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2003-04 in English football

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The 2003-2004 season was the 124th season of competitive football in England.

Contents

[edit] Overview

Arsenal completed the entire campaign without losing a single league game.

Wimbledon completed their controversial relocation to Milton Keynes and moved into the National Hockey Stadium, which would be used as a temporary home until a permanent home was built at Denbigh North. At the end of the season, the club's directors changed its name to Milton Keynes Dons.

Telford United, who had been members of the Conference every season since its formation in 1979, went out of business at the end of a season in which they had reached the Fourth Round of the FA Cup. The club was quickly reformed as AFC Telford United and joined the Northern League.

Doncaster Rovers were crowned Division Three champions to earn their second successive promotion, having been Conference playoff winners the previous season. They had not played above the league's lowest tier for nearly 20 years.

Carlisle United were relegated to the Conference from Division Three. They had spent all but two of the last 17 seasons in the league's fourth tier, but had been members of the top division during the 1974-75 season and topped the league three games into the season despite getting relegated at the end of it.

[edit] Events

[edit] National team

Date Venue Opponents Score Competition England scorers
August 20, 2003 Portman Road, Ipswich Image:Flag of Croatia.svg Croatia 3-1 F David Beckham (pen), Michael Owen, Frank Lampard
September 6, 2003 Skopje City Stadium Image:Flag of Macedonia.svg Macedonia 2-1 ECQ Wayne Rooney, David Beckham (pen)
September 10, 2003 Old Trafford, Manchester Image:Flag of Liechtenstein.svg Liechtenstein 2-0 ECQ Michael Owen, Wayne Rooney
October 11, 2003 Istanbul Image:Flag of Turkey.svg Turkey 0-0 ECQ
November 16, 2003 Old Trafford, Manchester Image:Flag of Denmark.svg Denmark 2-3 F Wayne Rooney, Joe Cole
February 14, 2004 Estádio Algarve, Faro Image:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal 1-1 F Ledley King
March 31, 2004 Nya Ullevi Stadion, Gothenburg Image:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden 0-1 F
June 1, 2004 City of Manchester Stadium, Manchester Image:Flag of Japan (bordered).svg Japan 1-1 FA Michael Owen
June 5, 2004 City of Manchester Stadium, Manchester Image:Flag of Iceland.svg Iceland 6-1 FA Frank Lampard, Wayne Rooney (2), Darius Vassell (2), Wayne Bridge
June 13, 2004 Estádio da Luz, Lisbon Image:Flag of France.svg France 1-2 ECF Frank Lampard
June 17, 2004 Estádio Cidade, Coimbra Image:Flag of Switzerland.svg Switzerland 3-0 ECF Wayne Rooney (2), Steven Gerrard
June 21, 2004 Estádio da Luz, Lisbon Image:Flag of Croatia.svg Croatia 4-2 ECF Paul Scholes, Wayne Rooney (2), Frank Lampard
June 24, 2004 Estádio da Luz, Lisbon Image:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal 1-1 (FT), 2-2 (aet), 5-6 (P) ECF Michael Owen, Frank Lampard
  • ECQ - Euro 2004 qualifiers
  • ECF - Euro 2004 finals
  • F - Friendly; scores are written England first
  • FA - FA Summer Tournament (friendly)
  • (FT) - Full time
  • (aet) - After extra time
  • (P) - After penalty shoot out

[edit] Honours

Competition Winner
FA Premier League Arsenal
FA Cup Manchester United
Carling Cup Middlesbrough
Football League Trophy Blackpool
Football League First Division Norwich City
Football League Second Division Plymouth Argyle
Football League Third Division Doncaster Rovers
FA Community Shield Manchester United

[edit] European Qualification

Competition Qualifiers Reason for Qualification
UEFA Champions League Arsenal 1st in FA Premier League
Chelsea 2nd in FA Premier League
UEFA Champions League Third Qualifying Round Manchester United 3rd in FA Premier League
Liverpool 4th in FA Premier League
UEFA Cup Newcastle United 5th in FA Premier League
Middlesbrough League Cup Winners
Millwall In lieu of FA Cup winners
(qualification awarded as FA Cup runners-up because FA Cup winners Manchester United had already qualified for the Champions League)

[edit] League tables

[edit] FA Premier League

The Premiership title race was a three-horse race for most of the season, but Arsenal remained unbeaten all season long and clinched the title with 90 points and an 11-point gap over runners-up Chelsea, who had been most people's favourites for the title after a £100million summer spending spree.

