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2009–10 Portsmouth F.C. season


FieldValue
clubPortsmouth FC
imagePortsmouth supporters Wembley 2010 FA Cup Final.jpg
captionPortsmouth fans at Wembley Stadium during the 2010 FA Cup Final
season2009–10
managerAvram Grant
mgrtitleManager
chairmanPortpin (90%)
Al Fahim Asia Associates Limited (10%)
chrtitleOwner
stadiumFratton Park
leaguePremier League
league result20th (relegated)
cup2League Cup
cup2 resultQuarter-finals
cup1FA Cup
cup1 resultRunners-up
league topscorerAruna Dindane (8)
season topscorerFrédéric Piquionne (11)
highest attendance20,821 vs. Tottenham Hotspur
(17 October 2009)
lowest attendance14,323 vs. Wigan Athletic
(14 April 2010)
average attendance17,572
prevseason2008–09
nextseason2010–11
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leftarm10000FFbody1=0000FFrightarm1=0000FFshorts1=FFFFFFsocks1=FF0000
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pattern_la3pattern_b3=_thinbluehoopsonblackpattern_ra3=
leftarm3000000body3=000000rightarm3=000000shorts3=000000socks3=000000

Al Fahim Asia Associates Limited (10%) (17 October 2009) (14 April 2010)

The 2009–10 season was Portsmouth's 111th in existence, their seventh season in the Premier League and their seventh consecutive season in the top division of English football. It was a season in which the club struggled with financial problems and entered administration.

The club finished at 20th place in the league, a place they had occupied since the second matchday, which meant relegation to the Championship. Portsmouth managed to only receive points in 14 of the 38 games, including only seven wins. In March they were docked nine points for entering administration.

Portsmouth's biggest success in the season came in the FA Cup, advancing to the final after beating Coventry City, Sunderland, Southampton, Birmingham City and Tottenham Hotspur. They played at Wembley Stadium in the final against Chelsea, a game that Chelsea won by 1–0. Portsmouth also participated in the League Cup and reached the quarter-finals.

Manager Paul Hart was sacked in November and replaced by Avram Grant, who stayed until the end of the season. French striker Frédéric Piquionne scored eleven goals throughout the season and was the club's top goalscorer.

Team kit

For the third consecutive season, the team's kits were produced by Canterbury of New Zealand. The shirt sponsor was Jobsite, replacing OKI Printing Solutions, who had sponsored Portsmouth's kits since the 2005–06 season. The home strip returned to the traditional blue shirts, white shorts and red socks after the previous season's all-blue kit with gold trim. However, the blue of the home jersey was a lighter shade than the usual royal blue.

On 8 April 2010, Portsmouth announced a new five-year kit supply deal with Kappa. They wore a Kappa strip for the first time in the FA Cup semi-final on 11 April. For the 2010 FA Cup Final, Kappa produced a white and maroon kit with a salmon pink trim, referencing Portsmouth's original colours.

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Ownership changes

The club started the season with great expectation after Sulaiman Al-Fahim bought the club from previous owner Alexandre Gaydamak for a fee around £60 million, but Al-Fahim's ownership only lasted 40 days until Ali Al-Faraj and his business Falcondrone Ltd. bought 90% of Al-Fahim's stake in Portsmouth; as part of the deal, Al-Fahim became non-executive chairman at the club until the end of the 2010–11 season.https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/teams/p/portsmouth/8289279.stm However, at the start of February 2010, al-Faraj lost his stake in Portsmouth to a debtor as part of a repayment agreement on one of his loans.https://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/p/portsmouth/8497491.stm In 2010, Balram Chainrai loaned former owner Ali al-Faraj £17 million, secured through collateral of Fratton Park grounds and the club itself. When the owner failed to pay meet a scheduled loan repayment, Chainrai took over control of the club. He intended to sell the club as soon as possible, and in the meantime he leased Fratton Park back to Portsmouth, with possible future rental yields of nearly a million pounds annually. On the morning of 26 February, a formal announcement was made that the club had entered administration and would be docked 9 points once three directors of the Premier League board had met to agree when the points should formally be taken. Andrew Andronikou, Peter Kubik and Michael Kiely of accountancy firm UHY Hacker Young were appointed by the club as administrators.

