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2008–09 Premier League

Football season in England


Football season in England

FieldValue
competitionPremier League
season[2008–09](2008-09-in-english-football)
dates16 August 2008 – 24 May 2009
winnersManchester United
11th Premier League title
18th English title
relegatedNewcastle United
Middlesbrough
West Bromwich Albion
continentalcup1[Champions League](2009-10-uefa-champions-league)
continentalcup1 qualifiersManchester United
Liverpool
Chelsea
Arsenal
continentalcup2[Europa League](2009-10-uefa-europa-league)
continentalcup2 qualifiersEverton
Aston Villa
Fulham
league topscorer sectionTop scorers
league topscorerNicolas Anelka
(19 goals)
best goalkeeperEdwin van der Sar (21 clean sheets)
biggest home winManchester City 6–0 Portsmouth
(21 September 2008)
biggest away winHull City 0–5 Wigan Athletic
(30 August 2008)
Middlesbrough 0–5 Chelsea
(18 October 2008)
West Bromwich Albion 0–5
Manchester United
(27 January 2009)
highest scoringArsenal 4–4 Tottenham Hotspur
(29 October 2008)
Liverpool 4–4 Arsenal
(21 April 2009)
longest wins11 games
Manchester United
longest unbeaten21 games
Arsenal
longest losses6 games
Blackburn Rovers
Hull City
longest winless14 games
Middlesbrough
highest attendance75,569
Manchester United 1–4 Liverpool
(14 March 2009)
lowest attendance14,169
Wigan Athletic 0–1 West Ham United
(4 March 2009)
attendance13,524,978
average attendance35,592
matches380
total goals942
prevseason[2007–08](2007-08-premier-league)
nextseason[2009–10](2009-10-premier-league)

11th Premier League title 18th English title Middlesbrough West Bromwich Albion Liverpool Chelsea Arsenal Aston Villa Fulham (19 goals) (21 September 2008) (30 August 2008) Middlesbrough 0–5 Chelsea (18 October 2008) West Bromwich Albion 0–5 Manchester United (27 January 2009) (29 October 2008) Liverpool 4–4 Arsenal (21 April 2009) Manchester United Arsenal Blackburn Rovers Hull City Middlesbrough Manchester United 1–4 Liverpool (14 March 2009) Wigan Athletic 0–1 West Ham United (4 March 2009)

The 2008–09 Premier League (known as the Barclays Premier League for sponsorship reasons) was the 17th season since the establishment of the Premier League in 1992. The season began on Saturday, 16 August 2008, and ended on 24 May 2009. The fixtures were announced on 16 June 2008. A total of 20 teams contested the league, consisting of 17 who competed in the previous season and three promoted from the Football League Championship. The new match ball was the Nike T90 Omni.

Manchester United began the season as the two-defending champions, having secured their second consecutive (and tenth) Premier League title on the final day of the previous season.

Season summary

At the start of the season, clubs were allowed to name seven substitutes on the bench instead of five. This season was also different in that there was no New Year's Day game, as is traditional. This was because the FA Cup third round is traditionally played on the first Saturday in January, which in 2009 fell in the usual spot for New Year's league games. September saw Manchester City taken over by the Abu Dhabi United Group, transforming the football club into one of the world's wealthiest, securing the signing of Robinho for a British record £32.5 million just seconds before the 2008 summer transfer window closed in the process.

The first goal of the season was scored by Arsenal's Samir Nasri against newly promoted West Bromwich Albion in the fourth minute of the early kick-off game on the opening day of the season on 16 August. Gabriel Agbonlahor of Aston Villa scored the first hat-trick of the season against Manchester City, scoring three goals in the space of seven minutes.

The title race was a battle between Manchester United and bitter rivals Liverpool, who beat them 4–1 at Old Trafford on 14 March 2009. Liverpool topped the table at the end of 2008, but their lead slipped after a series of draws. On 16 May 2009, Manchester United clinched the Premier League title after a goalless draw against Arsenal. It was their 11th Premier League title and 18th English top flight title overall, tying a record with Liverpool, who finished as runners-up. It was the second time that they had won the title for three consecutive years, the first being in 2001. Only four other clubs have achieved this feat: Huddersfield Town (1923–25), Arsenal (1933–35), Liverpool (1982–84) and Manchester City (2021–24), with the latter becoming the first club to win the English top flight title for four consecutive seasons.

