From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
1992–93 FA Premier League
Football Season In England
Football Season In England
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| competition | FA Premier League |
| season | [1992–93](1992-93-in-english-football) |
| dates | 15 August 1992 – 11 May 1993 |
| winners | Manchester United |
| 1st Premier League title | |
| 8th English title | |
| relegated | Crystal Palace |
| Middlesbrough | |
| Nottingham Forest | |
| continentalcup1 | [Champions League](1993-94-uefa-champions-league) |
| continentalcup1 qualifiers | Manchester United |
| continentalcup2 | [Cup Winners' Cup](1993-94-european-cup-winners-cup) |
| continentalcup2 qualifiers | Arsenal |
| continentalcup3 | [UEFA Cup](1993-94-uefa-cup) |
| continentalcup3 qualifiers | Aston Villa |
| Norwich City | |
| matches | 462 |
| total goals | 1222 |
| league topscorer | Teddy Sheringham |
| (22 goals) | |
| best goalkeeper | Bobby Mimms (19 clean sheets) |
| biggest home win | Blackburn Rovers 7–1 Norwich City |
| (3 October 1992) | |
| Sheffield United 6–0 Tottenham Hotspur | |
| (2 March 1993) | |
| biggest away win | Manchester United 0–3 Everton |
| (19 August 1992) | |
| Sheffield Wednesday 0–3 Manchester City | |
| (5 September 1992) | |
| Leeds United 1–4 Nottingham Forest | |
| (5 December 1992) | |
| Blackburn Rovers 2–5 Coventry City | |
| (26 January 1993) | |
| Nottingham Forest 0–3 Norwich City | |
| (17 March 1993) | |
| Queens Park Rangers 0–3 Blackburn Rovers | |
| (24 March 1993) | |
| Manchester City 2–5 Everton | |
| (8 May 1993) | |
| highest scoring | Oldham Athletic 5–3 Nottingham Forest |
| (22 August 1992) | |
| Blackburn Rovers 7–1 Norwich City | |
| (3 October 1992) | |
| Oldham Athletic 6–2 Wimbledon | |
| (3 April 1993) | |
| Everton 3–5 Queens Park Rangers | |
| (12 April 1993) | |
| Liverpool 6–2 Tottenham Hotspur | |
| (8 May 1993) | |
| longest wins | 7 games |
| Manchester United | |
| Sheffield Wednesday | |
| longest unbeaten | 11 games |
| Manchester United | |
| longest losses | 6 games |
| Nottingham Forest | |
| longest winless | 13 games |
| Ipswich Town | |
| highest attendance | 44,619 |
| Liverpool 1–0 Everton | |
| (20 March 1993) | |
| lowest attendance | 3,039 |
| Wimbledon 1–3 Everton | |
| (26 January 1993) | |
| prevseason | [First Division 1991–92](1991-92-football-league-first-division) |
| nextseason | [1993–94](1993-94-fa-premier-league) |
1st Premier League title 8th English title Middlesbrough Nottingham Forest Norwich City (22 goals) (3 October 1992) Sheffield United 6–0 Tottenham Hotspur (2 March 1993) (19 August 1992) Sheffield Wednesday 0–3 Manchester City (5 September 1992) Leeds United 1–4 Nottingham Forest (5 December 1992) Blackburn Rovers 2–5 Coventry City (26 January 1993) Nottingham Forest 0–3 Norwich City (17 March 1993) Queens Park Rangers 0–3 Blackburn Rovers (24 March 1993) Manchester City 2–5 Everton (8 May 1993) (22 August 1992) Blackburn Rovers 7–1 Norwich City (3 October 1992) Oldham Athletic 6–2 Wimbledon (3 April 1993) Everton 3–5 Queens Park Rangers (12 April 1993) Liverpool 6–2 Tottenham Hotspur (8 May 1993) Manchester United Sheffield Wednesday Manchester United Nottingham Forest Ipswich Town Liverpool 1–0 Everton (20 March 1993) Wimbledon 1–3 Everton (26 January 1993) The 1992–93 FA Premier League was the inaugural season of the Premier League, the top division of English football. The season began on 15 August 1992 and ended on 11 May 1993. The league was made up of the 22 clubs that broke away from the Football League at the end of the 1991–92 season. The new league was backed up by a five-year, £304 million deal with Sky to televise Premier League matches. In concept, the Premier League was identical to the old First Division of the Football League, which was now reduced to three divisions.
