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2000–01 Barnsley F.C. season

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Barnsley
2000–01 season
ChairmanJohn Dennis
ManagerDave Bassett (until 19 December)
Nigel Spackman (from 8 January)
StadiumOakwell
First Division16th
FA CupThird round
League CupThird round
Top goalscorerLeague: Bruce Dyer and Neil Shipperley (14)
All: Neil Shipperley (16)
Average home league attendance14,465

During the 2000–01 English football season, Barnsley F.C. competed in the Football League First Division.

Season summary

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With Craig Hignett and Nicky Eaden departing, manager Dave Bassett brought in inexperienced Carl Regan and Lee Jones to bolster the squad in the hopes that Barnsley would finally return to the Premiership. However, Barnsley's increasingly rapid turnover of managers was to continue during the season with Bassett leaving in December, a surprise decision to most.[1] Nigel Spackman was brought in to replace Bassett,[2] and the team eventually finished in sixteenth position, above Sheffield Wednesday by virtue of goal difference.

Final league table

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
14 Crewe Alexandra 46 15 10 21 47 62 −15 55
15 Norwich City 46 14 12 20 46 58 −12 54
16 Barnsley 46 15 9 22 49 62 −13 54
17 Sheffield Wednesday 46 15 8 23 52 71 −19 53
18 Grimsby Town 46 14 10 22 43 62 −19 52
Source: [citation needed]
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored

Results

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Barnsley's score comes first[3]

Legend

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Win Draw Loss

Football League First Division

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Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Scorers
12 August 2000 Norwich City H 1–0 15,640 Jones
19 August 2000 Watford A 0–1 13,186
26 August 2000 West Bromwich Albion H 4–1 14,321 Jones (2), Shipperley (2)
28 August 2000 Birmingham City A 1–4 17,160 Appleby
10 September 2000 Fulham A 1–5 10,437 Appleby
12 September 2000 Crystal Palace A 0–1 16,297
16 September 2000 Queens Park Rangers H 4–2 12,763 Darlington (own goal), Shipperley, van der Laan, Dyer
23 September 2000 Crewe Alexandra A 2–2 5,738 Barnard (pen), Dyer
30 September 2000 Grimsby Town H 2–0 13,096 Chettle, Shipperley
6 October 2000 Huddersfield Town A 1–1 13,556 Kozluk (own goal)
14 October 2000 Nottingham Forest H 3–4 14,831 Shipperley (2), Dyer
17 October 2000 Tranmere Rovers H 1–1 12,412 Barnard (pen)
21 October 2000 Gillingham A 0–0 9,030
24 October 2000 Wolverhampton Wanderers H 1–2 13,393 McClare
27 October 2000 Preston North End A 2–1 13,566 Dyer, Sheron
5 November 2000 Wimbledon H 0–1 13,641
8 November 2000 Blackburn Rovers H 1–2 13,622 Ripley
11 November 2000 Bolton Wanderers A 0–2 13,406
18 November 2000 Sheffield Wednesday H 1–0 19,989 Dyer
25 November 2000 Portsmouth H 1–0 12,853 Dyer
2 December 2000 Wolverhampton Wanderers A 0–2 17,340
9 December 2000 Sheffield United H 0–0 16,780
16 December 2000 Stockport County A 0–2 5,383
23 December 2000 Norwich City A 0–0 16,581
26 December 2000 Burnley H 1–0 18,725 Morgan
29 December 2000 Watford H 0–1 13,820
1 January 2001 West Bromwich Albion A 0–1 19,423
13 January 2001 Birmingham City H 2–3 13,631 Dyer, Jones
20 January 2001 Burnley A 1–2 15,380 Hayward
3 February 2001 Blackburn Rovers A 0–0 18,573
10 February 2001 Fulham H 0–0 14,654
17 February 2001 Queens Park Rangers A 0–2 9,388
20 February 2001 Crystal Palace H 1–0 12,909 Shipperley
24 February 2001 Crewe Alexandra H 3–0 13,175 Jones, Wright (own goal), Shipperley
3 March 2001 Grimsby Town A 2–0 5,996 Dyer (2)
7 March 2001 Nottingham Forest A 0–1 18,788
10 March 2001 Huddersfield Town H 3–1 15,290 Dyer (2), Shipperley
17 March 2001 Tranmere Rovers A 3–2 8,484 Dyer, Shipperley, Rankin
25 March 2001 Gillingham H 3–1 13,609 Dyer (2), Shipperley (pen)
31 March 2001 Stockport County H 0–2 13,203
7 April 2001 Sheffield United A 2–1 22,811 Bullock, Shipperley
14 April 2001 Wimbledon A 1–1 7,609 Shipperley
16 April 2001 Preston North End H 0–4 16,361
21 April 2001 Sheffield Wednesday A 1–2 23,498 Shipperley
28 April 2001 Bolton Wanderers H 0–1 13,979
6 May 2001 Portsmouth A 0–3 13,064

