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2001-02 in English football

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The 2001-2002 season was the 122nd season of competitive football in England.


Contents

[edit] Events

[edit] Dario reaches managerial milestone

On November 20 2001, Dario Gradi took charge of his 1,000 competitive game in charge of Crewe Alexandra in Division One. Gradi had arrived at Crewe in June 1983, and he reached this landmark just four months into a season which had already seen a total of more than 20 managerial changes in the Premiership, Division One, Division Two and Division Three. Crewe ended the season by being relegated to Division Two but the club's directors showed no intention of parting company with the longest-serving manager at any Football League club.

[edit] Wimbledon get go-ahead for Milton Keynes move

Just after the end of the Division one season, a three-man panel of The Football Association gave permission for Wimbledon F.C. to move from their historic South London home to Milton Keynes. The move sparked outrage among Wimbledon supporters, who formed their own club - AFC Wimbledon - in response to the controversial plans of chairman Charles Koppel.

[edit] Arsenal cruise to title glory

In one of the most closely-fought Premiership title races for years, Arsenal cruised to title glory at the end of an outstanding season. They won their final 13 Premiership fixtures, scored in all 38 Premiership games and were unbeaten on their Premiership travels. Their crown was won in the penultimate game of the season when they beat defending champions Manchester United 1-0 at Old Trafford. Four days earlier they had also won the F.A Cup with a 2-0 victory over Chelsea at the Millennium Stadium.

[edit] Albion and Birmingham back in the big time

West Bromwich Albion and Birmingham City, who had both been outside the top division since 1986, were finally promoted back to the top division with Albion as Division One runners-up and Birmingham as playoff winners. In an ironic twist, Albion had overtaken near neighbours Wolves in the race for the run for second place by winning seven of their final nine league games. Birmingham's triumph was sealed by a penalty-shoot out win over Norwich at the Millennium Stadium. They followed Manchester City, managed by Kevin Keegan, into the Premiership.

[edit] Sir Alex puts off his retirement

Sir Alex Ferguson announced in February that he would be postponing his retirement as Manchester United manager by at least three more seasons after he signed a new contract as manager. The news came just after United completed an impressive revival in the Premiership which saw them rise from ninth to first in the space of two months.

On 8th December, United stood ninth in the Premiership - 11 points behind Liverpool, who had a game in hand - and had lost six of their seven previous games. Even a UEFA Cup place was now looking beyond reach. But a nine-match winning run saw United cruise to the top of the Premiership and they were soon challenging a three-horse race with Liverpool and Arsenal. They remained in the title race until the penultimate game of the season, when they lost 1-0 at home to Arsenal and surrendered the title crown to their opponents.

United's failure was largely put down to the inability to find a suitable replacement for Jaap Stam, the brilliant Dutch central defender who had been sold to Lazio for £16.25million just after the start of the season. Another disappointment was the failure of Juan Sebastián Verón, at £28.1million the most expensive player ever to sign for an English club, to live up to his hefty price tag. On a positive note, Dutch striker Ruud van Nistelrooy lived up to his £19million price tag by scoring 34 goals in all competitions during his first season at Old Trafford.

After the season was over, rumours began to circulate that Sir Alex was about to break the English transfer record once again and bring in Leeds United central defender Rio Ferdinand, in hope that his side would return to their winning ways in 2002-03.....

[edit] ITV Digital crisis plunges league clubs into turmoil

The collapse of debt-ridden ITV Digital in May 2002 plunged many Football League clubs into turmoil. The likes of Bradford City, Nottingham Forest, Watford, Barnsley, Lincoln City and Port Vale filed for administration, fearful that the drastic loss of revenue would put them out of business.

Of all the troubled clubs, Bradford City's situation was the most precarious. The West Yorkshire club had debts of £36million and had failed to meet a deadline for a takeover deal. It seemed inevitable that the Bantams, who had gone into liquidation in 1983, would endure a total collapse and lose their place in the Football League. Their only hope was for the Football League to ignore their financial plight and allow them a place in Division One for the 2002-03 season....

