From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
1995–96 Arsenal F.C. season
English football club season
English football club season
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| club | Arsenal F.C. |
| season | 1995–96 |
| chairman | Peter Hill-Wood |
| manager | Bruce Rioch |
| stadium | Highbury |
| league | FA Premier League |
| league result | 5th |
| cup1 | FA Cup |
| cup1 result | Third round |
| cup2 | League Cup |
| cup2 result | Semi-finals |
| league topscorer | |
| Ian Wright (15) | |
| season topscorer | |
| Ian Wright (23) | |
| highest attendance | 38,323 (1 May, vs. Liverpool, FA Premier League) |
| lowest attendance | 27,194 (3 October, vs. Hartlepool United, League Cup) |
| pattern_la1 | _arsenal9495h |
| pattern_b1 | _arsenal9495h |
| pattern_ra1 | _arsenal9495h |
| pattern_so1 | _5redstripes |
| leftarm1 | FFFFFF |
| body1 | FF0000 |
| rightarm1 | FFFFFF |
| shorts1 | FFFFFF |
| socks1 | FFFFFF |
| pattern_la2 | _arsenal9596a |
| pattern_b2 | _arsenal9596a |
| pattern_ra2 | _thinredborder |
| leftarm2 | 00006A |
| body2 | 00006A |
| rightarm2 | 00006A |
| shorts2 | 00006A |
| socks2 | 00006A |
| pattern_la3 | _arsenal9596t |
| pattern_b3 | _arsenal9596t |
| pattern_ra3 | _thinredborder |
| leftarm3 | FFDF00 |
| body3 | FFDF00 |
| rightarm3 | 00006A |
| shorts3 | 00006A |
| socks3 | 00006A |
| prevseason | 1994–95 |
| nextseason | 1996–97 |
Ian Wright (15) Ian Wright (23) The 1995–96 season was Arsenal Football Club's 70th consecutive season in the top flight of English football. Arsenal finished fifth in the FA Premier League (known as the FA Carling Premiership for sponsorship reasons). Bruce Rioch served as Arsenal manager, succeeding George Graham. Arsenal lost to Sheffield United in the third round of the FA Cup and were knocked out of the semifinals of the League Cup by Aston Villa.
Season summary
Bruce Rioch was appointed Arsenal boss on 8 June 1995, and took over an Arsenal side that had finished 12th in the FA Premier League the previous season. Rioch was hired from Bolton Wanderers, after an impressive run culminating in promotion to the Premier League. This also included an FA Cup win against Arsenal in 1994, when they were the holders.
Pre-season signings David Platt and Dennis Bergkamp signaled Rioch's intent to play a more attacking, possession based style. Bergkamp was a club-record signing for Arsenal, costing £7.5 million from Inter Milan. Kevin Campbell and Stefan Schwarz were sold, Paul Davis was freed to join Brentford while Alan Smith confirmed he could no longer play because of his knee injury.
Arsenal made a strong start to the campaign, not losing until matchday 8 at Stamford Bridge. A loss in the North London Derby at White Hart Lane in November was the start of a tough spell however as Arsenal won just three of the next twelve in the Premier League and went out of the FA Cup in the third round to Sheffield United. Arsenal blew their best chance of silverware in February after they went out of the League Cup to eventual winners Aston Villa in the semi-finals.
Rioch did manage to right the ship and lead Arsenal to 5th, on the last day of the season, and a place in the UEFA Cup after losing just two of their final thirteen league matches.
In Rioch's only season, Arsenal saw an improvement from 12th to 5th, improved their goal difference by 14 goals and conceded only 32 goals, a league best. Despite this progress, Rioch had a fallout with Ian Wright, in which Wright ended up turning in a transfer request. Rioch did not get the best out of Bergkamp, nor indeed Wright, but 5th was a creditable finish after the turmoil of George Graham's exit. Still, attendance figures at Highbury were up and the future looked promising for Arsenal.
In the summer of 1996 Rioch clashed with vice-chairman David Dein about transfers. Following Graham's fiasco with an agent that ultimately led to his firing, Arsenal decided that transfers would be dealt with by the board rather than the manager going forward. Rioch and Dein however, failed to see eye to eye about how Arsenal should act in the transfer market. Just days before the start of the next season, by mid-August Bruce Rioch had been sacked.
