On This Day (19 April 1975): Sunderland Show Fans The Future!
As Sunderland continued their post-1973 transition, the signs were promising as new stars emerged!
Pop has a pop! On 19 April 1976, Sunderland AFC clinched only their second ever promotion, courtesy of a 2-1 win over Bolton Wanderers . It was an occasion that some had feared would never come, such was our mediocre league form in the seasons that immediately followed relegation in 1970, but FA Cup success under Bob Stokoe in 1973 brought new hope and whilst there was to be a couple of โso near, yet so farโ episodes thereafter, things finally fell into place on the back of a fantastic home record.
Unbeaten at Roker Park in the league during 1975/1976, one of the quirks of the campaign was that the only two teams able to come away with anything, in the shape of hard-fought 1-1 draws were the two Bristol clubs โ Rovers and City. It was somewhat ironic, therefore, that exactly a year before promotion was confirmed the latter had been the final visitors to Wearside for 1974/1975, a season that gave a good indication that the patience of the supporters was close to being rewarded. The Lads were in the race throughout but their progress was somewhat hampered by a series of draws.
Goals from Viv Busby that brought a home loss to mid-table Fulham at the end of February โ the final league reverse in SR6 for 17 months โ were to prove costly but there was still a chance of going up when the Robins arrived for the penultimate fixture. Going up against the visitors would be Dave Watson and Bobby Kerr โ both of whom had been injury doubts in the build-up โ plus Rod Belfitt, who was brought into the starting eleven due to Vic Halom suffering from a knee complaint. Heavy rain earlier in the day meant that a slick surface ideal for passing football greeted the two sides and after losing the toss, Alan Dickโs men were invited to attack the Fulwell End in the first half โ yet most of the early action was down at the other end.
Joe Bolton was the first to threaten for Sunderland with a long-range attempt that flew just wide, and he would end the half with an ever better shot to nudge the hosts ahead. In between those incidents both Pop Robson and Belfitt had chances blocked, whilst Cityโs best opening led to Ivor Emanuel striking the base of the post. Whereas the ball bounced out to safety that time, Bolton, whoโd picked the ball up and driven towards goal from deep, then saw his long-range blast clip the woodwork and go into the net.