2014–15 in English football
Season | 2014–15 | |
---|---|---|
Men's football | ||
Premier League | Chelsea | |
Championship | Bournemouth | |
League One | Bristol City | |
League Two | Burton Albion | |
Conference Premier | Barnet | |
League Cup | Chelsea | |
Community Shield | Arsenal | |
The 2014–15 season will be the 135th season of competitive association football in England.
Promotion and relegation
Pre-season
League | Promoted to league | Relegated from league[1] |
---|---|---|
Premier League | ||
Championship | ||
League One | ||
League Two |
National teams
England national football team
Template:2014 FIFA World Cup Group D table
14 June 2014 2014 FIFA World Cup Group D | England | 1–2 | Italy | Manaus, Brazil |
23:00 BST | Sturridge 37' | Report | Marchisio 35' Balotelli 50' |
Stadium: Arena Amazonia Attendance: 39,800 Referee: Björn Kuipers |
19 June 2014 2014 FIFA World Cup Group D | Uruguay | 2–1 | England | São Paulo, Brazil |
20:00 BST | Suárez 39', 85' | Report | Rooney 75' | Stadium: Arena de Sao Paulo Attendance: 62,575 Referee: Carlos Velasco Carballo (Spain) |
24 June 2014 2014 FIFA World Cup Group D | England | 0–0 | Costa Rica | Belo Horizonte, Brazil |
17:00 BST | Report | Stadium: Mineirão Attendance: 57,823 Referee: Djamel Haimoudi (Algeria) |
8 September 2014 UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying Group E | Switzerland | 0–2 | England[2] | Basel |
19:45 BST | Report | Welbeck 58', 90+4' | Stadium: St. Jakob-Park Attendance: 35,500 Referee: Cüneyt Çakir (Turkey) |
9 October 2014 UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying Group E | England | 5–0 | San Marino | London |
19:45 BST | Jagielka 25' Milner 38' Rooney 43' (pen.) Welbeck 49' Townsend 72' Della Valle 78' (o.g.) |
Summary | Selva 43' Rinaldi 90' |
Stadium: Wembley Stadium Attendance: 55,990 Referee: Marcin Borski |
12 October 2014 UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying Group E | Estonia | 0–1 | England[2] | Tallinn |
17:00 BST | Klavan 29' | Summary | Baines 45+1' Henderson 53' Rooney 73' Wilshere 87' |
Stadium: A. Le Coq Arena Attendance: 10,195 Referee: Strahonja |
15 November 2014 UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying Group E | England | 3–1 | Slovenia | London |
17:00 GMT | Gibbs 52' Rooney 59' (pen.) Welbeck 66', 72' Clyne 79' Sterling 82' Jagielka 88' |
Summary | Henderson 58' (o.g.) Cesar 58' |
Stadium: Wembley Stadium Attendance: 82,305 Referee: Olegário Benquerença |
27 March 2015 UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying Group E | England | 4–0 | Lithuania[2] | London |
19:45 GMT | Rooney 7' Welbeck 45' Sterling 58' 80' Kane 73' |
Report | Žaliūkas 41' Kazlauskas 90+1' |
Stadium: Wembley Stadium Attendance: 83,671 Referee: Pavel Královec |
30 May 2014 Friendly | England | 3–0 | Peru | London, England |
20:00 BST | Sturridge 32' Cahill 65' Jagielka 70' |
Report | Stadium: Wembley Attendance: 83,578 Referee: Viktor Kassai |
4 June 2014 Friendly | Ecuador | 2–2 | England | Miami, United States |
20:00 BST | E. Valencia 8' Arroyo 70' A. Valencia 79' |
Report | Rooney 29' Lambert 51' Sterling 79' |
Stadium: Sun Life Stadium Attendance: 21,534 Referee: Jair Marrufo |
7 June 2014 Friendly | England | 0–0 | Honduras | Miami, United States |
21:45 BST | Report | Beckeles 64' | Stadium: Sun Life Stadium Attendance: 45,379 Referee: Ricardo Salazar |
3 September 2014 Friendly | England | 1–0 | Norway | London, England |
20:00 BST | Rooney 68' (pen) | Report | Stadium: Wembley Attendance: 40,181 Referee: Jorge Sousa |
18 November 2014 Friendly | Scotland | 1–3 | England | Glasgow, Scotland |
20:00 BST | Robertson 83' | Report | Oxlade-Chamberlain 32' Rooney 47', 85' |
Stadium: Celtic Park Attendance: 55,000 Referee: Jonas Eriksson |
31 March 2015 Friendly | Italy | 1–1 | England | Turin, Italy |
19:45 BST | Pellè 29' | Report | Townsend 79' | Stadium: Juventus Stadium Attendance: 31,138 Referee: Felix Brych |
England women's national football team
Template:2015 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification - UEFA Group 6
14 June 2014 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification – UEFA Group 6 | Belarus | 0–3 | England[3] | Minsk, Belarus |
15:00 BST | Avkhimovich 88' | Report | Aluko 31' Houghton 36' Dowie 66' Bronze 90+5' |
Stadium: Traktar Stadium Attendance: 350 Referee: Jana Adamkova |
19 June 2014 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification – UEFA Group 6 | Ukraine | 1–2 | England | Lviv, Ukraine |
19:00 BST | Vasylyuk 59' Olha Ovdiychuk 63' |
Report | Stoney 11' Aluko 14' Bronze 53' Bassett 62' |
Stadium: Arena Lviv Attendance: 3,757 Referee: Cristina Dorcioman |
21 August 2014 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification – UEFA Group 6 | Wales | 0–4 | England[3] | Cardiff |
19 BST | Summary | Carney 16' Aluko 39' Bassett 44' Sanderson 45' |
Stadium: Cardiff City Stadium Referee: Efthalia Mitsi |
17 September 2014 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification – UEFA Group 6 | Montenegro | 0–10 | England[3] | Petrovac, Budva |
19:00 BST | Armisa Kuć 80' Irena Bjelica 84' 86' |
Summary | Aluko 8', 31', 64' Carney 22', 51' Bronze 37' Scott 52' Duggan 56', 90+4' Williams 79' Alex Greenwood 90' Potter 90+3' |
Stadium: Stadion Pod Malim Brdom Attendance: 300 Referee: Petra Chuda |
League season
Premier League
Template:2014–15 Premier League table
Football League Championship
In a remarkable Championship season marked with constant changes among the top 6, Bournemouth and Watford ultimately emerged victorious in the automatic promotion places. Bournemouth completed a remarkable turnaround from being within 5 minutes of liquidation in 2008, and reached the top-flight for the first time in their history by storming their way to the top of the table, remaining top for around half the season and snatching the title on the last day. This meant that Eddie Howe had achieved the rare feat of taking a club from the fourth tier for the first, an achievement for which he was named the Football League Manager of the Decade. Despite a spell in which they changed managers 4 times in 35 days between August and October, Watford found stability under Serb Slavisa Jokanovic and whilst there were a few shaky moments, they took advantage of the slip-ups by other teams to take the first promotion spot and make their return to the Premier League after an 8 year absence.
