2004–05 FA Premier League
























































































Premier League
Season
2004–05
Champions
Chelsea
1st Premier League title
2nd English title
Relegated
Norwich City
Crystal Palace
Southampton
Champions League
Chelsea
Arsenal
Manchester United
Everton
Liverpool
UEFA Cup
Bolton Wanderers
Middlesbrough
Intertoto Cup
Newcastle United
Matches played
380
Goals scored
975 (2.57 per match)
Top goalscorer
Thierry Henry (25 goals)
Biggest home win
Arsenal 7–0 Everton
(11 May 2005)
Biggest away win
West Bromwich Albion 0–5 Liverpool
(26 December 2004)
Highest scoring
Tottenham Hotspur 4–5 Arsenal
(13 November 2004)
Longest winning run
8 games[1]
Chelsea
Longest unbeaten run
29 games[1]
Chelsea
Longest winless run
15 games[1]
West Bromwich Albion
Longest losing run
6 games[1]
Bolton Wanderers
Tottenham Hotspur
Highest attendance
67,989
Manchester United v Portsmouth (26 February 2005)
Lowest attendance
16,180
Fulham v West Bromwich Albion (16 January 2005)
Average attendance
33,893

← 2003–04


2005–06 →


The 2004–05 FA Premier League (known as the FA Barclays Premiership for sponsorship reasons) began on 14 August 2004 and ended on 15 May 2005. Arsenal were the defending champions after going unbeaten the previous season. Chelsea won the title with a then record 95 points, which was surpassed by Manchester City in the 2017–18 season, securing the title with a 2–0 win at the Reebok Stadium against Bolton Wanderers. Chelsea also broke a number of other records during their campaign, most notably breaking the record of most games won in a single Premier League campaign, securing 29 wins in the league in home and away matches.


In the domestic cup competitions, Arsenal won the FA Cup after beating holders Manchester United on penalties in the final. Chelsea won the Football League Cup, beating Liverpool (who had defeated holders Middlesbrough in the 4th round) 3–2 after extra time.




