Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/1995-96-fa-premier-league-by-team

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1995–96 Newcastle United F.C. season


FieldValue
clubNewcastle United
season1995–96
managerKevin Keegan
chairmanSir John Hall
stadiumSt James' Park
leaguePremier League
league result2nd
cup1FA Cup
cup1 resultThird round
cup2League Cup
cup2 resultQuarter-finals
league topscorer
Les Ferdinand (25)
season topscorer
Les Ferdinand (29)
highest attendance36,589 (vs. Tottenham Hotspur)
lowest attendance36,225 (vs. Chelsea)
average attendance36,506
pattern_la1_nufc9597h
pattern_b1_newcastle9597h
pattern_ra1_nufc9597h
pattern_sh1_adidaswhite
pattern_so1_nufc9597h
shorts1000000
socks1000000
pattern_la2_nufc9596a
pattern_b2_nufc9596a
pattern_ra2_nufc9596a
pattern_sh2_adidasblue
pattern_so2_nufc9596a
shorts2fffde1
prevseason1994–95
nextseason1996–97

Les Ferdinand (25) Les Ferdinand (29) During the 1995–96 FA Premier League season, English club Newcastle United participated in the Premier League, finishing in second place.

Season summary

The 1995–96 season saw Sir John Hall's millions allow Newcastle to invest heavily in players from across the world. With a total of some £16 million spent on the signings of Les Ferdinand, David Ginola, Warren Barton and Shaka Hislop before the start of the season, Kevin Keegan's team made a strong start. Colombian striker Faustino Asprilla and England midfielder David Batty were also attracted to the north-east in February 1996 for a combined total of around £11 million.

An explosive start to the season saw Newcastle storm to the top of the Premier League table. Newcastle led the league for virtually all of the season from August until mid-March, and by Christmas had established a 10-point lead over Manchester United. Though they lost 2–0 at Old Trafford on 27 December, they still managed to extend this lead to 12 points on 20 January 1996, putting them in prime position for the title with 15 matches remaining. However, Manchester United – bolstered by the return of Eric Cantona from suspension – then enjoyed a surge in form. Despite an emphatic 2–1 win at Middlesbrough largely inspired by debutant Faustino Asprilla, Newcastle lost five of their next eight. Newcastle dropped vital points away to West Ham and Manchester City, whilst a 1–0 win for Alex Ferguson's team at St James' Park on 4 March ended Newcastle's 100% home record in the league and cut their lead to a single point, and further away defeats at Arsenal, Liverpool and Blackburn Rovers allowed Manchester United to overtake them and establish a lead that would ultimately prove decisive.

Ferguson's mind games added further heat to the title race and provoked an infamous rant from Keegan live on Sky Sports on 29 April 1996, following his team's 1–0 win at Leeds United. A 1–1 draw at Nottingham Forest three days later left Newcastle needing to beat Tottenham Hotspur, and Manchester United needing to lose against Middlesbrough, if the title was to return to Tyneside for the first time since 1927. In the end, a 1–1 draw proved academic as Manchester United beat the Teessiders 3–0, thus winning by four points. Newcastle's second place finish was nonetheless their highest finish for 69 years.

Analysis

The contest between Newcastle United and Manchester United for the Premier League title in the 1995–96 season has been described by Total Football magazine as "an absolute classic". In 2012, the season was one of six nominees for the Premier League 20 Seasons Award for the best Premier League season ever.

The 4–3 loss to Liverpool was voted the greatest game of the first decade of the Premier League at the Premier League 10 Seasons Awards, attributing to the jubilant celebrations at Anfield whilst Keegan slumped over the advertising hoardings in distress.

Newcastle's collapse in the Premier League title race has been the subject of continuous debate. Newcastle's performance has been described by Graham Lister of Goal.com as having "entered football folklore as the Premier League's ultimate Devon Loch moment." Rob Lee claimed that the failure to capture the title was due to falling player confidence, whilst Ian Cusack believed that the return of Eric Cantona was the major difference, stating "Newcastle United had, player for player, the best team in the Premiership, but didn't have the best player." Mark Lawrenson said the general consensus was Keegan's attacking philosophy having been instrumental in costing Newcastle the title, stating "I really think they should have won the league in the 1995–96 season...Kevin could have done it if he'd altered the system very, very slightly. But he didn't want to betray his principles...I think Kevin wanted it free-flowing in all departments and that doesn't necessarily happen."

