Episode 6 Wrighty & Brighty — Steve Coppell, Ian Wright, and the Day Crystal Palace Nearly Won the FA Cup Duration: 30 minutes (1981–1991)
Steve Coppell arrived at Crystal Palace in 1984 with no managerial experience and a set of weightlifting equipment. Over the next decade he built something that had never existed at the club before: a team with a genuine identity, a style of play, and two strikers — Ian Wright and Mark Bright — who belonged in any company in English football.
This episode covers the Coppell years in full: the unlikely survival battles, the FA Cup run of 1990 that took Palace to Wembley to face Manchester United, the semi-final in which they came back from three-nil down against Liverpool, and the final itself — a match Crystal Palace came within nine minutes of winning, before a Wembley replay that went the other way. It also covers the nine-nil humiliation at Liverpool that preceded all of it, and what happened when Ian Wright — the greatest player the club had produced — left for Arsenal and took a little of the light with him.
Player of the Era: Ian Wright — the striker from Brockley who joined Crystal Palace from non-league football at twenty-one and became, briefly, the best forward in the country.
Duration: 30 minutes
Research Sources
Steve Coppell (Wikipedia) — appointment details, playing career cut short by knee injury, age at appointment (28 years 10 months), Ian Wright discovery, FA Cup final 1990, career record at Palace.
Crystal Palace FC official website — 'OTD: 41 years to the day that Coppell became gaffer' (June 2025); '41 years to the day'; 'Back in 1989: Three-goal comeback sees Palace promoted in style'; 'Mark Bright vividly describes 89 promotion in autobiography'; 'OTD: Wright & Bright turn play-off semi-final around'; 'Value for money: How Coppell and Noades built Palace's most successful squad'; 'We Were There: The inside story of the 1990 FA Cup semi-final'.
Ian Wright (Wikipedia) — full career biography; Sunday league years with Ten-em-Bee; Greenwich Borough; Billy Smith tip-off; trial at Palace; August 1985 signing; fee described as set of weightlifting equipment.
Arsenal.com — 'How a flower seller helped Ian Wright turn pro' — Billy Smith's role; Coppell's quote to Noades.
Mark Bright (Wikipedia/Grokipedia) — born Stoke-on-Trent; adopted; Port Vale and Leicester career; signed November 1986 for £75,000; 113 goals in 286 appearances.
Liverpool FC History — 1990 FA Cup semi-final scoreline: Rush 14', Bright 46', O'Reilly 70', McMahon 81', Barnes 83' pen, Gray 88', Pardew 109'. Palace starting XI confirmed.
1990 FA Cup final (Wikipedia) — scoreline: O'Reilly 17', Robson 35', Hughes 69', Wright 72', Wright 79', Hughes 92'. Replay: Lee Martin. Ferguson's decision to drop Jim Leighton. Les Sealey.
1989-90 FA Cup (Wikipedia) — Palace's route; semi-final details; first season both semis televised live in full.
Ron Noades (Wikipedia) — takeover January 1981; club debt £1.75m; manager appointments; Mullery; Coppell appointment; "selling a player each month."
Crystal Palace FC official website — 'Remembering Noades' impact on 40-year anniversary' — Alan Mullery appointment, crowd boycott detail.