2013–14 Premier League





























































































Premier League
Season
2013–14
Champions
Manchester City
2nd Premier League title
4th English title
Relegated
Norwich City
Fulham
Cardiff City
Champions League
Manchester City
Liverpool
Chelsea
Arsenal
Europa League
Everton
Tottenham Hotspur
Hull City
Matches played
380
Goals scored
1,052 (2.77 per match)
Top goalscorer
Luis Suárez (31 goals)[1]
Best goalkeeper
Petr Čech
Wojciech Szczęsny
(16 clean sheets)[2]
Biggest home win
Manchester City 7–0 Norwich City[3]
(2 November 2013)
Biggest away win
Tottenham Hotspur 0–5 Liverpool[3]
(15 December 2013)
Highest scoring
Manchester City 6–3 Arsenal[3]
(14 December 2013)
Cardiff City 3–6 Liverpool[3]
(22 March 2014)
Longest winning run
11 games[3]
Liverpool
Longest unbeaten run
16 games[3]
Liverpool
Longest winless run
9 games[3]
Fulham
Sunderland
West Bromwich Albion
Longest losing run
7 games[3]
Crystal Palace
Highest attendance
75,368[3]
Manchester United 4–1 Aston Villa
(29 March 2014)
Lowest attendance
19,242[3]
Swansea City 3–3 Stoke City
(10 November 2013)
Total attendance
13,929,810[3]
Average attendance
36,657[3]

← 2012–13


2014–15 →


The 2013–14 Premier League (known as the Barclays Premier League for sponsorship reasons) was the 22nd season of the Premier League, the top-flight English professional league for men's football clubs. The fixtures were announced on 19 June 2013. The season started on Saturday 17 August 2013, and concluded on Sunday 11 May 2014.


On the final day of the season, Manchester City won the Premier League with a 2–0 victory over West Ham United, finishing with 86 points. Liverpool had looked on course to win the title with two weeks to go, but a loss and a draw in two of their last three matches, combined with Manchester City winning their final five league matches, ultimately meant they finished in second place with 84 points. Chelsea finished third and Arsenal, who led the table for the longest period, finished fourth. Manchester United had a disappointing season attempting to defend their title and ended up seventh, a then-joint worst performance for Premier League holders. Norwich City, Fulham, and Cardiff City finished in the bottom three and were relegated to the Football League Championship.


Luis Suárez won the scoring title with 31 goals, and was also named Player of the Season. Goalkeepers Wojciech Szczęsny of Arsenal and Petr Čech of Chelsea led the league with 16 clean sheets each. Tony Pulis of Crystal Palace won the Manager of the Season award.




Contents






  • 1 Season summary


  • 2 Teams


    • 2.1 Stadia and locations


    • 2.2 Personnel and kits


    • 2.3 Managerial changes




  • 3 League table


  • 4 Results


  • 5 Season statistics


    • 5.1 Scoring


      • 5.1.1 Top scorers


      • 5.1.2 Hat-tricks




    • 5.2 Clean sheets


      • 5.2.1 Player


      • 5.2.2 Club




    • 5.3 Discipline


      • 5.3.1 Player


      • 5.3.2 Club






  • 6 Awards


    • 6.1 Monthly awards


    • 6.2 Annual awards


      • 6.2.1 Premier League Manager of the season


      • 6.2.2 Premier League Player of the season


      • 6.2.3 PFA Players' Player of the Year


      • 6.2.4 PFA Team of the Year


      • 6.2.5 PFA Young Player of the Year


      • 6.2.6 FWA Footballer of the Year


      • 6.2.7 Premier League Golden Glove


      • 6.2.8 Premier League Fair Play League






  • 7 Average attendances[110]


  • 8 References





Season summary


The 380 fixtures for the 2013–14 Premier League season were announced on 19 June 2013. The television broadcast rights were given two-to-three weeks later. The season started on Saturday 17 August 2013, and concluded on Sunday 11 May 2014.[4] During the 2013–14 season, the Premier League used goal-line technology for the first time.[5]


