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2000–01 Liverpool F.C. season
English football club season
English football club season
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| club | Liverpool F.C. |
| season | 2000–01 |
| chairman | David Moores |
| manager | Gérard Houllier |
| league | FA Premier League |
| league result | [3rd](2000-01-fa-premier-league) |
| cup1 | FA Cup |
| cup1 result | [**Winners**](2000-01-fa-cup) |
| cup2 | League Cup |
| cup2 result | [**Winners**](2000-01-football-league-cup) |
| cup3 | UEFA Cup |
| cup3 result | [**Winners**](2000-01-uefa-cup) |
| pattern_la1 | _liverpool0001h |
| pattern_ra1 | _liverpool0001h |
| pattern_b1 | _liverpool0001h |
| leftarm1 | FF0000 |
| body1 | FF0000 |
| rightarm1 | FF0000 |
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| socks1 | FF0000 |
| pattern_la2 | _liverpool0001a |
| pattern_ra2 | _liverpool0001a |
| pattern_b2 | _liverpool0001a |
| pattern_sh2 | _goldsides |
| pattern_so2 | _goldtop |
| leftarm2 | FFBF00 |
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| socks3 | 008000 |
| league topscorer | |
| Michael Owen (16) | |
| season topscorer | |
| Michael Owen (24) | |
| average attendance | 42,768 |
| prevseason | [1999–2000](1999-2000-liverpool-f-c-season) |
| nextseason | [2001–02](2001-02-liverpool-f-c-season) |
Michael Owen (16) Michael Owen (24)
The 2000–2001 season was '''Liverpool Football Club''''s 109th season in existence and their 39th consecutive season in the top-flight of English football. This season proved highly successful for Liverpool, with them picking up the League Cup, UEFA Cup and FA Cup under Gerard Houllier, having finished 3rd in the league.
Season summary
Liverpool enjoyed their best season for years when they completed a unique treble of cup competitions and ended Gérard Houllier's three-year wait to bring silverware to Anfield.
The first trophy was secured on 25 February when a 5–4 penalty shoot-out victory followed a 1–1 draw with Birmingham City in the Worthington Cup final. The game was also the first club fixture to be played at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium while Wembley was being rebuilt. Part two of the treble was completed on 12 May when two late Michael Owen goals overturned Arsenal's lead in the FA Cup final to give the Reds a 2–1 win. The final part of the treble was perhaps the most dramatic. The UEFA Cup final featured an amazing nine goals as Alavés gave them a run for their money fighting back to equalize from 3–1 and 4–3, before Liverpool finally ran out 5–4 winners after extra-time. The FA and UEFA cup wins meant Liverpool played in the Charity Shield and UEFA Super Cup at the start of the next season, winning both.
Promising young midfielder Steven Gerrard was voted PFA Young Player of the Year for his key part in one of the most successful seasons in Liverpool's 109-year history, and contributions from British stars Michael Owen, Robbie Fowler, Jamie Carragher, Danny Murphy and new signings Gary McAllister and Emile Heskey were matched by an increasingly continental side consisting of new captain Sami Hyypiä, Sander Westerveld, Jari Litmanen and Dietmar Hamann.
However, there was sad news just after the end of the season, when former manager Joe Fagan (manager of the 1984 side that also managed to win three trophies in a season) died at the age of 80 after a long illness.
