Tudor made a name for himself by producing and hosting a documentary about Stanley's 1973-74 season, which simultaneously saw them relegated from the Third Division with a record low points total, and yet getting to and winning that year's FA Cup final.
Despite Stanley's hopeless league form, they manage to beat fellow Third Division strugglers Southport in the FA Cup, and then non-league Pontefract Athletic, despite the latter's 45-degree sloping pitch.
When the film presentation resumes, it shows Stanley beating Chelsea in the fifth round, before recording suspicious victories against Hull City, where the Hull players suddenly become scared of the ball after Tudor arranges for a hypnotist to visit them, and then Leicester City, thanks in equal parts to a dazzling performance by a mysterious new player called Brian Parkinson (who is brought in at Tudor's recommendation after Hardy is pranked into submitting a transfer request, causing Masson to drop him from the team), and the referee demonstrating blatant bias against Leicester.
After the film ends, Tonker reveals the additional footage, showing that Tudor bribed the referee in the Leicester match, illegally brought Brian Parkinson (actually an obscure member of Brazil's 1970 World Cup squad named Nero) into the country, and then secretly exploited a loophole in the leasehold to buy out Stanley's stadium, which he then demolished and replaced with a hotel, leading to Stanley going out of business before the 1974-75 season.
Tudor confesses to his various misdeeds, but says that the only matches he actually played a part in rigging were the ones against Hull and Leicester, revealing that it was actually Leeds who bribed the referee in the cup final, and yet still lost.