Overview
Background
Main article: Foundation of the Premier League
In May 1992, the breakaway league signed a broadcasting rights contract with Sky and the BBC valued at £304 million, the largest such agreement in the history of British sport. The league's executive committee was unable, however, to secure title sponsorship for the new competition after eight clubs blocked a proposed £13 million deal with brewers Bass. Nonetheless, clubs began to utilise their dramatically increased wealth to fund a series of high-profile transfers.
Although the idea of a super league had been mentioned by football's governing bodies and evaluated by the media since the mid-1980s, plans for a new Premier League of 22 clubs were first unveiled by the Football Association in October 1990, and included in the Football Association's Blueprint for the Future of Football, published in June 1991. The majority of First Division clubs, particularly long-established top clubs including Arsenal and Manchester United, were in favour of a breakaway from the Football League, although Football League president Bill Fox criticised the planned Premier League as an attempt by the Football Association to "hijack" the First Division.
Shortly before the season began, newly promoted Blackburn Rovers signed Southampton's 21-year-old England international striker Alan Shearer for a new British record fee variously reported as £3.3 million,{{cite news |url=https://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sport/football/159429.stm |title=The Kenny Dalglish file
The structure of the new league was identical to that of the previous season's Football League First Division, comprising 22 teams, with each playing the other 21 twice for a total of 42 matches. Ipswich Town and Middlesbrough had been promoted from the old Second Division as champions and runners-up respectively, and Blackburn Rovers took the third promotion place after winning the 1991–92 Second Division play-off.
Season summary
The first Premier League title went to Manchester United, the club's first title in 26 years. Their title was achieved with a 10-point lead over runners-up Aston Villa, after overcoming a slow start to the season which had seen them slip to mid table, with the signing of French striker Eric Cantona in late November proving to be the catalyst for their improved form which saw them lose just two league games after his arrival.
Norwich City led the table for most of the first half of the season, but their challenge faded in the final weeks of the campaign, and were out of contention with three games remaining, after they lost 3–1 to Ipswich Town. Norwich did however finish in third place, achieving European qualification in Mike Walker's debut season as manager; with a goal difference of −4, this is the highest Premier League finish by a team with a negative goal difference. Blackburn, in the top division for the first time in almost 30 years, finished in fourth place. They briefly led the league early in the season, but suffered a shortage of goals after Alan Shearer, who had scored 16 times before the turn of the year, suffered a torn cruciate ligament and missed the second half of the season. The title race was largely between the clubs who finished in the top four after early challenges from the likes of Arsenal, Coventry City, and Queens Park Rangers were not sustained.
Nottingham Forest's league form had suffered through the sale of key players including Des Walker and Teddy Sheringham, and they were bottom of the Premier League for the majority of the season. Their relegation was confirmed in early May when they lost to Sheffield United, and manager Brian Clough announced his retirement after 18 years as manager, which had yielded one league title, two European Cups and four League Cups. Next to go were newly promoted Middlesbrough, who fell from mid-table at Christmas to go down in second from bottom place. Last to go down were Crystal Palace, who failed to win their final game of the season which would have instead consigned Oldham Athletic to the final relegation place - Oldham's survival was secured with a thrilling 4–3 win over Southampton.