During the 2013–14 season, first place changed hands 25 times, compared to just four times during the 2012–13 season. That represented the most lead changes since the 2001–02 season – which had 29, the most ever. The championship was not decided until the final day of play for just the seventh time in league history.[6] Manchester City won the league with a 2–0 victory over West Ham United on the final day, finishing with 86 points.[7] In total, Manchester City led the league just 14 days throughout the season en route to their second championship in the last three seasons. The club scored 102 goals, one short of the record, while also conceding the second fewest goals in the league.[6]


With two weeks to go, Liverpool looked like having a chance to win the championship before they had a loss and a draw in two of their final three games.[8] The team ended up in second place with 84 points. Chelsea came third, while perennial power and 2013 champions Manchester United had a disappointing season under new manager David Moyes (who was sacked in April) and finished seventh.[6] It was their first finish outside the top four in Premier League history, their worst finish overall since 1989–90, and the first time they had not qualified for European football in 25 years.[9] Southampton's eighth-place finish and Everton's 72 points were club records.


Sunderland became only the second team in the Premier League era to avoid relegation having been bottom of the table on Christmas Day.[6] Defeat at home to Everton on 12 April left Gus Poyet's side bottom of the table, seven points from safety (albeit with two games in hand). The club's 'great escape' [10] began with a draw away at eventual champions Manchester City, followed by a run of four wins, including remarkable away victories at Chelsea and Manchester United. The side's survival was confirmed by a 2–0 victory over West Bromwich Albion on 7 May. Norwich City, Fulham, and Cardiff City were the bottom three teams and were relegated to the Football League Championship.


Two teams (Manchester City and Liverpool) scored more than 100 goals for the first time in league history. The feat has only once been achieved before – by Chelsea in 2009–10. Luis Suárez won the golden boot for most goals with 31, ahead of teammate Daniel Sturridge who came second with 21 goals. Wojciech Szczęsny of Arsenal and Petr Čech of Chelsea led the league with 16 clean sheets each. In a game against Southampton, Asmir Begović became just the fifth goalkeeper in league history to score.[6] Begovic's goal was also the fastest of the season, occurring just 12 seconds into the game.[11]Mile Jedinak had the most tackles with 133. Chelsea manager José Mourinho lost a home game for the first time in his Premier League career, losing to Sunderland and ending a run of 77-straight home games unbeaten, stretching over two stints as Chelsea manager.[6]



Teams


A total of 20 teams contested the league, including 17 sides from the 2012–13 season[12] and three promoted from the 2012–13 Football League Championship.[13]


On 16 April 2013, Cardiff City earned promotion from the 2012–13 Football League Championship. They returned to the top division after being absent for 51 years.[14] This was Cardiff's first season in the Premier League. This season featured both Cardiff City and Swansea City, marking the first time the South Wales derby featured in the top flight.[15] It was also the first time that two clubs outside England were featured in the top flight of English football in the same season.


On 4 May 2013, Hull City earned promotion to the Premier League after a brief absence of three seasons. Hull needed to beat Cardiff City on the final day of the season to maintain second place, but a draw was sufficient following Watford's dramatic loss at home to Leeds United.[16]


On 27 May 2013, Crystal Palace claimed the final promotion place, after beating Watford in the Football League Championship play-off final[17] with Kevin Phillips converting the winning penalty in extra time. This meant Palace played in the Premier League for the first time since the 2004–05 season.


The three teams promoted replace Queens Park Rangers, Reading and Wigan Athletic who were all relegated to the Championship at the end of the previous season.