West Bromwich Albion were the first team to be relegated to the Championship after losing 2–0 at home to Liverpool on 17 May 2009. Middlesbrough and Newcastle United joined them on the last day of the season after losses at West Ham United and Aston Villa, respectively. The results meant that Hull City and Sunderland stayed up, despite home defeats to Manchester United and Chelsea respectively. The fact that Hull City avoided relegation (along with Stoke City, who stayed up relatively comfortably under the management of Tony Pulis), meant it was the first time since the 2005–06 season that more than one promoted club maintained their Premier League status. Aston Villa, Everton and Fulham, who stayed up last season on goal difference, all secured European football for the 2009–10 season through their league positions.

Teams

Twenty teams competed in the league – the top seventeen teams from the previous season and the three teams promoted from the Championship. The promoted teams were West Bromwich Albion, Stoke City (returning to the top flight after absences of two and twenty-three years respectively) and Hull City (playing top flight football for the first time ever). This was also Stoke City's first season in the Premier League. They replaced Reading (relegated to the Championship after a two-year top-flight spell), Birmingham City and Derby County (both teams relegated to the Championship after a season's presence).

Stadiums and locations

Arsenal

Chelsea

Fulham

Tottenham Hotspur

West Ham United

Bolton Wanderers

Manchester City

Manchester United

Wigan Athletic|position=right}}

TeamLocationStadiumCapacity
ArsenalLondon (Holloway)Emirates Stadium60,432
Aston VillaBirminghamVilla Park42,640
Blackburn RoversBlackburnEwood Park31,367
Bolton WanderersBoltonReebok Stadium28,723
ChelseaLondon (Fulham)Stamford Bridge42,055
EvertonLiverpool (Walton)Goodison Park40,157
FulhamLondon (Fulham)Craven Cottage26,500
Hull CityKingston upon HullKC Stadium25,404
LiverpoolLiverpool (Anfield)Anfield45,276
Manchester CityManchester (Bradford)City of Manchester Stadium47,726
Manchester UnitedManchester (Old Trafford)Old Trafford76,212
MiddlesbroughMiddlesbroughRiverside Stadium35,100
Newcastle UnitedNewcastle upon TyneSt James' Park52,387
PortsmouthPortsmouthFratton Park20,224
Stoke CityStoke-on-TrentBritannia Stadium28,000
SunderlandSunderlandStadium of Light49,000
Tottenham HotspurLondon (Tottenham)White Hart Lane36,240
West Bromwich AlbionWest BromwichThe Hawthorns25,369
West Ham UnitedLondon (Upton Park)Upton Park35,303
Wigan AthleticWiganJJB Stadium25,138

Personnel and kits

(as of 24 May 2009)

TeamManagerCaptainKit manufacturerShirt sponsor
ArsenalFRA Arsène WengerESP Cesc FàbregasNikeFly Emirates
Aston VillaNIR Martin O'NeillDEN Martin LaursenNikeAcorns
Blackburn RoversENG Sam AllardyceNZL Ryan NelsenUmbroCrown Paints
Bolton WanderersENG Gary MegsonENG Kevin DaviesReebokReebok
ChelseaNED Guus HiddinkENG John TerryAdidasSamsung
EvertonSCO David MoyesENG Phil NevilleUmbroChang
FulhamENG Roy HodgsonENG Danny MurphyNikeLG
Hull CityENG Phil BrownENG Ian AshbeeUmbroKaroo (H) / Kingston Communications (A, 3rd)
LiverpoolESP Rafael BenítezENG Steven GerrardAdidasCarlsberg
Manchester CityWAL Mark HughesIRL Richard DunneLe Coq SportifThomas Cook
Manchester UnitedSCO Sir Alex FergusonENG Gary NevilleNikeAIG
MiddlesbroughENG Gareth SouthgateAUT Emmanuel PogatetzErreàGarmin
Newcastle UnitedENG Alan ShearerENG Nicky ButtAdidasNorthern Rock
PortsmouthENG Paul HartENG David JamesCanterburyOki
Stoke CityWAL Tony PulisENG Andy GriffinLe Coq SportifBritannia
SunderlandSCO Ricky SbragiaENG Dean WhiteheadUmbroBoylesports
Tottenham HotspurENG Harry RedknappENG Ledley KingPumaMansion.com
Casino & Poker
West Bromwich AlbionENG Tony MowbrayENG Jonathan GreeningUmbroNone
West Ham UnitedITA Gianfranco ZolaENG Matthew UpsonUmbroXL Holidays / SBOBET
Wigan AthleticENG Steve BruceNED Mario MelchiotChampionJJB Sports