League Cup winners Middlesbrough qualified for the UEFA Cup for the first time in their history, joined by fifth-placed Newcastle United. Seventh-placed Charlton Athletic and eighth-placed Bolton Wanderers both achieved their highest league finishes since the 1950s, while ninth-placed Fulham (many people's pre-season relegation favourites) defied the odds under 33-year-old manager Chris Coleman and achieved the highest league finish of their history.

Newly promoted Leicester City and Wolverhampton Wanderers both went down after just one season, while Leeds United's financial crisis saw them lose most of their key players and eventually saw them relegated from the top flight after 14 successive seasons among the elite.

PWDLFAGDPts
C1Arsenal38261207326+4790
 2Chelsea3824776730+3779
 3Manchester United3823696435+2975
 4Liverpool381612105537+1860
 5Newcastle United38131785240+1256
 6Aston Villa381511124844+456
 7Charlton Athletic381411135151053
 8Bolton Wanderers381411134856-853
 9Fulham381410145246+652
 10Birmingham City381214124348-550
 11Middlesbrough38139164452-848
 12Southampton381211154445-147
 13Portsmouth38129174754-745
 14Tottenham Hotspur38136194757-1045
 15Blackburn Rovers38128185159-844
 16Manchester City38914155554+141
 17Everton38912174557-1239
R18Leicester City38615174865-1733
R19Leeds United3889214079-3933
R20Wolverhampton Wanderers38712193877-3933

[edit] Football League First Division

The top three led the division for most of the season, but Sunderland couldn't shake off their poor start to the season and eventually lost out to Norwich, returning to the Premiership after nearly a decade, and West Brom, who bounced back to the Premiership after relegation the previous season. Crystal Palace achieved one of the most unlikely promotions of recent times, spending the entire first half of the season in the relegation zone under manager Steve Kember before surging into the play-off places under new manager Iain Dowie.

Wimbledon's move to Milton Keynes took its toll on the club, and they finished bottom of the table in an abysmal final season for the club before it was renamed as MK Dons. Bradford fared little better, despite the presence of former England captain Bryan Robson in the manager's chair. Walsall made a respectable start to the season before slumping somewhat later in the season, then sacking manager Colin Lee for speaking to Plymouth about their manager's job (even though Walsall gave him their permission, and he turned the job down anyway) and crashing into the relegation zone under caretaker Paul Merson, who was nonetheless given the job permanently.

                              P    W  D  L   F   A    W  D  L   F   A   GD  Pts
 1 Norwich City              46   18  3  2  44  15   10  7  6  35  24   40   94  Promoted
 2 West Bromwich Albion      46   14  5  4  34  16   11  6  6  30  26   22   86  Promoted
 3 Sunderland                46   13  8  2  33  15    9  5  9  29  30   17   79
 4 West Ham United           46   12  7  4  42  20    7 10  6  25  25   22   74
 5 Ipswich Town              46   12  3  8  49  36    9  7  7  35  36   12   73
 6 Crystal Palace            46   10  8  5  34  25   11  2 10  38  36   11   73  Promoted (playoff winners)
 7 Wigan Athletic            46   11  8  4  29  16    7  9  7  31  29   15   71
 8 Sheffield United          46   11  6  6  37  25    9  5  9  28  31    9   71
 9 Reading                   46   11  6  6  29  25    9  4 10  26  32   -2   70
10 Millwall                  46   11  8  4  28  15    7  7  9  27  33    7   69  UEFA Cup (FA Cup runners up)
11 Stoke City                46   11  7  5  35  24    7  5 11  23  31    3   66
12 Coventry City             46    9  9  5  34  22    8  5 10  33  32   13   65
13 Cardiff City              46   10  6  7  40  25    7  8  8  28  33   10   65
14 Nottingham Forest         46    8  9  6  33  25    7  6 10  28  33    3   60
15 Preston North End         46   11  7  5  43  29    4  7 12  26  42   -2   59
16 Watford                   46    9  8  6  31  28    6  4 13  23  40  -14   57
17 Rotherham United          46    8  8  7  31  27    5  7 11  22  34   -8   54
18 Crewe Alexandra           46   11  3  9  33  26    3  8 12  24  40   -9   53
19 Burnley                   46    9  6  8  37  32    4  8 11  23  45  -17   53
20 Derby County              46   11  5  7  39  33    2  8 13  14  34  -14   52
21 Gillingham                46   10  1 12  28  34    4  8 11  20  33  -19   51
22 Walsall                   46    8  7  8  29  31    5  5 13  16  34  -20   51  Relegated
23 Bradford City             46    6  3 14  23  35    4  3 16  15  34  -31   36  Relegated
24 Wimbledon                 46    3  4 16  21  40    5  1 17  20  49  -48   29  Relegated

[edit] Football League Second Division

Plymouth finished top of the division, though they lost manager Paul Sturrock to Southampton. Queens Park Rangers grabbed the second spot from under the noses of Bristol City, who proceeded to lose the play-off final to Brighton, another side who bounced back from relegation the previous season.

