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2004–05 FA Premier League
Football season in England
Football season in England
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| image | Champions 2004-5.jpg |
| competition | FA Premier League |
| winners | Chelsea |
| 1st Premier League title | |
| 2nd English title | |
| relegated | Crystal Palace |
| Norwich City | |
| Southampton | |
| continentalcup1 | [Champions League](2005-06-uefa-champions-league) |
| continentalcup1 qualifiers | Chelsea |
| Arsenal | |
| Manchester United | |
| Everton | |
| Liverpool (as [Champions League winners](2005-uefa-champions-league-final)) | |
| continentalcup2 | [UEFA Cup](2005-06-uefa-cup) |
| continentalcup2 qualifiers | Bolton Wanderers |
| Middlesbrough | |
| continentalcup3 | [Intertoto Cup](2005-uefa-intertoto-cup) |
| continentalcup3 qualifiers | Newcastle United |
| matches | 380 |
| total goals | 975 |
| league topscorer section | Top scorers |
| league topscorer | Thierry Henry |
| (25 goals) | |
| best goalkeeper | Petr Čech (24 clean sheets) |
| biggest home win | Arsenal 7–0 Everton |
| (11 May 2005) | |
| biggest away win | West Bromwich Albion 0–5 Liverpool |
| (26 December 2004) | |
| highest scoring | Tottenham Hotspur 4–5 Arsenal |
| (13 November 2004) | |
| longest wins | 8 games |
| Chelsea | |
| longest unbeaten | 29 games |
| Chelsea | |
| longest winless | 15 games |
| West Bromwich Albion | |
| longest losses | 6 games |
| Bolton Wanderers | |
| Tottenham Hotspur | |
| highest attendance | 67,989 |
| Manchester United 2–1 Portsmouth | |
| (26 February 2005) | |
| lowest attendance | 16,180 |
| Fulham 1–0 West Bromwich Albion | |
| (16 January 2005) | |
| attendance | 12,882,140 |
| average attendance | 33,900 |
| prevseason | [2003–04](2003-04-fa-premier-league) |
| nextseason | [2005–06](2005-06-fa-premier-league) |
| season | [2004–05](2004-05-in-english-football) |
| dates | 14 August 2004 – 15 May 2005 |
1st Premier League title 2nd English title Norwich City Southampton Arsenal Manchester United Everton Liverpool (as Champions League winners) Middlesbrough (25 goals) (11 May 2005) (26 December 2004) (13 November 2004) Chelsea Chelsea West Bromwich Albion Bolton Wanderers Tottenham Hotspur Manchester United 2–1 Portsmouth (26 February 2005) Fulham 1–0 West Bromwich Albion (16 January 2005)
The 2004–05 FA Premier League (known as the FA Barclays Premiership for sponsorship reasons) was the 13th season of the Premier League. It began on 14 August 2004 and ended on 15 May 2005. Arsenal were the defending champions after going unbeaten the previous season. Chelsea won the title with a then record 95 points, which was previously set by Manchester United in the 1993–94 season, and later surpassed by Manchester City in the 2017–18 season (100), securing the title with a 2–0 win at the Reebok Stadium against Bolton Wanderers. Chelsea also broke a number of other records during their campaign, most notably breaking the record of most games won in a single Premier League campaign, securing 29 wins in the league in home and away matches, which they later surpassed in the 2016–17 season.
Season summary
Arsenal were the favourites to defend their title after finishing the previous season unbeaten, but they also faced competition in the form of regular challengers Manchester United and Chelsea, the latter under the new management of Portuguese José Mourinho, who had just won the UEFA Champions League with Porto. Liverpool also had a new manager in Spaniard Rafael Benítez, who had just won La Liga and the UEFA Cup with Valencia and were expected to challenge for the title too. Another managerial change at a club aiming for the top was at Tottenham Hotspur, who appointed Jacques Santini, who had just led France to the quarter-finals of the 2004 European Championship.