Title holders Leeds United finished 17th, which was the lowest finish from a defending league champion since Ipswich Town finished 17th in 1962–63 after having won the title in 1961–62, and the lowest any top tier champions have so far finished in the Premier League. Leeds failed to win an away game in the league. The lowest a defending champion has finished since then has been 12th (Leicester City in 2016–17, having won the title in 2015–16). Liverpool, who had been the English league’s dominant force of the previous two decades with an honours list including 11 league titles between 1973 and 1990, finished a disappointing sixth, and had been in the bottom half of the table as late as March.
In total 1,222 goals were scored, which until the 2023-24 Premier League, stood as a Premier League record, mainly due to significantly fewer number of games from 1995–96 season onward. The top scorer in the new Premier League was Teddy Sheringham, who found the net for Nottingham Forest in their opening game of the season before being sold to Tottenham Hotspur, scoring a further 21 goals for the North London side in the league. PFA Player of the Year was Paul McGrath of Aston Villa. FWA Player of the Year was Chris Waddle, who helped Sheffield Wednesday achieve runners-up spot in both of the cups after ending his three-year spell in France. PFA Young Player of the Year was Ryan Giggs, who won the award for the second year running, and also picked up a league title medal with Manchester United.
On 26 January, Wimbledon hosted Everton at Selhurst Park in front of a crowd of just over 3,000. More than 30 years on, this remains the lowest attendance recorded at a Premier League match. Despite their frequently low attendances, Wimbledon managed to climb clear of the relegation battle during the second half of the season to finish 12th.
Teams
Twenty-two teams competed in the league – the top nineteen teams from the First Division and the three teams promoted from the Second Division. The promoted teams were Ipswich Town, Middlesbrough and Blackburn Rovers, returning to the top flight after an absence of six, three and twenty-six years respectively. They replaced Luton Town, Notts County and West Ham United, who were relegated to the First Division, ending Luton Town's ten-year spell in the top flight, whilst both Notts County and West Ham United were relegated after only one year in the top flight.
Stadiums and locations
Arsenal
Chelsea
Crystal Palace
Queens Park Rangers
Tottenham Hotspur
Wimbledon
Manchester City
Manchester United
Oldham Athletic|position=right}}
| Team | Location | Stadium | Capacity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arsenal | London (Highbury) | Highbury | |
| Aston Villa | Birmingham | Villa Park | |
| Blackburn Rovers | Blackburn | Ewood Park | |
| Chelsea | London (Fulham) | Stamford Bridge | |
| Coventry City | Coventry | Highfield Road | |
| Crystal Palace | London (Selhurst) | Selhurst Park | |
| Everton | Liverpool (Walton) | Goodison Park | |
| Ipswich Town | Ipswich | Portman Road | |
| Leeds United | Leeds | Elland Road | |
| Liverpool | Liverpool (Anfield) | Anfield | |
| Manchester City | Manchester (Moss Side) | Maine Road | |
| Manchester United | Manchester (Old Trafford) | Old Trafford | |
| Middlesbrough | Middlesbrough | Ayresome Park | |
| Norwich City | Norwich | Carrow Road | |
| Nottingham Forest | West Bridgford | City Ground | |
