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2005–06 Wigan Athletic F.C. season


FieldValue
clubWigan Athletic
season2005–06
managerPaul Jewell
chairmanDave Whelan
leaguePremier League
league result10th
cup1FA Cup
cup1 resultFourth round
cup2League Cup
cup2 resultRunners-up
league topscorer
Henri Camara (12)
season topscorer
Jason Roberts (14)
highest attendance25,023 (vs. Liverpool, Premier League, 11 February)
lowest attendance3,346 (vs. AFC Bournemouth, League Cup, 20 September)
pattern_b1_3whitestripes
leftarm10000FF
body10000FF
rightarm10000FF
shorts10000FF
socks1FFFFFF
leftarm2000055
body2FFCC00
rightarm2000055
shorts2000055
socks2FFCC00
prevseason2004–05
nextseason2006–07

Henri Camara (12) Jason Roberts (14) The 2005–06 Wigan Athletic season was the club's 28th season in the Football League and their first ever season in the top division of English football, following their promotion from the Championship the season before.

Despite starting the season as one of the favourites for relegation,{{cite news

Wigan also reached the final of the League Cup, the club's first ever appearance in a major cup final. They lost the match 4–0 to Manchester United.

Background

Prior to the club's promotion to the Premier League, Wigan were a team that had spent 25 years in the third and fourth tier of English football since the club's election into the Football League in 1978. In 1995, when the club was playing football in Division Three and struggling due to financial difficulties and declining attendances, Wigan was taken over by local businessman Dave Whelan, who ambitiously proclaimed that Wigan would be playing Premier League football within ten years. He also built a new stadium for the club, the JJB Stadium, which was opened in 1999 and replaced the dilapidated Springfield Park ground which had been inherited from the town's previous league club, Wigan Borough, on its formation in 1932.

With the help of Whelan's financial backing, the club rapidly rose through the divisions, gaining promotion to the second tier of English football for the first time in 2003, and culminating with their promotion to the Premier League on the final day of the 2004–05 Championship season. Despite this success, the club was predicted by many to be relegated straight back down to the Championship, including The Times, who suggested Wigan "will need a miracle if they are to survive".

Pre-season

On 7 July, Greater Manchester Police issued the club with a court summons over an unpaid bill of approximately £270,000 for policing the club's football matches. The police had also threatened to withdraw their services if the club failed to settle the debt before 1 August. Chairman Dave Whelan later agreed to pay the bill to prevent the cancellation of fixtures in the club's first Premier League season, but would continue to resolve the matter in court.

The squad began their pre-season preparations with a training camp in Denmark. They played two friendlies against local opposition behind closed doors, and won both games 5–0. Midfielder Jimmy Bullard also agreed a new three-year contract with the club, ending speculation that he would leave before the end of the transfer window.

DateOpponentResultVenueScorersAttendanceMatch Report
19 July 2005Elite 3000 Helsingør0–5AwayMahon 45', Thome 47', Teale 57', Bullard 70', Teale 82'330Report
21 July 2005Herlev IF0–5Away?621
27 July 2005Preston North End1–1AwayMcCulloch 9'3,124
30 July 2005Macclesfield Town0–4AwayJohansson 39', Bullard 57', Teale 81', Mahon 87'1,024
2 August 2005Morecambe0–1AwayEllington 77'1,262
3 August 2005Accrington Stanley1–1AwayMcCulloch 74'983
6 August 2005Boavista1–0HomeEllington 21' (pen)5,837

Premier League

August

Wigan's opening league game was at home against reigning Premier League champions Chelsea. The home side played well and despite missing opportunities to score themselves, it looked as though they would manage an impressive draw, but were denied by a spectacular injury time winner from Hernán Crespo. After losing 1–0 to Charlton Athletic on 20 August, Wigan's next game was a crucial home match against relegation rivals Sunderland. Wigan won the match 1–0, their first ever Premier League win, with Jason Roberts scoring the goal – a penalty which had been awarded within the first 15 seconds of the game.