At the other end of the table, amongst those tipped for relegation were Norwich City, Crystal Palace and West Bromwich Albion, having all just been promoted from the First Division (rebranded this season as the Championship). Everton, Manchester City, Blackburn Rovers and Portsmouth were also tipped to struggle, the first three finishing just outside the relegation places the previous season and Portsmouth being in their second season.
Arsenal's record-breaking unbeaten streak of 49 games ended on 24 October 2004, when Manchester United beat them 2–0 at Old Trafford.
Relegation
For the first time since the advent of the Premier League in 1992, no team was relegated before the final day of the season. In each of the last three weekends of the season, the team that was bottom of the table at the start of the weekend finished it outside the drop zone. The final round of the season began with West Bromwich Albion at the bottom, Southampton and Crystal Palace one point ahead and Norwich City a further point ahead, in the last safe spot. West Brom, who had been bottom of the table and eight points from safety on Christmas Day, did their part by beating Portsmouth 2–0. Norwich, the only side to have their fate completely in their own hands, lost 6–0 to Fulham and went down. Southampton took the lead against Manchester United within 10 minutes through a John O'Shea own goal, but ultimately lost the match 2–1 and were also relegated. Crystal Palace, away to Charlton Athletic, were leading 2–1 after 71 minutes, but with eight minutes to go, Jonathan Fortune equalised for Charlton to send their South East London rivals down. Had Palace won they would have stayed up; instead they became the first team to be relegated from the Premier League four times. As a result, West Brom stayed up, becoming the first club in Premier League history to avoid relegation after being bottom of the table at Christmas.
As all four matches ended, cameras focused on West Brom's home ground, The Hawthorns, as confirmation of other results began to filter through. Once the realisation dawned on the players and fans that survival had been achieved, a mass pitch invasion was sparked, with huge celebrations. The Portsmouth fans joined in the celebrations as, through losing, they had "helped" relegate arch-rivals Southampton.
Teams
Twenty teams competed in the league – the top seventeen teams from the previous season and the three teams promoted from the First Division. The promoted teams were Norwich City, West Bromwich Albion and Crystal Palace, returning to the top flight after an absence of nine, one and six years respectively. The promoted teams replaced Leicester City, Leeds United and Wolverhampton Wanderers, who were relegated to the newly branded Championship. Leicester City and Wolverhampton Wanderers were both relegated after a season's presence while Leeds United ended their top flight spell of fourteen years.
Stadiums and locations
Arsenal
Charlton Athletic
Chelsea
Crystal Palace
Fulham
Tottenham Hotspur
Aston Villa
Birmingham City
West Bromwich Albion|position=right}}
| Team | Location | Stadium | Capacity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arsenal | London (Highbury) | Arsenal Stadium | 38,419 |
| Aston Villa | Birmingham (Aston) | Villa Park | 42,553 |
| Birmingham City | Birmingham (Bordesley) | St Andrew's | 30,079 |
| Blackburn Rovers | Blackburn | Ewood Park | 31,367 |
| Bolton Wanderers | Bolton | Reebok Stadium | 28,723 |
| Charlton Athletic | London (Charlton) | The Valley | 27,111 |
| Chelsea | London (Fulham) | Stamford Bridge | 42,360 |
| Crystal Palace | London (Selhurst) | Selhurst Park | 25,073 |
| Everton | Liverpool (Walton) | Goodison Park | 40,569 |
| Fulham | London (Fulham) | Craven Cottage | 24,600 |
| Liverpool | Liverpool (Anfield) | Anfield | 45,276 |
| Manchester City | Manchester (Bradford) | City of Manchester Stadium | 48,000 |
| Manchester United | Manchester (Old Trafford) | Old Trafford | 68,217 |
| Middlesbrough | Middlesbrough | Riverside Stadium | 35,049 |
| Newcastle United | Newcastle upon Tyne | St James' Park | 52,387 |
| Norwich City | Norwich | Carrow Road | 27,010 |