[edit] Ipswich fall from grace

A year after qualifying for the UEFA Cup and earning George Burley the Manager of the Year award, Ipswich Town dropped back into Division One. The Suffolk side had looked doomed by Christmas after winning just one of their first 18 Premiership games. Then came a turnaround in form which saw them win seven out of eight fixtures and climb to 12th place, suggesting that they were safe. But another decline set in, and this time Ipswich were unable to halt it. Their relegation was confirmed with a 5-0 defeat away to runners-up Liverpool on the final day of the season.

Joining Ipswich in Division One would be already doomed Derby County and Leicester City, both going down after six seasons in the Premiership - the last of which had seen three different men take charge of the team.

[edit] Successful managers

Arsene Wenger guided Arsenal to the Premiership title and F.A Cup double for the second time in five seasons.

Bobby Robson, 69, earned a knighthood just weeks after his Newcastle side finished fourth in the Premiership and qualified for the Champions League.

Graeme Souness marked Blackburn's return to the Premiership with a tenth-place finish in the league as well as glory in the League Cup.

Kevin Keegan won the Division One title with Manchester City to return them to the Premiership at the first time of asking.

Gary Megson's two-year revival of West Bromwich Albion was completed with a long-awaited return to the top flight of English football. Just weeks later, they were joined in the Premiership with rivals Birmingham City - who had triumphed in the playoffs under the management of Steve Bruce.

Peter Taylor's only season as Brighton manager was a great success as they topped Division Two and claimed a second successive promotion.

Alan Pardew finally made the most of Reading's impressive resources as they won promotion to Division One.

Joe Kinnear began to reverse Luton Town's decline by guiding them to promotion to Division Two.

Steve Cotterill gave Cheltenham Town their third promotion in six seasons after they won the Division Three playoffs.

Paul Sturrock guided his Plymouth Argyle side to the Division Three title, amassing a record points total on the way.

[edit] Successful players

Ruud van Nistelrooy scored more than 30 goals in all competitions during his first season with Manchester United.

Thierry Henry's 24 Premiership goals were a major factor in Arsenal's double glory.

Sol Campbell and Ashley Cole were an instrumental half of Arsenal's defence in their glorious season.

Shaun Goater's frequent goalscoring helped Manchester City win promotion to the Premiership.

Alan Shearer had another season of high scoring to get Newcastle United into the Premiership's top five for the first time since 1997.

Andy Cole scored the winning goal for Blackburn Rovers in the League Cup final just weeks after his move from Manchester United.

Darren Carter, 18, scored the winning penalty in a shoot-out after extra time to end Birmingham City's 16-year exile from the top flight of English football.

Dean Sturridge scored 23 Division One goals for Wolverhampton Wanderers, who narrowly missed out on regaining the top division place they had last occupied in 1984.

Bobby Zamora's prolific goalscoring took Brighton & Hove Albion to the Division Two title and secured their second successive promotion.

[edit] Honours

Competition Winner
FA Premier League Arsenal
FA Cup Arsenal
Worthington Cup Blackburn Rovers
Football League First Division Manchester City
Football League Second Division Brighton & Hove Albion
Football League Third Division Plymouth Argyle
Football Conference Boston United
FA Trophy Yeovil Town