September

On 10 September, Wigan came from behind to beat West Bromwich Albion 2–1, claiming their first Premier League win away from home, and scoring their first Premier League goals from open play. Following a draw in the next game against Middlesbrough, Wigan played their first cup game of the season against AFC Bournemouth in the League Cup, winning the match 1–0. On 24 September, Wigan extended their unbeaten run with a 1–0 away against Everton. As a result of the club's impressive form, manager Paul Jewell received the September Manager of the Month award.

DateOpponentResultVenueScorersAttendanceMatch Report
14 August 2005Chelsea0–1Home23,575Report
20 August 2005Charlton Athletic1–0Away23,453Report
27 August 2005Sunderland1–0HomeRoberts 2' (pen)17,223Report
10 September 2005West Bromwich Albion1–2AwayConnolly 40', Bullard 90+2'25,617Report
18 September 2005Middlesbrough1–1HomeCamara 68'16,641Report
24 September 2005Everton0–1AwayFrancis 47'37,189Report
2 October 2005Bolton Wanderers2–1HomeCamara 48', McCulloch 63'20,553Report
15 October 2005Newcastle United1–0HomeRoberts 40'22,374Report
22 October 2005Aston Villa0–2AwayHughes 32' (og), Mahon 82'32,294Report
29 October 2005Fulham1–0HomeChimbonda 90+2'17,266Report
5 November 2005Portsmouth0–2AwayChimbonda 48', Roberts 79'19,102Report
19 November 2005Arsenal2–3HomeCamara 28', Bullard 45'25,004Report
26 November 2005Tottenham Hotspur1–2HomeMcCulloch 88'22,611Report
3 December 2005Liverpool3–0Away44,098Report
10 December 2005Chelsea1–0Away42,060Report
14 December 2005Manchester United4–0Away67,793Report
17 December 2005Charlton Athletic3–0HomeCamara 9', 51', 63'17,074Report
26 December 2005Manchester City4–3HomeRoberts 11', 45', McCulloch 23', Camara 71'25,017Report
28 December 2005West Ham United0–2AwayRoberts 43', Camara 45'34,131Report
31 December 2005Blackburn Rovers0–3Home20,639Report
2 January 2006Birmingham City2–0Away29,189Report
15 January 2006West Bromwich Albion0–1Home17,421Report
21 January 2006Middlesbrough2–3AwayRoberts 2', Thompson 29', Mellor 90+3'27,208Report
31 January 2006Everton1–1HomeScharner 45'21,731Report
4 February 2006Bolton Wanderers1–1AwayJohansson 77'25,854Report
11 February 2006Liverpool0–1Home25,023Report
19 February 2006Tottenham Hotspur2–2AwayJohansson 10', 67'35,676Report
6 March 2006Manchester United1–2HomeScharner 60'23,574Report
11 March 2006Sunderland0–1AwayCamara 8'31,194Report
18 March 2006Manchester City0–1AwayMcCulloch 55'42,444Report
25 March 2006West Ham United1–2HomeMcCulloch 45+1'18,736Report
3 April 2006Blackburn Rovers1–1AwayRoberts 53'20,410Report
8 April 2006Birmingham City1–1HomeJohansson 49'18,669Report
15 April 2006Newcastle United3–1AwayBullard 5'52,302Report
18 April 2006Aston Villa3–2HomeBullard 25', Camara 56', 60'17,330Report
24 April 2006Fulham1–0Away17,149Report
29 April 2006Portsmouth1–2HomeCamara 34'21,126Report
7 May 2006Arsenal4–2AwayScharner 10', Thompson 33'38,359Report

FA Cup

DateRoundOpponentResultVenueScorersAttendanceMatch Report
7 January 2006Third roundLeeds United1–1HomeConnolly 47'10,980[ Report]
17 January 2006Third round (replay)Leeds United3–3 (aet)AwayJohansson 24', Roberts 50', 103'15,243[ Report]
(Wigan Athletic win 4–2 on penalties)
28 January 2006Fourth roundManchester City1–0Away30,811[ Report]