| Portsmouth | Portsmouth | Fratton Park | 20,220 |
| Southampton | Southampton | St Mary's Stadium | 32,505 |
| Tottenham Hotspur | London (Tottenham) | White Hart Lane | 36,240 |
| West Bromwich Albion | West Bromwich | The Hawthorns | 26,484 |
Personnel and kits
| Team | Manager | Captain | Kit manufacturer | Shirt sponsor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arsenal | FRA Arsène Wenger | FRA Patrick Vieira | Nike | O2 |
| Aston Villa | IRL David O'Leary | SWE Olof Mellberg | Hummel | DWS Investments |
| Birmingham City | ENG Steve Bruce | IRL Kenny Cunningham | Diadora | Flybe |
| Blackburn Rovers | WAL Mark Hughes | ENG Garry Flitcroft | Lonsdale | HSA |
| Bolton Wanderers | ENG Sam Allardyce | NGA Jay-Jay Okocha | Reebok | Reebok |
| Charlton Athletic | ENG Alan Curbishley | IRL Matt Holland | Joma | All:Sports |
| Chelsea | POR José Mourinho | ENG John Terry | Umbro | Emirates |
| Crystal Palace | NIR Iain Dowie | NIR Michael Hughes | Diadora | Churchill |
| Everton | SCO David Moyes | SCO David Weir | Umbro | Chang |
| Fulham | WAL Chris Coleman | ENG Lee Clark | Puma | dabs.com |
| Liverpool | ESP Rafael Benítez | ENG Steven Gerrard | Reebok | Carlsberg |
| Manchester City | ENG Stuart Pearce | FRA Sylvain Distin | Reebok | Thomas Cook |
| Manchester United | SCO Alex Ferguson | IRL Roy Keane | Nike | Vodafone |
| Middlesbrough | ENG Steve McClaren | ENG Gareth Southgate | Erreà | [888.com](888-holdings) |
| Newcastle United | SCO Graeme Souness | ENG Alan Shearer | Adidas | Northern Rock |
| Norwich City | NIR Nigel Worthington | ENG Craig Fleming | Xara | Proton |
| Portsmouth | FRA Alain Perrin | NED Arjan De Zeeuw | Pompey Sport | TY |
| Southampton | ENG Harry Redknapp | SCO Nigel Quashie | Saints | Friends Provident |
| Tottenham Hotspur | NED Martin Jol | ENG Ledley King | Kappa | Thomson Holidays |
| West Bromwich Albion | ENG Bryan Robson | ENG Kevin Campbell | Diadora | T-Mobile |
Managerial changes
| Team | Outgoing manager | Manner of departure | Date of vacancy | Position in table | Incoming manager | Date of appointment | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liverpool | FRA Gérard Houllier | Mutual consent | 24 May 2004 | *Pre-season* | SPA Rafael Benítez | 16 June 2004 | ||||
| Chelsea | ITA Claudio Ranieri | Sacked | 31 May 2004 | POR José Mourinho | 2 June 2004 | |||||
| Tottenham Hotspur | ENG David Pleat (caretaker) | End of caretaker spell | 1 June 2004 | FRA Jacques Santini | 3 June 2004 | |||||
| Southampton | SCO Paul Sturrock | Mutual consent | 23 August 2004 | 10th | ENG Steve Wigley | 23 August 2004 | ||||
| Newcastle United | ENG Sir Bobby Robson | Sacked | 30 August 2004 | 17th | SCO Graeme Souness | title=Souness takes Newcastle job | url=https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/teams/n/newcastle_united/3630952.stm | publisher=BBC Sport | date=6 September 2004 | access-date=3 April 2012}} |
| Blackburn Rovers | SCO Graeme Souness | Signed by Newcastle United | 6 September 2004 | 19th | WAL Mark Hughes | 16 September 2004 | ||||
| West Bromwich Albion | ENG Gary Megson | Sacked | 26 October 2004 | 16th | ENG Bryan Robson | 9 November 2004 | ||||
| Tottenham Hotspur | FRA Jacques Santini | Resigned | 5 November 2004 | 11th | NED Martin Jol | 8 November 2004 | ||||
| Portsmouth | ENG Harry Redknapp | 24 November 2004 | 12th | CRO Velimir Zajec | 21 December 2004 | |||||
| Southampton | ENG Steve Wigley | Sacked | 8 December 2004 | 18th | ENG Harry Redknapp | 21 December 2004 | ||||
| Manchester City | ENG Kevin Keegan | Resigned | 11 March 2005 | 12th | ENG Stuart Pearce (caretaker) | 11 March 2005 | ||||
| Portsmouth | CRO Velimir Zajec | Returned to director of football position | 7 April 2005 | 16th | FRA Alain Perrin | 7 April 2005 | ||||
| Manchester City | ENG Stuart Pearce (caretaker) | End of caretaker period | 12 May 2005 | 8th | ENG Stuart Pearce | 12 May 2005 |
League table
Results
Make sure that you understand how this table works. For each match, only list the result ONCE, in the row of the home team. Do NOT list the result of a game in the ROW of the away team.