[edit] English national team

Date Opposition Venue Competition Result Score England Scorers
15 August 2001Image:Flag of the Netherlands.svg NetherlandsHomeWhite Hart Lane, LondonFriendlyLost0-2
1 September 2001Image:Flag of Germany.svg GermanyAwayOlympic Stadium, MunichWorld Cup QualifierWon5-1Michael Owen (3), Steven Gerrard, Emile Heskey
5 September 2001Image:Flag of Albania.svg AlbaniaHomeSt James' Park, NewcastleWorld Cup QualifierWon2-0Michael Owen, Robbie Fowler
6 October 2001Image:Flag of Greece.svg GreeceHomeOld Trafford, ManchesterWorld Cup QualifierDrawn2-2Teddy Sheringham, David Beckham
10 November 2001Image:Flag of Sweden.svg SwedenHomeOld Trafford, ManchesterFriendlyDrawn1-1David Beckham (pen)
13 February 2002Image:Flag of the Netherlands.svg NetherlandsAwayAmsterdam ArenA, AmsterdamFriendlyDrawn1-1 Darius Vassell
27 March 2002Image:Flag of Italy.svg ItalyHomeElland Road, LeedsFriendlyLost1-2Robbie Fowler
17 April 2002Image:Flag of Paraguay.svg ParaguayHomeAnfield, LiverpoolFriendlyWon4-0Michael Owen, Danny Murphy, Darius Vassell, Celso Ayala (og)
21 May 2002Image:Flag of South Korea (bordered).svg Korea RepublicAwayJeju World Cup Stadium, SeogwipoFriendlyDrawn1-1Michael Owen
26 May 2002Image:Flag of Cameroon.svg CameroonNeutralWing Stadium, KobeFriendlyDrawn2-2Darius Vassell, Robbie Fowler
2 June 2002Image:Flag of Sweden.svg SwedenNeutralSaitama Stadium, SaitamaWorld Cup First RoundDrawn1-1Sol Campbell
7 June 2002Image:Flag of Argentina.svg ArgentinaNeutralSapporo Dome, SapporoWorld Cup First RoundWon1-0David Beckham (pen)
12 June 2002Image:Flag of Nigeria.svg NigeriaNeutralNagai Stadium, OsakaWorld Cup First RoundDrawn0-0
15 June 2002Image:Flag of Denmark.svg DenmarkNeutralStadium Big Swan, NiigataWorld Cup Second RoundWon3-0Rio Ferdinand, Michael Owen, Emile Heskey
21 June 2002Image:Flag of Brazil.svg BrazilNeutralStadium Epoca, FukuroiWorld Cup Quarter FinalLost1-2Michael Owen

[edit] Tables

[edit] FA Premier League

Arsenal, who scored in all 38 Premiership games, were unbeaten on their travels and won their final 13 games of the season, clinched the Premiership title to end Manchester United's bid for a unique fourth successive title. Liverpool clinched second place to condemn Manchester United to their first finish outside the top two since 1991 - which was ironically the last year of Liverpool's 10-year run of top-two finishes!

Tottenham Hotspur were expected to excel under new manager Glenn Hoddle, but a League Cup final defeat and a ninth place Premiership finish were not enough for even a UEFA Cup place. League Cup winners Blackburn Rovers achieved a 10th place finish and qualified for Europe for only the fourth time in their history.

Premiership newcomers Fulham spent more than £30million on new players before the start of the season, but finished a disappointing 13th in the final table - just months after chairman Mohammed al Fayed had boasted that his team could win the league title in their first top division season for more than 30 years.

2001-02 was the first Premiership season where all three newly promoted teams avoided relegation.

First to go down were Leicester City, whose run of bad form continued into the new season and failed to stop despite the efforts of three different managers. Next were Leicester's local rivals Derby County, who also had three managers in the season. The last team to drop were Ipswich Town, who had qualified for the UEFA Cup just 12 months earlier.