Financial problems

Even before the season began Portsmouth saw a net transfer spend in the far negative, with key players such as Glen Johnson, Peter Crouch, Niko Kranjčar, and Sylvain Distin all departing the club. Although a team was assembled through cheap deals and loans, it soon became clear that Portsmouth had been depleted of quality and the team began sliding down to the bottom of the table, with the first seven league matches all being lost.

As the season progressed, the finances dried up and the club admitted on 1 October that some of their players and staff had not been paid. On 3 October, media outlets started to report that a deal was nearing completion for Ali al-Faraj to take control of the club. On Monday 5 October, a deal was agreed for Al Faraj and his associates via the British Virgin Islands-registered company Falcondrone to hold a 90% majority holding, with Al-Fahim retaining 10% stake and the title of non-executive chairman for two years. Falcondrone also agreed a deal with Gaydamak the right to buy, for £1, Miland Development (2004) Ltd, which owned various strategic pockets of land around the ground, once refinancing was complete. 2 days after the Al-Faraj takeover was completed, Portsmouth's former technical director Avram Grant returned as director of football.

On the pitch, Portsmouth's late transfer of funds called for a flurry of transfers at the end of the window, including the loan signing of Ivorian international Aruna Dindane, who would go on to score a hat-trick against Wigan Athletic. An opening run of seven defeats raised fears Hart would be sacked, but at the eighth attempt, at Molineux, Hassan Yebda (another loanee) headed in to secure the first win. Portsmouth were beaten 4–2 at Fratton Park by Aston Villa in the quarter finals of the League Cup, having beaten off Premiership high-flyers Stoke City; yet another loanee, Frédéric Piquionne, was on target twice. However, because of the financial problems, the Premier League placed the club under a transfer embargo, meaning the club were not allowed to sign any players.

Paul Hart was sacked by the board on 24 November, based on the poor results that left Portsmouth at the bottom of the league. He was offered the role of technical director responsible for players aged 18–21, but he declined. Coaches Paul Groves and Ian Woan took temporary charge of the team. On 26 November 2009, Portsmouth F.C. announced on its official website that Avram Grant had been appointed as manager.

On 3 December, it was announced that the club had failed to pay the players for the second consecutive month. On the 31st, it was announced player's wages would again be paid late, on 5 January 2010. According to common football contracts, the players then had the right to terminate their contracts and leave the club without any compensation for the club, upon giving 14 days notice. Despite the financial difficulties, Grant's time as manager was initially successful, having won two of his first four games in charge (against Sunderland and Liverpool) and only narrowly missing out on a point against league leaders Chelsea.

HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) filed a winding-up petition against Portsmouth at the High Court in London on 23 December. HMRC claimed the club owed large sums in unpaid VAT on the club's net receipts from its negative transfer spend over the previous two years. Initially, the club denied the winding-up order and a statement was released via the club's website, in which the club stated that they expected the winding-up order to be retracted. The club applied to the High Court to strike out the winding-up petition. Tax lawyer Conrad McDonnell argued that the standard VAT treatment of football clubs, negotiated between the FA and HMRC, was wrong and legally no VAT should be charged on transfers of employees (players are employees), so that the whole HMRC debt was disputed. On 19 January 2010, the High Court dismissed the club's claim, although permission to appeal was granted and a statement from Portsmouth said the judge "considered an appeal to the Court of Appeal would have a 'real chance of success'". This meant that the case stayed open and HMRC were not able to proceed with an immediate winding-up as they wanted.

Meanwhile, it was announced on 5 January that the Premier League were to use Portsmouth's share of the latest installment of television broadcast monies to pay off the club's debts to other top-flight sides. Chelsea, Tottenham and Watford were all owed money by Portsmouth (as were Udinese and Lens). The Premier League split £7 million between them. The action is allowed within league rules to protect clubs that are owed money from transfers.

On 26 January, the Premier League partially lifted the transfer embargo, and allowed the club to sign and register loanees and players not registered to other clubs. Portsmouth managed to sell a few players, raising hope that bills and staff might get paid on time. On 28 January, the club's deep financial trouble was further highlighted by the temporary closure of the Portsmouth website, after the club failed to pay their bills for its upkeep to their Bournemouth-based digital agency Juicy. The website was back live several hours later, after Juicy announced a new financial arrangement with Portsmouth. It appeared on 2 February that staff and players were not paid their wages on time for the fourth time in five months, causing Portsmouth's PFA representative to call for more openness from within the club.

