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2016–17 Stoke City F.C. season

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Stoke City
2016–17 season
ChairmanPeter Coates
ManagerMark Hughes
Stadiumbet365 Stadium
League CupThird Round

The 2016–17 season will be Stoke City's ninth season in the Premier League and the 61st in the top tier of English football.[1]

Following last season's third-straight ninth-place finish, Mark Hughes brought in Joe Allen, Wilfried Bony, Lee Grant, Bruno Martins Indi and Ramadan Sobhi. However, Stoke's poor form at the end of last season continued at the start of 2016–17 as in the first six matches they managed to pick up just two points, which meant they ended September in the relegation zone.

Pre-season

In April 2016, Stoke announced that from the 2016–17 season, the Britannia Stadium will be renamed the bet365 Stadium, with the capacity to be increased to 30,000 for the start of the 2017–18 season.[2][3] The club also announced a five-year contract with kit manufacturer Macron, described by chief executive Tony Scholes as the biggest kit deal in the club's history.[4] Stoke announced their retained list in June 2016; departing the club were experienced duo Peter Odemwingie and Steve Sidwell along with development squad players Ben Barber, Ed Dryden, Bobby Moseley, Ryan O'Reilly, Petros Skapits and Mason Watkins-Clarke.[5]

The Stoke squad returned to training on 8 July 2016, where they then went on a six-day training camp in Kitzbühel, Austria.[6][7] Stoke's first pre-season match saw them lose 3–0 to a much fitter Burton Albion side with goals from Lucas Akins and a brace from Chris O'Grady.[8] Stoke then played out a 1–1 draw against Preston North End at Deepdale, with Mame Biram Diouf cancelling out Daniel Johnson's opener.[9] Stoke made their first signings of the season on 25 July 2016 with the arrival of Egyptian winger Ramadan Sobhi from Al Ahly for £5 million and Welsh midfielder Joe Allen from Liverpool for £13 million.[10][11] The squad then travelled out to Florida for a ten-day training camp.[12] Stoke earned their first win of pre-season on 27 July 2016 with a 2–1 win against Major League Soccer side Orlando City, with goals from Bojan and Diouf.[13] Stoke also played against Orlando's B team in a behind closed doors match which Stoke won 5–0.[14] Stoke ended their low-key pre-season with a 1–0 defeat at German Bundesliga club Hamburger SV.[15]

Match Date Opponent Venue Result Scorers Report
1 16 July 2016 Burton Albion A 0–3 Report
2 23 July 2016 Preston North End A 1–1 Diouf 54' Report
3 27 July 2016 Orlando City A 2–1 Diouf 48', Bojan 64' Report
4 1 August 2016 Orlando City B A 5–0 Shaqiri 22', 29' (2), Joselu 51', Diouf 63', Arnautović 82' Report
5 6 August 2016 Hamburger SV A 0–1 Report

Premier League

August

Stoke began their ninth season in the Premier League with a trip to newly promoted Middlesbrough on 13 August. Stoke suffered a blow prior to the match with Jack Butland being ruled out due to injury.[16] Stoke made a terrible start to the game with Boro's new signing Álvaro Negredo scoring after 11 minutes and Gastón Ramírez hit the post as Aitor Karanka's side controlled the first half. Stoke improved after the break and earned a point thanks to a Xherdan Shaqiri free-kick.[17][18]

Stoke's first home match at the newly re-branded bet365 Stadium was against Pep Guardiola's Manchester City. Manchester City took the lead in controversial fashion after referee Mike Dean awarded a penalty against Ryan Shawcross for shirt pulling, Sergio Agüero, scoring from the spot. Agüero then made it 2–0 with a header before Dean awarded Stoke a penalty for the same offence he gave Man City. Bojan converted his spot-kick but it was Manchester City substitute Nolito who sealed the three points for the away side with two late goals.[19][20]

The final match of August was away at Ronald Koeman's Everton where Stoke lost 1–0 to a controversial penalty. After a goalless first half Michael Oliver awarded Everton a penalty just after half time for Phil Bardsley tangling with Ashley Williams from a corner. Shay Given pushed Leighton Baines' spot-kick on to the post but the ball then rebounded off Given's head and in.[21][22] After the match, Oliver's decision was criticised by Mark Hughes, Glenn Whelan and Peter Coates.[23][24][25]

Stoke had a busy transfer deadline day with the loan arrivals of Wilfried Bony, Bruno Martins Indi and Lee Grant, while Joselu and Philipp Wollscheid both departed on season-long loans.[26]

September

Hughes gave debuts to new signings Wilfried Bony and Bruno Martins Indi for the visit of Tottenham Hotspur following the international break. After an even opening half hour the game changed when Mark Hughes was sent-off by Antony Taylor for arguing with fourth official Jon Moss, Hughes later admitted he deserved to be sent-off.[27] From then on, Stoke lost their focus and put in an abject performance and goals from Dele Alli, Harry Kane and a brace from Son Heung-min earned Spurs a second-straight 4–0 win at Stoke.[28][29] Afterwards, chairman Peter Coates heavily criticized the team's performance, saying, "We fell to pieces."[30]