Players
First-team squad
| No. | Player | Nationality | Date of birth | Signed from | **Goalkeepers** | **Defenders** | **Midfielders** | **Forwards** |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sander Westerveld | Netherlands | Vitesse | |||||
| 19 | Pegguy Arphexad | Guadeloupe | Leicester City | |||||
| 26 | Jørgen Nielsen | Denmark | Hvidovre | |||||
| 2 | Stephane Henchoz | Switzerland | Blackburn Rovers | |||||
| 3 | Christian Ziege | Germany | Middlesbrough | |||||
| 6 | Markus Babbel | Germany | Bayern Munich | |||||
| 12 | Sami Hyypia | Finland | Willem II | |||||
| 14 | Vegard Heggem | Norway | Rosenborg | |||||
| 23 | Jamie Carragher | England | LFC Academy | |||||
| 27 | Gregory Vignal | France | Montpellier | |||||
| 29 | Stephen Wright | England | LFC Academy | |||||
| 30 | Djimi Traore | Mali | Stade Lavallois | |||||
| 31 | Frode Kippe | Norway | Lillestrom | |||||
| 7 | Vladimir Smicer | Czech Republic | RC Lens | |||||
| 11 | Jamie Redknapp | England | Bournemouth | |||||
| 13 | Danny Murphy | England | Crewe Alexandra | |||||
| 15 | Patrik Berger | Czech Republic | Borussia Dortmund | |||||
| 16 | Dietmar Hamann | Germany | Newcastle United | |||||
| 17 | Steven Gerrard | England | LFC Academy | |||||
| 20 | Nick Barmby | England | Everton | |||||
| 21 | Gary McAllister | Scotland | Coventry City | |||||
| 24 | Bernard Diomède | France | Auxerre | |||||
| 25 | Igor Biscan | Croatia | Dinamo Zagreb | |||||
| 28 | Richie Partridge | Ireland | Stella Maris | |||||
| 33 | Alan Navarro | England | LFC Academy | |||||
| 8 | Emile Heskey | England | Leicester City | |||||
| 9 | Robbie Fowler | England | LFC Academy | |||||
| 10 | Michael Owen | England | LFC Academy | |||||
| 37 | Jari Litmanen | Finland | Barcelona | |||||
| 38 | Daniel Sjolund | Finland | West Ham United |
Transfers
In
| a | #D10A11 | 1px}}" | Date | a | #D10A11 | 1px}}" | Pos. | a | #D10A11 | 1px}}" | No. | a | #D10A11 | 1px}}" | Player | a | #D10A11 | 1px}}" | From | a | #D10A11 | 1px}}" | Fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7 June 2000 | MF | 24 | FRA Bernard Diomède | Auxerre | £3,000,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 1 July 2000 | MF | 21 | SCO Gary McAllister | Coventry City | Free Transfer | ||||||||||||||||||
| 1 July 2000 | GK | 19 | FRA Pegguy Arphexad | Leicester City | Free Transfer | ||||||||||||||||||
| 1 July 2000 | DF | 6 | GER Markus Babbel | Bayern Munich | Free Transfer | ||||||||||||||||||
| 18 July 2000 | MF | 20 | ENG Nick Barmby | Everton | £6,000,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 25 July 2000 | DF | 3 | GER Christian Ziege | Middlesbrough | £5,500,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 22 September 2000 | DF | 27 | FRA Gregory Vignal | Montpellier | £500,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 28 November 2000 | FW | 38 | FIN Daniel Sjolund | West Ham United | £1,300,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 7 December 2000 | MF | 25 | CRO Igor Biscan | Dinamo Zagreb | £5,500,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 4 January 2001 | FW | 37 | FIN Jari Litmanen | Barcelona | Free Transfer |
Out
| a | #D10A11 | 1px}}" | Date | a | #D10A11 | 1px}}" | Pos. | a | #D10A11 | 1px}}" | No. | a | #D10A11 | 1px}}" | Player | a | #D10A11 | 1px}}" | To | a | #D10A11 | 1px}}" | Fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 26 June 2000 | DF | 20 | NOR Stig Inge Bjornebye | ENG Blackburn Rovers | £300,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 1 July 2000 | DF | 6 | IRL Phil Babb | POR Sporting CP | Free Transfer | ||||||||||||||||||
| 3 August 2000 | MF | 25 | ENG David Thompson | ENG Coventry City | £2,750,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 18 August 2000 | DF | 21 | SCO Dominic Matteo | ENG Leeds United | £4,750,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 3 November 2000 | GK | 19 | USA Brad Friedel | ENG Blackburn Rovers | Free Transfer | ||||||||||||||||||
| 28 November 2000 | DF | 4 | CMR Rigobert Song | ENG West Ham United | £2,500,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 6 December 2000 | DF | 5 | IRL Steve Staunton | ENG Aston Villa | Free Transfer | ||||||||||||||||||
| 11 December 2000 | FW | 18 | NED Erik Meijer | GER Hamburg | Free Transfer | ||||||||||||||||||
| 21 December 2000 | FW | 22 | GUI Titi Camara | ENG West Ham United | £2,600,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 27 December 2000 | FW | 27 | ISL Haukur Ingi Guðnason | ISL Keflavik | Free Transfer | ||||||||||||||||||
| 20 March 2001 | FW | 32 | ENG Jon Newby | ENG Bury | £100,000 |
Events of the season
August
Gérard Houllier prepared for his third season at the Liverpool helm, looking to improve on the fourth-place finish of the previous campaign which had seen the Reds having to settle for a place in the UEFA Cup when they had come so close to qualifying for the UEFA Champions League.