Rioch's 431 days in charge is the shortest spell of any Arsenal manager since William Elcoat's spell between 1898 and 1899 (when the club was still known as Woolwich Arsenal).
Players
Squad information
Reserve squad
In
| # | Position | Player | Transferred from | Fee | Date | Team | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7 | ITA Sampdoria | £4,750,000 | First-team | ||||
| 10 | ITA Internazionale | £7,500,000 | First-team |
Total spending: £12,250,000
Out
| # | Position | Player | Transferred to | Fee | Date | Team | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15 | ITA Fiorentina | £2,300,000 | First-team | ||||
| 7 | ENG Nottingham Forest | Undisclosed | First-team |
Total income: £2,300,000
Club
Coaching staff
Competitions
Main article: 1995–96 FA Premier League
Results summary
Results by round
Pre-season
Arsenal spent their initial pre-season in Sweden playing Swedish sides Kristianstads, Gallstads and GAIS. Returning to England, they then played games against Wolverhampton Wanderers, Inter Milan (at home), and St Albans. Jensen Wright Dennis Bergkamp |stadium=Avallagarden|location=Gallstads|attendance=1,834|result=W}}{{Football box collapsible Parlour Helder Wright Wright Helder
Matches
Wright Adams Wright Monkou Bergkamp Wright Wright Armstrong Winterburn Dickov Hartson Waddle Dixon Merson Holdworth Ferdinand Stamp Platt Helder Kanchelskis Dixon Platt Bergkamp Wright Bergkamp
FA Cup
Main article: 1995–96 FA Cup
League Cup
Main article: 1995–96 Football League Cup
Wright Wright , , Bergkamp Keown Hartson
Topscorers
- ENG Ian Wright 15
- NED Dennis Bergkamp 11
- ENG David Platt 6
- ENG Paul Merson 5
- WAL John Hartson 4
References
References
- Smith, Alan. (19 June 2015). "Golden Goal: Dennis Bergkamp for Arsenal v Newcastle (2002)".
- (2003). "The Official Illustrated History of Arsenal". Hamlyn.
- Spurling, Jon. (2001). "Top Guns". Aureus Publishing Ltd.
- N. Boehm, Arsenal Insider. 2017
- (2022-05-01). "sacked-rioch-upset".
- Rich, Tim. (13 May 2003). "Seaman's standing unfairly undermined by rare mistakes". The Independent.
- White, Clive. (11 July 1995). "Platt in pounds 4.75m move to Arsenal". The Independent.
- (26 January 2000). "TROUBLED TIMES OF IAN WRIGHT.". The Free Library.
- Shaw, Phil. (21 June 1995). "Rioch signs Bergkamp to signal new era". The Independent.
- Marshall, Alan. (24 October 1997). "I'm Wright off England blasts Ian; FANS TO BLAME". The Free Library.
- (6 June 2011). "Leeds United: My Whites playing days – Linighan INTERVIEW". Yorkshire Evening Post.
- Shaw, Phil. (20 August 1994). "Premiership Kick-off: Search for the happy medium starts here: Influx of foreign players and new Fifa guidelines give unfamiliar look to new season. Phil Shaw reports". The Independent.
- Hartson, 89
- Winter, Henry. (23 July 1992). "Rocastle's move to Leeds leaves room for Thomas". The Independent.
- Culley, Jon. (10 November 1997). "That was the weekend that was". The Independent.
- "Arsenal reserve team appearances 1995/96". Arseweb.
- Irwin, Mark. (31 July 1996). "SIGN OR GET OUT RIOCH!; Arsenal warn crisis boss.". The Free Library.
- Mark Andrews. (2016-07-26). "Dennis Bergkamp Arsenal Debut 26 July 1995 – Pre-season at Kristianstad".
- "Arsenal First Team Line-ups".
- Andy Kelly. (2017-01-28). "Every Arsenal Game in "On This Day" Order".
- (21 July 2015). "1995: Bruce Rioch's one pre-season. Bergkamp arrives! {{!}} The History of Arsenal".
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 1995–96 Arsenal F.C. season — 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