Also, Nike provided new match balls, white with red and yellow (autumn/spring) and yellow with purple and black (winter), based on their T90 Laser II Omni model.

Managerial changes

TeamOutgoing managerManner of departureDate of vacancyTableIncoming managerDate of appointment
ChelseaISR Avram GrantSacked24 May 2008*Pre-season*BRA Luiz Felipe Scolari1 July 2008
Manchester CitySWE Sven-Göran ErikssonMutual consent2 June 2008WAL Mark Hughesfirst=Phillast=McNultytitle=Hughes becomes Man City managerurl=https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/teams/m/man_city/7431155.stmpublisher=BBC Sportdate=4 June 2008access-date=4 June 2008}}
Blackburn RoversWAL Mark HughesSigned by Manchester City4 June 2008ENG Paul Ince22 June 2008
West Ham UnitedENG Alan CurbishleyResigned3 September 20085thITA Gianfranco Zola11 September 2008
Newcastle UnitedENG Kevin Keegan4 September 200811thIRL Joe Kinnear26 September 2008
Tottenham HotspurESP Juande RamosSackedtitle=Tottenham sack Ramos for Redknappurl=https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/7691457.stmwork=BBC Sportpublisher=British Broadcasting Corporationdate=26 October 2008access-date=26 October 2008archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20081028114330/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/7691457.stmarchive-date= 28 October 2008url-status= live}}20thENG Harry Redknapp26 October 2008
PortsmouthENG Harry RedknappSigned by Tottenham26 October 20087thENG Tony Adams28 October 2008
SunderlandIRL Roy KeaneResigned4 December 200818thSCO Ricky Sbragia27 December 2008
Blackburn RoversENG Paul InceSacked16 December 200819thENG Sam Allardyce17 December 2008
PortsmouthENG Tony Adamstitle=Portsmouth confirm Adams sackingurl=https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/teams/p/portsmouth/7878084.stmwork=BBC Sportpublisher=British Broadcasting Corporationdate=9 February 2009access-date=9 February 2009archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090211080748/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/p/portsmouth/7878084.stmarchive-date=11 February 2009url-status= live}}16thENG Paul Hart9 February 2009
ChelseaBRA Luiz Felipe Scolari9 February 20094thNED Guus Hiddink11 February 2009
Newcastle UnitedIRL Joe KinnearMedical break clause16 February 200913thENG Alan Shearer31 March 2009
  • Newcastle United manager Joe Kinnear was originally appointed as interim manager until the end of October on 26 September, signed a one-month contract extension on 24 October, and was named manager until the end of the English football season on 28 November.
  • Portsmouth caretaker manager Paul Hart was appointed on 9 February. On 3 March chairman Alexandre Gaydamak confirmed the appointment would be until at least the end of the English football season.
  • Chelsea manager Guus Hiddink remained Russia manager until the end of the English football season, when he left Chelsea and returned to his Russia duties on a full-time basis.
  • Newcastle United manager Joe Kinnear took leave from Newcastle United following heart bypass surgery on 16 February. His assistants, Chris Hughton and Colin Calderwood, were appointed to serve as caretaker managers until his return, which was understood might not occur before the end of the English football season. On 31 March, Alan Shearer was appointed manager until the end of the season, as Joe Kinnear was not able to return to his Newcastle United duties until the end of the English football season. After the season ended, both Joe Kinnear and Alan Shearer left the club permanently, and Chris Hughton was appointed manager during the course of the following season.
  • Roberto Martínez was announced to be manager on 9 June, however due to complications surrounding the appointment of backroom staff, the deal was not finalised and officially announced until 15 June.

