2003-04 IN ENGLISH FOOTBALL

The '2003-04 season' was the 124th season of competitive football in England.

Contents
Overview
Events
National team
Honours
European qualification
League tables
FA Premier League
Football League First Division
Football League Second Division
Football League Third Division
National league system
Cup competitions
Football Conference
Northern Premier League
Southern League
Isthmian League
Other leagues
Transfer deals
Summer transfer window
January transfer window
Retirements
Deaths

Overview


Arsenal completed the entire campaign without losing a single league game.
Leeds United narrowly avoided going into administration, but despite a valiant effort late in the season to claw back lost points, they were unable to avoid relegation and lost their place in the Premiership to newcomers Portsmouth.
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 A.F.C. Telford United and joined the Northern Premier 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. York City also followed them out of the Football League afer a dreadful second half to the season. Meanwhile, Chester City and Shrewsbury Town were promoted back to the Football League from the Nationwide Conference.

Events



29 February 2004: Middlesbrough win their first ever trophy as a professional club by beating Bolton Wanderers in the League Cup final.

5 March 2004: Three Leicester City players, Paul Dickov, Keith Gillespie and Frank Sinclair, are charged with sexual assault while on a training camp in La Manga, Spain. All charges are dropped in May.

27 May 2004: Telford United are liquidated and removed from the Conference as a result.

2 June 2004: José Mourinho takes over as manager of Chelsea, replacing Claudio Ranieri.

16 June 2004: Rafael Benítez takes over as manager of Liverpool, replacing Gérard Houllier.

21 June 2004: Wimbledon announce that they will change their name to Milton Keynes Dons, reflecting its highly controversial move from South London to Milton Keynes.

National team


DateVenueOpponentsScoreCompetitionEngland scorers
August 20, 2003Portman Road, Ipswich3-1FDavid Beckham ''(pen)'', Michael Owen, Frank Lampard
September 6, 2003Skopje City Stadium
Macedonia
2-1ECQWayne Rooney, David Beckham ''(pen)''
September 10, 2003Old Trafford, Manchester2-0ECQMichael Owen, Wayne Rooney
October 11, 2003Istanbul0-0ECQ
November 16, 2003Old Trafford, Manchester2-3FWayne Rooney, Joe Cole
February 14, 2004Estádio Algarve, Faro1-1FLedley King
March 31, 2004Nya Ullevi Stadion, Gothenburg0-1F
June 1, 2004City of Manchester Stadium, Manchester1-1FAMichael Owen
June 5, 2004City of Manchester Stadium, Manchester6-1FAFrank Lampard, Wayne Rooney (2), Darius Vassell (2), Wayne Bridge
June 13, 2004Estádio da Luz, Lisbon1-2ECFFrank Lampard
June 17, 2004Estádio Cidade, Coimbra3-0ECFWayne Rooney (2), Steven Gerrard
June 21, 2004Estádio da Luz, Lisbon4-2ECFPaul Scholes, Wayne Rooney (2), Frank Lampard
June 24, 2004Estádio da Luz, Lisbon1-1 (FT), 2-2 (aet), 5-6 (P)ECFMichael 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

Honours


CompetitionWinner
FA Premier LeagueArsenal
FA CupManchester United
Carling CupMiddlesbrough
Football League TrophyBlackpool
Football League First DivisionNorwich City
Football League Second DivisionPlymouth Argyle
Football League Third DivisionDoncaster Rovers
FA Community ShieldManchester United

European qualification


CompetitionQualifiersReason for qualification
UEFA Champions LeagueArsenal1st in FA Premier League
Chelsea2nd in FA Premier League
UEFA Champions League Third Qualifying RoundManchester United3rd in FA Premier League
Liverpool4th in FA Premier League
UEFA CupNewcastle United5th in FA Premier League
MiddlesbroughLeague Cup Winners
MillwallIn 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)

League tables


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. Portsmouth, also considered favourites for relegation pre-season, finished a respectable 13th in their first top-flight season.
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.
Main articles: FA Premier League 2003-04

PWDLFAGDPts
'C'1Arsenal38261207326+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
'R'18Leicester City38615174865-1733
'R'19Leeds United3889214079-3933
'R'20Wolverhampton Wanderers38712193877-3933