                              P   W  D  L   F   A   W  D  L   F   A   GD  Pts
 1. Arsenal                  38  12  4  3  42  25  14  5  0  37  11  +43  87
 2. Liverpool                38  12  5  2  33  14  12  3  4  34  16  +37  80
 3. Manchester United        38  11  2  6  40  17  13  3  3  47  28  +42  77
 4. Newcastle United         38  12  3  4  40  23   9  5  5  34  29  +22  71
 5. Leeds United             38   9  6  4  31  21   9  6  4  22  16  +16  66
 6. Chelsea                  38  11  4  4  43  21   6  9  4  23  17  +28  64
 7. West Ham United          38  12  4  3  32  14   3  4 12  16  43   -9  53  
 8. Aston Villa              38   8  7  4  22  17   4  7  8  24  30   -1  50
 9. Tottenham Hotspur        38  10  4  5  32  24   4  4 11  17  29   -4  50
10. Blackburn Rovers         38   8  6  5  33  20   4  4 11  22  31   +4  46
11. Southampton              38   7  5  7  23  22   5  4 10  23  32   -8  45
12. Middlesbrough            38   7  5  7  23  26   5  4 10  12  21  -12  45
13. Fulham                   38   7  7  5  21  16   3  7  9  15  28   -8  44
14. Charlton Athletic        38   5  6  8  23  30   5  8  6  15  19  -11  44
15. Everton                  38   8  4  7  26  23   3  6 10  19  34  -12  43
16. Bolton Wanderers         38   5  7  7  20  31   4  6  9  24  31  -18  40
17. Sunderland               38   7  7  5  18  16   3  3 13  11  35  -22  40
18. Ipswich Town             38   6  4  9  20  24   3  5 11  21  40  -23  36
19. Derby County             38   5  4 10  20  26   3  2 14  13  37  -30  30
20. Leicester City           38   3  7  9  15  34   2  6 11  15  30  -34  28

Blue bold text = To enter the UEFA Champions League at the first round stage
Blue normal text = To enter the Champions League at the qualifier stage
Red text = Relegated to Division One

[edit] Football League Division One

                              P   W  D  L   F   A   W  D  L   F   A   GD  Pts
 1. Manchester City          46  19  3  1  63  19  12  3  8  45  33  +56  99  
 2. West Bromwich Albion     46  15  4  4  36  11  12  4  7  25  18  +32  89
 3. Wolverhampton Wanderers  46  13  4  6  33  18  12  7  4  43  25  +33  86
 4. Millwall                 46  15  3  5  43  22   7  8  8  26  26  +21  77
 5. Birmingham City          46  14  4  5  44  20   7  9  7  26  29  +21  76
 6. Norwich City             46  15  6  2  36  16   7  3 13  24  35   +9  75  
 7. Burnley                  46  11  7  5  39  29  10  5  8  31  33   +8  75
 8. Preston North End        46  13  7  3  45  21   7  5 11  26  38  +12  72
 9. Wimbledon                46   9  8  6  30  22   9  5  9  33  35   +6  67
10. Crystal Palace           46  13  3  7  42  22   7  3 13  28  40   +8  66
11. Coventry City            46  12  4  7  33  19   8  2 13  26  34   +6  66
12. Gillingham               46  12  5  6  38  26   6  5 12  26  41   -3  64
13. Sheffield United         46   8  8  7  34  30   7  7  9  19  24   -1  60
14. Watford                  46  10  5  8  38  30   6  6 11  24  26   +6  59
15. Bradford City            46  10  1 12  41  39   5  9  9  28  37   -7  55
16. Nottingham Forest        46   7 11  5  26  21   5  7 11  24  30   -1  54
17. Portsmouth               46   9  6  8  36  31   4  8 11  24  41  -12  53
18. Walsall                  46  10  6  7  29  27   3  6 14  22  44  -20  51
19. Grimsby Town             46   9  7  7  34  28   3  7 13  16  44  -22  50
20. Sheffield Wednesday      46   6  7 10  28  37   6  7 10  21  34  -22  50
21. Rotherham United         46   7 13  3  32  29   3  6 14  20  37  -14  49
22. Crewe Alexandra          46   8  8  7  23  32   4  5 14  24  44  -29  49
23. Barnsley                 46   9  9  5  37  33   2  6 15  22  53  -27  48
24. Stockport County         46   5  1 17  19  44   1  7 15  23  58  -60  26

Blue text = Promoted to The Premiership
Green text = Losing play-off candidates
Red text = Relegated to Division Two