League table

Results

Season statistics

Scoring

  • First goal of the season: Samir Nasri for Arsenal against West Bromwich, 3 minutes and 40 seconds. (16 August 2008).
  • Last goal of the season: Kenwyne Jones for Sunderland against Chelsea, 90 minutes. (24 May 2009)
  • Fastest goal in a match: 31 seconds – Steve Sidwell for Aston Villa against Everton (7 December 2008))
  • Goal scored at the latest point in a match: 90+4 minutes and 56 seconds – Carlton Cole for West Ham United against Blackburn (30 August 2008)
  • First own goal of the season: Robert Huth (Middlesbrough) for Tottenham Hotspur, 90+2 minutes and 28 seconds (16 August 2008)
  • First hat-trick of the season and fastest hat-trick of the season: Gabriel Agbonlahor (Aston Villa) against Manchester City, 7 minutes and 3 seconds (17 August 2008)
  • Most goals scored by one player in a match: 4 goals – Andrey Arshavin (Arsenal) against Liverpool, 36', 67', 70', 90' (21 April 2009)
  • Widest winning margin: 6 goals – Manchester City 6–0 Portsmouth (21 September 2008)
  • Most goals in a match: 8 goals
    • Arsenal 4–4 Tottenham Hotspur (29 October 2008)
    • Liverpool 4–4 Arsenal (21 April 2009)
  • Most goals in one half: 7 goals – Liverpool v Arsenal (21 April 2009) 0–1 at half time, 4–4 final
  • Most goals in one half by a single team: 5 goals – Manchester United v Tottenham Hotspur (25 April 2009) 0–2 at half-time, 5–2 final

Top scorers

RankPlayerCluburl=http://www.premierleague.com/en-gb/players/index.html?paramSearchType=BY_STAT&paramSeason=2008-2009title=Barclays Premier League Top Scorersaccess-date=11 December 2013publisher=FA Premier Leaguearchive-date=23 November 2015archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151123131222/http://www.premierleague.com/en-gb/players/index.html?paramSearchType=BY_STAT&paramSeason=2008-2009url-status=dead }}
1FRA Nicolas AnelkaChelsea19
2POR Cristiano RonaldoManchester United18
3ENG Steven GerrardLiverpool16
4BRA RobinhoManchester City14
ESP Fernando TorresLiverpool14
6ENG Gabriel AgbonlahorAston Villa12
ENG Darren BentTottenham Hotspur12
ENG Kevin DaviesBolton Wanderers12
NLD Dirk KuytLiverpool12
ENG Frank LampardChelsea12
ENG Wayne RooneyManchester United12

Clean sheets

  • Most clean sheets – Manchester United (24)
  • Fewest clean sheets – Hull City (6)