Top scorers
| Rank | Player | Club | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | FRA Thierry Henry | Arsenal | 25 |
| 2 | ENG Andy Johnson | Crystal Palace | 21 |
| 3 | FRA Robert Pires | Arsenal | 14 |
| 4 | ENG Jermain Defoe | Tottenham Hotspur | 13 |
| NLD Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink | Middlesbrough | 13 | |
| ENG Frank Lampard | Chelsea | 13 | |
| NGA Yakubu | Portsmouth | 13 | |
| 8 | ENG Andy Cole | Fulham | 12 |
| ENG Peter Crouch | Southampton | 12 | |
| Iceland Eiður Guðjohnsen | Chelsea | 12 |
Awards
Monthly awards
| Month | Manager of the Month | Player of the Month |
|---|---|---|
| August | FRA Arsène Wenger (Arsenal) | ESP José Antonio Reyes (Arsenal) |
| September | SCO David Moyes (Everton) | ENG Ledley King (Tottenham Hotspur) |
| October | ENG Harry Redknapp (Portsmouth) | ENG Andy Johnson (Crystal Palace) |
| November | POR José Mourinho (Chelsea) | NED Arjen Robben (Chelsea) |
| December | NED Martin Jol (Tottenham Hotspur) | ENG Steven Gerrard (Liverpool) |
| January | POR José Mourinho (Chelsea) | ENG John Terry (Chelsea) |
| February | SCO Sir Alex Ferguson (Manchester United) | ENG Wayne Rooney (Manchester United) |
| March | ENG Harry Redknapp (Southampton) | ENG Joe Cole (Chelsea) |
| April | ENG Stuart Pearce (Manchester City) | ENG Frank Lampard (Chelsea) |
Annual awards
PFA Players' Player of the Year
The PFA Player's Player of the year award was won by Chelsea captain John Terry.
The shortlist for the PFA Players' Player of the Year award, in alphabetical order, was as follows:
- Petr Cech (Chelsea)
- Steven Gerrard (Liverpool)
- Thierry Henry (Arsenal)
- Andrew Johnson (Crystal Palace)
- Frank Lampard (Chelsea)
- John Terry (Chelsea)
PFA Young Player of the Year
Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney was the recipient for this award.
PFA Fans' Player of the Year
Chelsea midfielder Frank Lampard won this award for the first time.
PFA Team of the year
Goalkeeper – Petr Čech
Defenders – Gary Neville, John Terry, Rio Ferdinand, Ashley Cole
Midfielders – Shaun Wright-Phillips, Frank Lampard, Steven Gerrard, Arjen Robben
Strikers – Thierry Henry, Andy Johnson
FWA Footballer of the Year
Chelsea midfielder Frank Lampard won this award.
Premier League Player of the Season
Chelsea's midfielder Frank Lampard won the Premier League Player of the Season award.
Premier League Golden Boot
Arsenal and French striker Thierry Henry won the Premier League Golden Boot award for the third time in his career with 25 goals.
Premier League Golden Glove
Chelsea goalkeeper Petr Čech won the Premier League Golden Glove, for 25 clean sheets, in his debut season as he set a remarkable record of 10 consecutive clean sheets, as Chelsea won the title.