[edit] Football League Division Two

                              P   W  D  L   F   A   W  D  L   F   A   GD  Pts
 1. Brighton & Hove Albion   46  17  5  1  42  16   8 10  5  24  26  +24  90
 2. Reading                  46  12  7  4  36  20  11  8  4  34  23  +27  84
 3. Brentford                46  17  5  1  48  12   7  6 10  29  31  +34  83
 4. Cardiff City             46  12  8  3  39  25  11  6  6  36  25  +25  83
 5. Stoke City               46  16  4  3  43  12   7  7  9  24  28  +27  80
 6. Huddersfield Town        46  13  7  3  35  19   8  8  7  30  28  +18  78
 7. Bristol City             46  13  6  4  38  21   8  4 11  30  32  +15  73
 8. Queens Park Rangers      46  11 10  2  35  18   8  4 11  25  31  +11  71
 9. Oldham Athletic          46  14  6  3  47  27   4  10 9  30  38  +12  70
10. Wigan Athletic           46   9  6  8  36  23   7  10 6  30  28  +15  64
11. Wycombe Wanderers        46  13  5  5  38  26   4  8 11  20  38   -6  64
12. Tranmere Rovers          46  10  9  4  39  19   6  6 11  24  41   +3  63
13. Swindon Town             46  10  7  6  26  21   5  7 11  20  35  -10  59
14. Port Vale                46  11  6  6  35  24   5  4 14  16  38  -11  58
15. Colchester United        46   9  6  6  35  33   6  6 11  30  43  -11  57
16. Blackpool                46   8  9  6  39  31   6  5 12  27  38   -3  56
17. Peterborough United      46  11  5  7  46  26   4  5 14  18  33   -5  55
18. Chesterfield             46   9  3 11  35  36   4 10  9  18  29  -12  52
19. Notts County             46   8  7  8  28  29   5  4 14  31  42  -12  50
20. Northampton Town         46   9  4 10  30  33   5  3 15  24  46  -25  49
21. A.F.C. Bournemouth       46   9  4 10  36  33   1 10 12  20  38  -15  44
22. Bury                     46   6  9  8  26  32   5  2 16  17  43  -32  44
23. Wrexham                  46   7  7  9  29  32   4  3 16  27  57  -33  43
24. Cambridge United         46   7  7  9  29  34   0  6 17  18  59  -46  34

[edit] Football League Division Three

                              P   W  D  L   F   A   W  D  L   F   A   GD  Pts
 1. Plymouth Argyle          46  19  2  2  41  11  12  7  4  30  17  +43  102
 2. Luton Town               46  15  5  3  50  18  15  2  6  46  30  +48  97
 3. Mansfield Town           46  17  3  3  49  24   7  4 12  23  36  +12  79
 4. Cheltenham Town          46  11 11  1  40  20  10  4  9  26  29  +17  78
 5. Rochdale                 46  13  8  2  41  22   8  7  8  24  30  +13  78
 6. Rushden & Diamonds       46  14  5  4  40  20   6  8  9  29  33  +15  73
 7. Hartlepool United        46  12  6  5  53  23   8  5 10  21  25  +26  71  
 8. Scunthorpe United        46  14  5  4  43  22   5  9  9  31  34  +18  71
 9. Shrewsbury Town          46  13  4  6  36  19   7  6 10  28  34  +11  70
10. Kidderminster Harriers   46  13  6  4  35  17   6  3 14  21  30   +9  66
11. Hull City                46  12  6  5  38  18   4  7 12  19  33   +6  61   
12. Southend United          46  12  5  6  36  22   3  8 12  15  32   -3  58
13. Macclesfield Town        46   7  7  9  23  25   8  6  9  18  27  -11  58
14. York City                46  11  5  7  26  20   5  4 14  28  47  -13  57
15. Darlington               46  11  6  6  37  25   4  5 14  23  46  -11  56
16. Exeter City              46   7  9  7  25  32   7  4 12  23  41  -25  55
17. Carlisle United          46  11  5  7  31  21   1 11 11  18  35   -7  52
18. Leyton Orient            46  10  7  6  37  25   3  6 14  18  46  -16  52
19. Torquay United           46   8  6  9  27  31   4  9 10  19  32  -17  51
20. Swansea City             46   7  8  8  26  26   6  4 13  27  51  -24  51
21. Oxford United            46   8  7  8  34  28   3  7 13  19  34   -9  47
22. Lincoln City             46   8  4 11  25  27   2 12  9  19  35  -18  46
23. Bristol Rovers           46   8  7  8  28  28   3  5 15  12  32  -20  45
24. Halifax Town             46   5  9  9  24  28   3  3 17  15  56  -45  36

