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2002–03 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season
English football club season
English football club season
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| club | Wolverhampton Wanderers |
| season | 2002–03 |
| manager | Dave Jones |
| mgrtitle | Manager |
| chairman | Sir Jack Hayward OBE |
| chrtitle | Chairman |
| league | Football League First Division |
| league result | 5th |
| (promoted via play-offs) | |
| cup1 | FA Cup |
| cup1 result | Quarter-finals |
| cup2 | League Cup |
| cup2 result | 2nd round |
| league topscorer | Kenny Miller (19) |
| season topscorer | Kenny Miller (24) |
| highest attendance | 28,190 (vs Leicester City, 4 May 2003) |
| lowest attendance | 23,016 (vs Brighton, 11 November 2002) |
| average attendance | 25,745 (league only) |
| prevseason | [2001–02](2001-02-wolverhampton-wanderers-f-c-season) |
| nextseason | [2003–04](2003-04-wolverhampton-wanderers-f-c-season) |
(promoted via play-offs) The 2002–03 season was the 104th season of competitive league football in the history of English football club Wolverhampton Wanderers. They played the season in the second tier of the English football system, the Football League First Division.
The season was a huge success for the club as they were promoted to the Premier League via the play-offs after finishing fifth in the table. It was their first and only success in the play-off system from, to date, six attempts. This ended a nineteen-year top flight absence for the club and a fourteen-year stay in the same division.
Season review
In contrast to the heavy spending of the previous close season, Summer 2002 saw the club recruit four players on free transfers. Two of these incoming players were however high-profile deals, with former England captain Paul Ince signing alongside ex-Manchester United stalwart Denis Irwin, on one-year deals.
The season began strongly with an opening day draw at administration-hit Bradford City, followed by three successive victories that put the club at the top of the table. Their form soon dipped though, and the next seven games brought just one win. An upturn saw a 10-game unbeaten run return the team to the play-off positions, aided by the loan addition of striker Carlton Cole. The Christmas/New Year period though brought a return of just two points from a possible 15.
With this drop in form, manager Dave Jones faced criticism from chairman Sir Jack Hayward at the turn of the year, publicly reminding him that he had promised to deliver automatic promotion.{{cite web
The following week brought a first league success in six games, with a narrow victory at neighbours Walsall further relieving the pressure on manager Jones. A 4–1 cup triumph against promotion chasers Leicester City preceded the team's highest away win of the campaign, where they defeated Sheffield Wednesday 4–0 to return to the play-off zone. However, their following away fixture brought the team crashing back to ground with a 1–4 loss at relegation strugglers Brighton.
An unbeaten sequence yielded 14 points from 18 before a slender loss at runaway leaders Portsmouth. March also saw an exit from the FA Cup, losing 0–2 at Premier League Southampton in Wolves' first quarter final appearance for five years, before the club recorded their biggest win since 1988 as they thumped Gillingham 6–0.
By April Wolves sat in sixth place, the final play-off berth, but with the East Anglian duo of Ipswich and Norwich just two points behind. Easter Monday brought the decisive round of games to clarify the play-off picture with Ipswich losing earlier in the day, meaning Wolves could confirm their play-off place if they won at Norwich. A 3–0 victory that evening ensured the club would participate in its fourth play-off campaign at this level.

Wolves finished the season in fifth place after two successive draws, meaning they would play Reading in the play-offs. The first leg saw them at home, where they overturned a half time deficit to win the game 2–1 and take a lead into the second leg. A tense 1–0 success at the Madejski Stadium thanks to a goal from substitute Alex Rae sent them into the final for the first time, breaking a run of three successive losses in away legs.
The final was staged at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff where Wolves met Sheffield United. The Blades had had a strong season, being positioned in the play-off zone almost throughout and reaching the semi-finals of both the FA Cup and League Cup. Wolves won the game decisively with three first-half goals by Mark Kennedy, Nathan Blake and top goalscorer Kenny Miller bringing a 3–0 triumph, preserved by goalkeeper Matt Murray who saved a second half penalty from Michael Brown as part of a man of the match performance.