Tony Adams, previously suggested by many as a possible future manager of Arsenal and England, failed to keep Wycombe up, ending their ten-year spell in the division. Notts County nearly went bankrupt during the course of the season and the effect on the club was evident, as they slipped into Division Three (or League Two, as it would be called the next season), and Rushden's years of success came to a grinding halt as they crashed back out of the division after being promoted the previous year. Grimsby's relegation happened in somewhat bizarre fashion - manager Paul Groves was sacked after leading the side into the relegation zone, and caretaker manager Graham Rodger lifted the side up the table, giving them a good chance of survival. Rather than give the job to Rodger permanently, the board instead handed it to Nicky Law (sacked from Bradford after a dire start to the season), who steered them straight back into the relegation zone, which they were unable to escape from. Unsurprisingly, Law's contract was not renewed over the summer.

                              P    W  D  L   F   A    W  D  L   F   A   GD  Pts
 1 Plymouth Argyle           46   17  5  1  52  13    9  7  7  33  28  +44   90  Promoted
 2 Queens Park Rangers       46   16  7  0  47  12    6 10  7  33  33  +35   83  Promoted
 3 Bristol City              46   15  6  2  34  12    8  7  8  24  25  +21   82
 4 Brighton & Hove Albion    46   17  4  2  39  11    5  7 11  25  32  +21   77  Promoted (playoff winners)
 5 Swindon Town              46   12  7  4  41  23    8  6  9  35  35  +18   73
 6 Hartlepool United         46   10  8  5  39  24   10  5  8  37  37  +15   73
 7 Port Vale                 46   15  6  2  45  28    6  4 13  28  35  +10   73
 8 Tranmere Rovers           46   13  7  3  36  18    4  9 10  23  38   +3   67
 9 A.F.C. Bournemouth        46   11  8  4  35  25    6  7 10  21  26   +5   66
10 Luton Town                46   14  6  3  44  27    3  9 11  25  39   +3   66
11 Colchester United         46   11  8  4  33  23    6  5 12  19  33   -4   64
12 Barnsley                  46    7 12  4  25  19    8  5 10  29  39   -4   62
13 Wrexham                   46    9  6  8  27  21    8  3 12  23  39  -10   60
14 Blackpool                 46    9  5  9  31  28    7  6 10  27  37   -7   59
15 Oldham Athletic           46    9  8  6  37  25    3 13  7  29  35   +6   57
16 Sheffield Wednesday       46    7  9  7  25  26    6  5 12  23  38  -16   53
17 Brentford                 46    9  5  9  34  38    5  6 12  18  31  -17   53
18 Peterborough United       46    5  8 10  36  33    7  8  8  22  25    0   52
19 Stockport County          46    6  8  9  31  36    5 11  7  31  34   -8   52
20 Chesterfield              46    9  7  7  34  31    3  8 12  15  40  -22   51
21 Grimsby Town              46   10  5  8  36  26    3  6 14  19  55  -26   50  Relegated
22 Rushden & Diamonds        46    9  5  9  37  34    4  4 15  23  40  -14   48  Relegated
23 Notts County              46    6  9  8  32  27    4  3 16  18  51  -28   42  Relegated
24 Wycombe Wanderers         46    5  7 11  31  39    1 12 10  19  36  -25   37  Relegated

[edit] Football League Third Division

Doncaster earned a second successive promotion, showing that the club was firmly back on track after the years of struggle and scandal the club endured in the late 90s. Hull's expensive investment in players finally paid off, and the team was promoted. Torquay, traditionally strugglers, snatched the last automatic promotion spot from Huddersfield on the last day of the season. Huddersfield would make up for this by beating Mansfield in the play-off final.

York started the season brightly, but only managed to gain nine points between November 1 and the end of the season and lost their 80-year old League status. Carlisle started the season horrendously, but a late run saw them finish 23rd. A few years ago this would have seen them complete an amazing escape from relegation, but with the introduction of two relegation places from the League it was no longer sufficient, and they dropped into the Conference.