On 4 February, Portsmouth was taken over by its fourth owner in one season: Balram Chainrai. A Nepalese businessman based in Hong Kong, Chainrai took over Portsmouth as part of a clause in a loan deal he made with the previous owners. He is thought to have given the club between £15 and £20 million, but the debts were not repaid.

A full court hearing of HMRC's winding-up petition was held on 10 February and the club was given a "stay-of-execution" for a further seven days with a view to securing a new buyer. If the club did not enter administration or HMRC did not recover its money, the club could have been wound up by the Court and a liquidator appointed.

On 26 February, having not secured a new buyer before the 25 February deadline, Portsmouth prepared to enter administration, and appointed UHY Hacker Young as administrators. On the morning of 26 February, a formal announcement was made that the club had entered administration and would be docked nine points once three directors of the Premier League board had met to agree when the points should formally be taken. The Premier League decided to delay their decision until the court case on 15 March decided the club's fate. After beating Birmingham City 2–0 on 6 March, Portsmouth qualified for the FA Cup semi-final, to face Tottenham Hotspur at Wembley on 11 April. On 11 March, the HMRC withdrew their winding-up order, having contested the validity of the administration that was implemented on 26 February, after receiving documentation proving its validity. On 12 March Peter Storrie stepped down as the club's CEO, though he remained at the club in the short term as a consultant to the administrator.

On 15 March, a consortium fronted by Rob Lloyd entered a period of exclusivity to buy Portsmouth. Rob Lloyd met 19 invited Portsmouth fans at the Hilton Portsmouth on Sunday 14th to outline his group's plans and to answer questions from the fans.

On 17 March, Portsmouth were docked nine points for entering administration. That only confirmed a relegation that was always inevitable, with Portsmouth being last in the league on actual points as well. Portsmouth reached the 2010 FA Cup Final against Chelsea, losing the match 1–0, but would have normally been qualified to the UEFA Europa League as Chelsea had qualified for the higher ranked Champions League. However, Portsmouth was denied entry due to its financial state, with Premier League's 7th-placed team Liverpool taking over its place.

On 24 March, administrator Andrew Andronikou revealed that the club would be looking to start the next season with a whole new squad. Players with expiring contracts would be allowed to leave and Portsmouth were looking to sell between eight and ten players. Overall, up to 20 players could leave at the end of the season. The club would be looking to build their team from free transfers in the summer transfer window to save money.

Players

First-team squad

:Squad at end of season

Left club during season

Statistics

Appearances and goals

No.Pos.NameLeagueFA CupLeague CupTotalDisciplineAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals[[File:Yellow card.svg13px]][[File:Red card.svg13px]]
1GKENG David James250400029030
3DFFRA Younès Kaboul193402025351
3DFPOR Ricardo Rocha100200012002
4MFRSA Aaron Mokoena21+20412+1027+3170
5MFENG Jamie O'Hara25+12310028+1280
6MFENG Hayden Mullins15+304+202021+5030
7DFISL Hermann Hreiðarsson171501023120
8MFSEN Papa Bouba Diop9+305+200014+5010
9FWFRA Frédéric Piquionne26+856+132+2334+111120
10FWENG David Nugent0+300+10000+4000
11MFENG Michael Brown22+22602+1030+3261
14MFGHA Quincy Owusu-Abeyie3+70000+113+8100
15DFFRA Sylvain Distin3000003000
16DFIRL Steve Finnan20+10400024+1010
17FWNGA John Utaka10+813+423116+12420
18DFBEL Anthony Vanden Borre15+40204121+4121
19MFCRO Niko Kranjčar4011005100
19FWENG Danny Webber4+1311+30328+16110
20FWENG Tommy Smith12+4120000000
21GKENG Jamie Ashdown5+10101014+4100
22MFSCO Richard Hughes9+101+202+1112+4150
23MFGHA Kevin-Prince Boateng20+23520025+2590
24FWCIV Aruna Dindane18+18312123+11070
26DFISR Tal Ben Haim21+10101023+1040
27FWNGA Nwankwo Kanu6+1720+100+426+22400
31GKBIH Asmir Begović8+10303014+1010
32MFALG Hassan Yebda15+32203020+3230
33MFGRE Angelos Basinas7+501+202010+7030
35DFIRL Marc Wilson280601+1035+1030
39DFALG Nadir Belhadj16+332+114022+4420
40DFENG Joel Ward1+2000102+2010
41DFENG Matt Ritchie1+1000001+1000
46DFGER Lennard Sowah3+2000003+2000