Discipline

  • First yellow card of the season: Sam Ricketts for Hull City against Fulham, 28 minutes and 6 seconds (16 August 2008)
  • First red card of the season: Mark Noble for West Ham United against Manchester City, 37 minutes and 20 seconds (24 August 2008)
  • Card given at latest point in a game: Michael Dawson (red) at 90+8 minutes and 28 seconds for Tottenham Hotspur against Stoke City (19 October 2008)
  • Most yellow cards in a single match: 8
    • Chelsea 1–1 Manchester United – one for Chelsea (Mikel John Obi) and seven for Manchester United (Paul Scholes, Rio Ferdinand, Gary Neville, Dimitar Berbatov, Wayne Rooney, Patrice Evra and Cristiano Ronaldo) (21 September 2008)
    • Sunderland 1–1 Arsenal – three for Sunderland (Dean Whitehead, Kieran Richardson and Dwight Yorke) and five for Arsenal (Gaël Clichy, Kolo Touré, Alex Song, Nicklas Bendtner and Emmanuel Adebayor) (4 October 2008)
    • Aston Villa 2–2 Arsenal – four for Aston Villa (Gabriel Agbonlahor, Nigel Reo-Coker, Stiliyan Petrov and Gareth Barry) and four for Arsenal (Alex Song, Kolo Touré, Abou Diaby and Robin van Persie) (26 December 2008)
    • Manchester United 3–0 Chelsea – three for Manchester United (Cristiano Ronaldo, Wayne Rooney and Park Ji-sung) and five for Chelsea (Frank Lampard, José Bosingwa, Ricardo Carvalho, John Terry and Juliano Belletti) (11 January 2009)
    • Manchester City 1–0 Sunderland – three for Manchester City (Valeri Bojinov, Gélson Fernandes and Shaun Wright-Phillips) and five for Sunderland (Phil Bardsley, Calum Davenport, Grant Leadbitter, Andy Reid and Anton Ferdinand) (22 March 2009)
  • Most red cards in a single match: 3 – Manchester City 1–2 Tottenham Hotspur – two for Manchester City (Richard Dunne and Gélson Fernandes) and one for Tottenham Hotspur (Benoît Assou-Ekotto) (9 November 2008)

Overall

  • Most wins – Manchester United (28)
  • Fewest wins – Middlesbrough and Newcastle United (7)
  • Most losses – West Bromwich Albion (22)
  • Fewest losses – Liverpool (2)
  • Most goals scored – Liverpool (77)
  • Fewest goals scored – Middlesbrough (28)
  • Most goals conceded – West Bromwich Albion (67)
  • Fewest goals conceded – Chelsea and Manchester United (24)

Home

  • Most wins – Manchester United (16)
  • Fewest wins – Hull City (3)
  • Most losses – Hull City (11)
  • Fewest losses – Liverpool (0)
  • Most goals scored – Manchester United (43)
  • Fewest goals scored – Middlesbrough and Wigan Athletic (17)
  • Most goals conceded – Hull City (36)
  • Fewest goals conceded – Tottenham Hotspur (10)

Away

  • Most wins – Chelsea (14)
  • Fewest wins – West Bromwich Albion (1)
  • Most losses – Middlesbrough (15)
  • Fewest losses – Liverpool (2)
  • Most goals scored – Arsenal (37)
  • Fewest goals scored – West Bromwich Albion (10)
  • Most goals conceded – Stoke City (40)
  • Fewest goals conceded – Manchester United (11)

Miscellaneous

  • Longest injury time: 11 minutes, 2 seconds – Stoke City against Tottenham Hotspur (19 October 2008)

Awards

Monthly awards

MonthManager of the MonthPlayer of the MonthManagerClubPlayerClub
AugustGareth SouthgateMiddlesbroughDecoChelsea
SeptemberPhil BrownHull CityAshley YoungAston Villa
OctoberRafael BenítezLiverpoolFrank LampardChelsea
NovemberGary MegsonBolton WanderersNicolas AnelkaChelsea
DecemberMartin O'NeillAston VillaAshley YoungAston Villa
JanuarySir Alex FergusonManchester UnitedNemanja VidićManchester United
FebruaryDavid MoyesEvertonPhil JagielkaEverton
MarchRafael BenítezLiverpoolSteven GerrardLiverpool
AprilSir Alex FergusonManchester UnitedAndrey ArshavinArsenal

Annual awards

Premier League Manager of the Season

Sir Alex Ferguson, 67, picked up the Premier League Manager of the Season for the ninth time. During his hugely successful spell with Manchester United, which began in 1986, he won thirteen Premier League titles, five FA Cups, three League Cups, three European titles, one Intercontinental Cup and one Club World Cup.

Premier League Player of the Season

Nemanja Vidić, 27, won the Premier League Player of the Season accolade for the first time.

PFA Players' Player of the Year

The PFA Players' Player of the Year award for 2009 was won by Ryan Giggs of Manchester United.