| Oldham Athletic | Manchester (Oldham) | Boundary Park | |
| Queens Park Rangers | London (Shepherd's Bush) | Loftus Road | |
| Sheffield United | Sheffield (Highfield) | Bramall Lane | |
| Sheffield Wednesday | Sheffield (Owlerton) | Hillsborough Stadium | |
| Southampton | Southampton | The Dell | |
| Tottenham Hotspur | London (Tottenham) | White Hart Lane | |
| Wimbledon | London (Selhurst) | Selhurst Park |
Personnel and kits
(as of 9 May 1993)
| Team | Manager | Captain | Kit manufacturer | Shirt sponsor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arsenal | SCO George Graham | ENG Tony Adams | Adidas | JVC |
| Aston Villa | ENG Ron Atkinson | ENG Kevin Richardson | Umbro | Mita Copiers |
| Blackburn Rovers | SCO Kenny Dalglish | ENG Tim Sherwood | Asics | McEwan's Lager |
| Chelsea | ENG David Webb (caretaker) | IRL Andy Townsend | Umbro | Commodore International |
| Coventry City | ENG Bobby Gould | ENG Brian Borrows | Ribero | Peugeot |
| Crystal Palace | ENG Steve Coppell | ENG Geoff Thomas | Bukta (until December) | |
| Ribero (from December) | Tulip Computers | |||
| Everton | ENG Howard Kendall | ENG Dave Watson | Umbro | NEC |
| Ipswich Town | ENG John Lyall | ENG David Linighan | Umbro | Fisons |
| Leeds United | ENG Howard Wilkinson | SCO Gordon Strachan | Admiral | Admiral |
| Liverpool | SCO Graeme Souness | ENG Mark Wright | Adidas | Carlsberg |
| Manchester City | ENG Peter Reid | IRL Terry Phelan | Umbro | Brother Industries |
| Manchester United | SCO Alex Ferguson | ENG Bryan Robson | Umbro | Sharp |
| Middlesbrough | ENG Lennie Lawrence | IRL Alan Kernaghan | Admiral | Imperial Chemical Industries |
| Norwich City | WAL Mike Walker | ENG Ian Butterworth | Ribero | Norwich and Peterborough |
| Nottingham Forest | ENG Brian Clough | ENG Stuart Pearce | Umbro | Shipstones (home), Labatt's (away) |
| Oldham Athletic | ENG Joe Royle | IRL Mike Milligan | Umbro | JD Sports |
| Queens Park Rangers | ENG Gerry Francis | NIR Alan McDonald | Clubhouse | Classic FM |
| Sheffield United | ENG Dave Bassett | ENG Brian Gayle | Umbro | Laver |
| Sheffield Wednesday | ENG Trevor Francis | ENG Nigel Pearson | Umbro | Sanderson |
| Southampton | ENG Ian Branfoot | ENG Glenn Cockerill | Admiral | Draper Tools |
| Tottenham Hotspur | ENG Doug Livermore | |||
| ENG Ray Clemence | ENG Gary Mabbutt | Umbro | Holsten | |
| Wimbledon | IRL Joe Kinnear | ENG John Scales | Admiral |
Managerial changes
| Team | Outgoing manager | Manner of departure | Date of vacancy | Position in table | Incoming manager | Date of appointment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Norwich City | WAL David Williams | End of caretaker spell | 1 May 1992 | *Pre-season* | WAL Mike Walker | 1 June 1992 |
| Coventry City | ENG Don Howe | 14 May 1992 | ENG Bobby Gould | 6 June 1992 | ||
| Tottenham Hotspur | ENG Peter Shreeves | Sacked | 19 May 1992 | ENG Doug Livermore | ||
| ENG Ray Clemence | 19 May 1992 | |||||
| Chelsea | SCO Ian Porterfield | 15 February 1993 | 12th | ENG David Webb | 15 February 1993 |
League table
Results
Season statistics
Top scorers
The top goalscorer in the Premier League's inaugural season was Teddy Sheringham, who scored one goal for Nottingham Forest before his early-season transfer followed by 21 for Tottenham Hotspur for a total of 22. Alan Shearer had scored 16 goals by Christmas before suffering a season-ending injury.