Contents






  • 1 Personnel and kits


  • 2 League table


  • 3 Results


  • 4 Season preview


  • 5 Relegation battle


  • 6 Managerial changes


  • 7 Top scorers


  • 8 Awards


    • 8.1 Monthly awards


    • 8.2 Annual awards


      • 8.2.1 PFA Players' Player of the Year


      • 8.2.2 PFA Young Player of the Year


      • 8.2.3 PFA Fans' Player of the Year


      • 8.2.4 PFA Team of the year


      • 8.2.5 FWA Footballer of the Year


      • 8.2.6 Premier League Player of the Season


      • 8.2.7 Premier League Golden Boot


      • 8.2.8 Premier League Golden Glove


      • 8.2.9 Premier League Manager of the Season


      • 8.2.10 Premier League Fair Play Award






  • 9 See also


  • 10 References


  • 11 External links





Personnel and kits






















































































































































Team
Manager
Captain
Kit manufacturer
Shirt sponsor

Arsenal

France Arsène Wenger

France Patrick Vieira

Nike

O2

Aston Villa

Republic of Ireland David O'Leary

Sweden Olof Mellberg

Hummel
DWS Investments

Birmingham City

England Steve Bruce

Republic of Ireland Kenny Cunningham

Diadora

Flybe.com

Blackburn Rovers

Wales Mark Hughes

England Garry Flitcroft

Lonsdale
HSA

Bolton Wanderers

England Sam Allardyce

Nigeria Jay-Jay Okocha

Reebok

Reebok

Charlton Athletic

England Alan Curbishley

Republic of Ireland Matt Holland

Joma
All:Sports

Chelsea

Portugal José Mourinho

England John Terry

Umbro

Emirates

Crystal Palace

Northern Ireland Iain Dowie

Northern Ireland Michael Hughes
Diadora

Churchill

Everton

Scotland David Moyes

Scotland David Weir
Umbro

Chang

Fulham

Wales Chris Coleman

England Lee Clark

Puma

dabs.com

Liverpool

Spain Rafael Benítez

England Steven Gerrard
Reebok

Carlsberg

Manchester City

England Stuart Pearce

France Sylvain Distin
Reebok

Thomas Cook

Manchester United

Scotland Alex Ferguson

Republic of Ireland Roy Keane
Nike

Vodafone

Middlesbrough

England Steve McClaren

England Gareth Southgate

Erreà

888.com

Newcastle United

Scotland Graeme Souness

England Alan Shearer

Adidas

Northern Rock

Norwich City

Northern Ireland Nigel Worthington

England Craig Fleming

Xara

Proton

Portsmouth

France Alain Perrin

Netherlands Arjan De Zeeuw
Pompey Sport

TY

Southampton

England Harry Redknapp

Scotland Nigel Quashie
Saints

Friends Provident

Tottenham Hotspur

Netherlands Martin Jol

England Ledley King

Kappa

Thomson Holidays

West Bromwich Albion

England Bryan Robson

England Kevin Campbell
Diadora

T-Mobile


League table









































































































































































































































































Pos
Team

Pld

W

D

L

GF

GA

GD

Pts
Qualification or relegation
1

Chelsea (C)
38
29
8
1
72
15
+57
95

2005–06 UEFA Champions League Group stage
2

Arsenal
38
25
8
5
87
36
+51
83
3

Manchester United
38
22
11
5
58
26
+32
77

2005–06 UEFA Champions League Third qualifying round
4

Everton
38
18
7
13
45
46
−1
61
5

Liverpool
38
17
7
14
52
41
+11
58

2005–06 UEFA Champions League First qualifying round[a]
6

Bolton Wanderers
38
16
10
12
49
44
+5
58

2005–06 UEFA Cup First round[b]
7

Middlesbrough
38
14
13
11
53
46
+7
55
8

Manchester City
38
13
13
12
47
39
+8
52

9

Tottenham Hotspur
38
14
10
14
47
41
+6
52
10

Aston Villa
38
12
11
15
45
52
−7
47
11

Charlton Athletic
38
12
10
16
42
58
−16
46
12

Birmingham City
38
11
12
15
40
46
−6
45
13

Fulham
38
12
8
18
52
60
−8
44
14

Newcastle United
38
10
14
14
47
57
−10
44

2005 UEFA Intertoto Cup Third round
15

Blackburn Rovers
38
9
15
14
32
43
−11
42

16

Portsmouth
38
10
9
19
43
59
−16
39
17

West Bromwich Albion
38
6
16
16
36
61
−25
34
18

Crystal Palace (R)
38
7
12
19
41
62
−21
33
Relegation to the 2005–06 Football League Championship
19

Norwich City (R)
38
7
12
19
42
77
−35
33
20

Southampton (R)
38
6
14
18
45
66
−21
32

Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champion; (R) Relegated.
Notes:




  1. ^ Although they failed to qualify for the Champions League as one of the top four English clubs, Liverpool were given a special dispensation to compete as the defending champions. They were, however, forced to enter in the first qualifying round. See Liverpool F.C. 2005–06 UEFA Champions League qualification for details.


  2. ^ Since the finalists of the FA Cup, Arsenal and Manchester United, as well as Chelsea, who won the 2004–05 Football League Cup, were confirmed to qualify for the Champions League, and the fifth-placed team (Liverpool) were moved to the Champions League, the sixth and seventh-placed teams in the Premier League were rewarded with entry to the UEFA Cup.




Results






































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Home Away[1]