Promotion ended a 19-year absence from the top level of English football for the club and a fourteen-year stay in the same division. It also brought owner Sir Jack Hayward his dream of Premier League football at his 13th attempt. Three days later Hayward joined in a bus parade through Wolverhampton city centre to Molineux to celebrate the triumph.
Results
Pre season
Wolves' pre season saw them spend a week in Cascais, Portugal (15–22 July), training and playing two Portuguese sides. As had become common in recent years, only their final game was held at their Molineux home. Bentley Sturridge Jones Pollet Niculae Rui Bento Toñito A second string Wolves side also played: 2–0 v Kidderminster Harriers (24 July), 4–0 v Worcester City (1 August) and 0–0 v Burton Albion (6 August)
Football League First Division
A total of 24 teams competed in the Football League First Division in the 2002–03 season. Each team played every other team twice: once at their stadium, and once at the opposition's. Three points were awarded to teams for each win, one point per draw, and none for defeats.
The provisional fixture list was released on 13 June 2002, but was subject to change in the event of matches being selected for television coverage or police concerns. Newton Irwin Cooper Cooper Miller Sturridge Gray Sturridge Freedman Thomson Blake Miller Allison Blake Miller Ndah Sturridge Blake Rae Sturridge Partridge West Gray Miller Sturridge Blackwell Brooker Hart Holland Naylor Ndah Miller Sturridge Cameron Kennedy Miller Dawson Cameron Cameron Sturridge Miller Brown Sturridge
Final table
| Pos | Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Portsmouth | 46 | 29 | 11 | 6 | 97 | 45 | +52 | 98 |
| 2 | Leicester City | 46 | 26 | 14 | 6 | 73 | 40 | +33 | 92 |
| 3 | Sheffield United | 46 | 23 | 11 | 12 | 72 | 52 | +20 | 80 |
| 4 | Reading | 46 | 25 | 4 | 17 | 61 | 46 | +15 | 79 |
| **5** | **Wolverhampton Wanderers** | **46** | **20** | **16** | **10** | **81** | **44** | **+37** | **76** |
| 6 | Nottingham Forest | 46 | 20 | 14 | 12 | 82 | 50 | +32 | 74 |
| 7 | Ipswich Town | 46 | 19 | 13 | 14 | 80 | 64 | +16 | 70 |
Results summary
Results by round |color_-2=green1|color_22-=red1
Play-offs
Naylor Blake Miller
FA Cup
Kennedy Ndah Shearer Miller Miller Proudlock Butler
League Cup
Wood Pollet Rae Robins Swailes Miller Rae Scott Swailes Bryan Hurst Mullin Blake Newton Irwin
Players
Statistics
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Awards
| **Award** | **Winner** |
|---|---|
| **Fans' Player of the Season** | Joleon Lescott |
| **Young Player of the Season** | Matt Murray |
Transfers
In
| **Date** | **Player** | **From** | **Fee** | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 July 2002 | ISL Ívar Ingimarsson | Unattached | Free | ||
| 23 July 2002 | IRL Denis Irwin | Unattached | Free | ||
| 6 August 2002 | ENG Paul Ince | Unattached | Free{{cite news | url=https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/w/wolverhampton_wanderers/2164254.stm | title=Ince agrees Wolves move |
| 23 August 2002 | ENG Marc Edworthy | Unattached | Free | ||
| 18 September 2002 | USA Ian Feuer | Unattached | Non-contract | ||
| 26 February 2003 | AUS Adam Federici | Unattached | End of season |
Out
| **Date** | **Player** | **To** | **Fee** |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 2002 | ENG Andy Sinton | Released | Free |
| June 2002 | WAL Carl Robinson | Released | Free |
| 1 July 2002 | AUS Kevin Muscat | SCO Rangers | Free |