Locations of the 2013–14 Premier League teams

Aston Villa

Aston Villa



Cardiff City

Cardiff City



Everton

Everton



Hull City

Hull City



Liverpool

Liverpool



Manchester City

Manchester City



Manchester United

Manchester United



Newcastle United

Newcastle United



Norwich City

Norwich City



Southampton

Southampton



Stoke City

Stoke City



Sunderland

Sunderland



Swansea City

Swansea City



West Bromwich Albion

West Bromwich Albion



London

London



London teams Arsenal Chelsea Crystal Palace Fulham Tottenham Hotspur West Ham United


London teams
Arsenal
Chelsea
Crystal Palace
Fulham
Tottenham Hotspur
West Ham United





Locations of the 2013–14 Premier League teams




Greater London Premier League football clubs

Tottenham Hotspur

Tottenham Hotspur



Arsenal

Arsenal



Chelsea

Chelsea



Crystal Palace

Crystal Palace



Fulham

Fulham



West Ham United

West Ham United




Greater London Premier League football clubs



Stadia and locations


Note: Table lists clubs in alphabetical order.











































































































Team
Stadium[18]
Capacity[18]

Arsenal

Emirates Stadium

7004603380000000000♠60,338

Aston Villa

Villa Park

7004426820000000000♠42,682

Cardiff City

Cardiff City Stadium

7004278150000000000♠27,815

Chelsea

Stamford Bridge

7004417980000000000♠41,798

Crystal Palace

Selhurst Park

7004262550000000000♠26,255

Everton

Goodison Park

7004395710000000000♠39,571

Fulham

Craven Cottage

7004257000000000000♠25,700

Hull City

KC Stadium

7004254000000000000♠25,400

Liverpool

Anfield

7004452760000000000♠45,276

Manchester City

Etihad Stadium

7004474050000000000♠47,405

Manchester United

Old Trafford

7004757310000000000♠75,731

Newcastle United

St James' Park

7004524050000000000♠52,405

Norwich City

Carrow Road

7004272440000000000♠27,244

Southampton

St Mary's Stadium

7004325890000000000♠32,589

Stoke City

Britannia Stadium

7004277400000000000♠27,740

Sunderland

Stadium of Light

7004487070000000000♠48,707

Swansea City

Liberty Stadium

7004207500000000000♠20,750

Tottenham Hotspur

White Hart Lane

7004362840000000000♠36,284

West Bromwich Albion

The Hawthorns

7004264450000000000♠26,445

West Ham United

Boleyn Ground

7004350160000000000♠35,016


Personnel and kits


Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.






















































































































































Team
Manager1
Captain
Kit manufacturer
Shirt sponsor

Arsenal

France Arsène Wenger

Belgium Thomas Vermaelen

Nike[19]

Emirates[20]

Aston Villa

Scotland Paul Lambert

Netherlands Ron Vlaar

Macron[21]

dafabet[22]

Cardiff City

Norway Ole Gunnar Solskjær

England Mark Hudson

Puma[23]

Malaysia[24]

Chelsea

Portugal José Mourinho

England John Terry

Adidas[25]

Samsung[26]

Crystal Palace

Wales Tony Pulis

Republic of Ireland Paddy McCarthy

Avec[27]

GAC Logistics[28]

Everton

Spain Roberto Martínez

England Phil Jagielka

Nike[29]

Chang[30]

Fulham

Germany Felix Magath

Norway Brede Hangeland

Adidas[31]

Marathonbet[32]

Hull City

England Steve Bruce

Slovenia Robert Koren

Adidas[33]

Cash Converters[33]
Liverpool

Northern Ireland Brendan Rodgers

England Steven Gerrard

Warrior[34]

Standard Chartered[35]

Manchester City

Chile Manuel Pellegrini

Belgium Vincent Kompany

Nike[36]

Etihad Airways[37]

Manchester United

Wales Ryan Giggs
(interim player-manager)

Serbia Nemanja Vidić

Nike[38]

Aon[39]

Newcastle United

England Alan Pardew

Argentina Fabricio Coloccini

Puma[40]

Wonga[41]

Norwich City

England Neil Adams

Scotland Russell Martin

Erreà[42]

Aviva[43]

Southampton

Argentina Mauricio Pochettino

England Adam Lallana

Adidas[44]

aap3[45]

Stoke City

Wales Mark Hughes

England Ryan Shawcross

Adidas[46]

Bet365[47]