The campaign began with a 1–0 home win over relegation favourites Bradford City, who had defeated Liverpool last season to deny the Reds Champions League qualification; Emile Heskey scored the only goal of the game. A 2–0 defeat at Arsenal followed, before a thrilling 3–3 draw at Southampton in which Michael Owen was on target twice.
September
September began well with good home wins over Aston Villa and Manchester City. The European adventure then began with a 1–0 away win over Romanian side Rapid București in the first round first leg of the UEFA Cup. The return to league action saw 1–1 draws with West Ham United and Sunderland. The month ended with a goalless home draw in the return leg against Rapid București to ensure progression to the next stage of the competition.
October
October began badly for Liverpool, who found themselves on the receiving end of a 3–0 defeat by Chelsea in the league. Two weeks later, however, an Emile Heskey hat-trick gave them a 4–0 win at Derby County which put them in fourth place, four points behind leaders Manchester United and second placed Arsenal and a point behind third placed Leicester City. Heskey was on target in the next two games that month – a 1–0 win over Slovan Liberec in the UEFA Cup second round first leg at Anfield and the 3–1 win over Everton in the Merseyside derby, also at Anfield. http://www.liverpool-mad.co.uk/footydb/loadgen.asp?Day=15&Month=Oct&ssnno=130&teamno=342
November
November brought mixed results for the Reds. Their Football League Cup quest began in the third round with a 2–1 win over Chelsea after extra time. This was followed by a 4–3 league defeat to Leeds United at Elland Road. In the second round second leg of the UEFA Cup, the Reds eliminated Slovan Liberec to reach the third round. There was also an impressive 4–1 home win over Coventry City in the league, followed by 2–1 defeats at Tottenham Hotspur and Newcastle United, and finally an 8–0 away demolition of Division Two side Stoke City in the fourth round of the League Cup. Liverpool were still a healthy fifth in the league but were now 12 points adrift of leaders Manchester United, in turn eight points ahead of nearest contenders Arsenal. http://www.liverpool-mad.co.uk/footydb/loadgen.asp?Day=26&Month=Nov&ssnno=130&teamno=342
December
December was a generally good month for the Reds, who began with a 3–0 home win over Charlton Athletic before overcoming Olympiacos in the UEFA Cup third round. Liverpool then suffering a shock 1–0 home defeat at the hands of surprise title outsiders Ipswich Town, only promoted the previous season. A Danny Murphy goal gave them a 1–0 away win over Manchester United two days before Christmas, though it did little to alter the decision of many bookmakers by this stage of the season to re-open the books on the title race, as so many of them were now certain that United would win their third successive title. The year ended with a 1–0 defeat to Middlesbrough at the Riverside Stadium on Boxing Day. The Reds ended the year in sixth place, occupying the European places along with leaders Manchester United, and the top five clubs Arsenal, Sunderland, Leicester City and Ipswich Town. http://www.liverpool-mad.co.uk/footydb/loadgen.asp?Day=26&Month=Dec&ssnno=130&teamno=342
January
2001 started with a 2–1 home win over Southampton, followed by a 3–0 home win over Rotherham United in the FA Cup third round. Then came a surprise 2–1 defeat by Division One strugglers Crystal Palace in the League Cup semi-final first leg at Selhurst Park, though the Reds were rampant 5–0 winners in the return leg at Anfield 14 days later to book their place in the final with Birmingham City and be presented with the opportunity to win the trophy for a record sixth time. There was also an excellent 3–0 away win over Aston Villa in the league in mid January, as well as a 2–0 win at Leeds United in the FA Cup fourth round. The month ended with a 1–1 draw against strugglers Manchester City at Maine Road. Liverpool now stood fourth in the league, with Manchester United now 15 points ahead of nearest contenders Arsenal, 16 points clear of third placed Sunderland and 18 points clear of Liverpool. Though the league was now surely beyond Liverpool's (and indeed any other team's) reach, the Reds still had three cups to play for. http://www.liverpool-mad.co.uk/footydb/loadgen.asp?Day=31&Month=Jan&ssnno=130&teamno=342
February
February began with an impressive 3–0 home win over struggling West Ham United and a 1–1 draw at Sunderland. Then came the return to European action – a 2–0 away win over Roma in the UEFA Cup fourth round, in which Michael Owen scored both goals. Then came a 4–2 home win over Manchester City in the FA Cup fifth round. Then came the second leg of the game against Roma, which the Reds lost 1–0 at Anfield, still enough for Liverpool to progress to the quarter-finals.