| Rank | Player | Club | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ENG Teddy Sheringham | Nottingham Forest | |
| Tottenham Hotspur | 22 | ||
| 2 | ENG Les Ferdinand | Queens Park Rangers | 20 |
| 3 | ENG Dean Holdsworth | Wimbledon | 19 |
| 4 | ENG Micky Quinn | Coventry City | 17 |
| 5 | ENG Alan Shearer | Blackburn Rovers | 16 |
| ENG David White | Manchester City | ||
| 7 | ENG Chris Armstrong | Crystal Palace | 15 |
| FRA Eric Cantona | Leeds United | ||
| Manchester United | |||
| ENG Brian Deane | Sheffield United | ||
| WAL Mark Hughes | Manchester United | ||
| ENG Matt Le Tissier | Southampton | ||
| ENG Ian Wright | Arsenal | ||
| 13 | ENG Mark Robins | Norwich City | 14 |
Hat-tricks
Main article: List of Premier League hat-tricks
| Player | For | Against | Result | Date | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FRA | Leeds United | Tottenham Hotspur | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-cantona-hits-hat-trick-to-crush-spurs-1542635.html | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220501/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-cantona-hits-hat-trick-to-crush-spurs-1542635.html | archive-date=1 May 2022 | url-access=subscription | url-status=live | title=Football: Cantona hits hat-trick to crush Spurs | work=The Independent | first=Phil | last=Andrews | date=26 August 1992 | access-date=27 August 2018}} | |
| ENG | Norwich City | Oldham Athletic | url=http://www.skysports.com/football/oldham-vs-norwich/275365 | title=Oldham 2–3 Norwich | publisher=Sky Sports | date=9 November 1992 | access-date=27 August 2018}} | |||||||
| SCO | Middlesbrough | Blackburn Rovers | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-rovers-rocked-by-hendrie-hat-trick-1561793.html | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220501/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-rovers-rocked-by-hendrie-hat-trick-1561793.html | archive-date=1 May 2022 | url-access=subscription | url-status=live | title=Football: Rovers rocked by Hendrie hat-trick | work=The Independent | first=Frank | last=Dobson | date=6 December 1992 | access-date=27 August 2018}} | |
| ENG | Queens Park Rangers | Everton | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-evertons-day-of-dismissals-1565903.html | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220501/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-evertons-day-of-dismissals-1565903.html | archive-date=1 May 2022 | url-access=subscription | url-status=live | title=Football: Everton's day of dismissals | work=The Independent | first=Norman | last=Fox | date=29 December 1992 | access-date=27 August 2018}} | |
| ENG | Sheffield United | Ipswich Town | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-deane-gets-about-town-1478999.html | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220501/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-deane-gets-about-town-1478999.html | archive-date=1 May 2022 | url-access=subscription | url-status=live | title=Football: Deane gets about Town | work=The Independent | first=Phil | last=Andrews | date=16 January 1993 | access-date=27 August 2018}} | |
| ENG | Tottenham Hotspur | Leeds United | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-barmby-poses-a-national-problem-1474603.html | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220501/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-barmby-poses-a-national-problem-1474603.html | archive-date=1 May 2022 | url-access=subscription | url-status=live | title=Football: Barmby poses a national problem | work=The Independent | first=Trevor | last=Haylett | date=22 February 1993 | access-date=27 August 2018}} | |
| SCO | Leeds United | Blackburn Rovers | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-strachan-inspires-1454576.html | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220501/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-strachan-inspires-1454576.html | archive-date=1 May 2022 | url-access=subscription | url-status=live | title=Football: Strachan inspires | work=The Independent | first=Niall | last=Edworthy | date=11 April 1993 | access-date=27 August 2018}} | |
| ENG | Queens Park Rangers | Nottingham Forest | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-forest-full-of-goals-and-holes-1454582.html | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220501/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-forest-full-of-goals-and-holes-1454582.html | archive-date=1 May 2022 | url-access=subscription | url-status=live | title=Football: Forest full of goals and holes | work=The Independent | first=Sam | last=Elliott | date=11 April 1993 | access-date=27 August 2018}} | |