In the playoff race, newly promoted Wolverhampton Wanderers missed out on goal difference whilst 2014 playoff losers Derby slipped from 6th to 8th after suffering a last day 3-0 home loss to Reading, despite actually leading the table for portions of the season, and in the top 6 since September. Norwich, Middlesbrough, Brentford and Ipswich all made the playoffs, with Brentford's achievement all the more surprising considering they had only been promoted alongside Wolverhampton.
Birmingham's top-10 finish was all the more remarkable considering they were in the relegation zone in October, but with the arrival of former player Gary Rowett from Burton, they surged up the table. Cardiff City, who had been relegated with Norwich the previous season, finished in the top half, despite the questionable appointment of Russell Slade in October. Reading endured a turbulent season; after a promising start, they fell away drastically and manager Nigel Adkins was sacked in December following a 6-1 loss to Birmingham. Former West Brom manager Steve Clarke took over the reigns and despite fears of relegation carrying on into the last few games, the Royals beat the drop and also managed to make the FA Cup semi-finals only losing to Arsenal in extra-time. Bolton and Brighton also survived relegation; Bolton made an awful start to the season, costing Dougie Freedman his job. Former Celtic boss Neil Lennon came in as his replacement and they ultimately survived, never really looking in serious danger of the drop under Lennon. Leeds were just one point above danger on New Years day, with Massimo Cellino being suspended from the club by the football league for fraud, having twice sacked managers after winless periods during the season, but 9 wins in 12 games, and 3 defeats in their first 16 games of 2015, confirmed a mid table placing, with Neil Redfearn remaining as manager for the rest of the season.
Following the heights of 2 successive playoffs, Brighton had a rough season which wasn't helped by losing their top striker (Leonardo Ulloa) to Leicester in the transfer window. It took the resignation of Sami Hyypia and appointment of experienced Chris Hughton to help the club move to safety though questions were asked of Hughton's defensive tactics for a club renowned for attacking. Rotherham's return to the second tier in 10 years saw them beat the drop, even with 3 points deducted for fielding an ineligible player with just 2 games of their rivals left- Rotherham gained a draw and a win in their next 2 games to prevent relegation danger. Fulham found themselves in a relegation battle for much of the season and at times, it was feared the club would suffer a second relegation in a row, but a late run of form saw them survive, albeit with over 83 goals conceded (only 2 less than the previous season) and beaten only by the bottom team.
At the bottom of the table from the off and just a year after surviving relegation, Blackpool finished bottom after a thoroughly awful season, failing to win away once and conceding 91 goals overall with many rival players scoring hat-tricks against them. The disastrous season was not helped by fan protests against owner Owen Oyston's running of the club throughout the season as well as the fact that they had only 8 players 2 weeks before the season even started. Making even bigger headlines was the relegation of Wigan, just 2 years after they had won the FA Cup and been in the Premier League; during the season, they went through 3 managers and failed to win at home between August and April as the extra games from the previous season appeared to take its toll on the club, also affected by chairman Dave Whelan trying to justify prejudicial text messages made by one of his appointments, Malky Mackay, which were found during his time at Cardiff the previous season. Taking the final relegation spot was Millwall who made a good start that soon faded away and saw them return to the third tier, despite being in the battle to survive up until the last few games.
Template:2014–15 Football League Championship table
Football League One
Bristol City ended their two-year absence from the Championship, topping the division for virtually the entire season and becoming the first club in the country to win promotion. Milton Keynes Dons, the top scorers in any of the four divisions, snatched the second promotion spot from under the noses of Preston North End on the final day, and won promotion to the Championship for the first time as the current incarnation of the club.
Despite being hotly tipped to make an immediate return to the Championship, Yeovil Town spent most of the season rooted to the bottom of the table and suffered their second successive relegation, finding themselves back in League Two for the first time in a decade. Similarly, Leyton Orient were also among the promotion favourites after their play-off final appearance the previous year, but struggled all season, got through four managers and ultimately finished second-bottom. Crawley Town were relegated back to League Two after three years at this level. Notts County filled the final relegation spot, ultimately being cost dear by a disastrous second half of the season after some promising early form. Crewe survived a second relegation battle in a row despite some heavy thrashings in the season, whilst Colchester's final day win to deny Preston automatic promotion confirmed their survival having been cut adrift for most of the season.
Template:2014–15 Football League One table
Football League Two
Just 6 years after their first ever promotion to the Football League and just missing out on promotion a year earlier, Burton Albion were promoted as champions. While manager Gary Rowett departed for Birmingham early in the season, his replacement in top-flight legend Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink guided the club into the top 6 and then finally promotion. Shrewsbury went up in second, securing an instant return to League One; they had actually led the table for much of the season but were made to pay for slip-ups that Burton took advantage of. Taking the third automatic slot in dramatic fashion were Bury, who almost slipped out of the race, but a last-day win over Tranmere saw the club also promoted.