Top scorers

No.Pos.NameLeagueFA CupLeague CupTotal
9FWFRA Frédéric Piquionne52310
24FWCIV Aruna Dindane5117
39DFALG Nadir Belhadj4105
23MFGHA Kevin-Prince Boateng3104
27FWNGA Nwankwo Kanu2024
3DFFRA Younès Kaboul3003
17FWNGA John Utaka0213
19STENG Danny Webber1023
32MFALG Hassan Yebda2002
5MFENG Jamie O'Hara1102
7MFISL Hermann Hreiðarsson1001
17FWRSA Aaron Mokoena0101
18DFBEL Anthony Vanden Borre0011
22MFSCO Richard Hughes0011

Transfers

In

Permanent

DatePositionNameFromFee
1 July 2009DFRSA Aaron MokoenaBlackburn RoversFree
31 July 2009DFIRE Steve FinnanESP EspanyolFree
7 August 2009GKFIN Antti NiemiUnattachedFree
27 August 2009STTommy SmithWatford£1.8M
date=2009-08-28title=Portsmouth wrap up four signingsurl=https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/teams/p/portsmouth/8226466.stmaccess-date=2025-05-25work=BBC Sportlanguage=en-GB}}MFMichael BrownWiganNominal
28 August 2009MFGER Kevin-Prince BoatengTottenham Hotspur£4.0M
31 August 2009DFISR Tal Ben HaimManchester CityUndisclosed
1 September 2009DFMike WilliamsonWatford£3.0M
1 September 2009FWDanny WebberSheffield UnitedFree
3 February 2010DFPOR Ricardo RochaBEL Standard LiègeFree
12 February 2010DFSER Duško TošićGER Werder BremenFree

Loan

DatePos.NameFromReturn date
5 August 2009FWFRA Frédéric PiquionneFRA LyonEnd of season
13 August 2009DFBEL Anthony Vanden BorreITA GenoaEnd of season
28 August 2009STCIV Aruna DindaneFRA LensEnd of season
28 August 2009MFJamie O'HaraTottenham Hotspur15 January 2010
1 September 2009MFALG Hassan YebdaPOR BenficaEnd of season
29 January 2010FWGHA Quincy Owusu-AbeyieRUS Spartak Moscow31 March 2010
29 January 2010MFJamie O'HaraTottenham HotspurEnd of season

Out

Permanent

DatePositionNameToFee
date=2009-07-01title=Five players make Portsmouth exiturl=https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/teams/p/portsmouth/8128288.stmaccess-date=2025-04-09work=BBC Sportlanguage=en-GB}}DFMali Djimi TraoréFRA MonacoFree
26 June 2009DFGlen JohnsonLiverpool£17.0M
1 July 2009DFWAL Geraint PriceStewarts & Lloyds CorbyFree
1 July 2009DFSol CampbellNotts CountyFree
1 July 2009DFAndre BlackmanBristol CityFree
1 July 2009DFRyan WoodfordHavant & WaterloovilleFree
1 July 2009MFSean DavisBolton WanderersFree
1 July 2009MFLouis CastlesBognor Regis TownFree
1 July 2009MFJerome ThomasWest Bromwich AlbionFree
1 July 2009MFGlen LittleSheffield UnitedFree
1 July 2009MFCameroon LaurenESP Córdoba CFFree
1 July 2009MFFRA Noé PamarotESP HérculesFree
1 July 2009MFIRE Joe CollinsUnattachedFree
1 July 2009FWBEL Andréa Mbuyi-MutomboBEL Standard LiègeFree
27 July 2009FWPeter CrouchTottenham Hotspur£9.0M
7 August 2009MFFRA Arnold MvuembaFRA LorientFree
12 August 2009DFMartin CranieCoventry City£0.5M
27 August 2009DFFRA Sylvain DistinEverton£6.0M
1 September 2009MFCRO Niko KranjčarTottenham Hotspur£2.5M
7 December 2009DFLinvoy PrimusUnattachedRetired
27 January 2010DFMike WilliamsonNewcastle United£1.0M
27 January 2010DFFRA Younès KaboulTottenham Hotspur£6.0M
1 February 2010GKBosnia and Herzegovina Asmir BegovićStoke City£3.25M
1 February 2010MFFRA Gauthier MahotoFRA BastiaFree
24 March 2010GKFIN Antti NiemiUnattachedContract terminated
31 March 2010MFGHA Quincy Owusu-AbeyieQatar Al SaddLoan terminated