League Cup

Wigan entered the League Cup in the second round and were drawn against AFC Bournemouth. Manager Paul Jewell made 11 changes to the side, with several players making their debuts. Bournemouth, suffering from an injury crisis, could only name four substitutes, but held Wigan until Jason Roberts broke the deadlock four minutes from time to send his team into the next round. Wigan played Watford in the third round, and the game was taken to extra time with neither side able to score after 90 minutes. Ryan Taylor scored the opening goal from the penalty spot in the 98th minute before Andreas Johansson sealed the victory with two goals late in the second half of extra time. In the fourth round, Wigan were drawn at home against Newcastle United, but despite being drawn against stronger opposition, Jewell reiterated that he would continue to use his fringe players in the cup, as Premier League survival was still the main priority for the club. Wigan beat their opponents 1–0 through a penalty from David Connolly late in the game, with Newcastle manager Graeme Souness conceding that Wigan were "totally dominant". The club then met local rivals Bolton Wanderers in the quarter-final, where Roberts' two goals late in the first half were enough to take Wigan to their first ever major cup semi-final.

Wigan's next opponents were Arsenal, with the first match of the two-legged tie to be played at the JJB Stadium. Wigan won the match 1–0 against a weakened Arsenal side, with debutant Paul Scharner scoring the goal. The attendance of 12,181, the lowest figure for a League Cup semi-final for almost ten years, was criticised by several media outlets, but club officials argued that the poor attendance was caused by a busy fixture list – the match was Wigan's fifth home game in the space of three weeks. Arsenal fielded their "strongest available line-up" for the return leg at Highbury, but struggled to beat Wigan goalkeeper Mike Pollitt, who made "a string of outstanding saves", including a first-half penalty against José Antonio Reyes. Arsenal made their first breakthrough around the halfway point of the second half, with Thierry Henry scoring the goal to tie the game on aggregate. The game went into extra time, and Arsenal took a 2–1 aggregate lead through a Robin van Persie free kick, before Wigan's Jason Roberts scored in the final two minutes to clinch a place in the cup final on the away goal rule.

The final was played at the Millennium Stadium against Manchester United, with Wigan going into the final as "huge underdogs". Mike Pollitt, a former youth player at Manchester United, picked up an injury early in the first half and was replaced by John Filan. Although Manchester United finished the game as comfortable 4–0 winners, Paul Jewell was "proud" of his players and felt the team "didn't get the breaks" they needed to beat their opponents.

DateRoundOpponentResultVenueScorersAttendanceMatch Report
20 September 2005Second roundAFC Bournemouth1–0HomeRoberts 86'3,346Report
25 October 2005Third roundWatford3–0 (aet)HomeTaylor 98' (pen), Johansson 117', 120+1'4,531Report
30 November 2005Fourth roundNewcastle United1–0HomeConnolly 88' (pen)11,574Report
20 December 2005Quarter-finalBolton Wanderers2–0HomeRoberts 40', 45+3'13,401Report
10 January 2006Semi-final (1st leg)Arsenal1–0HomeScharner 78'12,181Report
24 January 2006Semi-final (2nd leg)Arsenal2–1 (aet)AwayRoberts 119'34,692Report
(2–2 on aggregate – Wigan Athletic go through on away goals.)
26 February 2006FinalManchester United0–4Neutral66,866Report

Squad statistics

#Pos.PlayerLeagueFA CupLeague CupTotalDisciplineAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
1GKAUS150301 (1)019 (1)000
2DFFRA372203 (1)042 (1)270
3DFSCO0 (2)010405 (2)000
4DFENG11 (5)0304018 (5)010
5DFBRA0000303000
6DFSUI2601 (1)03 (1)030 (2)090
7FWSEN25 (4)12002 (1)027 (5)1200
8MFSWE6 (10)4314 (2)213 (12)701
10MFSCO27 (3)5103 (1)031 (4)581
11MFIRL32 (3)01 (1)04 (1)037 (5)090
12GKENG23 (1)0006029 (1)000
13GKENG0000000000
14MFIRL5 (1)1205012 (1)110
15DFENG1 (1)000203 (1)000
16DFNED310103035050
17MFJAM16 (4)1301020 (4)120
18DFAUT14 (2)3102 (1)117 (3)460
19DFENG3 (8)010418 (8)120
20MFSCO20 (4)01 (1)06 (1)027 (6)001
21MFENG35 (1)40 (2)04039 (3)400
22FWIRL4 (13)1112 (1)17 (14)300
23MFSUI5 (5)0100 (2)06 (7)000
24MFAUS3 (2)030309 (2)010
26DFENG35 (2)0203 (1)040 (3)030
27MFENG7 (3)200007 (3)240
30FWGRN3481 (2)24 (2)439 (4)1441
32MFENG000 (1)0000 (1)000
33FWENG3110105100
36DFENG00000 (1)00 (1)000