Going into the playoffs were Wycombe, Southend, Stevenage and Plymouth. Luton, on their return to the Football League, just missed out on a playoff place by virtue of Plymouth's victory over Shrewsbury. Portsmouth suffered an even lower league finish than the previous year in 16th with the club failing to make anything like a promotion challenge, but some good run of forms prevented them from being in a relegation battle.
Falling out of the Football League were Tranmere Rovers, who suffered a second relegation in a row and dropped out of the Football League after 94 years. Cheltenham Town filled the second relegation spot, returning to the Football Conference after 16 years; they had started the season reasonably well, but imploded disastrously after long-serving manager Mark Yates was sacked in favour of Paul Buckle, with not even the late-season arrival of veteran manager Gary Johnson saving them. Hartlepool had been in the relegation zone for good chunks of the season, but an impressive March saw the club fight their way to safety.
Template:2014–15 Football League Two table
Conference Premier
A close title race saw Barnet return to the Football League after a two-year absence, which also made them the first club to win promotion to the Football League three times.
Nuneaton were relegated in bottom place, their fortunes having rapidly deteriorated since the departure of manager Kevin Wilkin late in the previous season. Dartford finished second-bottom and experienced the relegation that they only avoided the previous season thanks to the demise of Salisbury City. AFC Telford United suffered an immediate relegation back to the Conference North, though at least went down fighting after being well adrift in bottom place for most of the season. Alfreton Town filled the final relegation spot and went down on goal difference; they were ultimately cost dear by having the worst defensive record in the division, eventually culminating in a 7-0 thrashing by Bristol Rovers on the final day of the season, when a draw would have been sufficient to prevent relegation.
Template:2014–15 Football Conference Premier table
Managerial changes
This is a list of changes of managers within English league football:
Team | Outgoing manager | Manner of departure | Date of departure | Position in table | Incoming manager | Date of appointment | Position in table at time of appointment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blackpool | Paul Ince | Sacked | 21 January 2014[4] | 14th (2013–14 season) | José Riga | 11 June 2014[5] | Pre-season |
Nottingham Forest | Billy Davies | Sacked | 24 March 2014[6] | 5th (2013–14 season) | Stuart Pearce | 1 July 2014[a][7] | |
Tranmere Rovers | Ronnie Moore | Sacked | 9 April 2014[b][8] | 19th (2013–14 season) | Robert Edwards | 27 May 2014[9] | |
West Bromwich Albion | Pepe Mel | Mutual consent[10] | 12 May 2014[11] | Pre-season | Alan Irvine | 14 June 2014[12] | |
Shrewsbury Town | Michael Jackson | Appointed as assistant manager | 12 May 2014[13] | Micky Mellon | 12 May 2014[13] | ||
Brighton & Hove Albion | Óscar García Junyent | Resigned | 12 May 2014[14] | Sami Hyypia | 6 June 2014[15] | ||
Tottenham Hotspur | Tim Sherwood | Sacked[16] | 13 May 2014[11] | Mauricio Pochettino | 27 May 2014[17] | ||
Charlton Athletic | José Riga | End of contract | 27 May 2014[18] | Bob Peeters | 27 May 2014[19] | ||
Southampton | Mauricio Pochettino | Signed by Tottenham Hotspur | 27 May 2014[17] | Ronald Koeman | 16 June 2014[20] | ||
Leeds United | Brian McDermott | Mutual Consent | 31 May 2014[21] | Dave Hockaday | 19 June 2014[22] | ||
Oxford United | Gary Waddock | Sacked | 4 July 2014[23] | Michael Appleton | 4 July 2014[23] | ||
Huddersfield Town | Mark Robins | Sacked | 10 August 2014[24] | 24th | Chris Powell | 3 September 2014[25] | 21st |
Crystal Palace | Tony Pulis | Mutual Consent | 14 August 2014[26] | Pre-season | Neil Warnock | 27 August 2014[27] | 18th |
Leeds United | Dave Hockaday | Sacked | 28 August 2014[28] | 21st | Darko Milanic | 24 September 2014[29] | 12th |
Watford | Giuseppe Sannino | Resigned | 31 August 2014[30] | 2nd | Óscar García Junyent | 2 September 2014[31] | 2nd |
Colchester United | Joe Dunne | Mutual Consent | 1 September 2014[32] | 23rd | Tony Humes | 1 September 2014 | 23rd |
Carlisle United | Graham Kavanagh | Sacked | 1 September 2014[33] | 22nd | Keith Curle | 19 September 2014[34] | 24th |
Accrington Stanley | James Beattie | Mutual consent | 12 September 2014[35] | 21st | John Coleman | 18 September 2014[36] | 20th |
Port Vale | Micky Adams | Resigned | 18 September 2014[37] | 23rd | Rob Page | 18 September 2014[38][39] | 23rd |
Cardiff City | Ole Gunnar Solskjær | Mutual consent | 18 September 2014[40] | 17th | Russell Slade | 6 October 2014[41] | 15th |
Fulham | Felix Magath | Sacked | 18 September 2014[42] | 24th | Kit Symons | 29 October 2014 | |
Leyton Orient | Russell Slade | Resigned | 24 September 2014[43] | 17th | Mauro Milanese | 26 October 2014 | |
Watford | Óscar García Junyent | Resigned | 29 September 2014[44] | 4th | Billy McKinlay | 29 September 2014 | 4th |
Bolton Wanderers | Dougie Freedman | Mutual consent | 3 October 2014[45] | 23rd | Neil Lennon | 12 October 2014[46] | 24th |
Hartlepool United | Colin Cooper | Resigned | 4 October 2014[47] | 24th | |||
Watford | Billy McKinlay | Sacked | 6 October 2014[48] | 3rd | Slavisa Jokanovic | 7 October 2014[49] | 3rd |
Scunthorpe United | Russ Wilcox | Sacked | 8 October 2014[50] | 23rd | Mark Robins | 13 October 2014[51] | 23rd |
York City | Nigel Worthington | Resigned | 13 October 2014[52] | 22nd | Russ Wilcox | 15 October 2014[53] | 22nd |
Tranmere Rovers | Robert Edwards | Sacked | 13 October 2014[54] | 24th | Micky Adams | 16 October 2014[55] | 24th |