                              P    W  D  L   F   A    W  D  L   F   A   GD  Pts
 1 Doncaster Rovers          46   17  4  2  47  13   10  7  6  32  24  +42   92  Promoted
 2 Hull City                 46   16  4  3  50  21    9  9  5  32  23  +38   88  Promoted
 3 Torquay United            46   15  6  2  44  18    8  6  9  24  26  +24   81  Promoted
 4 Huddersfield Town         46   16  4  3  42  18    7  8  8  26  34  +16   81  Promoted (playoff winners)
 5 Mansfield Town            46   13  5  5  44  25    9  4 10  32  37  +14   75
 6 Northampton Town          46   13  4  6  30  23    9  5  9  28  28   +7   75
 7 Lincoln City              46    9 11  3  36  23   10  6  7  32  24  +21   74
 8 Yeovil Town               46   14  3  6  40  19    9  2 12  30  38  +13   74
 9 Oxford United             46   14  8  1  34  13    4  9 10  21  31  +11   71
10 Swansea City              46    9  8  6  36  26    6  6 11  22  35   -3   59
11 Boston United             46   11  7  5  35  21    5  4 14  15  33   -4   59
12 Bury                      46   10  7  6  29  26    5  4 14  25  38  -10   56
13 Cambridge United          46    6  7 10  26  32    8  7  8  29  35  -12   56
14 Cheltenham Town           46   11  4  8  37  38    3 10 10  20  33  -14   56
15 Bristol Rovers            46    9  7  7  29  26    5  6 12  21  35  -11   55
16 Kidderminster Harriers    46    9  5  9  28  29    5  8 10  17  30  -14   55
17 Southend United           46    8  4 11  27  29    6  8  9  24  34  -12   54
18 Darlington                46   10  4  9  30  28    4  7 12  23  33   -8   53
19 Leyton Orient             46    8  9  6  28  27    5  5 13  20  38  -17   53
20 Macclesfield Town         46    8  9  6  28  25    5  4 14  26  44  -15   52
21 Rochdale                  46    7  8  8  28  26    5  6 12  21  32   -9   50
22 Scunthorpe United         46    7 10  6  36  27    4  6 13  33  45   -3   49
23 Carlisle United           46    8  5 10  23  27    4  4 15  23  42  -23   45  Relegated
24 York City                 46    7  6 10  22  29    3  8 12  13  37  -31   44  Relegated

[edit] National League System

[edit] Cup competitions

Competition Winners
FA Trophy Hednesford Town
FA Vase Winchester City
FA National League System Cup Mid Cheshire League

[edit] Football Conference

[edit] Northern Premier League

[edit] Southern League

[edit] Isthmian League

[edit] Other leagues

League Champions Notes
Step 3 Leagues Northern Premier League First Division Hyde United  
Southern League Midland/West Division Redditch United (promoted to Conference North after playoffs)
Southern League South/East Division King's Lynn  
Isthmian League Division One North Yeading  
Isthmian League Division One South Lewes (promoted to Conference South after playoffs)
Step 4 Leagues Northern League Dunston Federation Brewery  
North West Counties League Clitheroe  
Northern Counties East League Ossett Albion  
Midland Alliance Rocester  
United Counties League Spalding United  
Eastern Counties League A.F.C. Sudbury  
Isthmian League Division Two Leighton Town  
Essex Senior League Concord Rangers  
Spartan South Midlands League Beaconsfield SYCOB  
Combined Counties League AFC Wimbledon (promoted to Isthmian League First Division)
Hellenic League Brackley Town  
Western League Bideford  
Wessex League Winchester City  
Sussex County League Chichester City United  
Kent League Cray Wanderers  

[edit] Transfer deals

[edit] Summer transfer window

The summer transfer window runs from the end of the previous season until 31 August.

8 May 2003
11 May 2003
4 June 2003
6 June 2003
7 June 2003
11 June 2003
25 June 2003
30 June 2003
1 July 2003
2 July 2003
3 July 2003
7 July 2003
8 July 2003
9 July 2003
10 July 2003
11 July 2003
14 July 2003
15 July 2003
16 July 2003
17 July 2003
18 July 2003
21 July 2003
23 July 2003
24 July 2003
26 July 2003
28 July 2003
31 July 2003
1 August 2003
2 August 2003
3 August 2003
4 August 2003
5 August 2003
6 August 2003
8 August 2003
11 August 2003
12 August 2003
13 August 2003
14 August 2003
15 August 2003
21 August 2003
24 August 2003
25 August 2003
26 August 2003
29 August 2003
30 August 2003
31 August 2003
1 September

[edit] January transfer window

The mid-season transfer window runs from 1 to 31 January 2006.