Sunderland

Uruguay Gus Poyet

Republic of Ireland John O'Shea

Adidas[48]

BFS Group[49]

Swansea City

England Garry Monk

Wales Ashley Williams

Adidas[50]

GWFX[51]

Tottenham Hotspur

England Tim Sherwood

England Michael Dawson

Under Armour[52]

HP[53]

West Bromwich Albion

Spain Pepe Mel

Northern Ireland Chris Brunt

Adidas[54]

Zoopla[55]

West Ham United

England Sam Allardyce

England Kevin Nolan

Adidas[56]

Alpari[57]


  • 1 According to current revision of List of English Football League managers

  • Additionally, referee kits are now being made by Nike, sponsored by EA Sports, and Nike has a new match ball, the Incyte Premier League.



Managerial changes


A record 10 managers left their position mid-season during the 2013–14 campaign.[6]


































































































































Team
Outgoing manager
Manner of departure
Date of vacancy
Position in table
Incoming manager
Date of appointment
Everton

Scotland David Moyes
End of contract
19 May 2013[58]

Pre-season

Spain Roberto Martínez
5 June 2013[59]
Stoke City

Wales Tony Pulis
Mutual consent
21 May 2013[60]

Wales Mark Hughes
30 May 2013[61]
Chelsea

Spain Rafael Benítez
End of contract
27 May 2013[62]

Portugal José Mourinho
3 June 2013[63]
Manchester United

Scotland Sir Alex Ferguson
Retired
1 July 2013[64]

Scotland David Moyes
1 July 2013[65]
Sunderland

Italy Paolo Di Canio
Sacked
22 September 2013[66]
20th

Uruguay Gus Poyet
8 October 2013[67]
Crystal Palace

England Ian Holloway
Mutual consent
23 October 2013[68]
19th

Wales Tony Pulis
23 November 2013[69]
Fulham

Netherlands Martin Jol
Sacked
1 December 2013[70]
18th

Netherlands René Meulensteen
1 December 2013[70]
West Bromwich Albion

Scotland Steve Clarke
14 December 2013[71]
16th

Spain Pepe Mel
9 January 2014[72]
Tottenham Hotspur

Portugal André Villas-Boas
Mutual consent[73]
16 December 2013[74]
7th

England Tim Sherwood
16 December 2013[75]
Cardiff City

Scotland Malky Mackay
Sacked
27 December 2013[76]
16th

Norway Ole Gunnar Solskjær
2 January 2014[77]
Swansea City

Denmark Michael Laudrup
4 February 2014[78]
12th

England Garry Monk
4 February 2014[78]
Fulham

Netherlands René Meulensteen
14 February 2014[79]
20th

Germany Felix Magath
14 February 2014[79]
Norwich City

Republic of Ireland Chris Hughton
6 April 2014[80]
17th

England Neil Adams
6 April 2014
Manchester United

Scotland David Moyes
22 April 2014[81]
7th

Netherlands Louis van Gaal
19 May 2014[82]


League table









































































































































































































































































Pos
Team

Pld

W

D

L

GF

GA

GD

Pts
Qualification or relegation
1

Manchester City (C)
38
27
5
6
102
37
+65
86
Qualification for the Champions League group stage
2

Liverpool
38
26
6
6
101
50
+51
84
3

Chelsea
38
25
7
6
71
27
+44
82
4

Arsenal
38
24
7
7
68
41
+27
79
Qualification for the Champions League play-off round
5

Everton
38
21
9
8
61
39
+22
72
Qualification for the Europa League group stage
6

Tottenham Hotspur
38
21
6
11
55
51
+4
69
Qualification for the Europa League play-off round[a]
7

Manchester United
38
19
7
12
64
43
+21
64

8

Southampton
38
15
11
12
54
46
+8
56
9

Stoke City
38
13
11
14
45
52
−7
50
10

Newcastle United
38
15
4
19
43
59
−16
49
11

Crystal Palace
38
13
6
19
33
48
−15
45
12

Swansea City
38
11
9
18
54
54
0
42
13

West Ham United
38
11
7
20
40
51
−11
40
14

Sunderland
38
10
8
20
41
60
−19
38
15

Aston Villa
38
10
8
20
39
61
−22
38
16

Hull City
38
10
7
21
38
53
−15
37
Qualification for the Europa League third qualifying round[b]
17