Birmingham City | Lee Clark | Sacked | 20 October 2014[56] | 21st | Gary Rowett | 27 October 2014 | 23rd |
Burton Albion | Gary Rowett | Signed by Birmingham City | 27 October 2014 | 3rd | Jimmy Floyd Hasselbank | 13 November 2014 | 5th |
Blackpool | José Riga | Sacked | 28 October 2014[57] | 24th | Lee Clark | 30 October 2014 | 24th |
Wigan Athletic | Uwe Rösler | Sacked | 13 November 2014 | 22nd | Malky Mackay | 19 November 2014 | 22nd |
Cheltenham Town | Mark Yates | Sacked | 25 November 2014 | 18th | Paul Buckle | 26 November 2014 | 18th |
Reading | Nigel Adkins | Sacked | 15 December 2014 | 16th | Steve Clarke | 16 December 2014 | 16th |
Brighton & Hove Albion | Sami Hyypiä | Resigned | 22 December 2014 | 22nd | Chris Hughton | 31 December 2014 | 21st |
Crystal Palace | Neil Warnock | Sacked | 27 December 2014 | 18th | Alan Pardew | 2 January 2015 | 18th |
Newcastle United | Alan Pardew | Signed by Crystal Palace | 31 December 2014 | 10th | John Carver | 2 January 2015 | 10th |
Gillingham | Peter Taylor | Sacked | 31 December 2014 | 19th | Justin Edinburgh | 8 February 2015 | 17th |
West Bromwich Albion | Alan Irvine | Sacked | 29 December 2014 | 16th | Tony Pulis | 1 January 2015 | 16th |
Norwich City | Neil Adams | Resigned | 5 January 2015 | 7th | Alex Neil | 9 January 2015 | 7th |
Charlton Athletic | Bob Peeters | Sacked | 11 January 2015 | 14th | Guy Luzon | 14 January 2015 | 14th |
Queens Park Rangers | Harry Redknapp | Resigned | 3 February 2015 | 19th | |||
Yeovil Town | Gary Johnson | Sacked | 4 February 2015 | 24th | |||
Newport County | Justin Edinburgh | Signed by Gillingham | 7 February 2015 | 6th | |||
Aston Villa | Paul Lambert | Sacked | 11 February 2015[58] | 18th | Tim Sherwood | 14 February 2015[59] | 18th |
Diary of the season
- 8 August: Blackburn Rovers and Cardiff City play out a 1–1 draw in the opening game of the season, with Kenwyne Jones getting the season's first goal.[60]
- 16 August: The Premier League's first fixture sees Swansea defeat Manchester United 2-1, in United's first opening day loss since 1972. Swansea end the day joint-top with Arsenal, who won their own game against Crystal Palace by the same margin.[61]
- 21 August: Crystal Palace sporting director Iain Moody is forced to resign from his position after a team investigating accusations of fraud made by his previous club Cardiff City discover numerous e-mails containing apparently racist, homophobic and anti-semitic insults, sent to and from former Cardiff manager Malky Mackay. The discovery also causes Crystal Palace to confirm that they will not appoint Mackay as their new manager, the position having been vacant since the resignation of Tony Pulis a week prior.[62] Coventry City confirm that they will return to their former Ricoh Arena ground starting with their home game against Gillingham on 5 September, ending a spell of a little over a year playing at Northampton Town's Sixfields Stadium due to a rent dispute.[63]
- 26 August: In the League Cup second round, Manchester United lose 4-0 to League One side Milton Keynes Dons. Three other Premier League sides fall to lower-league opposition, as Burnley are knocked out by Sheffield Wednesday, Leicester City by Shrewsbury Town, and West Ham by Sheffield United.[64]
- 28 August: Wayne Rooney is confirmed as the new England captain, following Steven Gerrard's decision to retire from international football.[65]
- 31 August: The first month of the Premier League ends with Chelsea leading the table and Swansea and Aston Villa in second and third respectively. Manchester City, Liverpool, Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur complete the top six. Newly promoted Burnley, stand at the bottom of the table with one point, behind Crystal Palace due to goals scored and one point behind West Bromwich Albion. Nottingham Forest lead the Championship, a point ahead of Watford and newly promoted Wolverhampton Wanderers. The other three play-off spots are occupied by Norwich City, Millwall and Charlton Athletic. The relegation zone is occupied by Bolton Wanderers, Fulham and Blackpool.
- 8 September: England's European Championship qualifying campaign begins with a 2-0 away win over Switzerland, with new Arsenal signing Danny Welbeck scoring both goals.
- 19 September: Arsenal score three goals inside four minutes to defeat Aston Villa, with new £16m striker Danny Welbeck getting his first goal for the club. Newcastle Utd, whose manager Alan Pardew faced a barrage of protests from fans wanting him out of the club, recover from 2-0 down to claim a point against Hull, with Papiss Cissé coming of the bench to score twice in the final 15 minutes. In the evening game, West Ham score twice in the opening seven minutes on their way to defeating Liverpool 3-1. In the Championship, Nottingham Forest remain unbeaten at the top after a 0-0 draw with Millwall. Leeds United, who have now claimed 10 points out of 12 under caretaker manager Neil Redfearn, beat local rivals Huddersfield Town 3-0 at Elland Road. Newly promoted Wolves are now just a point behind Forest after another home win, their 3rd in a row, this time, 1-0 over Bolton.
- 20 September: West Bromwich Albion secure their first win under Alan Irvine, defeating Tottenham 1-0 at White Hart Lane. Leicester, trailing 3-1 with 20 minutes remaining, defeat Manchester United 5-3 in front of a full house at the King Power stadium. Crystal Palace defeat Everton at Goodison Park 3-2, after falling behind 1-0 inside the opening 15 minutes. Frank Lampard, now on loan at Manchester City, scores an 84th minute equaliser against his former club, to give the 10 men of City a point against Chelsea at the Etihad Stadium.
