Ten years ago today...Ian Holloway's Blackpool thrash Wigan Athletic in dream Premier League debut

It’s 10 years since Blackpool graced the Premier League, and having retold the story of the club’s climb to the top-flight in recent months it’s time to focus on that sensational season in the big-time.
It's 10 years since Blackpool make their dream Premier League debutIt's 10 years since Blackpool make their dream Premier League debut
It's 10 years since Blackpool make their dream Premier League debut
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And few matches were more magical than the opener as Blackpool won 4-0 at Wigan on August 14, 2010.

Our weekly re-run of STEVE CANAVAN’S match reports begins with the day which saw the Seasiders briefly reign supreme as the top club in the land....

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I’ll be honest, of all the chants I expected Blackpool fans to sing on the opening day, “ We want five” wasn’t one of them.

I also didn’t think I’d ever spend a Saturday night sipping a cup of carrot and coriander soup while watching Alan Hansen drool over the Seasiders on Match of the Day.

“Amazing performance, amazing result, amazing story!” All right Al, calm down, there are still 37 games to go, son.

If only West Brom were a bit better at the back, Blackpool fans the world over could have spent the next five days dreamily staring at the Premier League table, their boys perched on top, staring down at all the other lesser clubs in England.

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Alas Chelsea have that honour, for the time being at least…

This really is an astonishing story, that seems to get a little more unbelievable and far-fetched with every passing week.

There was a day not too long back, lest we forget, when Seasiders fans used to cross their fingers and hope to get a Premier League club in the second round of the Carling Cup.

On the rare occasions it happened, it was often the highlight of an otherwise dismal season. Now Pool are not only members of the footballing elite themselves but are dishing out hammerings.

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OK, so Wigan aren’t perhaps an accurate measure of the tests the top division will provide over the next nine months. But what a start to life back in the top flight.

Pool were 100/ 1 with the bookies to win 4-0. Mind you, what do they know? They thought the club would be in League One this season.

But here’s the thing: terrific scoreline as it was, the winning margin could have been doubled. Gary TaylorFletcher had a perfectly legitimate goal chalked off and Brett Ormerod, Jason Euell and Elliot Grandin all had good chances to add to the tally.

The 4,200 visiting fans filling the North Stand at Wigan were a sight to behold. This was their day, especially the older generation, who have followed this once-great club through thin and thin, and suffered throughout the dismal 1980s and 90s as the Seasiders lurched from one ordinary result to the next, not to mention skirting with financial disaster on more than one occasion.

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No-one enjoyed the proceedings more than Jimmy Armfield, doing his best to stay vaguely objective in the Radio 5Live commentary box but unable to hide his sheer joy at the sight of his beloved Tangerines returning to the big time with such a bang.

He was in the starting line-up the last time Pool stepped out at the highest level, back in 1971. He probably never thought he’d see the day when they returned, and yet here he was, watching it unfold.

The afternoon would have been great no matter what the score. So to actually win, and win at a canter … incredible.

Credit to the home fans, though. The majority in the main stand showed great dignity at the end as they stayed to applaud Charlie Adam and his colleagues off the park. It is always a hairs on the back of the neck moment when opposition fans applaud your team.

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At the end, with news seeping through that Pool were top of the table, an air of disbelief hung inside the stadium.

As I waited by the side of the pitch to congratulate and interview the players, each one had a kind of ‘ pinch me’ look on his face. It was such a fine moment, even the Wonga logo looked quite attractive. Actually, on second thoughts…

I can imagine supporters of Crewe, Bristol City and Hibernian doing a double-take when the result came through. Each of those clubs has beaten Pool in the last few weeks, during a horrid pre-season in which little went to plan and the players have been cheesed off about not receiving their promotion bonus.

But the tide began to turn with an encouraging performance against Hibs. And the six new players signed during the week gave the existing squad an essential morale boost, just in the nick of time.

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It also gave Holloway the options he so desperately needed. He could bring in Marlon Harewood and Elliot Grandin up front and select Craig Cathcart at the heart of the back four. The newcomers were great.

