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 2002–03 in English football
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The 2002-03 season was the 123rd season of competitive football in England.
[edit] Overview
- Wigan Athletic marked their 25th season of Football League membership by winning the Division Two championship and reaching the league's second tier for the very first time.
- Sheffield Wednesday went down to Division Two, just 10 years after reaching the finals of both domestic cup competitions and 11 years after coming two places short of the league title.
[edit] Events
- 22 July 2002 - Manchester United broke the English transfer record for the third time in just over a year. They paid Leeds United £29 million for central defender Rio Ferdinand.
- 4 August 2002 - Leicester City move into their new 32,500-seat Walkers Stadium after 111 years at Filbert Street. They drew 1-1 in a friendly with Athletic Bilbao.
- 17 August 2002 - The FA Premier League season begins. West Bromwich Albion's first top division game for 17 years ends in a 1-0 away defeat to Manchester United.
- 31 August 2002 - Leeds United sell striker Robbie Keane to Tottenham Hotspur for £7 million.
- 7 October 2002 - Peter Reid is sacked by FA Premier League strugglers Sunderland after seven-and-a-half years in charge.
- 10 October 2002 - Howard Wilkinson steps down as the Football Association's technical director to become the new Sunderland manager. He names Stoke City manager Steve Cotterill as his assistant.
- 12 October 2002 - England open their Euro 2004 qualifying series with a 2-1 win over Slovakia in Bratislava. David Beckham and Michael Owen score for England.
- 19 October 2002 - Everton striker Wayne Rooney becomes the youngest-ever goalscorer in FA Premier League history when he scores a last-minute winner against Arsenal, five days before his 17th birthday, to end the opposition's 30-match unbeaten Premiership run.
- 9 November 2002 - Manchester City beat Manchester United 3-1 in the last-ever Manchester derby at Maine Road.
- 18 December 2002 - The deaths are announced of former Football Association chairman Sir Bert Millichip, 88, and former Leicester City and Shrewsbury Town striker Arthur Rowley, 76, who scored a record 434 league goals during his 19-year career.
- 26 December 2002 - Hull City celebrate their first competitive game at their new Kingston Communications Stadium with a 2-0 win over Hartlepool United in Division Three.
- 4 January 2003 - Shrewsbury Town beat Everton 2-1 in an FA Cup third round tie at Gay Meadow.
- 2 March 2003 - Liverpool win the League Cup for the seventh time in their history thanks to a 2-0 win over Manchester United in the final at Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.
- 10 March 2003 - Howard Wilkinson is sacked as Sunderland manager (along with his assistant Steve Cotterill) after his team won just two out of 20 Premiership matches under his management.
- 12 March 2003 - Sunderland appoint former Republic of Ireland national coach Mick McCarthy as their new manager.
- 21 March 2003 - Leeds United, 16th in the FA Premier League and £80million in debt, sack Terry Venables after eight months as manager and replace him with Peter Reid, who signs a contract until the end of the season.
- 22 March 2003 - Derby County (in Division One) suspend manager John Gregory over allegations of misconduct and replace him with George Burley as interim manager.
- 27 April 2003 Portsmouth beat Rotherham 3-2 to win the First Division championship and gain promotion to the Premier League for the first time since the league's inception.
- 4 May 2003 - Arsenal lose 3-2 at home to Leeds United, a result which ensures Leeds United's safety and ends Arsenal's defence of the title. Manchester United are crowned league champions for the eighth time in 11 seasons. Sunderland are relegated from the Premiership with a record low of 4 wins, 19 points and 21 goals. Shrewsbury Town are relegated to the Conference, ending 53 years of Football League membership. Exeter City finished 23rd in Division Three and are also relegatead to the Conference - the first club to suffer automatic relegation without finishing bottom of the league. Peter Schmeichel calls time on his footballing career six months before his 40th birthday after helping Manchester City to finish ninth in the Premiership. He was replaced by David Seaman, who left Arsenal on a free transfer.
- 9 May 2003 - Derby County confirm that suspended manager John Gregory will not be returning, and his contract is terminated to make way for George Burley to receive the job on a permanent basis.
- 17 May 2003 - Arsenal win the FA Cup for the ninth time in their history by beating Southampton 1-0 at the Millennium Stadium.
- 26 May 2003 - Wolverhampton Wanderers return to the top flight after a 19-year exile by beating Sheffield United 3-0 in the Division One playoff final.
- 17 June 2003 - David Beckham agrees to join Real Madrid in a £25 million deal after 12 years at Manchester United.
- 26 June 2003 - Marc-Vivien Foé, who spent the 2002-03 season on loan to Manchester City, collapses and dies at the age of 28 during a Confederations Cup tie for Cameroon.
| Date |
Venue |
Opponents |
Score |
Competition |
England scorers |
| September 7, 2002 |
Villa Park, Birmingham |
Portugal |
1-1 |
F |
Alan Smith |
| October 12, 2002 |
Tehelné pole, Bratislava |
Slovakia |
2-1 |
ECQ |
David Beckham, Michael Owen |
| October 16, 2002 |
St Mary's Stadium, Southampton |
Macedonia |
2-2 |
ECQ |
David Beckham, Steven Gerrard |
| February 12, 2003 |
Upton Park, London |
Australia |
1-3 |
F |
Francis Jeffers |
| March 29, 2003 |
Rheinpark Stadion, Vaduz |
Liechtenstein |
2-0 |
ECQ |
Michael Owen, David Beckham |
| April 2, 2003 |
Stadium of Light, Sunderland |
Turkey |
2-0 |
ECQ |
Darius Vassell, David Beckham |
| May 22, 2003 |
Durban |
South Africa |
2-1 |
F |
Gareth Southgate, Emile Heskey |
| June 3, 2003 |
Walkers Stadium, Leicester |
Serbia |
2-1 |
F |
Steven Gerrard, Joe Cole |
| June 11, 2003 |
Riverside Stadium, Middlesbrough |
Slovakia |
2-1 |
ECQ |
Michael Owen (2) |
Key: ECQ = 2004 European Championship qualifiers, F = Friendly; scores are written England first
[edit] European club competitions
[edit] Honours
[edit] League competitions
Manchester United overhauled Arsenal during the final three months of the season to clinch their eighth Premiership title in 11 seasons, while the other two Champions League places went to Newcastle United and Chelsea. Going into the UEFA Cup were Liverpool and Blackburn Rovers, along with F.A Cup runners-up Southampton (who also achieved their best Premiership finish of 8th place) and Fair Play award winners Manchester City (who finished an impressive ninth on their Premiership comeback).