Football League First Division

The top three led the division for most of the season, but Sunderland could not 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.
PWDLFAGDPts
'C'1Norwich City46281087939+4094
'P'2West Bromwich Albion462511106442+2286
 3Sunderland462213116245+1779
 4West Ham United461917106745+2274
 5Ipswich Town462110158472+1273
'P'6Crystal Palace462110157261+1173
 7Wigan Athletic461817116045+1571
 8Sheffield United462011156556+971
 9Reading462010165557-270
 10Millwall461815135548+769
 11Stoke City461812165855+366
 12Coventry City461714156754+1365
 13Cardiff City461714156858+1065
 14Nottingham Forest461515166158+360
 15Preston North End461514176971-259
 16Watford461512195468-1457
 17Rotherham United461315185361-854
 18Crewe Alexandra461411215766-953
 19Burnley461314196077-1753
 20Derby County461313205367-1452
 21Gillingham46149234867-1951
'R'22Walsall461312214565-2051
'R'23Bradford City46106303869-3136
'R'24Wimbledon4685334189-4829

Football League Second Division

Plymouth Argyle 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 & Hove Albion, 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 Wanderers 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 & Diamonds' years of success came to a grinding halt as they crashed back out of the division after being promoted the previous year. Grimsby Town'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 City 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.
PWDLFAGDPts
'C'1Plymouth Argyle46261288541+4490
'P' 2Queens Park Rangers46221778045+4583
  3Bristol City462313105837+2182
'P' 4Brighton & Hove Albion462211136443+2177
  5Swindon Town462013137658+1873
  6Hartlepool United462013137661+1573
  7Port Vale462110157363+1073
  8Tranmere Rovers461716135956+367
  9A.F.C. Bournemouth461715145651+566
 10Luton Town461715146966+366
 11Colchester United461713165256-464
 12Barnsley461517145458-462
 13Wrexham46179205060-1060
 14Blackpool461611195865-759
 15Oldham Athletic461221136660+657
 16Sheffield Wednesday461314194864-1853
 17Brentford461411215269-1753
 18Peterborough United461216185858052
 19Stockport County461119166270-852
 20Chesterfield461215194971-2251
 21Grimsby Town461311225581-2650
 22Rushden & Diamonds46139246074-1448
 23Notts County461012245078-2842
 24Wycombe Wanderers46619215075-2537

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.
PWDLFAGDPts
'C'1Doncaster Rovers46271187937+4292
'P' 2Hull City46251388244+3888
'P' 3Torquay United462312116844+2481
'P' 4Huddersfield Town462312116852+1681
  5Mansfield Town46229157662+1475
  6Northampton Town46229155851+775
  7Lincoln City461917106847+2174
  8Yeovil Town46235187057+1374
  9Oxford United461817115544+1171
 10Swansea City461514175861-359
 11Boston United461611195054-459
 12Bury461511205464-1056
 13Cambridge United461414185567-1256
 14Cheltenham Town461414185771-1456
 15Bristol Rovers461413195061-1155
 16Kidderminster Harriers461413194559-1455
 17Southend United461412205163-1254
 18Darlington461411215361-853
 19Leyton Orient461314194865-1753
 20Macclesfield Town461313205469-1552
 21Rochdale461214204958-950
 22Scunthorpe United461116196972-349
'R'23Carlisle United46129254669-2345
'R'24York City461014223566-3144

National league system


Cup competitions

CompetitionWinners
FA TrophyHednesford Town
FA VaseWinchester City
FA National League System CupMid Cheshire League

Football Conference


★ Champions:


Chester City

Playoff winners:


Shrewsbury Town

★ Relegated:


Margate ''(forced relegation to Conference South due to failing ground requirements)''
Northern Premier League


★ Champions:


Hucknall Town ''(to Conference North)''

★ Also promoted ''(to Conference North)'':


Droylsden, Barrow, Alfreton Town, Harrogate Town, Southport, Worksop Town, Lancaster City, Vauxhall Motors, Gainsborough Trinity, Stalybridge Celtic, Altrincham, Runcorn FC Halton, Bradford Park Avenue ''(playoff winners)''
Southern League


★ Champions:


Crawley Town ''(to Conference National)''

★ Also promoted ''(to Conference North)'':


Stafford Rangers, Nuneaton Borough, Worcester City, Hinckley United, Moor Green

★ Also promoted ''(to Conference South)'':


Weymouth, Newport County, Cambridge City, Welling United, Weston-Super-Mare, Eastbourne Borough, Havant & Waterlooville, Dorchester Town ''(playoff winners)''
Isthmian League


★ Champions:


Canvey Island ''(to Conference National)''

★ Also promoted ''(to Conference South)'':


Sutton United, Thurrock, Hornchurch, Grays Athletic, Carshalton Athletic, Hayes, Bognor Regis Town, Bishop's Stortford, Maidenhead United, Ford United, Basingstoke Town, St Albans City ''(playoff winners)''

★ Also promoted ''(to Conference North)'':


