their next match. Sunderland repeated the feat a year later, in a match remembered for Sunderland goalkeeper
Thomas Sørensen saving a Shearer penalty.
21st century ahead of the derby game. In an eventful derby on 17 April 2006, Newcastle came from 1–0 down at half time to beat Sunderland 4–1 at the
Stadium of Light. One of Newcastle's scorers that day,
Michael Chopra, later joined Sunderland and played in three derbies against Newcastle. On 25 October 2008, Sunderland beat Newcastle 2–1 at the Stadium of Light, their first home win in a derby for 28 years. On 31 October 2010 Newcastle beat Sunderland, who played with ten men for over 37 minutes, 5–1 at home, with their captain
Kevin Nolan scoring a hat-trick, while Sunderland's former Newcastle defender
Titus Bramble was sent off. Newcastle led the return fixture in January 2011 1–0 thanks to another Nolan goal, only for Sunderland's
Asamoah Gyan to equalise in injury time. The next derby took place in August 2011 at the Stadium of Light, where Newcastle won 1–0 thanks to a Ryan Taylor free kick. The return fixture at St. James Park ended 1–1. Both sides were charged by the FA for failing to keep their players under control, charges which they both accepted. On 14 April 2013, Sunderland defeated Newcastle 3–0 at St. James' Park in manager
Paolo Di Canio's second game in charge, their first away win in the fixture in 13 years. The attendance for the game was 52,355 with 2,000 Sunderland fans, this included the suspended Black cats midfielder
Craig Gardner. The Sunderland goalscorers were
Stéphane Sessègnon in the 27th minute,
Adam Johnson in the 74th minute and
David Vaughan in the 82nd minute. The following season saw Sunderland do the double over Newcastle for the first time since the 1966/67 season and win three derbies in a row since 1923- the Black Cats edging a 2–1 Stadium of Light on 27 October 2013, before a repeat 0–3 victory at St. James Park on 1 February 2014, with goals from
Fabio Borini, Adam Johnson and
Jack Colback. On 21 December 2014, Adam Johnson scored a late goal in the 90th minute past goalkeeper
Jak Alnwick at St. James' Park, ensuring that Sunderland had defeated Newcastle in four consecutive derbies - a new record and also Sunderland's third consecutive victory at St. James' Park. On 5 April 2015 Sunderland again defeated Newcastle to make it five derby wins in a row and complete the double victory over Newcastle for a second consecutive season;
Jermain Defoe scored from 22 yards on the stroke of half-time to give Sunderland victory. On 25 October 2015 Sunderland once again defeated Newcastle to make it a record sixth consecutive derby victory. A penalty from Adam Johnson opened the scoring which saw Newcastle down to 10 men with
Fabricio Coloccini sent off as a result. Then a goal from
Billy Jones and a
Steven Fletcher volley sealed the win. With Sunderland having been relegated to the third tier of English football in 2018, they became eligible for the
EFL Trophy, which also included underage teams of Premier League clubs such as Newcastle. Sunderland's first team met Newcastle's
Under-21s in the
2018–19 competition, winning 4–0; due to the local interest this match attracted a crowd of over 16,000, far above the average for the competition, but is not counted towards statistics relating to the derby (Sunderland went on to reach
the final but lost to
Portsmouth on penalties). Newcastle faced Sunderland away in the FA Cup on 6 January 2024, the first derby since 2016. Newcastle won that match 3–0, securing a first away win over their rivals since 2011. On 13 October 2024,
Sunderland A.F.C. Women and
Newcastle United W.F.C. played each other in the
Women's Championship for the first time at the
Stadium of Light, setting a new attendance record of 15,387 for the league in doing so. The previous record attendance for the Women's Championship had been 11,137, set in a match played in 2022. On 24 May 2025, Sunderland defeated
Sheffield United 2–1 at Wembley Stadium in the
Championship play-off final to win promotion to the
Premier League for the first time since
2017. Sunderland's victory confirmed that the Tyne-Wear derby returned to the English top-flight for the first time since the
2015–16 season. The two sides would first meet again in the Premier League on 14 December 2025. Sunderland defeated Newcastle 1–0 at home after Newcastle striker
Nick Woltemade scored an own goal. The most recent meeting between the two sides was played on 22 March 2026 in the Premier League. Sunderland would end up beating Newcastle 1-2 at St. James’ Park to do the league double over Newcastle for the first time since the
2013–14 season. ==Hooliganism and violence==