| ENG | Sheffield Wednesday | Southampton | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-wednesdays-strength-in-depth-1454980.html | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220501/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-wednesdays-strength-in-depth-1454980.html | archive-date=1 May 2022 | url-access=subscription | url-status=live | title=Football: Wednesday's strength in depth | work=The Independent | first=Phil | last=Andrews | date=13 April 1993 | access-date=27 August 2018}} | |
| ENG | Queens Park Rangers | Everton | url=http://www.skysports.com/football/everton-vs-qpr/275613 | title=Everton 3–5 QPR | publisher=Sky Sports | date=12 April 1993 | access-date=27 August 2018}} | |||||||
| ENG | Norwich City | Leeds United | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-sutton-does-the-trick-to-inspire-norwich-champions-still-without-an-away-win-as-canaries-1455447.html | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220501/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-sutton-does-the-trick-to-inspire-norwich-champions-still-without-an-away-win-as-canaries-1455447.html | archive-date=1 May 2022 | url-access=subscription | url-status=live | title=Football: Sutton does the trick to inspire Norwich: Champions still without an away win as Canaries rediscover their scoring touch | first=Trevor | last=Haylett | date=15 April 1993 | access-date=27 August 2018}} | ||
| ENG | Liverpool | Coventry City | 4–0 (H) | |||||||||||
| ENG | Leeds United | 3–3 (A) | ||||||||||||
| ENG | Southampton | Oldham Athletic | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-oldham-triumph-against-the-odds-royles-men-produce-the-performance-to-ensure-survival-as-2321704.html | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220501/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-oldham-triumph-against-the-odds-royles-men-produce-the-performance-to-ensure-survival-as-2321704.html | archive-date=1 May 2022 | url-access=subscription | url-status=live | title=Football: Oldham triumph against the odds: Royle's men produce the performance to ensure survival as Coppell's worst fears come true | work=The Independent | first=Owen | last=Slot | date=9 May 1993 | access-date=27 August 2018}} |
:Note: (H) – Home; (A) – Away
Historic goals
First ever Premier League goal was scored by Sheffield United's Brian Deane against Manchester United on 15 August 1992. Goal number 100 was scored by Leeds United's Eric Cantona against Tottenham Hotspur on 25 August 1992. Later in the season, a 1000th goal milestone was reached, when Mike Newell scored away at Nottingham Forest for Blackburn Rovers on 7 April 1993.
Top assists
| Rank | Player | Club | url=https://www.premierleague.com/stats/top/players/goal_assist?se=1 | title=Premier League Player Stats – Assists | publisher=Premier League | access-date=15 March 2024 | url-status=live | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170624144700/https://www.premierleague.com/stats/top/players/goal_assist | archive-date=24 June 2017}} |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | FRA Eric Cantona | Leeds United | |||||||
| Manchester United | 16 | ||||||||
| 2 | ENG Darren Anderton | Tottenham Hotspur | 11 | ||||||
| IRL Niall Quinn | Manchester City | ||||||||
| 4 | ENG Brian Deane | Sheffield United | 10 | ||||||
| ENG Matt Le Tissier | Southampton | ||||||||
| ENG Jason Wilcox | Blackburn Rovers | ||||||||
| 7 | ENG Jason Dozzell | Ipswich Town | 9 | ||||||
| ENG Rick Holden | Manchester City | ||||||||
| ENG Lee Sharpe | Manchester United | ||||||||
| ENG Teddy Sheringham | Tottenham Hotspur | ||||||||
| ENG Andy Sinton | Queens Park Rangers | ||||||||
| ENG Ian Woan | Nottingham Forest |
Clean sheets
| Rank | Player | Club | Clean |
|---|---|---|---|
| sheets | |||
| 1 | ENG Bobby Mimms | Blackburn Rovers | 19 |
| 2 | DEN Peter Schmeichel | Manchester United | 18 |
| 3 | ENG David Seaman | Arsenal | 15 |
| 4 | NED Hans Segers | Wimbledon | 13 |
| 5 | ENG Tony Coton | Manchester City | 11 |
| SCO Bryan Gunn | Norwich City | ||
| ENG John Lukic | Leeds United | ||
| ENG Nigel Martyn | Crystal Palace | ||
| WAL Neville Southall | Everton | ||
| 10 | ENG Tim Flowers | Southampton | 10 |
Discipline
Player
-
Most yellow cards: 8
- NIR Iain Dowie (Southampton)
- ENG Terry Hurlock (Southampton)
- WAL Vinnie Jones (Wimbledon)
- ENG Jamie Pollock (Middlesbrough)
- ENG Neil Ruddock (Tottenham Hotspur)
- NIR Lawrie Sanchez (Wimbledon)
- ENG Dennis Wise (Chelsea)
-
Most red cards: 2
- SCO Brian McAllister (Wimbledon)
- WAL Neville Southall (Everton)
Club
-
Most yellow cards: 58
- Sheffield United
-
Fewest yellow cards: 23
- Aston Villa
- Norwich City
-
Most red cards: 5
- Wimbledon
-
Fewest red cards: 0
- Aston Villa
- Leeds United
- Manchester United
- Norwich City
- Oldham Athletic