Final league table

Main article: 1995–96 FA Premier League

Results by round

|color_2-4=blue2|text_2-4=1996-97 UEFA Cup |color_20-22=red1|text_20-22=1996–97 Football League

Kit

Newcastle United's kit was manufactured by the company Adidas and sponsored by Tyneside-based brewery Newcastle Brown Ale.

Players

First-team squad

:Squad at end of season

Left club during season

Reserves

:The following players did not appear for the first-team this season.

Appearances, goals and cards

:Starts + substitute appearances)

No.Pos.NameLeagueFA CupLeague CupTotalDisciplineAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals[[File:Yellow card.svg13px]][[File:Red card.svg13px]]
15GKTRI Shaka Hislop240004028000
2DFENG Warren Barton30+10205137+1140
4DFENG Darren Peacock33+10205240+1230
6DFENG Steve Howey281104033120
3DFENG John Beresford32+10102035+1041
18MFNIR Keith Gillespie26+23004130+2430
10MFENG Lee Clark22+621+103026+7210
7MFENG Rob Lee368103140910
14MFFRA David Ginola345204040560
8MFENG Peter Beardsley3582132401160
9FWENG Les Ferdinand37252153442940
1GKCZE Pavel Srníček14+10201+1017+2000
27DFBEL Philippe Albert19+44212+1123+5640
19DFENG Steve Watson15+83103+1119+9400
11FWCOL Faustino Asprilla11+33000011+3320
22MFENG David Batty111000011120
26DFENG Robbie Elliott5+101+10208+2010
28FWENG Paul Kitson2+5220004+5210
11MFENG Scott Sellars2+4000214+4100
5MFMontserrat Ruel Fox2+2000103+2000
12DFSUI Marc Hottiger0+10001+101+2000
16FWENG Darren Huckerby0+100+10000+2000
17MFIRL Jimmy Crawford00000+100+1000
23MFENG Chris Holland00000+100+1000
25FWENG Paul Brayson0000101000

Coaching staff

Matches

Pre-season

Kitson Brayson Brayson Beardsley Gillespie Ferdinand

[[1995–96 FA Premier League|Premier League]]

Beardsley Ferdinand Lee Beardsley Ferdinand Edghill Lee Kitson Ferdinand Ferdinand Clark Albert Watson Beardsley Ekoku Cunningham Beresford Ginola Keane Ferdinand Beardsley Clark Ferdinand Williamson A. Quinn Rösler Asprilla Asprilla Ferdinand Wright Collymore Ginola Asprilla

[[1995–96 FA Cup|FA Cup]]

Beardsley Gullit Watson Beresford Albert Wise Peacock Newton

[[1995–96 Football League Cup|League Cup]]

Sellars Ferdinand Gillespie Lee Albert Ferdinand Ferdinand Peacock

Notes

References

References

  1. Adams, Tony. (31 March 2011). "Newcastle's Entertainers fall at Anfield". [[ESPN]].
  2. Kelly, Ryan. (29 April 2020). "Kevin Keegan's 'I will love it' rant: What outburst was about & full transcript". Goal.com.
  3. Morton, David. (30 April 2017). "How Newcastle United clinched their last league title - 90 years ago today". The Chronicle.
  4. Wright, Simon. (2013). "Premier League flashback - 1995-96 review: King Eric's one man crusade to the championship". Total Football.
  5. (16 April 2012). "Premier League 20 seasons awards – best season". [[Premier League]].
  6. (16 April 2012). "Premier League 20 seasons awards – best season". [[Premier League]].
  7. Glenn, Moore. (5 April 1996). "Keegan's philosophy faces reality test". The Independent.
  8. Delaney, Miguel. (28 March 2020). "Keegan, Ferguson, Cantona and a collapse: The inside story of the 1995/96 title race". [[The Independent]].
  9. Hardy, Martin. (24 September 2015). "Newcastle United a far cry from Kevin Keegan's 1995 entertainers, 20 years on". [[The Guardian]].
  10. Lister, Graham. (30 March 2012). "Manchester United in 1992, Newcastle in 1996 & the great title-challenge collapses Manchester City will be desperate not to emulate". Goal.com.
  11. Smallwood, Jimmy. (20 March 2012). "Are Man City about to relive the Newcastle collapse of 1996?". [[BBC]].
  12. Cusack, Ian. (13 July 1996). "Imperfect Match – Newcastle Utd 1995-96". [[When Saturday Comes]].
  13. Malam, Colin. (20 January 2008). "Why Keegan's class of 96 blew a 12p-point lead". [[The Daily Telegraph]].
  14. "FootballSquads - Newcastle United - 1995/96".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1995–96 Newcastle United F.C. season — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This 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