- 30 September: The month ends with Chelsea continuing to lead the Premier League, three points ahead of Southampton. Defending champions Manchester City are a further two points behind Southampton, and a point ahead of a clutch of sides including Arsenal, Swansea and Aston Villa. Burnley and Newcastle United, both of whom are without a single win this season, sit bottom of the table, with Newcastle ahead on goals scored alone. Queens Park Rangers make up the bottom three. In the Championship, Norwich have taken over the top of the table, though Nottingham Forest are unbeaten and behind on goal difference. Wolves, Watford, Ipswich and Derby occupy the play-off spots. The bottom three remains unchanged from the previous month, with Blackpool bottom and still winless, and Fulham and Bolton Wanderers ahead of them by only one and two points respectively.
- 31 October: October ends with Chelsea still leading the Premier League, four points ahead of Southampton. Manchester City remain in third, while West Ham United stand in fourth. Arsenal, Swansea and Liverpool are behind in the European chase. Newcastle United have moved above QPR and out of the relegation zone, at the expense of their northern rivals Sunderland. Winless Burnley remain at the bottom of the table. Derby County have moved to the top of the Championship, though only goal difference is separating them Watford, Norwich and Wolves. Bournemouth and Middlesbrough are two points behind in fifth and sixth. Blackpool remain bottom of the Championship. Birmingham City have moved below Bolton, while Fulham has escaped the relegation zone under new manager Kit Symons.
- 12 November: The news that Ched Evans, who was convicted of rape in 2012 and given a five-year prison sentence, is being allowed to train with his former club Sheffield United results in TV presenter Charlie Webster resigning as a club ambassador,[66] and sponsors DBL Logistics threatening to terminate their deal with immediate effect should Evans be offered any form of contract by the club.[67]
- 30 November: At the end of November, Chelsea continue to lead the Premier League, now six points ahead of second place, which is occupied by Manchester City. Southampton are a point behind in third, while Manchester United take fourth place, with West Ham, Arsenal and Spurs not far behind. Burnley have edged above Leicester to rise off the bottom of the table, and QPR remain in the relegation zone. With the exception of leaders Derby, the Championship's top six has changed since the end of October: Ipswich and Brentford have risen to joint second (Ipswich leading on goal difference), Bournemouth and Middlesbrough have each risen a place, and Blackburn have moved into sixth place. Although Bolton and Birmingham have escaped the relegation zone, Blackpool have had no such luck and remain bottom, now joined by two teams that reached the play-offs last season, Wigan (23rd) and Brighton.
- 10 December: Hereford United, currently playing in the Southern League Premier Division, are suspended "from all football activity" with immediate effect by the Football Association following failure to respond to questions from an Independent Regulatory Commission.[68]
- 11 December: The suspension of Hereford United from all footballing activities is lifted.
- 19 December: Hereford United go out of business and are forced to resign from the Southern League. The club had been in existence for 90 years, played in the Football League from 1972 to 1997 and again between 2006 and 2012.
- 31 December: As the year closes, Manchester City have begun to whittle away at Chelsea's lead at the top of the table and are now three points behind. A losing streak has seen Southampton drop behind Manchester United into fourth. Arsenal have climbed above West Ham, but the top seven remains unchanged, as is the relegation zone, except for Crystal Palace replacing QPR in 18th. In the Championship, Derby have slipped behind leaders Bournemouth and second-placed Ipswich, and Blackburn has been replaced in the top six by Watford, who have knocked Brentford down to sixth. Millwall have replaced Brighton in the relegation zone, but it otherwise remains unchanged from the end of November.
- 23 January: Cambridge United, newly promoted back to the Football League for this season, manage to hold Manchester United to a 0-0 draw in the fourth round of the FA Cup, forcing a replay at Old Trafford.
- 24 January: The FA sees Chelsea eliminated by League One side Bradford City, Manchester City knocked out by Championship side Middlesbrough, Southampton eliminated by Premier League side Crystal Palace, Tottenham Hotspur eliminated by the top-flight's basement side Leicester City, and Swansea knocked out by Championship team Blackburn Rovers. Liverpool and Sunderland are also held to goal-less draws by Championship sides Bolton Wanderers and Fulham respectively.
- 31 January: By the end of January Chelsea have restored their five-point lead over Manchester City. The top four remains unchanged, while West Ham dropped out of the top seven, to be replaced by Liverpool. Burnley stand in 17th, ahead of Hull, QPR and Leicester. In the Championship, Derby have returned to second place, a point ahead of Middlesbrough and separated from Bournemouth by goal difference. In the promotion race, Ipswich, Brentford and Watford are a few points behind. Millwall, Wigan and Blackpool remain in the bottom three.
- 28 February: February ends with Chelsea five points ahead of Manchester City. Manchester United remain third, while Southampton have slipped behind Arsenal in fifth. Liverpool and Spurs also remain in the top seven. Leicester remain stuck to the foot of the table, but Hull and QPR have climbed clear at the expense of Burnley and Aston Villa. The Championship promotion race has eight points separating leaders Derby and eighth-placed Wolves. Bournemouth have slumped in recent weeks to slip behind Middlesbrough and Watford, while both Ipswich and Norwich can overtake the South Coast side if they win their games in hand. Brentford have fallen to seventh. The bottom three remains unchanged from the end of January.
- 1 March: Chelsea defeat Tottenham Hotspur 2-0 at Wembley Stadium in the League Cup Final, winning the first major trophy of the season. It is their fifth League Cup trophy, and the first trophy won by the club since José Mourinho returned as manager in 2013.
- 22 March: Bristol City defeat Walsall 2-0 at Wembley Stadium in the League Trophy Final, winning it for a record third time.
- 31 March: Chelsea ended the month still top of the Premier League table, 6 points ahead of Manchester City with a game in hand. Manchester City's shock defeat to Burnley coupled with Arsenal's good run of form saw them trail City by only a single point and also a point ahead of Manchester United in fourth. Liverpool, Southampton, and Tottenham Hotspur occupy the top seven. Although Burnley defeated Manchester City earlier in the month, they stay in the bottom three with QPR and Leicester, who are still rock bottom. Bournemouth reoccupy top spot in the Championship and followed closely by Watford in second. Middlesbrough, Norwich, Derby, and Ipswich complete the top six. Brentford and Wolves are still in the hunt for a playoff spot as only 8 points separate first to eighth. Wigan move above Millwall in the bottom three and Blackpool still rooted to the bottom, 17 points adrift with only 7 games left.