- Queens Park Rangers
Annual awards
| Award | Winner | Club |
|---|---|---|
| PFA Players' Player of the Year | IRL Paul McGrath | Aston Villa |
| PFA Young Player of the Year | WAL Ryan Giggs | Manchester United |
| FWA Footballer of the Year | ENG Chris Waddle | Sheffield Wednesday |
The Professional Footballers' Association (PFA) presented its annual Players' Player of the Year award to Paul McGrath, a veteran central defender who contributed to Aston Villa's second-place finish in the Premier League. Manchester United's Paul Ince came second and Blackburn's Alan Shearer third. The Young Player of the Year award was given to Ryan Giggs, the 19-year-old Manchester United left winger who had also won the award in the previous season. Giggs, who finished ahead of Tottenham's Nick Barmby and Nottingham Forest's Roy Keane, became the first player to win the award more than once.
The Football Writers' Association (the FWA) chose Chris Waddle as its Footballer of the Year. Waddle, who made his return to English football with Sheffield Wednesday after three years in France with Olympique Marseille, became the first Wednesday player to win the award in its 45-year history. McGrath and Giggs finished in second and joint third place respectively in the writers' poll.
The PFA also selected eleven players to form its Team of the Year. The team included four Manchester United players (Giggs, Ince, Peter Schmeichel and Gary Pallister) and two from Leeds United (Tony Dorigo and Gary Speed). The other members of the team were McGrath, Keane, Shearer, David Bardsley (Queens Park Rangers) and Ian Wright (Arsenal). The Manager of the Year award, chosen by a panel representing football's governing body, the media, and fans, was given to Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson. The newly formed League Managers Association also presented its own Manager of the Year award for the first time, specifically designed to recognise "the manager who made best use of the resources available to him". This award went to Dave Bassett of Sheffield United.
| PFA Team of the Year | Goalkeeper | Defenders | Midfielders | Forwards |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DEN Peter Schmeichel | ||||
| (Manchester United) | ||||
| ENG David Bardsley | ||||
| (Queens Park Rangers) | ENG Gary Pallister | |||
| (Manchester United) | IRL Paul McGrath | |||
| (Aston Villa) | ENG Tony Dorigo | |||
| (Leeds United) | ||||
| IRL Roy Keane | ||||
| (Nottingham Forest) | ENG Paul Ince | |||
| (Manchester United) | WAL Gary Speed | |||
| (Leeds United) | WAL Ryan Giggs | |||
| (Manchester United) | ||||
| ENG Alan Shearer | ||||
| (Blackburn Rovers) | ENG Ian Wright | |||
| (Arsenal) |
Attendances
Liverpool drew the highest average home attendance in the first edition of the Premier League. !#!!Football club!!Home games!!Average attendance |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Liverpool || 21 || 37,009 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Manchester United || 21 || 35,084 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Aston Villa || 21 || 29,594 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Leeds United || 21 || 29,228 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Tottenham Hotspur || 21 || 27,878 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Sheffield Wednesday || 21 || 27,264 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Manchester City || 21 || 24,698 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Arsenal || 21 || 24,403 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Nottingham Forest || 21 || 21,910 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Everton || 21 || 20,455 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Sheffield United || 21 || 19,057 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Chelsea || 21 || 18,754 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Ipswich Town || 21 || 18,188 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Middlesbrough || 21 || 16,724 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Norwich City || 21 || 16,253 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Blackburn Rovers || 21 || 16,248 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Crystal Palace || 21 || 15,726 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Southampton || 21 || 15,148 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Coventry City || 21 || 15,024 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Queens Park Rangers || 21 || 15,001 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Oldham Athletic || 21 || 12,859 |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Wimbledon || 21 || 8,405 |- |} }}
References
References
- "English Premier League 1992–93". statto.com.