There was no improvement the following week away at Crystal Palace as Stoke again put in a woeful performance and conceded four goals for a third time. Scott Dann, James McArthur, James Tomkins and Andros Townsend scored for Palace with Marko Arnautović scoring a last minute consolation. The result kept Stoke rock bottom of the Premier League and increased the pressure on Mark Hughes.[31][32]

Following their EFL Cup exit to Hull City, Stoke came up against midlands rivals West Bromwich Albion and former manager Tony Pulis, who was in charge of his 1,000th match.[33] In what was a hard fought encounter, Stoke took the lead in the 73rd minute through Joe Allen's first goal for the Potters. Stoke, however, were unable to see out their first win of the season as a mix-up between Bruno Martins Indi and debutant Lee Grant gifted West Brom a late corner which was duly headed in by Salomón Rondón.[34][35]

October

Stoke then travelled to Old Trafford to play Manchester United on 2 October. Lee Grant made a number of fine saves to deny Manchester United from taking the lead in the first half before he was eventuality beaten by Anthony Martial on 69 minutes. Joe Allen scored for the second match running, earning Stoke a 1–1 draw, their first point at Old Trafford since 1980.[36][37]

Following the international break, Stoke played against Sunderland, the only other team without a Premier League victory. Stoke won the match 2–0 with Joe Allen scoring twice in the first half to lift some of the pressure off Mark Hughes. Goalkeeper Lee Grant had little to do as the Black Cats put in an inept performance and City earned the first clean sheet in the league since March.[38][39]

Stoke then travelled to the KCOM Stadium to take on Mike Phelan's Hull City on 22 October. The Potters produced their best performance of the season, comfortably winning the match 2–0 with two long range strikes from Xherdan Shaqiri.[40][41] The result lifted the team out of the relegation zone and was also Stoke's 100th win in the Premier League.[42] There was an incident after the final whistle where Stoke had three players booked for a confrontation with Sam Clucas.[43]

Swansea City, now under the management of Bob Bradley, traveled to the Potteries on 31 October. Stoke made the perfect start to the match, with Wilfried Bony scoring his first goal for the against his former employers after just three minutes. The Swans, however, hit back soon after with a header from Wayne Routledge. Stoke then hit the post three times in quick succession before retaking the lead after half time after Ramadan Sobhi's low cross was turned into his own net by Alfie Mawson. Bony scored again late on to earn Stoke a 3–1 victory.[44][45]

November

Stoke made their first visit to West Ham United's London Stadium on 5 November. After a drab first half, West Ham took the lead when Michail Antonio's header was deflected in by Glenn Whelan for an own goal. Stoke earned a point after a mistake from Hammers' goalkeeper Adrian let in Bojan to fire into an empty net.[46]

After the international break Stoke took on Eddie Howe's Bournemouth at home. The Cherries were the better side and took the lead in the first half through a set play which was headed in by Nathan Aké. Stoke did have the chance to draw level but Bojan missed a second half penalty.[47]

The final match of November was against Watford at Vicarage Road, Hughes made five changes to his side which included the return of Giannelli Imbula. It paid off as Stoke dominated the match and scored the only goal of the encounter in the first half after Charlie Adam's header hit the post but then deflected in off Hornets' goalkeeper Heurelho Gomes for an own goal. It was a poor day for Watford and they had Miguel Britos sent-off late on for two bookable offences.[48]

Results

Match Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Scorers Report
1 13 August 2016 Middlesbrough A 1–1 32,110 Shaqiri 67' Report
2 20 August 2016 Manchester City H 1–4 27,455 Bojan 49' (pen) Report
3 27 August 2016 Everton A 0–1 39,581 Report
4 10 September 2016 Tottenham Hotspur H 0–4 27,835 Report
5 18 September 2016 Crystal Palace A 1–4 23,781 Arnautović 90+4' Report
6 24 September 2016 West Bromwich Albion H 1–1 27,645 Allen 73' Report
7 2 October 2016 Manchester United A 1–1 75,251 Allen 82' Report
8 15 October 2016 Sunderland H 2–0 27,701 Allen (2) 8', 45+1' Report
9 22 October 2016 Hull City A 2–0 18,522 Shaqiri (2) 26', 50' Report
10 31 October 2016 Swansea City H 3–1 26,602 Bony (2) 3', 73', Mawson 55' (o.g.) Report
11 5 November 2016 West Ham United A 1–1 56,970 Bojan 75' Report
12 19 November 2016 Bournemouth H 0–1 27,815 Report
13 27 November 2016 Watford A 1–0 20,058 Gomes 29' (o.g.) Report
14 3 December 2016 Burnley H 2–0 27,306 Walters 20', Muniesa 35' Report
15 10 December 2016 Arsenal A

