23 September 1986. Highfield Road. League Cup second round, first leg. Coventry beat Rotherham 3-2. Two weeks later, away leg, 1-0. Aggregate 4-2, through. Nobody knows this is the squad that will lift the FA Cup at Wembley in May. They're a top-flight club doing a routine cup tie against a Third Division side in the autumn.
9 November 2016. Wycombe Wanderers vs Coventry City. Adams Park, away. EFL Trophy group stage. Nine hundred and twelve people in a ten-thousand-seat stadium. The Trophy that year had been opened to Premier League and Championship under-twenty-three sides for the first time, was unpopular, and the gates collapsed. Nobody pretends this is the squad that will lift a trophy at Wembley in April. They're a third-tier club doing a controversial group-stage fixture, on the road, in front of a three-figure crowd.
Same club. Same badge. Same colour. Same destination, eventually. Almost nothing else in common.
Danny and Sarah open both cup roads at the same time. They start with the fixture list as narrative — what the schedule actually said about who mattered. They sit with the Sillett-Curtis benchmark — the impossible standard every Coventry manager since has been measured against — and ask whether it's fair. They put September 1986 next to September 2016 and find a side under Mowbray with ten league games, no wins, six draws, four losses — gone by 29 September. They walk Cyrille Regis through carefully — the senior pro who anchored 86/87, signed from West Brom in October 1984, one third of the Three Degrees — and ask who the equivalent was in 2016 (mostly: there wasn't one).
And they put both grounds side by side. Danny on Hillfields in 1986 — Primrose Hill Street into King Richard Street into Thackhall Street, terraced car-workers' houses end-to-end, the Mercers Arms and the Hand and Heart at lunchtime, the away coaches at the Coach and Horses. The football club, as Danny puts it, structurally downstream of the factory. By 2016 the Ricoh is a thirty-two-thousand-seater averaging nine thousand — twenty-three thousand empty seats every fortnight — and the chants you hear in the autumn aren't the Sky Blue Song; they're anti-SISU, directed up at the boardroom, at Joy Seppala, at Tim Fisher.
And underneath: the question of what a draw means. A draw in 1986 was a deposit — point in the bank, you'd take it and use it later. A draw in 2016 was a rescue — you'd held on for a draw. Same scoreline, different fact about the club's place in the world.
The cup roads end the same way. Three-two over Tottenham at Wembley in May 1987. Two-one over Oxford at Wembley in April 2017. Different scores, same shape — a narrow Coventry win at Wembley over a team they weren't favourite against. The ladder, again, inverted: Coventry win things when the table is at its worst.
In this episode:
- The two cup roads — League Cup '86 then FA Cup '87, EFL Trophy '16/17 — opened in parallel
- The Sillett-Curtis benchmark, and why no manager since has been able to repeat it
- Cyrille Regis as the spine of the 86/87 squad
- September 1986 vs September 2016 — the form tables that decided everything
- Tony Mowbray's first ten league games: no wins, six draws, four losses, gone by 29 September
- The Bigirimana arc — Coventry academy, Newcastle, back for 2016/17, Motherwell after the season
- Highfield Road as woven into the city's Saturday vs the Ricoh as a separate appointment, 32k seats and 23k empty
- The chants of autumn 2016: not the Sky Blue Song, anti-SISU, directed up at the boardroom
- The Stratford Town night — a non-league side knocking Coventry out of a regional cup in front of a three-figure attendance
- A draw was a deposit. A draw was a rescue. Same scoreline, different fact.
Chapters:
Coming up:
- Ep 3 — A City and Its Sound. The Specials, Two Tone, and the FA Cup third round vs Bolton on a frozen Highfield Road pitch.
- Ep 4 — Mowbray gone, the Russell Slade interregnum, Mark Robins back. Three managers in seven months.
- Ep 5 — Player profiles: Houchen, Bennett, and the squad behind the squad.
Sources — The Guardian archive, Wikipedia, and Perplexity AI. Show notes, transcripts and the full episode archive at skybluetimemachine.com.
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