FA Cup

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Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R3 6 January 2001 Leeds United A 0–1 32,386

League Cup

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Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R1 1st Leg 22 August 2000 Rotherham United A 1–0 4,940 Barnard
R1 2nd Leg 5 September 2000 Rotherham United H 3–2 (won 4–2 on agg) 8,088 Sheron (2), Barnard
R2 1st Leg 19 September 2000 Crewe Alexandra H 4–0 5,005 Dyer, van der Laan, Sheron (2)
R2 2nd Leg 26 September 2000 Crewe Alexandra A 3–0 (won 7–0 on agg) 1,775 Shipperley (2), Sheron
R3 1 November 2000 Stoke City A 2–3 10,480 Corbo, Jones

Squad

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Squad at end of season[4]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF England ENG Carl Regan
3 MF England ENG Matty Appleby
4 DF England ENG Mitch Ward
5 MF England ENG Steve Hayward
6 DF Finland FIN Janne Salli
7 MF South Africa RSA Eric Tinkler
8 FW Wales WAL Lee Jones
9 FW England ENG Neil Shipperley
10 FW England ENG Bruce Dyer[5]
11 MF England ENG Darren Barnard
12 FW England ENG Mike Sheron
13 GK England ENG Leigh Walker
14 MF England ENG Martin Bullock
16 DF England ENG Lee Crooks
17 MF England ENG Sean McClare
18 DF England ENG Chris Morgan
19 DF England ENG Antony Kay
20 GK England ENG Kevin Miller
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 MF Scotland SCO Alex Neil
22 DF Republic of Ireland IRL Brian O'Callaghan
23 MF England ENG Carl Barrowclough
24 DF Scotland SCO James Dudgeon[6]
25 DF England ENG Kevin Austin
26 MF England ENG Ricky Ravenhill
27 DF England ENG Chris Barker
28 DF Scotland SCO Keith Brown
29 FW New Zealand NZL Rory Fallon[7]
30 DF Uruguay URU Mateo Corbo
31 DF England ENG Steve Chettle
33 DF New Zealand NZL Dave Mulligan[8]
34 MF New Zealand NZL Leo Bertos
35 DF England ENG Jon Parkin
36 GK England ENG Richard Siddall
37 FW England ENG Isaiah Rankin
40 GK Wales WAL Andy Marriott

Left club during season

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Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK England ENG David Watson (retired)
5 DF England ENG Adie Moses (on loan from Stockport County)
6 DF England ENG Scott Jones (to Bristol Rovers)
15 MF Netherlands NED Robbie van der Laan (Retired)
16 MF England ENG Geoff Thomas (to Notts County)
No. Pos. Nation Player
23 FW England ENG Mike Turner (to Doncaster Rovers)
32 MF England ENG Ian Woan (to Swindon Town)
32 MF England ENG Neil Maddison (on loan from Middlesbrough)
35 MF England ENG Stuart Ripley (on loan from Southampton)
DF Scotland SCO Jim Lauchlan (on loan from Kilmarnock)

References

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  1. ^ "Bassett quits Barnsley". BBC Sport. 19 December 2000. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  2. ^ "Spackman named Barnsley boss". BBC Sport. 8 January 2001. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  3. ^ "Barnsley 2000-2001 Home - statto.com". Archived from the original on 28 September 2012. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  4. ^ "FootballSquads - Barnsley - 2000/01". www.footballsquads.co.uk.
  5. ^ Dyer was born in Redbridge, England, and represented them at U-21 level, but played a friendly game for Montserrat against Ashford Town in September 2007.
  6. ^ Dudgeon was born in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, but represented Scotland at youth level.
  7. ^ Fallon was born in Gisborne, New Zealand, but represented England internationally at every youth level before changing his nationality to English. He later changed his nationality back to New Zealander and made his international debut for New Zealand in August 2009.
  8. ^ Mulligan was born in Liverpool, England, but qualified to represent New Zealand internationally and made his full debut for New Zealand in October 2002, having previously represented them at U-17, U-20 and U-23 level.