ARS

AST
BIR BLB BOL CHA CHE CRY EVE FUL LIV MCI MUN MID NEW NWC POR SOU TOT
WBA

Arsenal


3–1

3–0

3–0

2–2

4–0

2–2

5–1

7–0

2–0

3–1

1–1

2–4

5–3

1–0

4–1

3–0

2–2

1–0

1–1

Aston Villa

1–3


1–2

1–0

1–1

0–0

0–0

1–1

1–3

2–0

1–1

1–2

0–1

2–0

4–2

3–0

3–0

2–0

1–0

1–1

Birmingham City

2–1

2–0


2–1

1–2

1–1

0–1

0–1

0–1

1–2

2–0

1–0

0–0

2–0

2–2

1–1

0–0

2–1

1–1

4–0

Blackburn Rovers

0–1

2–2

3–3


0–1

1–0

0–1

1–0

0–0

1–3

2–2

0–0

1–1

0–4

2–2

3–0

1–0

3–0

0–1

1–1

Bolton Wanderers

1–0

1–2

1–1

0–1


4–1

0–2

1–0

3–2

3–1

1–0

0–1

2–2

0–0

2–1

1–0

0–1

1–1

3–1

1–1

Charlton Athletic

1–3

3–0

3–1

1–0

1–2


0–4

2–2

2–0

2–1

1–2

2–2

0–4

1–2

1–1

4–0

2–1

0–0

2–0

1–4

Chelsea

0–0

1–0

1–1

4–0

2–2

1–0


4–1

1–0

3–1

1–0

0–0

1–0

2–0

4–0

4–0

3–0

2–1

0–0

1–0

Crystal Palace

1–1

2–0

2–0

0–0

0–1

0–1

0–2


1–3

2–0

1–0

1–2

0–0

0–1

0–2

3–3

0–1

2–2

3–0

3–0

Everton

1–4

1–1

1–1

0–1

3–2

0–1

0–1

4–0


1–0

1–0

2–1

1–0

1–0

2–0

1–0

2–1

1–0

0–1

2–1

Fulham

0–3

1–1

2–3

0–2

2–0

0–0

1–4

3–1

2–0


2–4

1–1

1–1

0–2

1–3

6–0

3–1

1–0

2–0

1–0

Liverpool

2–1

2–1

0–1

0–0

1–0

2–0

0–1

3–2

2–1

3–1


2–1

0–1

1–1

3–1

3–0

1–1

1–0

2–2

3–0

Manchester City

0–1

2–0

3–0

1–1

0–1

4–0

1–0

3–1

0–1

1–1

1–0


0–2

1–1

1–1

1–1

2–0

2–1

0–1

1–1

Manchester United

2–0

3–1

2–0

0–0

2–0

2–0

1–3

5–2

0–0

1–0

2–1

0–0


1–1

2–1

2–1

2–1

3–0

0–0

1–1

Middlesbrough

0–1

3–0

2–1

1–0

1–1

2–2

0–1

2–1

1–1

1–1

2–0

3–2

0–2


2–2

2–0

1–1

1–3

1–0

4–0

Newcastle United

0–1

0–3

2–1

3–0

2–1

1–1

1–1

0–0

1–1

1–4

1–0

4–3

1–3

0–0


2–2

1–1

2–1

0–1

3–1

Norwich City

1–4

0–0

1–0

1–1

3–2

1–0

1–3

1–1

2–3

0–1

1–2

2–3

2–0

4–4

2–1


2–2

2–1

0–2

3–2

Portsmouth

0–1

1–2

1–1

0–1

1–1

4–2

0–2

3–1

0–1

4–3

1–2

1–3

2–0

2–1

1–1

1–1


4–1

1–0

3–2

Southampton

1–1

2–3

0–0

3–2

1–2

0–0

1–3

2–2

2–2

3–3

2–0

0–0

1–2

2–2

1–2

4–3

2–1


1–0

2–2

Tottenham Hotspur

4–5

5–1

1–0

0–0

1–2

2–3

0–2

1–1

5–2

2–0

1–1

2–1

0–1

2–0

1–0

0–0

3–1

5–1


1–1

West Bromwich Albion

0–2

1–1

2–0

1–1

2–1

0–1

1–4

2–2

1–0

1–1

0–5

2–0

0–3

1–2

0–0

0–0

2–0

0–0

1–1


Source: Barclays Premier League
^ The home team is listed in the left-hand column.
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.
For coming matches, an a indicates there is an article about the match.




