After Tony Di Bart and Stiltskin, we smash one in at the near post to complete a hattrick of long-forgotten number ones…
Come On You Reds, by The Manchester United Football Squad (their 1st and only #1)
2 weeks, from 15th – 29th May 1994
A song featuring Britain’s most popular football team, and one of our longest-lasting rock acts, shouldn’t necessarily be consigned to the history books. And yet we’re probably all glad that this record never became as ubiquitous as some football songs. Because, even against the low bar set by most singing footballers, it’s pretty crap.
All the classic tropes are there. Piped-in crowd noises, commentary clips (‘Which number one single features Jonathon Pearce?’ would make a great pub quiz question), athletes looking far outside their comfort zones sharing a microphone in the video, lyrics that were probably scribbled out on the back of a beer mat: Come on you reds, Come on you reds, Just keep your bottle and use your heads… One verse, in fact, is literally just the team sheet: Robson, Kanchelskis and Giggs…
But away from all that, this is actually a fairly interesting number one. It is, to start with, Status Quo’s lost chart-topper. The records show that they have just the one – 1975’s ‘Down, Down’ – but this record was written and produced by the band, and is based on their 1988 hit ‘Burning Bridges’ (the ‘jig’ portion of which was in turn based on an old folk song called ‘Darby Kelly’). That isn’t one of my favourite Quo songs; but one of the few things that could have redeemed this tripe was if they had received a credit on the sleeve.
In footballing terms, it’s also a bit of a time capsule. It was released in advance of Utd’s FA Cup final against Chelsea (who released their own record for the game, making #23), and the idea that reaching the FA Cup final would merit a song seems bizarre in the modern football world. In fact, teams don’t record songs any more. No modern Premier League player would be seen dead singing along to cheesy lyrics written by some crusty old rockers. Which is both a slightly sad thing, and a great relief.
There have of course been two football number ones before this (‘Back Home’ and ‘World in Motion’) and a few more to come. But they are all songs about England, released ahead of World Cups and European Championships, with a whole country ready and willing to buy the record. ‘Come on You Reds’ is the only #1 by a club side, and they followed it up with two #6 hits for the ’95 and ’96 finals. Yes, not only did Man Utd dominate football in the nineties, they dominated the charts. No wonder we all hate them…
In case anyone is interested, the next biggest football club hits are Chelsea’s ‘Blue Is the Colour’ (#5 in 1972), Spurs’ ‘Ossie’s Dream’ (#5 in 1981), and Liverpool’s legendary ‘Anfield Rap’ (#3 in 1988). Back in the charts of 1994 though, and I’d have to say that the spring of this year has thrown up a run of fairly flash-in-the-pan, forgotten hits: ‘Doop’, ‘The Real Thing’, ‘Inside’, and now this. Up next, however, is a song that stayed at the top so long we had no choice but to remember every note…
(This video sadly cuts the last thirty seconds off the song… But you’ll have gotten the gist by then… It also features footage of the 1994 FA Cup final, suggesting it was produced after the record had made #1.)


I’ve never been interested in sport of any kind and just let football records pass me by, I’m afraid. It rather looks as if this has been listed everywhere by Man Utd FS without a co-credit to Quo, and I never see listed in the chart stats lists ‘Status Quo 1 No 1 + 1 with Man Utd’, which makes me wonder if they weren’t overkeen as being held partly responsible for it after all. I did love the original ‘Burning Bridges’, and if anything I think the folksy unplugged version with fiddles and accordion on ‘Aquostic’ is even better – arguably one of the best tracks they ever did.
I’m not sure if they were embarrassed by it, as they appear in the video with the players and had a hand in re-writing the lyrics. And as much as I do like Status Quo, it wouldn’t be the only questionable artistic decision they’ve made in their long history…
I have no clue about the sport (I’m a baseball guy) but the song fits being a sports song.
As with all non-national football team songs, just no. Unless the title of the song is Blue Is The Colour, and it dates from 1972, and was written by Daniel Boone just don’t do it! No good will come of it…!
Not even the Anfield Rap….??? I hadn’t actually heard Blue Is the Colour before, so I just gave it a listen. It’s OK, like ‘Back Home’ Pt II, though I had no idea it was written by Daniel Boone!
Not even the Anfield Rap I’m afraid 🙂 I can tolerate Nice One Cyril under the name Cockerel Chorus from 1973, though, it’s mildly amusing… 🙂