Kettering Town
Other leagues

LeagueChampionsNotes
Step 3 LeaguesNorthern Premier League First DivisionHyde United 
Southern League Midland/West DivisionRedditch United''(promoted to Conference North after playoffs)''
Southern League South/East DivisionKing's Lynn 
Isthmian League Division One NorthYeading 
Isthmian League Division One SouthLewes''(promoted to Conference South after playoffs)''
Step 4 LeaguesNorthern LeagueDunston Federation Brewery 
North West Counties LeagueClitheroe 
Northern Counties East LeagueOssett Albion 
Midland AllianceRocester 
United Counties LeagueSpalding United 
Eastern Counties LeagueA.F.C. Sudbury 
Isthmian League Division TwoLeighton Town 
Essex Senior LeagueConcord Rangers 
Spartan South Midlands LeagueBeaconsfield SYCOB 
Combined Counties LeagueA.F.C. Wimbledon 
Hellenic LeagueBrackley Town 
Western LeagueBideford 
Wessex LeagueWinchester City 
Sussex County LeagueChichester City United 
Kent LeagueCray Wanderers 

Transfer deals


Summer transfer window

The summer transfer window ran from the end of the previous season until 31 August 2003.
;8 May 2003

Steve Finnan from Fulham to Liverpool, £3.5m
;11 May 2003

Christophe Dugarry from Girondins de Bordeaux to Birmingham City, free
;4 June 2003

David Seaman from Arsenal to Manchester City, free

Michael Tarnat from Bayern Munich to Manchester City, free
;6 June 2003

Patrik Berger from Liverpool to Portsmouth, free
;7 June 2003

Matt Holland from Ipswich Town to Charlton Athletic, £750,000
;11 June 2003

Gianfranco Zola from Chelsea to Cagliari Calcio, free
;25 June 2003

Hélder Postiga from FC Porto to Tottenham Hotspur, £8.25m
;30 June 2003

Teddy Sheringham from Tottenham Hotspur to Portsmouth
;1 July 2003

Lee Bowyer from West Ham United to Newcastle United, free

David Bellion from Sunderland to Manchester United, free (Manchester United had to pay compenszation to Sunderland due to playes age)

Philippe Senderos from Servette to Arsenal, Undisclosed
;2 July 2003

David Beckham from Manchester United to Real Madrid, £25m
;3 July 2003

David Dunn from Blackburn Rovers to Birmingham City, £5.5m
;7 July 2003

Eric Djemba-Djemba from Nantes to Manchester United, £3.5m
;8 July 2003

Niclas Jensen from Manchester City to Borussia Dortmund, £750,000
;9 July 2003

Harry Kewell from Leeds United to Liverpool, £5m
;10 July 2003

Brett Emerton from Feyenoord to Blackburn Rovers, £2.5m
;11 July 2003

Les Ferdinand from West Ham United to Leicester City, free
;14 July 2003

Lorenzo Amoruso from Glasgow Rangers to Blackburn Rovers, £1.4m
;15 July 2003

Tim Howard from Major League Soccer to Manchester United, £2.2m

Glen Johnson from West Ham United to Chelsea, £6m
;16 July 2003

Geremi from Real Madrid to Chelsea, undisclosed

Tony Vidmar from Middlesbrough to Cardiff City, free
;17 July 2003

Ivan Campo from Real Madrid to Bolton Wanderers, free
;18 July 2003

Paul Merson from Portsmouth to Walsall, free

Bobby Zamora from Brighton and Hove Albion to Tottenham Hotspur, £1.5m

Ben Thatcher from Tottenham Hotspur to Leicester City, free
;21 July 2003

Wayne Bridge from Southampton to Chelsea, £7m

Damien Duff from Blackburn Rovers to Chelsea, £17m

Graeme Le Saux from Chelsea to Southampton, £500,000

Trevor Sinclair from West Ham United to Manchester City, £2.5m

Doriva from Celta Vigo to Middlesbrough, free
;23 July 2003

Kevin Davies from Southampton to Bolton Wanderers, free
;24 July 2003

Oleg Luzhny from Arsenal to Wolverhampton Wanderers, free

Gavin McCann from Sunderland to Aston Villa, £2.25m
;26 July 2003

Jens Lehmann from Borussia Dortmund to Arsenal, Undisclosed
;28 July 2003

Steven Reid from Millwall to Blackburn Rovers, £2.5m

Dejan Stefanovic from Vitesse Arnhem to Portsmouth, £1.9m
;31 July 2003

David Connolly from Wimbledon to West Ham United, £285,000

Jody Craddock from Sunderland to Wolverhampton Wanderers, £1.75m
;1 August 2003

Vratislav Gresko from Parma to Blackburn Rovers, £1.2m

Shaun Goater from Manchester City to Reading, £500,000

Steffen Iversen from Tottenham Hotspur to Wolverhampton Wanderers, free

Henri Camara from Sedan to Wolverhampton Wanderers, £1.5m
;2 August 2003

Antoine Sibierski from RC Lens to Manchester City, £700,000

Alan Wright from Aston Villa to Middlesbrough, free
;3 August 2003

Rob Lee from Derby County to West Ham United, free
;4 August 2003

Gaël Clichy from Cannes to Arsenal, Nominal

Luciano Figueroa from Rosario to Birmingham, £2.5m

Frederic Kanoute from West Ham United to Tottenham Hotspur, £3.5m

Matthew Etherington from Tottenham Hotspur West Ham United, Swap for Kanoute
;5 August 2003