Loan

DatePos.NameToReturn date
27 July 2009FWAUS Ryan Gazet Du ChattelierWeymouthSeptember 2009
28 July 2009DFCallum ReynoldsLuton Town22 January 2010
1 September 2009MFMatt RitchieNotts County31 December 2009
1 September 2009FWDavid NugentBurnley25 January 2010
1 September 2009MFTom KilbeyDagenham & Redbridge1 October 2009
14 October 2009GKBosnia and Herzegovina Asmir BegovićIpswich Town23 November 2009
2 January 2010FWParis Cowan-HallGrimsby TownEnd of season
5 January 2010DFLuke WilkinsonNorthampton Town5 February 2010
7 January 2010MFMarlon PackDagenham and Redbridge5 February 2010
1 February 2010FWDavid NugentBurnleyEnd of season
25 March 2010DFSER Duško TošićQueens Park RangersEnd of season

Matches

Pre-season

DateOpponentsH / AResult
F – AScorersAttendance
21 July 2009Havant & WaterloovilleA2 – 2Bopp 58', 62'3,216
25 July 2009Basingstoke TownA0 – 01,588
27 July 2009EastleighA1 – 6Kaboul 5' Cowan-Hall 10' Subotić 26' Nugent 75', 80', 88'1,401
31 July 2009Vitória de GuimarãesA2 – 0Rui Miguel 57' Custódio 87'
1 August 2009BenficaA4 – 0Cardozo 16', 41' Weldon 71' Wilkinson (o.g.) 86'
8 August 2009RangersH2 – 0Piquionne 31', 51'9,018
8 August 2009Gosport BoroughH0 – 3Ritchie 13', Ashikodi ', Subotić '832