- 6 April: Blackpool's relegation to League One is confirmed by Rotherham United's victory over Brighton & Hove Albion,[69] while Wigan Athletic sack manager Malky Mackay.[70][71]
Clubs dissolved
Club | League | Date of Dissolution |
---|---|---|
Salisbury City | None (last in 2013-14 Conference Premier) | 4 December 2014 |
Hereford United | Southern League Premier Division | 19 December 2014 |
Deaths
- 1 June 2014: Brian Farmer, 80, Birmingham City and Bournemouth & Boscombe Athletic right back.[72]
- 13 June 2014: Willie Harvey, 84, Bradford Park Avenue inside forward.[73]
- 24 June 2014: John Fantham, 75, England, Sheffield Wednesday and Rotherham United inside forward.[74]
- 3 July 2014: David Jones, 79, Swansea Town goalkeeper.[75]
- 5 July 2014: Brian Wood, 73, Crystal Palace, Leyton Orient, Colchester United and Workington defender.[76]
- 6 July 2014: Peter Kearns, 77, former Plymouth Argyle, Aldershot and Lincoln City inside forward.[77]
- 19 July 2014: Ray King, 89, former Port Vale goalkeeper.[78]
- 22 July 2014: Morris Stevenson, 71, former Luton Town inside forward.[79]
- 23 July 2014: Jordan Tabor, 23, former Cheltenham Town defender.[80]
- 28 July 2014: Alex Forbes, 89, former Scotland, Sheffield United, Arsenal, Leyton Orient and Fulham wing half.[81]
- 6 August 2014: Jimmy Walsh, 84, former Leicester City striker.[82]
- 21 August 2014: Don Clark, 96, former Bristol City forward.[83]
- 10 September 2014: David Whyte, 43, former Crystal Palace, Charlton Athletic, Ipswich Town, Bristol Rovers and Southend United striker.[84]
- 28 September 2014: Tim Rawlings, 81, former Walsall and Port Vale half-back.[85]
- 29 September 2014: Len Stephenson, 84, former Blackpool, Port Vale and Oldham Athletic forward.[86]
- 5 October 2014: John Best, 74, former USA and Tranmere Rovers defender.[87]
- 19 October 2014: Arnold Mitchell, 84, former Notts County and Exeter City right half.[88]
- 19 October 2014: Don Ratcliffe, 79, former Stoke City, Middlesbrough, Darlington and Crewe Alexandra winger.[89]
- 21 October 2014: Jim Barrett, Jr., 83, former West Ham United, Nottingham Forest and Birmingham City inside forward.[90] [where?]
- 24 October 2014: Malcolm Thompson, 68, former Hartlepool United and Scarborough striker.[91]
- 29 October 2014: Klas Ingesson, 46, former Sweden and Sheffield Wednesday midfielder.[92]
- 30 October 2014: Joe Brown, 85, former Middlesbrough, Burnley, Bournemouth & Boscombe Athletic and Aldershot left half and manager of Burnley.[93]
- 3 November 2014: Geoff Cox, 79, former Birmingham City and Torquay United winger.[94]
- 3 November 2014: Ivor Seemley, 85, former Sheffield Wednesday, Stockport County and Chesterfield left back.[95]
- 4 November 2014: Derek Hogg, 84, former Leicester City, West Bromwich Albion and Cardiff City outside left.[96]
- 4 November 2014: Eddie Stuart, 83, former Wolverhampton Wanderers, Stoke City, Tranmere Rovers and Stockport County defender.[97]
- 5 November 2014: Roy Hartle, 83, former Bolton Wanderers full back.[98]
- 7 November 2014: Alex Bain, 78, former Huddersfield Town, Chesterfield and Bournemouth forward.[99]
- 8 November 2014: Sammy Wilson, 82, former Millwall inside left.[100]
- 13 November 2014: Jim Storrie, 74, former Leeds United, Rotherham United and Portsmouth forward.[101]
- 15 November 2014: Valéry Mézague, 30, former Cameroon, Portsmouth and Bury midfielder.[102][103]
- 20 November 2014: Iain Hesford, 54, former Blackpool, Sunderland, Hull City and Maidstone United goalkeeper.[104]
- 23 November 2014: John Neal, 82, former Hull City, Swindon Town, Aston Villa and Southend United defender, who also managed Wrexham, Middlesbrough and Chelsea.[105]
- 26 November 2014: Malcolm Finlayson, 84, former Millwall and Wolverhampton Wanderers goalkeeper.[106]
- November 2014: Reg Foulkes, 91, former Walsall and Norwich City defender.[107]
- November 2014: Albert Jackson, 71, former Oldham Athletic defender.[108]
- 7 December 2014: Tommy Todd, 88, former Crewe Alexandra, Derby County and Rochdale forward.[109]
- 19 December 2014: Pat Holton, 78, former Chelsea and Southend United defender.[110]
- 27 December 2014: Ron Henry, 80, former England and Tottenham Hotspur defender.[111]
- 31 December 2014: Jimmy Dunn, 91, former Wolverhampton Wanderers and Derby County inside forward.[112]
- January 2015: John McPhee, 77, former Blackpool, Barnsley and Southport defender [113]
- 8 January 2015: Sam Morris, 84, former Chester City wing half.[114]
- 10 January 2015: Roger Wosahlo, 67, former Chelsea, Ipswich Town and Peterborough United winger.[115]
- 11 January 2015: Albert McPherson, 87, former Walsall centre half, who also went on to coach at West Bromwich Albion.[116]
- 14 January 2015: Danny Malloy, 84, former Cardiff City and Doncaster Rovers defender.[117]
- 16 January 2015: Bill Dodd, 78, former Workington forward.[118]
- 19 January 2015: Ken Furphy, 83, former Darlington, Workington and Watford defender, who also had spells in management with Workington, Watford, Blackburn Rovers and Sheffield United.[119]
- 25 January 2015: Ian Towers, 74, former Burnley, Oldham Athletic and Bury striker.[120]
- 30 January 2015: Harold Hassall, 85, former England, Huddersfield Town and Bolton Wanderers forward.[121]
- 2 February 2015: Roy Little, 83, former Manchester City, Brighton & Hove Albion and Crystal Palace defender.[122]
- 9 February 2015: Nick Sharkey, 71, former Sunderland, Leicester City, Mansfield Town and Hartlepool United forward.[123]
- 10 February 2015: Tom McQueen, 85, former Accrington Stanley goalkeeper.[124]
- February 2015: Geoff Morris, 65, former Walsall, Shrewsbury Town and Port Vale winger.[125]
- 3 March 2015: Dave Mackay, 80, former Scotland, Tottenham Hotspur, Derby County and Swindon Town left half, who also had spells in management with Swindon Town, Nottingham Forest, Derby County, Walsall, Doncaster Rovers and Birmingham City.[126]