West Bromwich Albion
38
7
15
16
43
59
−16
36

18

Norwich City (R)
38
8
9
21
28
62
−34
33
Relegation to the Championship
19

Fulham (R)
38
9
5
24
40
85
−45
32
20

Cardiff City (R)
38
7
9
22
32
74
−42
30

Source: Barclays Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Play-offs (only if needed to decide champion, teams for relegation or teams for UEFA competitions).[83]
(C) Champion; (R) Relegated.
Notes:




  1. ^ Since the winners of 2013–14 Football League Cup (Manchester City) qualified for the Champions League, the spot awarded to them (Europa League play-off round) was passed to the 6th-placed team.


  2. ^ Hull City qualified for the Europa League third qualifying round as runners-up of the 2013–14 FA Cup since winners Arsenal qualified for Champions League.




Results






































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Home Away

ARS

AST

CAR

CHE

CRY

EVE

FUL

HUL

LIV

MCI

MUN

NEW

NOR

SOU

STK

SUN

SWA

TOT

WBA

WHU

Arsenal

1–3
2–0

0–0
2–0
1–1
2–0
2–0
2–0
1–1

0–0
3–0
4–1
2–0
3–1
4–1
2–2

1–0
1–0
3–1

Aston Villa
1–2

2–0
1–0
0–1
0–2
1–2
3–1
0–1
3–2
0–3
1–2
4–1
0–0
1–4
0–0
1–1
0–2

4–3
0–2

Cardiff City
0–3
0–0

1–2
0–3
0–0
3–1
0–4
3–6
3–2
2–2
1–2
2–1
0–3
1–1
2–2

1–0
0–1
1–0
0–2

Chelsea

6–0
2–1
4–1

2–1
1–0

2–0
2–0
2–1
2–1
3–1
3–0
0–0
3–1
3–0
1–2
1–0

4–0
2–2
0–0

Crystal Palace
0–2
1–0
2–0
1–0

0–0
1–4
1–0
3–3
0–2
0–2
0–3
1–1
0–1
1–0
3–1
0–2
0–1
3–1
1–0

Everton
3–0
2–1
2–1
1–0
2–3

4–1
2–1

3–3
2–3
2–0
3–2
2–0
2–1
4–0
0–1
3–2
0–0
0–0
1–0

Fulham
1–3
2–0
1–2

1–3
2–2
1–3

2–2
2–3
2–4
1–3
1–0
1–0
0–3
1–0
1–4
1–2
1–2
1–1
2–1

Hull City
0–3
0–0
1–1
0–2
0–1
0–2
6–0

3–1
0–2
2–3
1–4
1–0
0–1
0–0
1–0
1–0
1–1
2–0
1–0

Liverpool
5–1
2–2
3–1
0–2
3–1

4–0
4–0
2–0

3–2

1–0
2–1
5–1
0–1
1–0
2–1
4–3
4–0
4–1
4–1

Manchester City
6–3
4–0
4–2
0–1
1–0
3–1
5–0
2–0
2–1


4–1
4–0
7–0
4–1
1–0
2–2
3–0
6–0
3–1
2–0

Manchester United

1–0
4–1
2–0
0–0
2–0
0–1
2–2
3–1

0–3

0–3

0–1
4–0
1–1
3–2
0–1
2–0
1–2
1–2
3–1

Newcastle United
0–1
1–0
3–0
2–0
1–0
0–3
1–0
2–3
2–2
0–2
0–4

2–1
1–1
5–1

0–3
1–2
0–4
2–1
0–0

Norwich City
0–2
0–1
0–0
1–3
1–0
2–2
1–2
1–0
2–3
0–0
0–1
0–0

1–0
1–1
2–0
1–1
1–0
0–1
3–1

Southampton
2–2
2–3
0–1
0–3
2–0
2–0
2–0
4–1
0–3
1–1
1–1
4–0
4–2

2–2
1–1
2–0
2–3
1–0
0–0

Stoke City
1–0
2–1
0–0