| 11 July 2002 | ENG Darren Bazeley | Released | Free |
| 2 August 2002 | IRL Colin Larkin | Mansfield Town | £120,000 |
| 28 September 2002 | USA Ian Feuer | Released | Free |
| 10 October 2002 | ENG Sean Connelly | Released | Free |
| 28 March 2003 | ENG Lewis Solly | Bury | Free |
Loans in
| **Start date** | **Player** | **From** | **End date** |
|---|---|---|---|
| 28 November 2002 | ENG Carlton Cole | Chelsea | 3 January 2003 |
Loans out
| **Start date** | **Player** | **To** | **End date** |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 July 2002 | BEL Cédric Roussel | BEL Mons | End of season |
| 12 September 2002 | NIR Mark Clyde | Kidderminster Harriers | 12 October 2002 |
| 12 September 2002 | IRL John Melligan | Kidderminster Harriers | 4 May 2003 |
| 4 October 2002 | ENG Michael Branch | Hull City | 3 December 2002 |
| 10 October 2002 | IRL Kenny Coleman | Kidderminster Harriers | End of season |
| 25 October 2002 | ENG Adam Proudlock | Tranmere Rovers | 25 November 2002 |
| 14 November 2002 | FRA Ludovic Pollet | Walsall | 1 January 2003 |
| 13 December 2002 | ENG Adam Proudlock | Sheffield Wednesday | 7 January 2003 |
| 10 February 2003 | ISL Ívar Ingimarsson | Brighton & Hove Albion | 4 May 2003 |
Kit
The season saw new home and away kits, manufactured by Admiral. The home strip reverted to a lighter gold colour after two years wearing a darker "old gold" style, while the away kit returned to the club's traditional all-white look. After twelve seasons sponsored by Goodyear, the club signed a two-year deal with Doritos.
References
References
- (6 January 2003). "Wonderers! Wolves savage Toon and save Jones' job". The Mirror.
- (21 April 2003). "Rotherham 2-1 Ipswich". BBC Sport.
- (13 April 2003). "Arsenal sink brave Blades". BBC Sport.
- (21 January 2003). "Liverpool conquer brave Blades". BBC Sport.
- (29 May 2003). "Crowds hail Molineux heroes". wolves.co.uk.
- (13 June 2002). "Rams in Reading opener". BBC Sport.
- (4 May 2003). "Player of the Year". wolves.co.uk.
- (1 July 2002). "Ivar New Club". wolves.co.uk.
- (23 July 2002). "Irwin joins Wolves". BBC Sport.
- (23 August 2002). "Howarth and Edworthy". wolves.co.uk.
- (18 September 2002). "Wolves sign Feuer". [[BBC Sport]].
- (26 February 2003). "Keeper looking to impress". wolves.co.uk.
- (15 May 2002). "Out of contract". wolves.co.uk.
- (7 May 2002). "Rangers accused over Muscat". [[BBC Sport]].
- (11 July 2002). "Darren departs". wolves.co.uk.
- (2 August 2002). "Striker moves to Mansfield". wolves.co.uk.
- (28 September 2002). "Feuer decides on future". wolves.co.uk.
- (10 October 2002). "Defender leaves Molineux". wolves.co.uk.
- (25 March 2003). "Shakers chase Solly". [[BBC Sport]].
- (28 November 2002). "Cole joins Wolves on loan". [[BBC Sport]].
- (27 July 2002). "Roussel goes on loan". [[BBC Sport]].
- (12 September 2002). "Two out on loan". wolves.co.uk.
- (4 October 2002). "Hull get a Branch". [[BBC Sport]].
- (10 October 2002). "Kidderminster comings and goings". wolves.co.uk.
- (25 October 2002). "Proudlock move confirmed". wolves.co.uk.
- (14 November 2002). "Ludo on the move". wolves.co.uk.
- (13 December 2002). "Another Proudlock loan". wolves.co.uk.
- (10 February 2003). "Ingimarsson joins Seagulls". [[BBC Sport]].
- (14 February 2002). "Wolves sign lucrative kit sponsorship deal with Admiral". wolves.co.uk.
- (9 August 2002). "New away kit". wolves.co.uk.
- (2 July 2002). "New sponsor revealed". wolves.co.uk.
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