Read Bang!: A History of Britain in the 1980s Online

Authors: Graham Stewart

Tags: #History

Bang!: A History of Britain in the 1980s (95 page)

SPORT

BBC SPORTS PERSONALITY OF THE YEAR

 

1980

Robin Cousins (figure skater)

1981

Ian Botham (cricketer)

1982

Daley Thompson (decathlete)

1983

Steve Cram (middle-distance runner)

1984

Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean (figure skaters)

1985

Barry McGuigan (boxer)

1986

Nigel Mansell (Formula 1 racing driver)

1987

Fatima Whitbread (javelin thrower)

1988

Steve Davis (snooker player)

1989

Nick Faldo (golfer)

FOOTBALL: UK TEAMS IN THE WORLD CUP

1982 in Spain

England eliminated (on points difference) in the second round: W 3, D 2, L 0

Northern Ireland eliminated in the second round: W 1, D 3, L 1

Scotland eliminated in the first round (group stage): W 1, D 1, L 1

Wales did not qualify

1986 in Mexico

England eliminated in the quarter-finals (Argentina 2, England 1): W 2, D 1, L 2

Northern Ireland eliminated in the first round (group stage): W 0, D 1, L 2

Scotland eliminated in the first round (group stage): W 0, D 1, L 2

Wales did not qualify

FOOTBALL: FIRST DIVISION CHAMPIONS

FOOTBALL: SCOTTISH PREMIER LEAGUE CHAMPIONS

CRICKET: THE ASHES

 

1981

England retained the Ashes, winning 3-1 (2 drawn), held in England

1982/3

Australia won back the Ashes, winning 2-1 (2 drawn), held in Australia

1985

England won back the Ashes, winning 3-1 (2 drawn), held in England

1986/7

England retained the Ashes, winning 2-1 (2 drawn), held in Australia

1989

Australia won back the Ashes, winning 4-0 (2 drawn), held in England

RUGBY: 5 NATIONS WINNERS

 

1980 
England (Grand Slam)

1985 
Ireland (Triple Crown)

1981 
France (Grand Slam)

1986 
France and Scotland

1982 
Ireland (Triple Crown)

1987 
France (Grand Slam)

1983 
France and Ireland

1988 
France and Wales (Triple Crown)

1984 
Scotland (Grand Slam)

1989 
France

TENNIS: FURTHEST PROGRESS OF BRITISH PLAYERS AT THE WIMBLEDON CHAMPIONSHIPS

Men’s Singles

 

1980

Second Round (Mark Cox, Andrew Jarrett, Buster Mottram)

1981

Second Round (John Feaver, John Lloyd, Buster Mottram)

1982

Fourth Round (Buster Mottram)

1983

Second Round (Stuart Bale, Andrew Jarrett)

1984

Third Round (John Lloyd)

1985

Third Round (John Lloyd)

1986

Second Round (Stephen Botfield, Andrew Castle, Colin Dowdeswell, Nick Fulwood)

1987

Third Round (Jeremy Bates)

1988

Second Round (Jeremy Bates, Stephen Botfield)

1989

Third Round (Nick Fulwood)

Ladies’ Singles

 

1980

Fourth Round (Virginia Wade)

1981

Fourth Round (Anne Hobbs, Jo Durie)

1982

Second Round (Anne Hobbs, Virginia Wade)

1983

Quarter-Finals (Virginia Wade)

1984

Quarter-Finals (Jo Durie)

1985

Fourth Round (Jo Durie)

1986

Third Round (Jo Durie, Anne Hobbs)

1987

Third Round (Jo Durie)

1988

Third Round (Julie Salmon)

1989

Third Round (Anne Hobbs)

OLYMPIC GAMES: BRITISH GOLD MEDAL WINNERS

1980 Moscow
(5 gold medals)

Sebastian Coe (1,500 metres)

Duncan Goodhew (100 metres breaststroke)

Steve Ovett (800 metres)

Daley Thompson (decathalon)

Alan Wells (100 metres)

1984 Los Angeles
(5 gold medals)

Sebastian Coe (1,500 metres)

Malcolm Cooper (shooting: rifle)

Andrew Holmes, Steven Redgrave, Martin Cross, Richard Budgett, Adrian Ellison (rowing: coxed fours)

Daley Thompson (decathalon)

Tessa Sanderson (javelin)

1988 Seoul
(5 gold medals)

Malcolm Cooper (shooting: rifle)

GB team (men’s hockey)

Andrew Holmes and Steven Redgrave (rowing: coxless pairs)

Michael McIntyre and Bryn Vaile (sailing: star class keelboat)

Adrian Moorhouse (100 metres breaststroke)

NOTES

Introduction

1
 Charles Moore,
Sunday Telegraph
, 8 March 2008.

Chapter 1

1
 In September 1978, Peter Jenkins went so far as to write in the
Guardian
that Britain could prove to be the first country to
make ‘the journey from developed to under-developed’.