3–2
2–1
1–1
4–1
1–0
3–5
0–0
2–1
1–0
0–1
1–1

2–0
1–1
0–1
0–0
3–1

Sunderland
1–3
0–1
4–0
3–4
0–0
0–1
0–1
0–2
1–3
1–0
1–2

2–1
0–0
2–2
1–0

1–3
1–2
2–0
1–2

Swansea City
1–2
4–1

3–0
0–1
1–1
1–2
2–0
1–1
2–2
2–3
1–4
3–0
3–0
0–1
3–3
4–0

1–3
1–2
0–0

Tottenham Hotspur

0–1
3–0
1–0

1–1
2–0
1–0
3–1
1–0
0–5
1–5
2–2
0–1
2–0
3–2
3–0
5–1
1–0

1–1
0–3

West Bromwich Albion
1–1

2–2
3–3
1–1
2–0
1–1
1–1
1–1
1–1
2–3
0–3
1–0
0–2
0–1
1–2
3–0
0–2
3–3

1–0

West Ham United
1–3
0–0
2–0
0–3
0–1
2–3
3–0
2–1
1–2
1–3
0–2
1–3
2–0
3–1
0–1
0–0
2–0
2–0
3–3


Updated to match(es) played on 11 May 2014. Source: Premier League
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.


Season statistics



Scoring



  • First goal: Daniel Sturridge for Liverpool against Stoke City (37th minute, 13:22 BST)[84] (17 August 2013)

  • Fastest goal: 12 seconds (Asmir Begović (GK); Stoke City 1–1 Southampton[11]2 November 2013)

  • Largest winning margin: 7 goals[3]
    • Manchester City 7–0 Norwich City (2 November 2013)


  • Highest scoring game: 9 goals[3]

    • Manchester City 6–3 Arsenal (14 December 2013)

    • Cardiff City 3–6 Liverpool (22 March 2014)



  • Most goals scored in a match by a single team: 7 goals[3]
    • Manchester City 7–0 Norwich City (2 November 2013)


  • Most goals scored in a match by a losing team: 3 goals[citation needed]

    • Sunderland 3–4 Chelsea (4 December 2013)

    • Manchester City 6–3 Arsenal (14 December 2013)

    • Stoke City 3–5 Liverpool (12 January 2014)

    • Aston Villa 4–3 West Bromwich Albion (29 January 2014)

    • Liverpool 4–3 Swansea City (23 February 2014)

    • Cardiff City 3–6 Liverpool (22 March 2014)





Top scorers





























































Rank
Player
Club
Goals[1]
1

Luis Suárez
Liverpool
31
2

Daniel Sturridge
Liverpool
21
3

Yaya Touré
Manchester City
20
4

Sergio Agüero
Manchester City
17

Wayne Rooney
Manchester United
6

Wilfried Bony
Swansea City
16

Edin Džeko
Manchester City

Olivier Giroud
Arsenal
9

Romelu Lukaku
Everton
15

Jay Rodriguez
Southampton


Hat-tricks



































































Player For Against Result Date
Luis Suárez Liverpool West Bromwich Albion 4–1[85]

26 October 2013

Luis Suárez4
Liverpool Norwich City 5–1[86]

