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2004-05 In English Football





OVERVIEW



EVENTS



NATIONAL TEAM

England began their qualifying campaign for the Football World Cup 2006 . They played alongside UK neighbours Wales and Northern Ireland in the European Group 6.

  • England score given first


;Key
  • H = Home match

  • A = Away match

  • N = Neutral site

  • F = Friendly

  • WCQ = FIFA World Cup 2006 Qualifying, European Zone Group 6

  • o.g. = Own goal



HONOURS



FINAL STANDINGS


FA Premier League

See Also: FA Premier League 2004-05



Chelsea lost just 1 Premiership game all season and set a top flight record of 29 wins and 95 points, opening up a 12-point gap over runners-up and F.A Cup winners Arsenal and finished 18 points ahead of third-placed Manchester United. Everton, who had narrowly avoided relegation a year earlier, surprised all the observers by clinching the fourth Champions League place, and Liverpool's historic European Cup triumph meant that England would have five sides entering the continent's leading club competition for the 2005-06 season.(First time this has happened)

Bolton Wanderers qualified for the UEFA Cup for the first time in their history, while Middlesbrough achieved qualification for the second season running.

After three successive top-five finishes, Newcastle United suffered a setback and finished 14th in the final table - their lowest Premiership finish to date.

All three relegation places were decided on the final day of the season. Crystal Palace, Norwich City and Southampton went down, but West Bromwich Albion stayed up despite having the worst record of any Premiership team to avoid relegation (6 wins and 34 points). They were also the first-ever Premiership team to avoid relegation after being bottom on Christmas Day, and the first top flight team to achieve this feat since Sheffield United in 1991.


The Football League


Football League Championship

After narrowly missing out on promotion the previous season, Sunderland managed to clinch a return to the top-flight. Wigan joined them, entering the top-flight for the first time in their history. West Ham made amends for their loss in the play-off final the previous year by beating Preston.

Unusually, none of the sides relegated to the Championship in 2003-04 did particularly well. While Leeds were widely predicted for a second successive relegation and possible bankruptcy (both of which looked likely in the middle of the season, but were staved off by another takeover), Wolves and Leicester were predicted to challenge for promotion. Instead, both sides started badly, and replaced their managers mid-season, never really looking like promotion contenders.

At the bottom of the table, Rotherham and Gillingham's luck finally ran out, and the sides were relegated after a short few years in which both sides battled the odds on small budgets. What made bigger headlines was Nottingham Forest's relegation to League One, six years after they were in the Premiership, and which made them the first European Cup winners to drop to the third division of their domestic league. While Dario Gradi's Crewe Alexandra managed to survive relegation on the last day of the season in their 2-1 win over Coventry City, which was their first win without striker Dean Ashton who was sold to Norwich City for £3m.


Football League One

Luton put the bizarre and often farcical takeover of summer 2003 behind them in spectacular style, performing the best out of any League side to clinch promotion. Hull joined them, their second promotion in as many seasons. Sheffield Wednesday - who looked like spending another season fighting relegation in the first few months - returned to the Championship under new manager Paul Sturrock, who put his sacking at Southampton behind him to lead Wednesday to their best season in nearly a decade.

Going down to League Two were Stockport, who continued their decline which began with relegation from Division One in 2001-02, Peterborough, feeling the strain of their financial situation, and Torquay, whose first season out of the bottom division in twelve years ended in disappointment. The fourth relegated side would have been Milton Keynes Dons (formerly Wimbledon), but Wrexham went into administration and lost 10 points as a result (despite the club's argument that it would be harder for them to exit administration if they were relegated).

  • Deducted 10 points for going into administration



Football League Two

Just two years after winning the Conference, Yeovil followed in Doncaster's footsteps by winning the League Two title. Scunthorpe - relegation candidates the season before - joined them, and Swansea edged the last automatic promotion spot. The side that they edged out, Southend, made amends by winning the play-offs, beating Lincoln in the final.

At the bottom, Cambridge and Kidderminster's finances hit them hard, and they fell out of the league, both on the back of signing several foreign players who proved ineffective. While Cambridge went into administration, this happened after they were already relegated, and made no difference overall, short of lifting Kidderminster above them.

  • Deducted 10 points for going into administration



Non-League Football



TRANSFER DEALS


Summer transfer window

The summer transfer window runs from the end of the previous season until 31 August.
; 28 April 2004











































January transfer window

The mid-season transfer window runs from 1 to 31 January 2006.
; 1 January 2005

















; 17 April 2005


For subsequent transfer deals see 2005-06 In English Football .


Retirements




DEATHS

  • Brian Clough , 69, who achieved league title success as manager with Derby County in 1972 but is best remembered for his achievement at Nottingham Forest - where he won promotion to the original First Division and established Forest as one of Europe's top sides. They were league champions once, European Cup winners twice and League Cup winners four times. He underwent a liver transplant in January 2003, 20 months before his death from stomach cancer in a Derby hospital.

  • Bill Nicholson , 85, who won a host of domestic and European trophies with Tottenham during the 1960s and 1970s, including the double in 1961 - which made Tottenham the first English club to win the double during the 20th century.

  • Emlyn Hughes , 57, former Liverpool player and England captain who won numerous domestic and European trophies with Liverpool as well as a League Cup with Wolves. During the 1980s he was a successful team captain on BBC's A Question Of Sport .

  • Bill Brown , 73, was goalkeeper for Spurs when they won the double in 1961.

  • Bedford Jezzard , 77, was a centre forward for Fulham and England during the 1950s.

  • Dave Carr , 48, was a defender with Luton Town , Lincoln City and Torquay United .

  • Harry McNally , 68, was a charismatic former manager of Wigan Athletic and Chester City . His popularity at Chester was such that the home terrace at the Deva Stadium would later be named after him.