Transfers

After initially struggling to attract players to the club, Mike Pollitt became the club's first signing of the summer. This was followed by the signing of little-known French right-back Pascal Chimbonda, Ryan Taylor of Tranmere Rovers and experienced defender Stéphane Henchoz. Nicky Eaden and Ian Breckin, who both featured regularly in the previous season's promotion winning side,{{cite web | url=http://www.soccerbase.com/squad_season.sd?teamid=2783&seasonid=134

Wigan strengthened the side further during the January transfer window with new signings Paul Scharner and David Thompson, as well as bringing in Neil Mellor and Reto Ziegler on loan. In April, Fulham had a £2.5 million bid accepted for Jimmy Bullard after the offer had triggered the player's release clause, and a deal was agreed which would be officially completed after the season had finished. After the final match against Arsenal, Pascal Chimbonda almost immediately handed in a transfer request, resulting in a transfer saga that would last for the entire duration of the summer transfer window. Henchoz and Thompson, whose contracts were due to expire, were both released.

In

PlayerFromFeeDateNotes
ENG Mike PollittENG Rotherham United£200,00030 June 2005
FRA Pascal ChimbondaFRA Bastia£500,0008 July 2005
ENG Ryan TaylorENG Tranmere Rovers£750,00013 July 2005
SUI Stéphane HenchozUnattachedFree29 July 2005
JAM Damien FrancisENG Norwich City£1,000,0005 August 2005
SEN Henri CamaraENG Wolverhampton Wanderers£3,000,0006 August 2005
NED Arjan de ZeeuwENG PortsmouthUndisclosed12 August 2005
AUS Josip SkokoTUR GençlerbirliğiUndisclosed23 August 2005
IRL David ConnollyENG Leicester City£2,000,00031 August 2005
AUT Paul ScharnerNOR Brann£2,000,0001 January 2006
ENG David ThompsonENG Blackburn RoversFree19 January 2006
  • Total spending: £9,450,000

Out

PlayerToFeeDateNotes
ENG Nicky EadenENG Nottingham ForestFree1 July 2005
ENG Ian BreckinENG Nottingham Forest£350,0005 July 2005
BRA Magno VieiraUnattachedFree8 July 2005
SCO David GrahamENG Sheffield Wednesday£250,00012 August 2005
ENG Nathan EllingtonENG West Bromwich Albion£3,000,00015 August 2005
ENG Phil EdwardsENG Accrington StanleyFree12 January 2006
BRA Emerson ThomeUnattachedFree7 February 2006
ENG Luke JoyceENG Carlisle UnitedFree4 April 2006
ENG Jimmy BullardENG Fulham£2,500,000End of season
SUI Stéphane HenchozUnattachedFreeEnd of season
ENG David ThompsonUnattachedFreeEnd of season
  • Total income: £6,100,000

Loans in

PlayerFromStart dateEnd dateNotes
ENG Neil MellorENG Liverpool19 January 2006End of season
SUI Reto ZieglerENG Tottenham Hotspur23 January 2006End of season

Loans out

PlayerToStart dateEnd dateNotes
BRA Emerson ThomeENG Derby County27 October 200526 November 2005
ENG David WrightENG Norwich City17 November 200516 December 2005
AUS Josip SkokoENG Stoke City7 February 2006End of season
ENG Kevin LeeENG Blackpool23 March 2006End of season
IRL Alan MahonENG Burnley23 March 2006End of season