Leeds United's season was plagued by a loss of form and mounting debts, as they slipped to 15th place - their lowest finish for 10 years. Aston Villa finished 16th to endure their first bottom-half finish since 1995.
Sunderland's season started badly and got worse as they finished with a record Premiership low of 4 wins, 19 points and 21 goals, losing their final 15 league games in the process. They were joined by West Bromwich Albion, who attained just 26 points in their first top flight season for nearly 20 years. Last to go down were West Ham United, who finished with 42 points - the highest points tally of any club to be relegated from the Premiership under the 20-club format.
Leading goalscorer: Ruud van Nistelrooy (Manchester United), 25
| Key |
| Qualified for the Champions League |
| Qualified for the UEFA Cup |
| Relegated to Division One |
Portsmouth won the First Division by some distance, passing manager Harry Redknapp's old club, West Ham on the way down. Leicester City earned a somewhat controversial promotion, as administration and a Creditor's Voluntary Agreement wrote off much of their debt. Partly as a result of this, the League would introduce a ten point deduction for any teams going into administration from the next season onwards. The play-offs were won by Wolves, returning to the top flight after nearly 20 years and finally allowing owner Sir Jack Hayward to see the return he wanted on his years of investment.
Grimsby were relegated, after struggling in the division for five years on extremely limited resources. Both Brighton and Sheffield Wednesday suffered awful starts to the season (Brighton managing only a single win from their first sixteen matches), and despite good runs of form late in the season, neither were able to survive.
Leading goalscorer: Svetoslav Todorov (Portsmouth), 26
See also: Play-off results
| Key |
| Promoted to the Premier League |
| Qualified for the promotion playoff |
| Relegated to Division Two |
Wigan won their first-ever promotion beyond the Second Division, helped by considerable investment in the team. Crewe managed a promotion on considerably less resources, while play-off winners Cardiff were another big-spending team that were able to earn promotion.
An ill-advised managerial change mid-season helped send Northampton down. Mansfield Town's first season out of the bottom division in over a decade ended as their previous spell had; with immediate relegation. Huddersfield started badly, and a financial crisis later in the season helped condemn them to relegation, only three years after they looked Premiership-bound. Cheltenham came close to survival, but a defeat on the final day of the season saw them return to Division Three.
| Key |
| Promoted to Division One |
| Qualified for the promotion playoff |
| Relegated to Division Three |
Rushden & Diamonds continued their meteoric rise, winning the divisional title. They were helped in no small part by runners-up Hartlepool suffering a shocking late-season collapse, which cost them the title and manager Mike Newell his job. Wrexham took the last automatic promotion spot and bounced back from the previous season's relegation, as did play-off winners Bournemouth.
A shock FA Cup victory over Everton did little to help Shrewsbury, and they finished bottom of the League. Exeter City were bought out pre-season in a high-profile takeover spearheaded by Uri Geller; unfortunately, Geller's associates proceeded to asset-strip the club, and despite a late-season run of form, Exeter fell victim to the first-ever dual relegation from the League.
| Key |
| Promoted to Division Two |
| Qualified for the promotion playoff |
| Relegated to Conference |
- Champions:
- Also promoted to Third Division:
[edit] Transfer deals
[edit] Summer transfer window
-
The summer transfer window ran from the end of the previous season until 31 August.
- 2 May 2002
- 14 August 2002
- 30 August 2002
- 31 August 2002
[edit] January transfer window
The mid-season transfer window ran from 1 to 31 January 2003.
- 31 January 2003
For subsequent transfer deals see 2003-04 in English football.
[edit] Famous Debutants
[edit] Deaths
- 26 June 2003: Marc-Vivien Foé, 28, Cameroon midfielder who spent the 2002-03 season on loan to Manchester City from French side Lyon, collapsed and died during a FIFA Confederations Cup game. A post mortem revealed that Foé, who had played for West Ham United earlier in his career, had suffered from an undetected heart condition.
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| League competitions |
The FA |
Cup competitions |
| Premier League |
England (B) (C) |
FA Cup |
| The Football League (Champ, 1, 2) |
(U-21) (U-20) (U-19) |
Football League Cup |
| Football Conference (Nat, N, S) |
(U-18) (U-17) (U-16) |
FA Community Shield |
| Northern Premier (Prem, 1N, 1S) |
List of clubs |
Football League Trophy |
| Southern League (Prem, 1Mid, 1S&W) |
List of venues |
FA Trophy |
| Isthmian League (Prem, 1N, 1S) |
(by capacity) |
Conference League Cup |
| English football league system |
List of leagues |
FA Vase |
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Records |
FA NLS Cup |
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Foreign players |
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2002-03 in English football,2002-03 IN ENGLISH FOOTBALL |