Harewood looked a little rusty early on but scored twice, set up Taylor-Fletcher’s goal and will improve mightily the more he plays.

Grandin was just terrific. He has power, skill and pace – the three ingredients any good footballer needs.

There was one turn on the halfway line and dash towards goal that was simply poetry in motion. “ He’s like a fast Wes,” one Pool fan commented. Not far off.

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Then there was Cathcart, still a kid in footballing terms but a man on the pitch. He looks as if he has bags of potential and is strong and brave in the tackle, just the type of player the Seasiders need.

Even the new lads who came off the bench, Ludovic Sylvestre and Chris Basham, looked impressive.

Sylvestre made plenty of good contributions in his half hour, while Basham flung himself all over the pitch in a bid to impress.

But the most credit must go the lads who were already here. Eight of the 11 played at Wembley and they remain the core of the club. Gary TaylorFletcher, Ian Evatt, Alex Baptiste, Stephen Crainey, Brett Ormerod… all superb. David Vaughan was as assured and as tidy as ever; Charlie Adam was involved in everything good; Matt Gilks made two good stops.

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It was just a shame that Keith Southern was stuck in the press box doing radio work. If there was one person who deserved to start Pool’s first ever Premier League game it was Southern.

Alas, a knee injury put paid to that but he’ll be back before too long. As the game’s been on Match of the Day, Sky Sports, ESPN, the Fox Channel, probably even CBeebies, the action doesn’t need much explaining.

Taylor-Fletcher was the man who wrote himself into the history books as Pool’s first ever Premier League goalscorer. He struck on 16 minutes, Adam freeing Harewood and the big man’s cross was bundled in at the back post by Taylor-Fletcher.

The £90,000 handed to Hudders eld for GTF’s services there years ago was pretty tidy business. Ormerod had miskicked in front of goal prior to that and TaylorFletcher had a goal wrongly chalked off for offside on 20 minutes.

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Harewood was put through but dallied too long. No matter, Pool were soon two ahead. It was that man Harewood who scored, jumping to his feet after being challenged, selling a defender a nice dummy and shooting from 20 yards.

Chris Kirkland, at one time rated as England’s next great goalkeeper, made a right hash of it, the ball squirming through his grasp.

The shot moved a little in the air but it was still poor keeping.

Harewood followed up to score a third two minutes before the break – in the right place at the right time after Kirkland had done well to stop a shot from the lively Grandin.

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Pool fans were in dreamland but they had chance to catch their breath during a calmer, less frantic second period.

There was a bonus straight after the break when Wigan full-back Steve Gohouri had a header ruled out for offside. Like Taylor-Fletcher’s earlier effort, it should have stood.

It didn’t and any thoughts of a comeback evaporated. Instead Pool controlled the game, and played sensible and effective football.

Just to add insult to Wigan’s injury, the Seasiders knocked in a fourth, Alex Baptiste more than a little shocked to discover the pretty awful cross he sent into the box had ended up in the back of the net.

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Thanks once again to Mr Kirkland for that one – he really is a most generous keeper.

The sea of tangerine behind the goal went wild. They’ve been rather spoilt of late – the last three away games have been the seven-goal thriller at Nottingham Forest, Wembley and this. Blimey, to think we once got excited at a victory in the quarter-finals of the LDV Vans Trophy North section.

Holloway and his players were cheered from the pitch like kings. It is 13 years since a promoted team won on the opening day and got relegated that season.

In other words, this bodes well – the trick is now to keep it up. That won’t be easy at Arsenal on Saturday but it’s not the games against the big boys that are important. Enjoy those days, but it’s the matches against teams in the bottom half that will decide Pool’s fate.

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That’s why beating Wigan is such a big deal and gets them off to a flier. But don’t worry about any of that at the moment. Get your hands on a copy of the Premier League table, frame it and stick it on the lounge wall. These are heady times indeed and the party’s only just begun.

Blackpool: Gilks, Baptiste, Evatt, Cathcart, Crainey, Vaughan, Adam, Grandin, Taylor-Fletcher (Euell 76), Ormerod (Sylvestre 59), Harewood (Basham 60)