Final league table

Main article: 2005–06 FA Premier League

References

References

  1. (16 February 2006). "Duo prove doubters wrong". [[FIFA]].
  2. (7 July 2005). "Wigan court summons over police fees". The Guardian.
  3. (9 July 2005). "I'll pay policing says Whelan". Johnston Publishing.
  4. (25 July 2005). "Latics boosted by Danish trip". Johnston Publishing.
  5. (29 July 2005). "Jim'll Fix It For Latics".
  6. "Opvisningskampe p Helsing r Stadion".
  7. (14 October 2005). "Jewell Wins Manager of Month Award".
  8. (20 September 2005). "Wigan 1–0 Bournemouth". BBC Sport.
  9. (29 November 2005). "Jewell to keep his strength in reserve". Mirror News.
  10. (30 November 2005). "Wigan 1–0 Newcastle". ESPN Soccernet.
  11. (20 December 2005). "Wigan 2-0 Bolton".
  12. (10 January 2006). "Wigan 1–0 Arsenal". BBC Sport.
  13. Johnston, Neil. (10 January 2006). "Cup semi-final, Arsenal in town, can't give seats away". The Guardian.
  14. Burt, Jason. (25 January 2006). "Arsenal 2 Wigan Athletic 1 (aet; 2–2 on aggregate; Wigan win on away goals rule): Roberts the winning ace puts Wigan in first final". The Independent.
  15. Davies, Christopher. (25 January 2006). "Roberts' late strike brings Wigan glory". The Daily Telegraph.
  16. (26 February 2006). "Jewell targets Carling Cup upset". BBC Sport.
  17. (1 March 2006). "Wigan: Chin up warning from Jewell". Oldham Advertiser.
  18. [http://www.footballsquads.co.uk/eng/2005-2006/faprem/wigan.htm FootballSquads – Wigan Athletic – 2005–06]
  19. (2 June 2005). "Jewell pleads for patience". Johnston Publishing.
  20. (30 June 2005). "Wigan snap up goalkeeper Pollitt". BBC Sport.
  21. (8 July 2005). "Pascal just perfect for Latics". Wigan Today.
  22. (13 July 2005). "Wigan complete swoop for Taylor". BBC Sport.
  23. (29 July 2005). "Stephane The Man For Man".
  24. (5 August 2005). "Wigan complete deal for Francis". BBC Sport.
  25. (6 August 2005). "Camara in the Picture For Wigan".
  26. (12 August 2010). "Arry Completes Latics Switch".
  27. (23 August 2010). "Skoko Begins Wigan Adventure".
  28. (31 August 2005). "Wigan secure signing of Connolly". BBC Sport.
  29. (22 December 2005). "Wigan complete signing of centre-back Scharner". ESPN.
  30. (19 January 2006). "New Signing For Latics".
  31. (1 July 2005). "Eaden Switches To Forest".
  32. (5 July 2005). "Breckin Follows Eaden To Forest".
  33. (15 July 2005). "Magno Leaves Wigan".
  34. (12 August 2005). "Graham makes Hillsborough switch". BBC Sport.
  35. (15 August 2005). "Duke Completes Albion Switch".
  36. Oliver, Pete. (12 January 2006). "Stanley strive on". BBC Sport.
  37. (7 February 2006). "Latics release Thome". ESPN.
  38. (4 April 2006). "Joyce Lukes North".
  39. (28 April 2006). "£2.5m-Bullard to join Fulham at end of season". ESPN.
  40. (10 May 2010). "Jackson's Joy".
  41. (19 January 2006). "Latics Snap Up 2nd Signing".
  42. (23 January 2006). "Swiss Rolls into Latics".
  43. (27 October 2005). "Thome Joins Rams on Loan".
  44. (17 November 2005). "Wright Joins Canaries on Loan".
  45. (7 February 2006). "Skoko Accepts Loan Move".
  46. (23 March 2006). "Lee Is a Seasider".
  47. (23 March 2006). "Mahon Man Heads For Turf Moor".
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