- 3 March 2015: Roy McCrohan, 84, former Reading, Norwich City, Colchester United and Bristol Rovers wing half.[127]
- 25 March 2015: Jimmy McGill, 68, former Arsenal, Huddersfield Town, Hull City and Halifax Town midfielder.[128]
- 25 March 2015: Ron Suart, 94, former Blackpool and Blackburn Rovers defender, who also managed Scunthorpe & Lindsay United, Blackpool and Chelsea.[129]
- 26 March 2015: Ian Moir, 71, former Manchester United, Blackpool, Chester City, Wrexham and Shrewsbury Town midfielder.[130]
- 4 April 2015: Bill Ellerington, 91, former England and Southampton full back.[131]
- 7 April 2015: Harry Dowd, 76, former Manchester City and Oldham Athletic goalkeeper.[132]
- 8 April 2015: Billy Ronson, 58, former Blackpool, Cardiff City, Wrexham and Barnsley midfielder.[133]
- 10 April 2015: Ray Treacy, 68, former Republic of Ireland, West Bromwich Albion, Charlton Athletic, Swindon Town and Preston North End striker.[134]
- 21 April 2015: Dave Walker, 73, former Burnley and Southampton defender.[135]
- 24 April 2015: Ken Birch, 81, former Everton and Southampton right half.[136]
- 27 April 2015: Chris Turner, 64, former Peterborough United, Luton Town, Cambridge United. Swindon Town and Southend United defender who also managed Cambridge United and Peterborough United.[137]
- April 2015: Gary Liddell, 60, former Leeds United, Grimsby Town and Doncaster Rovers forward.[138]
Retirements
- 13 June 2014: David Bentley, 29, former England, Arsenal, Blackburn Rovers and Tottenham Hotspur midfielder.[139]
- 19 June 2014: Phil Bolland, 37, former Oxford United, Peterborough United, Chester City and Wrexham defender.[140]
- 25 June 2014: Danny Carlton, 30, former Carlisle United, Bury and Morecambe striker.[141]
- 25 June 2014: Mike Pollitt, 42, former Lincoln City, Darlington, Notts County, Rotherham United, Chesterfield and Wigan Athletic goalkeeper.[142]
- June 2014: Josh Low, 35, former Bristol Rovers, Leyton Orient, Cardiff City, Oldham Athletic, Northampton Town, Leicester City, Peterborough United and Cheltenham Town midfielder.[143]
- 1 July 2014: Gary Alexander, 34, former Swindon Town, Hull City, Leyton Orient, Millwall, Brentford, Crawley Town and Burton Albion striker.[144]
- 4 July 2014: Guy Branston, 35, former Rotherham United, Sheffield Wednesday, Oldham Athletic, Peterborough United, Notts County, Burton Albion, Torquay United, Bradford City, Aldershot Town and Plymouth Argyle defender.[145]
- 17 July 2014: Martin Petrov, 35, former Bulgaria, Manchester City and Bolton Wanderers midfielder.[146]
- 21 July 2014: Leon Cort, 34, former Southend United, Hull City, Crystal Palace, Stoke City, Burnley and Charlton Athletic defender.[147]
- 22 July 2014: Dave Kitson, 34, former Cambridge United, Reading, Stoke City, Portsmouth, Sheffield United and Oxford United striker.[148]
- 27 August 2014: Manuel Almunia, 37, former Arsenal and Watford goalkeeper.[149]
- 22 September 2014: Adam Drury, 36, former Peterborough United, Norwich City and Leeds United defender.[150]
- 16 October 2014: William Gallas, 37, former France, Chelsea, Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur defender.[151]
- 18 October 2014: Nick Culkin, 36, former Manchester United and Queens Park Rangers goalkeeper.[152]
- 28 October 2014: Chris Iwelumo, 36, former Scotland, Stoke City, Colchester United, Charlton Athletic, Wolverhampton Wanderers, Burnley and Watford forward.[153]
- 29 October 2014: Clive Platt, 37, former Walsall, Rochdale, Notts County, Peterborough United, Milton Keynes Dons, Colchester United, Coventry City, Northampton Town and Bury forward.[154]
- 19 November 2014: Peter Løvenkrands, 34, former Denmark, Newcastle United and Birmingham City forward.[155]
- 1 December 2014: Byron Anthony, 30, former Cardiff City, Bristol Rovers, Hereford United and Newport County defender.[156]
- 3 December 2014: Matthew Etherington, 33, former Peterborough United, Tottenham Hotspur, West Ham United and Stoke City midfielder.[157]
- 16 December 2014: Thierry Henry, 37, former France and Arsenal striker, who holds the record number of goals scored for the Gunners.[158]
- 18 December 2014: Gary Doherty, 34, former Republic of Ireland, Luton Town, Tottenham Hotspur, Norwich City, Charlton Athletic and Wycombe Wanderers defender/striker.[159]
- 29 January 2015: Lloyd Owusu, 38, former Ghana, Brentford, Sheffield Wednesday, Reading, Yeovil Town, Cheltenham Town and Barnet forward.[160]
- 3 February 2015: Eddie Oshodi, 23, former Watford defender.[161]
- 28 February 2015: Gary Caldwell, 32, former Scotland and Wigan Athletic defender.[162]
- 2 March 2015: Jordan Seabright, 20, former A.F.C. Bournemouth and Dagenham & Redbridge goalkeeper.[163]
- 3 March 2015: Bradley Orr, 32, former Bristol City, Queens Park Rangers and Blackburn Rovers defender.[164]
- 7 March 2015: David Connolly, 37, former Republic of Ireland, Watford, Wimbledon, West Ham United, Leicester City, Wigan Athletic, Sunderland, Southampton, Portsmouth and AFC Wimbledon striker.[165]
- 8 April 2015: Barry Ferguson, 37, former Scotland, Blackburn Rovers, Birmingham City and Blackpool midfielder.[166]
- 23 April 2015: Marc Tierney, 29, former Oldham Athletic, Shrewsbury Town, Colchester United, Norwich City and Bolton Wanderers defender[167]
- 2 May 2015: Richard Lee, 32, former Watford and Brentford goalkeeper.[168]
- 2 May 2015: Stewart Drummond, 39, former Chester City, Shrewsbury Town and Morecambe midfielder, who is Morecambe's record appearance holder in the Football League.[169]
- 2 May 2015: Kevin Miller, 46, former Exeter City, Birmingham City, Watford, Crystal Palace, Barnsley, Bristol Rovers and Southampton goalkeeper.[170]
Notes
- ^ Although Pearce was announced on as new manager on 3 April, his official tenure began on 1 July
- ^ Moore was suspended from his duties for gambling-related offences on 17 February, before being formally dismissed on 9 April. John McMahon managed Tranmere from Moore's suspension until the end of the season.