[edit] European qualifiers

[edit] UEFA Champions League

[edit] Group phase

[edit] Qualifying round

[edit] UEFA Cup

[edit] Diary of the season

12 July 2001 - Manchester United break the English transfer fee record by paying Lazio £28.1million for Argentina midfielder Juan Sebastián Verón.

4 August 2001 - Portsmouth goalkeeper Aaron Flahavan, 25, is killed in a car crash just outside Bournemouth.

16 August 2001 - Oxford United move into their new 12,500-seat Kassam Stadium after six years of waiting, but their arrival is soured by a 2-1 home defeat against Rochdale in Division Three.

19 August 2001 - Former Coventry City, Luton Town, Manchester United, Aston Villa, Blackpool and West Ham United goalkeeper Les Sealey dies of a heart attack at the age of 43.

25 August 2001 - Southampton lose 2-0 to Chelsea in their first competitive game at the new 32,000-seat St Mary's Stadium.

29 September 2001 - Tottenham Hotspur surrender a 3-0 home lead over Manchester United in the FA Premier League and end up losing the game 5-3.

30 September 2001 - Leicester City sack manager Peter Taylor after 15 months in charge.

6 October 2001 - A late equaliser by David Beckham against Greece gains England automatic qualification for next summer's World Cup.

7 October 2001 - Jim Smith resigns after six years as manager of Derby County and is replaced by his assistant Colin Todd.

10 October 2001 - Dave Bassett is named as Leicester City's new manager, with Brighton & Hove Albion manager Micky Adams being appointed as his assistant.

15 October 2001 - Liverpool boss Gérard Houllier is taken to hospital after complaining about chest pains, during the draw against Leeds United. He undergoes emergency heart surgery and leaves Phil Thompson in sole control at Anfield, until April.

17 October 2001 - Just over two weeks after being sacked by Leicester City, Peter Taylor returns to management with Brighton & Hove Albion.

22 October 2001 - Bertie Mee, the manager of Arsenal's 1971 double-winning team, dies aged 82.

8 December 2001 - Manchester United lost 1-0 at home to West Ham United, completing a dismal run of six defeats from seven Premiership fixtures, which has left them standing ninth in the league - 11 points behind leaders Liverpool, who have a game in hand.

14 January 2002 - Colin Todd is sacked after three months as Derby County manager, his dismissal coming the week after they suffered a first-hurdle exit from the FA Cup at the hands of Division Three strugglers Bristol Rovers.

24 January 2002 - John Gregory resigns after four years as manager of Aston Villa.

30 January 2002 - John Gregory returns to management six days after leaving Aston Villa when he is named as the new manager of Derby County.

24 February 2002 - Blackburn Rovers beat Tottenham Hotspur 2-1 at the Millennium Stadium to win the League Cup for the first time in their history.

28 February 2002 - Sir Alex Ferguson changes his mind about retiring as Manchester United manager at the end of the season and signs a new contract which will keep him at the club for at least another three seasons.

20 March 2002 - Gérard Houllier returns to Liverpool after a six month spell out. He watches his side defeat Roma in the Champions League.

4 April 2002 - Dave Bassett becomes director of football at Leicester City and he hands managerial duties over to his assistant Micky Adams.

6 April 2002 - Leicester City's relegation is confirmed as they lost 1-0 at home to Manchester United.

21 April 2002 - West Bromwich Albion clinch promotion to the FA Premier League with a 2-0 win over Crystal Palace which ends their 16-year exile from the top flight.