The League Cup final on 25 February was to be the first domestic cup final to be playing beyond England's borders: Wembley Stadium had closed for rebuilding in October 2000 and, until the revamped stadium was ready, all major finals in English football would be held at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, Wales. Robbie Fowler put the Reds ahead against Birmingham City after 30 minutes, only for the Division One midlanders to equalise later. With extra time played, the scores were still level and so the game went to penalties – a first for an English cup final. Liverpool won the shoot-out to end their six-year wait for a major trophy, their longest major trophy wait since the early 1960s.
March
Liverpool began March with a 2–0 defeat at Leicester City before travelling to Portugal for the UEFA Cup quarter final first leg with Porto, which ended in a goalless draw. Then came the all-Merseyside FA Cup quarter-final – not against Everton, but against Wirral-based Tranmere Rovers, managed by former Liverpool striker John Aldridge. The Reds won 4–2 at Prenton Park, marking the end of a complicated story for Tranmere, who were on their way to relegation from Division One – and for Aldridge, who left the club within weeks of this game. Four days later, Porto travelled to Anfield for the quarter-final second leg, which the Reds won 2–0. The remaining games that month were a 1–1 home draw with struggling Derby County and a 2–0 home win over Manchester United, which did little except prolong United's wait for their inevitable third straight league title.
April
With Manchester United confirmed as FA Premier League champions on 14 April, most eyes were off the Premier League as Liverpool looked to add the FA Cup and UEFA Cup to their earlier League Cup triumph. The FA Cup semi-final at Villa Park on 8 April was against Division Two surprise package Wycombe Wanderers (in only their eighth season as a Football League club) and the Reds only narrowly managed to beat them with a slender 2–1 win. The UEFA Cup semi final first leg with Barcelona saw a goalless draw at the Camp Nou, before a penalty by 36-year-old Gary McAllister in the return leg at Anfield put the Reds through to their first post-Heysel European final.
May
After securing a third-place finish in the league and qualification for the Champions League for the first time in the post-Heysel era, the Reds enjoyed one of their finest months ever by completing a unique treble of the League Cup (won in late February), FA Cup and UEFA Cup. The FA Cup was snatched from the jaws of defeat when two late goals from Michael Owen overturned Arsenal's 1–0 lead in the final minutes of the game. The treble was completed four days later when a thrilling match against Alavés of Spain gave them a 5–4 victory in the UEFA Cup final.