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- ^ [1]
- ^ In Memoriam
- ^ Former Peterborough United player and manager Chris Turner dies, aged 64, in a Wisbech nursing home
- ^ Former Grimsby Town player Garry Liddell passes away
- ^ "David Bentley: Former England midfielder retires at 29". BBC Sport. 13 June 2014. Retrieved 13 June 2014.
- ^ "Former Chester and Wrexham defender Bolland knew it was right time to retire". Chesterfirst.co.uk. 2014-06-19. Retrieved 2014-06-19.
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- ^ "Mike Pollitt named Goalkeeper Coach". BBC Football. 25 June 2014. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
- ^ "Former Bristol Rovers and Cheltenham Town ace Josh Low retires as Ben Adelsbury and Sekani Simpson sign new Bath City deals". The Bath Chronicle. 27 August 2014. Retrieved 17 June 2014.
- ^ "Lions legend Gary Alexander retires". South London Press. 2014-07-01. Retrieved 2014-07-01.
- ^ "Football has got softer says retiring defender". BBC Sport. 2014-07-04. Retrieved 2014-07-04.
- ^ "Former Bolton Wanderers and Manchester City star Martin Petrov announces his retirement from football". The Bolton News. 2014-07-17. Retrieved 2014-07-17.
- ^ "Leon Cort confirms retirement and will not be coming back to Southend United". Echo News. 2014-07-21. Retrieved 2014-07-21.
- ^ "Dave Kitson: Former Oxford, Stoke City and Reading striker retires". BBC Sport. 22 July 2014. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
- ^ "Former Arsenal goalkeeper Manuel Almunia retires after Cagliari medical reveals heart problems". Mirror Online. 27 August 2014. Retrieved 27 August 2014.
- ^ "Darren Huckerby leads tributes from ex-team-mates as Norwich City legend Adam Drury retires". Eastern Daily Press. 22 September 2014.
- ^ "William Gallas, the former Chelsea, Arsenal and Spurs defender, retires from football". Daily Mail. 16 October 2014.
- ^ "FC head to Ilkeston as keeper hangs up gloves". FC United of Manchester. 18 October 2014.
- ^ "Chris Iwelumo: Chester and Scotland striker retires". BBC Sport. 28 October 2014. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
- ^ "Persistent injury problem leads to retirement for Clive Platt". Bury F.C. 29 October 2014. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
- ^ "Peter Lovenkrands: Ex-Rangers and Newcastle striker retires". http://www.bbc.co.uk/. BBC Sport. 19 November 2014. Retrieved 19 November 2014.
{{cite web}}
: External link in
(help)|website=
- ^ "Newport County: Ex-Wales Under-21 defender Byron Anthony retires". http://www.bbc.co.uk/. BBC Sport. 1 December 2014. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
{{cite web}}
: External link in
(help)|website=
- ^ "Etherington announces retirement". Daily Mail. 3 December 2014. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
- ^ "Thierry Henry: Former Arsenal and France striker retires". BBC Sport. 16 December 2014. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
- ^ "Gary Doherty: Ex-Norwich City defender forced to retire by injury". BBC Sport. 18 December 2014. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
- ^ "Lloyd Owusu retires". Brentford Football Club. 29 January 2015. Retrieved 29 January 2015.
- ^ "Eddie Oshodi: Forest Green defender quits football at 23". BBC Sport. 3 February 2015. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
- ^ "Former Scotland captain Gary Caldwell forced to quit". Daily Express. 28 February 2015.
- ^ Jordan Seabright: Torquay keeper quits to become car salesman BBC Sport. Retrieved 2 March 2015.
- ^ Bradley Orr: Blackburn Rovers full-back announces retirement BBC Sport. Retrieved 2 March 2015.
- ^ "David Connolly: AFC Wimbledon's former Ireland striker retires". BBC Sport. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
- ^ "Barry Ferguson: Clyde manager retires from playing at 37". BBC Sport. BBC. 9 April 2015. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
- ^ Marc Tierney retires from professional football Bolton Wanderers FC. Retrieved 23 April 2015.
- ^ "Brentford goalkeeper Richard Lee to retire at end of 2014-15 season". Brentford Football Club. 2 January 2015. Retrieved 2 January 2015.
- ^ http://www.thevisitor.co.uk/sport/football/morecambe-fc/morecambe-legend-drummond-announces-retirement-1-7231993
- ^ http://www.cornishguardian.co.uk/Brilliant-St-Austell-clinch-South-West-Peninsula/story-26398042-detail/story.html