The shortlist for the PFA Players' Player of the Year award was as follows:

  • Rio Ferdinand (Manchester United)
  • Steven Gerrard (Liverpool)
  • Ryan Giggs (Manchester United)
  • Cristiano Ronaldo (Manchester United)
  • Edwin van der Sar (Manchester United)
  • Nemanja Vidić (Manchester United)

PFA Team of the Year

Goalkeeper: Edwin van der Sar (Manchester United) Defence: Glen Johnson (Portsmouth), Patrice Evra, Rio Ferdinand, Nemanja Vidić (all Manchester United) Midfield: Steven Gerrard (Liverpool), Cristiano Ronaldo, Ryan Giggs (both Manchester United), Ashley Young (Aston Villa) Attack: Nicolas Anelka (Chelsea), Fernando Torres (Liverpool)

PFA Young Player of the Year

The PFA Young Player of the Year award was won by Ashley Young of Aston Villa.

The shortlist for the award was as follows:

  • Gabriel Agbonlahor (Aston Villa)
  • Jonny Evans (Manchester United)
  • Stephen Ireland (Man City)
  • Aaron Lennon (Tottenham Hotspur)
  • Rafael (Manchester United)
  • Ashley Young (Aston Villa)

FWA Footballer of the Year

The FWA Footballer of the Year award for 2009 was won by Steven Gerrard for the first time. The Liverpool captain saw off the challenges of Manchester United winger Ryan Giggs and forward Wayne Rooney, who finished second and third respectively.

Premier League Golden Boot

Chelsea striker Nicolas Anelka won the Premier League Golden Boot award for the first time. He scored 19 goals in 35 appearances, which ensured he finished as the season's top scorer.

Premier League Golden Glove

Manchester United goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar collected the Premier League Golden Glove award for the first time. He kept a total of 21 clean sheets in 33 appearances, including a record run of 11 consecutive clean sheets (1,311 minutes) from Stoke City on 15 November 2008 to West Bromwich Albion on 27 January 2009.

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. Fulham won this, ahead of London neighbours Chelsea and Arsenal. Hull City were deemed the least sporting side, finished in last place in the rankings

LMA Manager of the Year

The LMA Manager of the Year award was won by David Moyes after he led Everton to back-to-back fifth-place finishes and the FA Cup final.

PFA Fans' Player of the Year

Steven Gerrard was named the PFA Fans' Player of the Year.

Premier League Merit Award

  • Aston Villa and former Blackburn Rovers goalkeeper Brad Friedel was honoured with the Premier League Merit Award after reaching 167 consecutive Premier League appearances on 5 December 2008.
  • Manchester United goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar collected the Premier League Premier League Merit Award after breaking the Premier League record for minutes played without conceding a goal, spanning 11 consecutive clean sheets from Stoke City on 15 November 2008 to West Bromwich Albion on 27 January 2009.
  • Portsmouth goalkeeper David James was honoured with the Premier League Premier League Merit Award after he broke the Premier League's appearance record with 536 appearances on 14 February 2009 in Portsmouth's 2–0 victory over Manchester City.

Premier League Spirit Award

The Premier League Spirit Award is given to "the player or manager whose actions best encapsulate the spirit of the game". In recognition for leading his club to the top of the Fair Play league, the Premier League Spirit Award for 2008–09 was given to Fulham manager Roy Hodgson.

Behaviour of the Public League

Given to the best-behaved fans, Fulham won this for the third consecutive year, rounding off a hat-trick of sporting awards.

Attendances

Source:

No.ClubMatchesTotal attendanceAverage
1Manchester United191,430,77675,304
2Arsenal FC191,140,75560,040
3Newcastle United19926,24448,750
4Liverpool FC19828,61043,611
5Manchester City19815,10542,900
6Chelsea FC19790,17241,588
7Sunderland AFC19763,19840,168
8Aston Villa19756,42239,812
9Tottenham Hotspur19682,64935,929
10Everton FC19677,67935,667
11West Ham United19640,30733,700
12Middlesbrough FC19540,14428,429
13Stoke City19509,60426,821
14West Bromwich Albion19490,52425,817
15Hull City19471,50724,816
16Fulham FC19462,53424,344
17Blackburn Rovers19446,10223,479
18Bolton Wanderers19427,22822,486
19Portsmouth FC19376,76219,830
20Wigan Athletic19348,65618,350

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