Allow us to set the scene: Palace in trouble, two goals down – up pop Mark Bright and Ian Wright to save the day. It was to become a familiar story in the following years, but on this day (15th November) in 1986, the iconic strike partnership began terrorising defenders for the very first time.
Steve Coppell’s Palace were taking on Ipswich at Selhurst Park, and things were not going to plan, 2-0 down heading towards half-time.
New signing Bright was making his debut for the club, and had hoped to do so in more felicitous circumstances. A Kevin Wilson double had stunned the home supporters – but soon they were in full voice once more.
Bright gave Palace a way back into the game, marking his debut with a goal just before the break. Ipswich added a third, before Kevin Taylor notched one back for the Eagles.
Then, in the final minute, up stepped Ian Wright to score a vital equaliser – and add his name alongside Bright’s on the scoresheet.
The first of many occasions.
When it came to strike partnerships, there were all the combinations. The little and large: Jermain Defoe and Peter Crouch spring to mind. The nippy runner and the powerful finisher. The fast and the furious: step up Carlos Tevez and Wayne Rooney.
But at Crystal Palace, we were privileged to watch one of the very best at work. Their names even rhymed, for goodness' sake; it was just meant to be. Wright, Bright and an absolute shedload of goals.
Goals of all types too. Long-range screamers to perfectly timed tap-ins; wonderfully crafted openers to scrambled home equalisers; powerful headers to intricate lobs. Palace’s two No 9s could do it all.
Their stories could not be more different – geographically at least. Bright, born in Stoke-on-Trent, played his early football for non-league side Leek Town before joining Port Vale and Leicester City.
Gary Lineker had just left the latter, allowing a young Bright to establish himself in the first-team and earn a £75,000 move to Crystal Palace. Talk about a bargain.