Competitions

DateOpponentsTournamentH/AResultScorersAttendanceReferee
15 August 2009FulhamPremier LeagueH0 – 117,510Martin Atkinson
19 August 2009Birmingham CityPremier LeagueA0 – 119,922Lee Probert
22 August 2009ArsenalPremier LeagueA1 – 4Kaboul60,049Steve Bennett
25 August 2009HerefordLeague CupH4 – 1Piquionne , Utaka , Kranjčar , Hughes6,645Andy D'Urso
30 August 2009Man CityPremier LeagueH0 – 117,826Howard Webb
12 September 2009BoltonPremier LeagueH2 – 3Kaboul , Boateng17,564Chris Foy
19 September 2009Aston VillaPremier LeagueA0 – 235,979Stuart Attwell
22 September 2009Carlisle UtdLeague CupA3 – 1Dindane , Webber , Vanden Borre7,042Neil Swarbrick
26 September 2009EvertonPremier LeagueH0 – 118,116Alan Wiley
3 October 2009Wolverhampton WanderersPremier LeagueA1 – 0Yebda29,023Howard Webb
17 October 2009Tottenham HotspurPremier LeagueH1 – 2Boateng20,821Phil Dowd
24 October 2009Hull CityPremier LeagueA0 – 023,720Stuart Attwell
27 October 2009Stoke CityLeague CupH4 – 0Piquionne , Webber , Kanu11,251Peter Walton
31 October 2009Wigan AthleticPremier LeagueH4 – 0Dindane , Piquionne18,212Alan Wiley
7 November 2009Blackburn RoversPremier LeagueA1 – 3O'Hara23,110Andre Marriner
22 November 2009Stoke CityPremier LeagueA0 – 127,069Kevin Friend
28 November 2009Manchester UnitedPremier LeagueH1 – 4Boateng20,482Mike Dean
1 December 2009Aston VillaLeague CupH2 – 4Petrov , Kanu17,034Lee Mason
5 December 2009BurnleyPremier LeagueH2 – 0Hreiðarsson , Dindane17,822Phil Dowd
12 December 2009SunderlandPremier LeagueA1 – 1Kaboul37,578Steve Bennett
16 December 2009ChelseaPremier LeagueA1 – 2Piquionne40,137Mark Clattenburg
19 December 2009LiverpoolPremier LeagueH2 – 0Belhadj , Piquionne20,534Lee Mason
26 December 2009West Ham UnitedPremier LeagueA0 – 233,686Lee Probert
30 December 2009ArsenalPremier LeagueH1 – 4Belhadj20,404Alan Wiley
2 January 2010Coventry CityFA CupH1 – 1Boateng11,214Phil Dowd
12 January 2010Coventry CityFA CupA2 – 1Wright , Mokoena7,097Mike Jones
23 January 2010SunderlandFA CupH2 – 1Utaka10,315Peter Walton
26 January 2010West HamPremier LeagueH1 – 1Webber18,322Andre Marriner
31 January 2010Manchester CityPremier LeagueA0 – 244,015Martin Atkinson
3 February 2010FulhamPremier LeagueA0 – 121,934Anthony Taylor
6 February 2010Manchester UnitedPremier LeagueA0 – 574,684Lee Mason
9 February 2010SunderlandPremier LeagueH1 – 1Dindane16,242Kevin Friend
13 February 2010SouthamptonFA CupA4 – 1Owusu-Abeyie , Dindane , Belhadj , O'Hara31,385Howard Webb
20 February 2010Stoke CityPremier LeagueH1 – 2Piquionne17,208Mike Dean
27 February 2010BurnleyPremier LeagueA2 – 1Piquionne , Yebda19,714Mark Clattenburg
6 March 2010Birmingham CityFA CupH2 – 0Piquionne20,456Steve Bennett
9 March 2010Birmingham CityPremier LeagueH1 – 2Kanu18,465Mike Jones
15 March 2010LiverpoolPremier LeagueA1 – 4Belhadj40,316Stuart Attwell
20 March 2010Hull CityPremier LeagueH3 – 2Smith , O'Hara , Kanu16,513Phil Dowd
24 March 2010ChelseaPremier LeagueH0 – 518,753Lee Mason
27 March 2010Tottenham HotspurPremier LeagueA0 – 235,870Kevin Friend
3 April 2010Blackburn RoversPremier LeagueH0 – 016,207Steve Bennett
11 April 2010Tottenham HotspurFA CupN2 – 0Piquionne , Boateng84,602Alan Wiley
14 April 2010Wigan AthleticPremier LeagueA0 – 014,323Mike Dean
18 April 2010Aston VillaPremier LeagueH1 – 2Brown16,523Lee Probert
24 April 2010Bolton WanderersPremier LeagueA2 – 2Dindane20,526Howard Webb
1 May 2010Wolverhampton WanderersPremier LeagueH3 – 1Dindane , Utaka , Brown19,213Mike Jones
9 May 2010EvertonPremier LeagueA0 – 138,730Peter Walton
15 May 2010ChelseaFA CupN0 – 188,335Chris Foy

Premier League

Results by round

Final league table

Notes

References

References

  1. (23 July 2009). "Jobsite scores Portsmouth sponsorship".
  2. "Portsmouth FC Kit History".
  3. (9 April 2020). "Portsmouth handed massive boost ahead of FA Cup semi-final".
  4. (30 April 2010). "Portsmouth 09/10 Kappa FA Cup Final Shirt Design".
  5. ''Portsmouth City Football Club Limited v Revenue and Customs Commissioners'' [2011] STC 683
  6. "All Portsmouth players: 2010".
  7. (24 May 2009). "Mokoena makes Portsmouth switch".
  8. (31 July 2009). "Portsmouth sign defender Finnan".
  9. (2009-08-07). "Niemi completes Portsmouth move". BBC Sport.
  10. Bryant, Tom. (2009-08-27). "Watford's Tommy Smith joins Portsmouth on four-year deal". The Guardian.
  11. (2009-08-28). "Portsmouth wrap up four signings". BBC Sport.
  12. (2009-07-01). "Five players make Portsmouth exit". BBC Sport.
  13. (19 June 2009). "Portsmouth's Traore joins Monaco".
  14. (26 June 2009). "Johnson completes Liverpool move".
  15. (2009-07-27). "Luton sign Portsmouth youngster". BBC Sport.
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