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2005-06 In English Football





OVERVIEW



EVENTS



NATIONAL TEAM

England qualified for the Football World Cup 2006 , after finishing top of European Qualifying Group 6 .

;Key
  • H = Home match

  • A = Away match

  • N = Neutral site match

  • F = Friendly

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

  • WCF = FIFA World Cup 2006 Finals



HONOURS



EUROPEAN QUALIFICATION



LEAGUE TABLES


FA Premier League

See Also: FA Premier League 2005-06



Chelsea won the Premiership title by an 8-point margin after fighting off a late challenge by runners-up Manchester United. The other four European places went to Liverpool, Arsenal, Tottenham Hotspur and Blackburn Rovers.

Middlesbrough dipped seven places to 14th place in the final table, but did reach the UEFA Cup final - the first European final in their history. Also dipping seven places were Manchester City, who finished 15th, while Aston Villa slipped six places to 16th.

Sunderland were relegated with a Premiership record low of 3 wins and 15 points, while West Bromwich Albion and Birmingham City both hit the 30-point mark but were unable to avoid relegation. Portsmouth were the other team who spent the season battling relegation but they stayed up.


The Football League


Football League Championship

Reading entered the top flight for the first time in their history, breaking Sunderland's points record in the process. (Coincidentally, Sunderland were relegated from the Premiership while breaking the record for ''lowest'' number of points under the current scoring system). Sheffield United joined them, returning to the Premiership after twelve years. Surprise package Watford, initially tipped for relegation, entered the play-offs and beat Leeds United 3-0 in the Millennium Stadium final, who were unable to shake off a bad run of form (worse than any of the three relegated sides) that saw them lose out in the race for automatic promotion.

Crystal Palace fared the best out of the Premiership teams relegated the previous season, by getting to the play-offs but losing in the semi finals. Norwich never managed better than mid-table, while Southampton endured an awful season that saw Sir Clive Woodward take up a much-criticised role as Director Of Football , manager Harry Redknapp return to local rivals Portsmouth and the side looking in danger of relegation for much of the season, only managing a mid-table finish with a late surge in form, thanks to the appointment of George Burley . Chairman Rupert Lowe ultimately paid the price by being forced to resign after the end of the season.

The relegation battle was principally fought by four sides, Crewe, Brighton, Millwall and Sheffield Wednesday. Wednesday ultimately won the battle, and the remaining three were relegated. While Crewe and Brighton had not spent long in the division and were considered to be punching above their weight, Millwall underwent a disastrous season, getting through five managers and four chairmen before relegation.


Football League One


Southend United surprised many by winning a second successive promotion, returning to the Championship after nearly a decade (when it was called Division One). Colchester United also made the Championship for the first time in their history, but their promotion was tempered by the loss of manager Phil Parkinson to Hull City. A highly competitive play-off race saw Barnsley emerge as winners, beating Swansea City at the Millennium Stadium 4-3 on penalties after both normal time and extra-time finished 2-2, to return to the Championship after three seasons of struggle in Division Two/League One.

At the bottom, Walsall endured their second relegation in three seasons, Swindon became the first former Premiership side to slip to the bottom division (MK Dons were relegated a few weeks later, and it is debatable whether they can be considered a "former Premiership" team), Hartlepool crashed out of the division the season after they nearly earned promotion to the Championship, while MK Dons suffered the relegation they only avoided the previous season when Wrexham were docked points for entering administration.


Football League Two

Carlisle United were another side who earned a second successive promotion, only two years after a relegation from the League that some predicted would see the end of the club. Northampton Town joined them, making up for two seasons of play-off disappointment, and Leyton Orient ended a decade in the bottom division by earning promotion on nearly the last minute of the season. The side that they pushed out of the automatic promotion places, Grimsby Town, lost 1-0 to Cheltenham Town in the play-off final at the Millenium Stadium .

Rushden and Diamonds failed to improve on the previous season, and paid the price with relegation to the Conference. Oxford United joined them, despite the return of manager Jim Smith , and became the first former winners of a major trophy to be relegated to the Conference.
  • Deducted 1 point for fielding an ineligible player



Non-League Football



TRANSFER DEALS


Summer transfer window

The summer transfer window ran from the end of the previous season until 31 August.
; 16 May 2005


















































January transfer window

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



















''For subsequent transfer deals see List Of English Football Transfers 2006-07 ''


End of season retirements




DEATHS

  • Noel Cantwell , 72, was a Republic of Ireland international at left-back during the 1950s and 1960s. He also captained Manchester United to F.A Cup glory in 1963. As a manager he led Coventry City to their only European campaign in 1969-70.

  • Johnny Haynes , 71, former England and Fulham midfielder, who became the first English footballer to be paid £100 a week, died after suffering a brain haemorrhage at the wheel of his car which resulted in a head-on collision with another vehicle.

  • George Swindin , 90, was a former goalkeeper of Arsenal in the immediate postwar years. He helped them win two league titles and one F.A Cup. After hanging up his gloves, he served Arsenal as manager but was less successful.

  • George Best , 59, Northern Irish born striker who enjoyed the early and most successful years of his career Manchester United , died as a result of multiple organ failure three years after he underwent a liver transplant, the result of more than 30 years of heavy drinking. Personal problems meant that he played his last game for United at the age of 27, but he continued at various smaller clubs - including a brief spell with the Los Angeles Aztecs in America - until the age of 37.

  • Ted Ditchburn , 84, former England and Tottenham goalkeeper.

  • Mark Philo , 21, Wycombe winger, was killed in a car crash.

  • Ron Greenwood , 84, former West Ham and England manager. He managed West Ham to F.A Cup glory in 1964 and Cup Winners Cup success a year later, as well as providing the 1966 England World Cup winning team with three key players. Greenwood later managed the England team, achieving qualification for Euro 80 and the 1982 World Cup before retiring from football.

  • Peter Osgood , 59, former England , Chelsea and Southampton player, died of a heart attack while attending a family funeral. He was a key player in Chelsea's 1970 F.A Cup and 1971 Cup Winners Cup triumphs, and won another F.A Cup medal in 1976 with his next club Southampton.

  • John Lyall , 66, former West Ham United and Ipswich Town manager, died of a heart attack. He completed his first season in management at West Ham with F.A Cup glory in 1975, winning the trophy again in 1980 and taking West Ham to their highest ever league position - third - in 1986. He was sacked when West Ham were relegated in 1989, but make a comeback the following year with Ipswich Town. Lyall took Ipswich into the inaugural Premier League as Second Division champions in 1992, and remained in charge for another two-and-half years before he was sacked in December 1994. Lyall never returned to management after his dismissal from Ipswich.

  • Brian Labone , 66, former Everton captain who played in Harry Catterick's successful 1960s side, died of a heart attack. He helped them win the F.A Cup in 1964 and 1966 as well as the league title in 1963 and 1970. Labone was also capped 26 times by England between 1962 and 1970, but did not make the squad for England's victorious 1966 World Cup campaign.



REFERENCES