Premier League Manager of the Season
José Mourinho was awarded the Premier League Manager of the Season award after he led Chelsea to their first Premier League title, second Top division title in their history. During his first season at the club, Chelsea won the Premier League title (their first league title in 50 years) and the League Cup. The season was also notable for the number of records set during the season: Fewest goals against in a Premier League season (15), most clean sheets kept in a season (25), most wins in a season (29), most consecutive away wins (9) and the most points in a season (95).
Premier League Fair Play Award
The Premier League Fair Play Award is merit given to the team who has been the most sporting and best behaved team. Arsenal won the award for the second year in a row, ahead of Tottenham. The least sporting side for 2004–05 was Blackburn Rovers, who achieved a significantly lower fair play score than any other side.
Attendances
Source:
| No. | Club | Matches | Total attendance | Average |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Manchester United | 19 | 1,289,541 | 67,871 |
| 2 | Newcastle United | 19 | 985,040 | 51,844 |
| 3 | Manchester City | 19 | 858,655 | 45,192 |
| 4 | Liverpool FC | 19 | 809,148 | 42,587 |
| 5 | Chelsea FC | 19 | 795,534 | 41,870 |
| 6 | Arsenal FC | 19 | 721,602 | 37,979 |
| 7 | Aston Villa | 19 | 709,730 | 37,354 |
| 8 | Everton FC | 19 | 699,846 | 36,834 |
| 9 | Tottenham Hotspur | 19 | 679,980 | 35,788 |
| 10 | Middlesbrough FC | 19 | 608,236 | 32,012 |
| 11 | Southampton FC | 19 | 581,583 | 30,610 |
| 12 | Birmingham City | 19 | 546,434 | 28,760 |
| 13 | Charlton Athletic | 19 | 507,770 | 26,725 |
| 14 | West Bromwich Albion | 19 | 493,746 | 25,987 |
| 15 | Bolton Wanderers | 19 | 492,308 | 25,911 |
| 16 | Norwich City | 19 | 462,653 | 24,350 |
| 17 | Crystal Palace | 19 | 458,051 | 24,108 |
| 18 | Blackburn Rovers | 19 | 423,985 | 22,315 |
| 19 | Portsmouth FC | 19 | 381,370 | 20,072 |
| 20 | Fulham FC | 19 | 376,928 | 19,838 |
References
References
- "English Premier League 2004–05". statto.com.
- (24 May 2004). "Houllier to leave Liverpool". BBC Sport.
- (16 June 2004). "Liverpool appoint Benitez". BBC Sport.
- (2 June 2004). "Chelsea appoint Mourinho". BBC Sport.
- (2004-06-03). "Spurs appoint Santini". BBC Sport.
- (23 August 2004). "Sturrock leaves Saints". BBC Sport.
- (30 August 2004). "Newcastle force Robson out". BBC Sport.
- (6 September 2004). "Souness takes Newcastle job". BBC Sport.
- (16 September 2004). "Blackburn appoint Hughes". BBC Sport.
- (26 October 2004). "Megson sacked by West Brom". BBC Sport.
- (9 November 2004). "Baggies appoint Robson as manager". BBC Sport.
- (8 November 2004). "Spurs appoint Jol as new boss". BBC Sport.
- (24 November 2004). "Redknapp quits as Portsmouth boss". BBC Sport.
- (21 December 2004). "Zajec named as Pompey boss". BBC Sport.
- (8 December 2004). "Saints name Redknapp as boss". BBC Sport.
- (11 March 2005). "Keegan ends his reign at Man City". BBC Sport.
- (7 April 2005). "Pompey unveil Perrin as new boss". BBC Sport.
- (12 May 2005). "Man City unveil Pearce as manager". BBC Sport.
- (10 June 2005). "Liverpool FC allowed to defend title". UEFA.
- "2004–05 Premier League table". Premier League.
- (14 April 2005). "Blues trio head PFA list".
- "Premier League History - 2004/05 Season Review".
- "SEASONAL AWARDS 2004/05".
- "Archived copy".
- (12 December 2005). "Fair Play League".
- https://www.worldfootball.net/competition/co91/se3804/attendance/
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