2
 ‘The Medium Term Assessment’, memorandum by Gavyn Davies, 17 June 1977, in Kenneth O. Morgan,
Callaghan, A Life
(1997), p. 576.

3
 While at Upper Clayhill, Callaghan kept to a strict early morning routine of patrolling around his farm. Morgan,
Callaghan
, p.
375.

4
 MORI’s private polling on 4 September 1978 suggested the Tories were on 47 per cent and Labour on 45 per cent (Morgan,
Callaghan
, p. 638). The following month, Gallup had Labour on 47.5 per cent and the Conservatives on 42 per cent, and in November, Labour on 48 per cent and the Conservatives on 43 per
cent.

5
 Morgan,
Callaghan
, pp. 639–40.

6
 Lady Callaghan obituary,
Daily Telegraph
, 17 March 2005.

7
 Morgan,
Callaghan
, p. 641.

8
 Callaghan to Cledwyn Hughes, 5 April 1976, in Morgan,
Callaghan
, p. 474.

9
 Quoted in Morgan,
Callaghan
, p. 320; see also Morgan,
Callaghan
, pp. 760–1.

10
 Morgan,
Callaghan
, pp. 318–22.

11
 BBC news footage of Callaghan’s speech to the TUC conference, 5 September 1978.

12
 
The Times
, 6 September 1978.

13
 Cabinet Papers, 7 September 1978 (
The Times
, 1 January 2009).

14
 David Steel, interviewed for
The Night the Government Fell: A Parliamentary Coup
, broadcast on BBC Parliament channel, 28
March 2009.

15
 Edmund Dell,
The Chancellors
(1996), p. 390.

16
 National Archives; quoted in ‘Despot Planned Save Britain Fund’, BBC News website, 1 January 2005.

17
 John Campbell,
Edward Heath, A Biography
(1993), p. 589.

18
 ‘Goodbye Great Britain’,
Wall Street Journal
, 29 April 1975; quoted in Kathleen Burk and Alec Cairncross,
Goodbye, Great Britain: The 1976 IMF Crisis
(1992), p. xiv.

19
 Transcript of conversation between Henry Kissinger and Gerald Ford, 8 January 1975, Ford Library, copy in Margaret Thatcher
Foundation.

20
 To the fore was David Stirling, the war hero and founder of the SAS, who established GB75, which he called ‘an organisation
of apprehensive patriots’ aiming to prevent the constitution’s subversion by the far left.

21
 Nicholas Faith,
A Very Different Country: A Typically English Revolution
(2002), p. 195.

22
 Susan Crosland,
Tony Crosland
(1982), p. 378.

23
 Callaghan’s speech to the Labour Party conference, 28 September 1976; quoted in Dell,
The Chancellors
, p. 427.

24
 The M3 measure of the money supply averaged 12 per cent growth between 1976 and 1979. It was 10 per cent in 1975–6. Peter
Clarke,
Hope and Glory
(1996), p. 351.

25
 Dell,
The Chancellors
, p. 437.

26
 
The Times
, 31 December 1976.

27
 Paul Ormerod, ‘Incomes Policy’, in M. J. Artis and David Cobham,
Labour’s Economic
Policies
1974–79
(1991), p. 56.

28
 Gallup tracked support of the two main parties as follows:

 

 

29
 Lipsey to Callaghan, Cabinet Papers, 5 October 1978 (
The Times
, 1 January 2009).

30
 Jack Jones obituary,
The Times
, 23 April 2009.

31
 The claim was made by Oleg Gordievsky, the KGB’s bureau chief in London between 1982 and 1985, who stated he had paid Jones
for information and ‘had the pleasure of reading volumes of his files which were kept at the British department of the KGB until 1985 when they were transferred to the archives’.
Gordievsky (who defected in 1985) claimed that Jones, given the codid ‘Dream’, was a ‘very disciplined, useful agent’ and that Jones’s wife had been a Comintern
agent since the mid-1930s. Jack Jones obituary,
Daily Telegraph
, 22 April 2009; Oleg Gordievsky, letter to the editor,
Daily Telegraph
, 28 April 2009.

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