1 January 2004
2 January 2004
6 January 2004
9 January 2004
12 January 2004
14 January 2004
17 January 2004
23 January 2004
21 January 2004
22 January 2004
25 January 2004
27 January 2004
29 January 2004
30 January 2004
2 February 2004

For subsequent transfer deals see 2004-05 in English football.

[edit] Retirements

David Seaman (Manchester City)

[edit] Successful managers

Arsene Wenger took Arsenal to the Premiership title without losing a single league game all season, making him only the third manager in 116 years of English league football to achieve such a feat.

Sir Alex Ferguson guided Manchester United to their eleventh F.A Cup victory of all-time, and their fifth under his managemen.

Steve McClaren helped Middlesbrough win the first major trophy of their history by guiding them to victory in the League Cup final.

Nigel Worthington ended Norwich City's nine-year exile from the Premiership by guiding them to title glory in Division One.

Gary Megson took West Bromwich Albion back into the Premiership at the first time of asking.

Iain Dowie arrived at Crystal Palace just before Christmas, when they stood 19th in Division One, and five months later he took them into the Premiership as playoff winners thanks to a storming run of form.

Ian Holloway's three-year rebuilding programme at Queens Park Rangers finally paid off after he earned them promotion from Division Two.

Dave Penney achieved a second successive promotion with Division Three champions Doncaster Rovers.

Leroy Rosenior took Torquay United to promotion to Division Three, just three years after they had narrowly avoided relegation to the Conference.

Mark Wright took Chester City to title glory in the Conference to end their four-year absence from the Football League.

[edit] Successful players

Thierry Henry's prolific goalscoring was a major factor in Arsenal's title success, which was secured without a single defeat all season long.

Ruud van Nistelrooy had another great season for Manchester United and scored twice in the F.A Cup final to gain his second piece of silverware with the club.

Cristiano Ronaldo, 19, was Man of the Match in the F.A Cup final after scoring a brilliant goal which helped Manchester United achieve victory over Millwall.

Frank Lampard's superb form in the Chelsea midfielder earned his club a run to the European Cup semi-finals as well as second place in the Premiership.

Louis Saha's impressive goalscoring for Fulham earned him a mid-season move to Manchester United, worth almost £13million.

Wayne Rooney, still only 18, established himself as an England regular and was the centre of interest from Europe's biggest clubs after another highly promising season with Everton.

Lee Hughes scored 13 Division One goals for promoted West Bromwich Albion, only to have the next three seasons of his career written off by a prison sentence for causing a fatal car crash.

Andy Johnson helped Crystal Palace win promotion to the Premiership after his goalscoring helped them climb from 19th to 6th place in Division One in the space of five months.

Robert Green was touted as a future England goalkeeper after his excellent form between the sticks helped Norwich City win promotion to the Premiership.

Tim Cahill's strong form in the Millwall midfield earned him a move to Premiership side Everton after the Londoners failed to win promotion.

James Hayter scored a record breaking two minutes twenty seconds hat-trick for AFC Bournemouth against Wrexham F.C

[edit] Deaths

  • Ray Harford, 58, was best remembered for his managerial and coaching career - he was manager of Luton Town when they won the League Cup in 1988 and assistant manager of Blackburn Rovers when they were Premiership champions in 1995. He was promoted from the role of assistant manager to the manager's seat at three clubs - Luton Town, Wimbledon and Blackburn Rovers. He also had spells in charge of Fulham, West Bromwich Albion and finally Queens Park Rangers. His last post was as first-team coach at Millwall, and helped them win the Division Two title in 2001. He was still on the club's payroll at the time of his death from lung cancer.
  • Jimmy Davis, 21, Manchester United and England U-21 striker, died in a car crash on the M40 just hours before he was due to play his first game for Watford on a season-long loan deal. He had played once for Manchester United in a League Cup game, and had spent part of the 2001-02 season on loan to Swindon Town.
  • Bob Stokoe, 73, was manager of the Sunderland side who achieved a shock F.A Cup victory over Leeds United in the 1973 final. He later managed Carlisle United and returned to Sunderland during the 1986-87 season, but quit after failing to save them from relegation to the old Third Division for the first time in their history.
  • John Charles, 72, was the most famous Leeds United player in the pre Don Revie era. His exploits for Leeds United and the Welsh national team attracted attention from all over the world and he was sold to Italian side Juventus in 1958.


Seasons in English football

1999-00 | 2000-01 | 2001-02 | 2002-03 | 2003-04 | 2004-05 | 2005-06 | 2006-07 | 2007-08

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
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