Amdy Faye from Auxerre to Portsmouth, £1.5m

Gary Breen from West Ham United to Sunderland, free
;6 August 2003

Joe Cole from West Ham United to Chelsea, £6.6m

Juan Sebastián Verón from Manchester United to Chelsea, £15m
;8 August 2003

Thomas Sørensen from Sunderland to Aston Villa, £2.25m
;11 August 2003

Paolo Di Canio from West Ham United to Charlton Athletic, free
;12 August 2003

Cristiano Ronaldo from Sporting Lisbon to Manchester United, £12m

Kleberson from Atletico Paranaense to Manchester United, £5.9m
;13 August 2003

Mark Crossley from Middlesbrough to Fulham, £500,000
;14 August 2003

Adrian Mutu from Parma to Chelsea, £15m

Carlo Nash from Manchester City to Middlesbrough, Nominal

Sebastian Schemmel from West Ham United to Portsmouth, free
;15 August 2003

Kevin Horlock from Manchester City to West Ham United, £500,000
;21 August 2003

Gaizka Mendieta from Lazio to Middlesbrough, season-long loan
;24 August 2003

Danny Mills from Leeds United to Middlesbrough, season-long loan
;25 August 2003

Alexei Smertin from Girondins de Bordeaux to Chelsea, £3.45m
;26 August 2003

Hernán Crespo from Internazionale to Chelsea, £17m
;29 August 2003

Claudio Reyna from Sunderland to Manchester City, £2.5m

Barry Ferguson from Glasgow Rangers to Blackburn Rovers, £7.5m
;30 August 2003

Steve McManaman from Real Madrid to Manchester City, free

Boudewijn Zenden from Chelsea to Middlesbrough, season-long loan
;31 August 2003

Claude Makélélé from Real Madrid to Chelsea, £16m
;1 September

Neil Sullivan from Tottenham Hotspur to Chelsea, free

James McFadden from Motherwell to Everton, £1.25m

Nigel Martyn from Leeds United to Everton, Nominal

Kevin Kilbane from Sunderland to Everton, £750,000

Mark Pembridge from Everton to Fulham, £500,000
January transfer window

The mid-season transfer window runs from 1 January to 31 January 2006.
;1 January 2004

Michael Brown from Sheffield United to Tottenham Hotspur, £100,000
;2 January 2004

Fabien Barthez from Manchester United to Olympique de Marseille, season-long loan

Nikos Dabizas from Newcastle United to Leicester City, free
;6 January 2004

Peter Enckelman from Aston Villa to Blackburn Rovers, £150,000
;9 January 2004

Eyal Berkovic from Manchester City to Portsmouth, free
;12 January 2004

Alan Wright from Middlesbrough to Sheffield United, free
;14 January 2004

David James from West Ham United to Manchester City, £2m
;17 January 2004

Andy Melville from Fulham to West Ham United, free
;23 January 2004

Louis Saha from Fulham to Manchester United, £12.82m
;21 January 2004

Moritz Volz from Arsenal to Fulham, Nominal
;22 January 2004

Nigel Reo-Coker from Wimbledon to West Ham United, Undisclosed
;25 January 2004

Carl Cort from Newcastle United to Wolverhampton Wanderers, £2m
;27 January 2004

José Antonio Reyes from Sevilla to Arsenal, £16.5m

Michael Gray from Sunderland to Blackburn Rovers, free
;29 January 2004

Nolberto Solano from Newcastle United to Aston Villa, £1.5m
;30 January 2004

Scott Parker from Charlton Athletic to Chelsea, £10m

Ivica Mornar from RSC Anderlecht to Portsmouth, Undisclosed

Ricardinho from Sao Pãulo to Middlesbrough, Free
;2 February 2004

Jerome Thomas from Arsenal to Charlton Athletic, £100,000

Martin Taylor from Blackburn Rovers to Birmingham City, £1.25m

Jon Stead from Huddersfield Town to Blackburn Rovers, £1.25m

Jermain Defoe from West Ham United to Tottenham Hotspur, £7m

Bobby Zamora from Tottenham Hotspur to West Ham United, Swap for Defoe
For subsequent transfer deals see 2004-05 in English football.
Retirements


David Seaman (Manchester City)

Marco Gabbiadini (Hartlepool United)

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.

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