Pre-season and friendlies
| Date | Opponents | H / A | Result | Scorers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 22 July 2000 | Stoke City | A | 0–1 | |
| 29 July 2000 | SC Freiburg | A | 4–1 | Barmby 18', Heskey 40', Owen 54', Staunton 74' |
| 3 August 2000 | Glentoran | A | 4–0 | Fowler 9', Berger 43', Šmicer 44', Murphy 61' |
| 5 August 2000 | Benfica | N | 2–2 | Camara 10', Owen 48' |
| 10 August 2000 | Valerenga | A | 1–1 | |
| (2–4 p) | Šmicer 22' | |||
| 13 August 2000 | Parma | H | 5–0 | Hamann 29', Barmby 38', McAllister 59', Owen 64' (pen.), 84' |
Competitions
FA Premier League
League table
Main article: 2000–01 FA Premier League
Results by round
Matches
Henry El Khalej Hyypiä Hamann Horlock Hasselbaink Guðjohnsen Berger Heskey Berger Ziege Šmicer Gerrard Heskey Sherwood Dyer Heskey Babbel Owen Barmby Fowler Babbel Gerrard Fowler Izzet Fowler Bowyer Unsworth Babbel McAllister McAllister Fowler McAllister McAllister Murphy Owen
League Cup
Main article: 2000-01 Football League Cup
Matches
Fowler
Šmicer Babbel Fowler Hyypiä Murphy
Šmicer Barmby
leg 1 Morrison leg 2 Murphy Bišćan Fowler
Hamann Henchoz Barmby Ziege Hamann Fowler Carragher Purse Marcelo Lazaridis Hughes A. Johnson
FA Cup
Main article: 2000-01 FA Cup
Matches
Hamann
Heskey
Heskey Šmicer Babbel Goater
Allison Owen Gerrard Fowler
Fowler
Owen
UEFA Cup
Main article: 2000–01 UEFA Cup
Matches
Breda
Heskey
Owen
Gerrard
Barmby
Owen
Westerveld
McAllister
Gerrard
Fowler
Geli
Alonso
Herrera
Moreno
Contra
Karmona
Magno
Cruyff
Téllez
Main article: 2001 UEFA Cup Final
Statistics
Player statistics
Goalscorers
Includes all competitive matches.
| Rank | Pos. | No. | Player | FA Premier League | FA Cup | League Cup | UEFA Cup | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | FW | 10 | ENG Michael Owen | 16 | 3 | 1 | 4 | **24** |
| 2 | FW | 8 | ENG Emile Heskey | 14 | 5 | 0 | 3 | **22** |
| 3 | FW | 9 | ENG Robbie Fowler | 8 | 2 | 6 | 1 | **17** |
| 4 | MF | 17 | ENG Steven Gerrard | 7 | 1 | 0 | 2 | **10** |
| MF | 13 | ENG Danny Murphy | 4 | 1 | 4 | 1 | **10** | |
| 6 | MF | 20 | ENG Nick Barmby | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 | **8** |
| 7 | MF | 21 | SCO Gary McAllister | 5 | 0 | 0 | 2 | **7** |
| MF | 7 | CZE Vladimír Šmicer | 2 | 1 | 4 | 0 | **7** | |
| 9 | DF | 6 | ENG Markus Babbel | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | **6** |
| 10 | DF | 12 | FIN Sami Hyypiä | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 | **4** |
| 11 | MF | 16 | GER Dietmar Hamann | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | **3** |
| 12 | MF | 15 | CZE Patrik Berger | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | **2** |
| MF | 37 | FIN Jari Litmanen | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | **2** | |
| DF | 3 | GER Christian Ziege | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | **2** | |
| 15 | DF | 25 | CRO Igor Bišćan | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | **1** |
| **Own goal** | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | **2** | |||
| **TOTALS** | **71** | **17** | **17** | **20** | **127** |
http://www.liverpool-mad.co.uk/footydb/loadtmrs.asp?ssnno=130&teamno=342
Competition top scorers
| Competition | Result | Top scorer |
|---|---|---|
| [FA Premier League](2000-01-fa-premier-league) | 3rd | ENG Michael Owen, 16 |
| [UEFA Cup](2000-01-uefa-cup) | Winners | ENG Nick Barmby, 4 |
| ENG Michael Owen, 4 | ||
| [FA Cup](2000-01-fa-cup) | Winners | ENG Emile Heskey, 5 |
| [League Cup](2000-01-football-league-cup) | Winners | ENG Robbie Fowler, 6 |
| [Overall](2000-01-in-english-football) | ENG Michael Owen, 24 |
Notes
References
References
- (19 May 2001). "Charlton 0 Liverpool 4". Liverpoolfc.tv.
- (16 May 2001). "Liverpool 5 Alaves 4". [[UEFA]].
- (25 February 2001). "Blues shot down as Liverpool lift cup". British Broadcasting Corporation.
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