2004–05 FA Premier League is located in England

Arsenal

Arsenal



Aston Villa

Aston Villa



Birmingham

Birmingham



Blackburn

Blackburn



Bolton

Bolton



Charlton

Charlton



Chelsea

Chelsea



Crystal Palace

Crystal Palace



Everton

Everton



Fulham

Fulham



Liverpool

Liverpool



Man City

Man City



Man United

Man United



Middlesbrough

Middlesbrough



Newcastle

Newcastle



Norwich

Norwich



Portsmouth

Portsmouth



Southampton

Southampton



Tottenham

Tottenham



West Brom

West Brom




Locations of the 2004–05 Premier League teams



Season preview


Arsenal were the favourites to defend their title after finishing the previous season unbeaten, but they also faced competition in the form of regular challengers Manchester United and Chelsea, the latter under the new management of Portuguese José Mourinho, who had just won the UEFA Champions League with Porto. Liverpool also had a new manager in Spaniard Rafael Benítez, who had just won La Liga and the UEFA Cup with Valencia and were expected to challenge for the title too. Another managerial change at a club aiming for the top was at Tottenham Hotspur, who appointed Jacques Santini, who had just led France to the quarter-finals of the 2004 European Championship.


At the other end of the table, amongst those tipped for relegation were Norwich City, Crystal Palace and West Bromwich Albion, having all just been promoted from the First Division (which was rebranded this season as the Championship). Everton, Manchester City, Blackburn Rovers and Portsmouth were also tipped to struggle, the first three finishing just outside the relegation places the previous season and Portsmouth being in their second season.



Relegation battle


For the first time since the advent of the Premier League in 1992, no team was mathematically relegated before the final day of the season. In each of the last three weekends of the season, the team that was bottom of the table at the start of the weekend finished it outside the drop zone. The final round of the season started on 15 May with West Bromwich Albion at the bottom, Southampton and Crystal Palace one point ahead and Norwich City a further point ahead, in the last safe spot.


West Brom, who had been bottom of the table and eight points from safety on Christmas Day, did their part by defeating Portsmouth at home 2–0. Norwich, the only side to have their fate completely in their own hands, lost 6–0 at Fulham and went down. Southampton lost 2–1 at home to Manchester United and were relegated after 27 years in the top flight. Palace, away to Charlton Athletic, were leading 2–1 after 71 minutes, but with eight minutes to go, Charlton's Jonathan Fortune equalised to relegate Palace. Thus, West Brom stayed up, becoming the first club in Premier League history to avoid relegation after being bottom of the table at Christmas.


At the end of the 90 minutes in all four matches, cameras focused on West Brom's home ground, The Hawthorns, as confirmation of other results began to filter through. Once the realisation dawned on the players and fans that survival had been achieved, a mass pitch invasion was sparked, with huge celebrations. The Portsmouth fans joined in the celebrations as, through losing, they had "helped" relegate arch-rivals Southampton. The defeat itself mattered little to Portsmouth, as they would be unable to improve on their final position of 16th due to 15th-placed Blackburn Rovers' greater points tally.



Managerial changes




  • Blackburn Rovers appointed Wales boss Mark Hughes as manager in September, following the departure of Graeme Souness to Newcastle United.


  • Chelsea sacked Claudio Ranieri and replaced him with UEFA Champions League winning coach José Mourinho.


  • Liverpool appointed Valencia's UEFA Cup winning coach Rafael Benítez as successor to Gérard Houllier, who was sacked.


  • Manchester City parted company with manager Kevin Keegan in late March and replaced him with first team coach Stuart Pearce.


  • Newcastle United sacked manager Sir Bobby Robson at the end of August and replaced him with Blackburn's Graeme Souness.


  • Portsmouth parted company with Harry Redknapp in November and replaced him with executive director Velimir Zajec. He was also replaced by Alain Perrin in March.


  • Southampton parted company with Paul Sturrock early in the season; he had lasted less than six months in the job. He was replaced by Steve Wigley, but he was sacked in November and replaced by Harry Redknapp.


  • Tottenham Hotspur appointed former French national coach Jacques Santini as the new manager during pre-season. Santini left in November, citing personal problems, and was replaced by his assistant Martin Jol.


  • West Bromwich Albion sacked Gary Megson in October after Megson notified the club he would not be extending his contract beyond the end of the season. He was replaced him with former England captain and Manchester United legend Bryan Robson.