- Ball, Peter. (19 May 1992). "Premier League kicks off with £304m TV deal". The Times.
- Signy, Dennis. (18 September 1992). "Clubs ask Parry to resolve dispute over sponsorship". The Times.
- (2001). "The Economics of Football". Cambridge University Press.
- (14 November 2004). "How the FA betrayed their own game".
- (27 July 1992). "Shearer to move for £3.4 million". The Times.
- Kannas, Sofia. (22 July 2004). "Can money buy success?". The Football Association.
- Ross, Ian. (24 July 1992). "Rocastle completes transfer to Leeds". The Times.
- White, Clive. (11 September 1992). "Saunders signs for Villa after compromise deal". The Times.
- Signy, Dennis. (28 August 1992). "Sheringham joins Spurs in £2.1m deal". The Times.
- (5 June 2004). "England 1991/1992". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
- (10 August 2017). "The 22 original Premier League teams: Where are they now?". The Irish Times.
- (21 November 2016). "The 10 worst English top-flight title defences ever". Haymarket.
- (28 May 2023). "Record set for goals in a Premier League season". Premier League.
- MacInnes, Paul. (26 January 2017). ""It was one man and his dog" – the day 3,036 watched a Premier League match". Guardian News and Media.
- (1993). "News of the World Football Annual 1993–1994". Invincible Press.
- "Premier League Player Stats - Goals". Premier League.
- Andrews, Phil. (26 August 1992). "Football: Cantona hits hat-trick to crush Spurs". The Independent.
- (9 November 1992). "Oldham 2–3 Norwich". Sky Sports.
- Dobson, Frank. (6 December 1992). "Football: Rovers rocked by Hendrie hat-trick". The Independent.
- Fox, Norman. (29 December 1992). "Football: Everton's day of dismissals". The Independent.
- Andrews, Phil. (16 January 1993). "Football: Deane gets about Town". The Independent.
- Haylett, Trevor. (22 February 1993). "Football: Barmby poses a national problem". The Independent.
- Edworthy, Niall. (11 April 1993). "Football: Strachan inspires". The Independent.
- Elliott, Sam. (11 April 1993). "Football: Forest full of goals and holes". The Independent.
- Andrews, Phil. (13 April 1993). "Football: Wednesday's strength in depth". The Independent.
- (12 April 1993). "Everton 3–5 QPR". Sky Sports.
- Brown, Geoff. (18 April 1993). "Round-Up: Walsh stays ahead". The Independent.
- Brown, Geoff. (9 May 1993). "Football: Lions fans dig up Den". The Independent.
- Slot, Owen. (9 May 1993). "Football: Oldham triumph against the odds: Royle's men produce the performance to ensure survival as Coppell's worst fears come true". The Independent.
- (29 August 2021). "Wood celebrates scoring 30,000th PL goal".
- "Premier League Player Stats – Assists". Premier League.
- "Premier League Player Stats – Clean Sheets". Premier League.
- "Premier League Player Stats – Yellow Cards".
- "Premier League Player Stats – Red Cards".
- "Premier League Club Stats – Yellow Cards".
- "Premier League Club Stats – Red Cards".
- (29 March 1993). "McGrath wins PFA award". The Times.
- (4 October 2007). "England – Players Awards". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
- (3 May 1993). "Waddle receives award". The Times.
- Barnes, Stuart. (2007). "News of the World Football Annual 2007–2008". HarperSport.
- "Premier League 1992/1993 » Attendance » Home matches".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about 1992–93 FA Premier League — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report