4 December 2013
Adam Johnson Sunderland Fulham 4–1[87]

11 January 2014
Samuel Eto'o Chelsea Manchester United 3–1[88]

19 January 2014
Eden Hazard Chelsea Newcastle United 3–0[89]

8 February 2014
André Schürrle Chelsea Fulham 3–1[90]

1 March 2014
Yaya Touré Manchester City Fulham 5–0[91]

22 March 2014
Luis Suárez Liverpool Cardiff City 6–3[92]

22 March 2014

4 Player scored four goals



Clean sheets



Player





























































Rank
Player
Club
Clean sheets[2]
1

Petr Čech
Chelsea
16

Wojciech Szczęsny
Arsenal
3

Tim Howard
Everton
15
4

Artur Boruc
Southampton
14

Hugo Lloris
Tottenham Hotspur
6

Joe Hart
Manchester City
13
7

David de Gea
Manchester United
12

John Ruddy
Norwich City

Julián Speroni
Crystal Palace
10

Vito Mannone
Sunderland
11


Club



  • Most clean sheets: 18[3]
    • Chelsea


  • Fewest clean sheets: 5[3]
    • Fulham




Discipline



Player



  • Most yellow cards:[93]11

    • Pablo Zabaleta (Manchester City)


  • Most red cards:[93]3

    • Wes Brown (Sunderland)




Club



  • Most yellow cards:[94]78
    • Aston Villa


  • Most red cards:[94]7
    • Sunderland




Awards



Monthly awards























































































Month

Manager of the Month

Player of the Month
Reference
Manager
Club
Player
Club
August

Northern Ireland Brendan Rodgers
Liverpool

England Daniel Sturridge
Liverpool
[95]
September

France Arsène Wenger
Arsenal

Wales Aaron Ramsey
Arsenal
[96]
October

Argentina Mauricio Pochettino
Southampton

Argentina Sergio Agüero
Manchester City
[97]
November

England Alan Pardew
Newcastle United

Netherlands Tim Krul
Newcastle United
[98]
December

Chile Manuel Pellegrini
Manchester City

Uruguay Luis Suárez
Liverpool
[99]
January

Chile Manuel Pellegrini
Manchester City

England Adam Johnson
Sunderland
[100]
February

England Sam Allardyce
West Ham United

England Daniel Sturridge
Liverpool
[101]
March

Northern Ireland Brendan Rodgers
Liverpool

Uruguay Luis Suárez & England Steven Gerrard (shared)
Liverpool
[102]
April

Wales Tony Pulis
Crystal Palace

England Connor Wickham
Sunderland
[103]


Annual awards



Premier League Manager of the season


Tony Pulis won the Premier League Manager of the Season award.[104]



Premier League Player of the season


The Premier League Player of the Season was awarded to Luis Suárez.[104]



PFA Players' Player of the Year


The PFA Players' Player of the Year was awarded to Luis Suárez.[105]



PFA Team of the Year



The PFA team of the year was:[106]




  • Goalkeeper: Petr Čech (Chelsea)


  • Defence: Séamus Coleman (Everton), Gary Cahill (Chelsea), Vincent Kompany (Manchester City), Luke Shaw (Southampton)


  • Midfield: Steven Gerrard (Liverpool), Eden Hazard (Chelsea), Yaya Touré (Manchester City), Adam Lallana (Southampton)


  • Attack: Luis Suárez (Liverpool), Daniel Sturridge (Liverpool)



PFA Young Player of the Year


The PFA Young Player of the Year was also awarded to Eden Hazard.[107]



FWA Footballer of the Year


The FWA Footballer of the Year was also awarded to Luis Suárez.[107]



Premier League Golden Glove


The Premier League Golden Glove award was won by Petr Čech of Chelsea and Wojciech Szczęsny of Arsenal.[108]



Premier League Fair Play League


The Premier League Fair Play League was topped by Liverpool.[109]



Average attendances[110]























































































Club Average attendance
Manchester United 75,207
Arsenal 60,013
Newcastle United 50,395
Manchester City 47,075
Liverpool 44,671
Chelsea 41,482
Sunderland 41,090
Everton 37,732
Aston Villa 36,081
Tottenham Hotspur 35,808
West Ham United 34,197
Southampton 30,212
Cardiff City 27,430
Norwich City 26,805
Stoke City 26,137
West Bromwich Albion 25,194
Fulham 24,977
Crystal Palace 24,375
Hull City 24,117
Swansea City 20,407


References





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