Top scorers
































































Rank
Scorer
Team
Goals
1

Thierry Henry
Arsenal
25
2

Andy Johnson
Crystal Palace
21
3

Robert Pires
Arsenal
14
4

Jermain Defoe
Tottenham Hotspur
13

Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink
Middlesbrough
13

Frank Lampard
Chelsea
13

Yakubu
Portsmouth
13
8

Andy Cole
Fulham
12

Peter Crouch
Southampton
12

Eiður Guðjohnsen
Chelsea
12


Awards



Monthly awards





















































Month Manager of the Month
Player of the Month
August

France Arsène Wenger (Arsenal)

Spain José Antonio Reyes (Arsenal)
September

Scotland David Moyes (Everton)

England Ledley King (Tottenham Hotspur)
October

England Harry Redknapp (Portsmouth)

England Andy Johnson (Crystal Palace)
November

Portugal José Mourinho (Chelsea)

Netherlands Arjen Robben (Chelsea)
December

Netherlands Martin Jol (Tottenham Hotspur)

England Steven Gerrard (Liverpool)
January

Portugal José Mourinho (Chelsea)

England John Terry (Chelsea)
February

Scotland Sir Alex Ferguson (Manchester United)

England Wayne Rooney (Manchester United)
March

England Harry Redknapp (Southampton)

England Joe Cole (Chelsea)
April

England Stuart Pearce (Manchester City)

England Frank Lampard (Chelsea)


Annual awards



PFA Players' Player of the Year


The PFA Player's Player of the year award was won by Chelsea captain John Terry.



PFA Young Player of the Year


Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney was the recipient for this award.



PFA Fans' Player of the Year


Chelsea midfielder Frank Lampard won this award for the first time.



PFA Team of the year


Goalkeeper – Petr Čech

Defenders – Gary Neville, John Terry, Rio Ferdinand, Ashley Cole

Midfielders – Shaun Wright-Phillips, Frank Lampard, Steven Gerrard, Arjen Robben

Strikers – Thierry Henry, Andy Johnson(Poka)



FWA Footballer of the Year


Chelsea midfielder Frank Lampard won this award.



Premier League Player of the Season


Chelsea's midfielder Frank Lampard won the Premier League Player of the Season award.



Premier League Golden Boot


Arsenal and French striker Thierry Henry won the Premier League Golden Boot award for the third time in his career with an impressive 25 goals.



Premier League Golden Glove


Chelsea goalkeeper Petr Čech won the Premier League Golden Glove, for 24 clean sheets, in his debut season as he set a remarkable record of 10 consecutive clean sheets, as Chelsea won the title.



Premier League Manager of the Season


José Mourinho was awarded the Premier League Manager of the Season award after he led Chelsea to their first Premier League title, second Top division title in their history.[2][3] During his first season at the club, Chelsea won the Premier League title (their first league title in 50 years) and the League Cup. The season was also notable for the number of records set during the season: Fewest goals against in a Premier League season (15), most clean sheets kept in a season (25), most wins in a season (29), most consecutive away wins (9) and the most points in a season (95).



Premier League Fair Play Award


The Premier League Fair Play Award is merit given to the team who has been the most sporting and best behaved team. Arsenal won the award for the second year in a row, ahead of Tottenham.[4][5] The least sporting side for 2004–05 was Blackburn Rovers, who achieved a significantly lower fair play score than any other side.[6]



See also


  • 2004–05 in English football


References





  1. ^ abcd "English Premier League 2004–05". statto.com. Retrieved 19 February 2015..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ "Premier League History - 2004/05 Season Review". www.premierleague.com.


  3. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20061211030037/http://www.premierleague.com/fapl.rac?command=setSelectedId&nextPage=enNewsLatest&id=678429&type=com.fapl.website.news.NewsItem&categoryCode=NewsSpecialFeatures&breadcrumb=sfsub_breadcrumb


  4. ^ "Fair Play to Arsenal". The Sun. London. Retrieved 19 May 2005.


  5. ^ http://www.arsenal.com/assets/_files/documents/jul_08/gun__1215525750_accounts2005.pdf


  6. ^ "Wayback Machine" (PDF). 12 December 2005.




External links


  • 2004–05 FA Premier League Season at RSSSF










Popular posts from this blog

Bressuire

Vorschmack

Quarantine