4 May 2002 - Arsenal clinch the eighth FA Cup victory of their history with a 2-0 win over Chelsea at the Millennium Stadium.

8 May 2002 - Arsenal beat defending champions Manchester United 1-0 at Old Trafford to complete their second double in five seasons.

12 May 2002 - The FA Premier League season ends with Arsenal as champions, and the other three UEFA Champions League places going to Liverpool, Manchester United and Newcastle United. Chelsea and Leeds United go into the UEFA Cup. Ipswich Town, Derby County and Leicester City are relegated. The promoted sides are Manchester City, West Bromwich Albion and Birmingham City.

[edit] Promoted teams

From Division One to The Premier League:

Manchester City
West Bromwich Albion
Birmingham City

From Division Two to Division One:

Brighton & Hove Albion
Reading
Stoke City

From Division Three to Division Two:

Plymouth Argyle
Luton Town
Mansfield Town
Cheltenham Town

From The Football Conference to Division Three:

Boston United

[edit] Relegated teams

From The Premier League to Division One:

Ipswich Town
Derby County
Leicester City

From Division One to Division Two:

Crewe Alexandra
Barnsley
Stockport County

From Division Two to Division Three:

A.F.C. Bournemouth
Bury
Wrexham
Cambridge United

From Division Three to The Football Conference:

Halifax Town

[edit] Transfer deals

For subsequent transfer deals see 2002-03 in English football.

[edit] Managerial changes

August

September

October

November

December

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

[edit] Deaths

  • Les Sealey, 43, who kept goal for Manchester United in their 1990 F.A Cup and 1991 Cup Winners Cup triumphs, died of a heart attack in north London. He had also played for Coventry City, Luton Town, Aston Villa, Birmingham City (on loan), Blackpool and West Ham United, and at the time of his death had been working for West Ham United as goalkeeping coach.
  • Brian Moore, 69, former BBC Radio and ITV commentator, died of cancer three years after retiring from football commentary.
  • Bertie Mee, 80, Arsenal double-winning manager 1970-71, died after a long illness. He also guided Arsenal to European Fairs Cup glory, achieved one year before the double triumph. From 1976 to 1986 he was assistant manager to Graham Taylor at Watford, and remained at the club as a director until his retirement in 1991.
  • Jeff Astle, 59, West Bromwich Albion and England striker, died suddenly in Burton-upon-Trent. He is best remembered for his appearances on the T.V series 'Fantasy Football' and for scoring Albion's winning goal against Everton in the 1968 F.A Cup final.
  • Kenneth Wolstenholme, 81, BBC television commentator, who famously commentated England's 1966 World Cup triumph and is best remembered for saying 'They think it's all over... it is now' when Geoff Hurst scored England's last-minute winner.


Seasons in English football

1997-98 | 1998-99 | 1999-00 | 2000-01 | 2001-02 | 2002-03 | 2003-04 | 2004-05 | 2005-06

League competitions The FA Cup competitions
FA Premier League England FA Cup
The Football League (Champ, 1, 2) (U-21) (B) Carling Cup
Football Conference (Nat, N, S) List of clubs Community Shield
Northern Premier League (Prem, 1) List of venues Johnstone's Paint Trophy
Southern League (Prem, Mid, S&W) (by capacity) FA Trophy
Isthmian League (Prem, 1N, 1S) List of leagues FA Vase
English football league system Records FA NLS Cup
  National teams: Image:Flag of England (bordered).svg England | Image:Flag of Northern Ireland (bordered).svg Northern Ireland | Image:Flag of Scotland.svg Scotland | Image:Flag of Wales (bordered).svg Wales | Image:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg UK
UK-wide national team competitions: British Home Championship | Rous Cup
UK-wide club competitions: Coronation Cup | Texaco Cup | Anglo-Scottish Cup
Football in... England | Scotland | Wales | Northern Ireland
pl:Piłka nożna w Anglii (2001/2002)

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