League table

Template:2016–17 Premier League table

FA Cup

League Cup

Stoke were drawn away against League Two side Stevenage in the second round of the re-branded EFL Cup in what was the first meeting between the clubs. Stoke comfortably won the tie 4–0 with Peter Crouch scoring a hat-trick and Phil Bardsley scoring from 30-yards.[49][50] Stoke were then knocked out of the competition by Hull City despite Marko Arnautović opening the scoring goals from Ryan Mason and Markus Henriksen earned the Tigers passage to the next round.[51][52]

Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Scorers Report
R2 23 August 2016 Stevenage A 4–0 3,363 Crouch (3) 14', 48', 70', Bardsley 32' Report
R3 21 September 2016 Hull City H 1–2 10,550 Arnautović 24' Report

Squad statistics

No. Pos. Name Premier League FA Cup League Cup Total Discipline
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
1 GK England Jack Butland 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2 DF Scotland Phil Bardsley 8(1) 0 0 0 1 1 9(1) 1 2 0
3 DF Netherlands Erik Pieters 13 0 0 0 1(1) 0 14(1) 0 2 0
4 MF Wales Joe Allen 11(2) 4 0 0 2 0 13(2) 4 5 0
5 DF Spain Marc Muniesa 2(1) 1 0 0 1 0 3(1) 1 1 0
6 MF Republic of Ireland Glenn Whelan 11(1) 0 0 0 1 0 12(1) 0 2 0
7 MF Republic of Ireland Stephen Ireland 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
8 DF England Glen Johnson 5(1) 0 0 0 1 0 6(1) 0 0 0
10 FW Austria Marko Arnautović 13 1 0 0 2 1 15 2 5 0
12 FW Ivory Coast Wilfried Bony 9 2 0 0 1 0 10 2 1 0
14 MF Netherlands Ibrahim Afellay 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
15 DF Netherlands Bruno Martins Indi 11 0 0 0 1 0 12 0 1 0
16 MF Scotland Charlie Adam 5(3) 0 0 0 1(1) 0 6(4) 0 3 0
17 DF England Ryan Shawcross (c) 12 0 0 0 2 0 14 0 3 0
18 FW Senegal Mame Biram Diouf 5(4) 0 0 0 0(1) 0 5(5) 0 1 0
19 FW Republic of Ireland Jonathan Walters 5(7) 1 0 0 1 0 6(7) 1 0 0
20 DF United States Geoff Cameron 7 0 0 0 2 0 9 0 1 0
21 MF France Giannelli Imbula 6 0 0 0 1 0 7 0 1 0
22 MF Switzerland Xherdan Shaqiri 9 3 0 0 0 0 9 3 1 0
24 GK Republic of Ireland Shay Given 5 0 0 0 1 0 6 0 1 0
25 FW England Peter Crouch 1(7) 0 0 0 1 3 2(7) 3 0 0
26 DF Germany Philipp Wollscheid 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0
27 FW Spain Bojan Krkić 4(3) 2 0 0 0(1) 0 4(4) 2 1 0
29 GK Denmark Jakob Haugaard 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
32 MF Egypt Ramadan Sobhi 1(3) 0 0 0 1(1) 0 2(4) 0 0 0
33 GK England Lee Grant 9 0 0 0 1 0 10 0 0 0
Own goals 2 0 0 2

Transfers

In

Date Pos. Name From Fee
25 July 2016 MF Wales Joe Allen England Liverpool £13 million[11][53]
25 July 2016 MF Egypt Ramadan Sobhi Egypt Al Ahly £5 million[10][54]
5 August 2016 DF Republic of Ireland Ryan Sweeney England AFC Wimbledon £250,000[55]
31 August 2016 DF England Cameron McJannet England Luton Town Undisclosed[56]
29 September 2016 DF Scotland Harry Souttar Scotland Dundee United Undisclosed[57]

Out

Date Pos. Name To Fee
1 July 2016 DF England Ben Barber England York City Free[58][59]
1 July 2016 FW Nigeria Peter Odemwingie England Rotherham United Free[5][60]
1 July 2016 MF England Steve Sidwell England Brighton & Hove Albion Free[5][61]
1 July 2016 MF England Ed Dryden Released Free[5]
1 July 2016 DF Republic of Ireland Bobby Moseley England Solihull Moors Free[5]
1 July 2016 DF Republic of Ireland Ryan O'Reilly Released Free[5]
1 July 2016 FW Australia Peter Skapetis Released Free[5]
1 July 2016 DF Republic of Ireland Mason Watkins-Clark Released Free[5]
1 July 2016 FW Germany Yusuf Coban Germany 1899 Hoffenheim Free[62]
1 July 2016 GK Australia Dominic Kurasik England Brentford Free[63]
1 July 2016 GK Australia Chris Marques England Nottingham Forest Free[64]
1 July 2016 DF England Toby Wells Scotland Aberdeen Free[65]
15 August 2016 DF Republic of Ireland Marc Wilson England AFC Bournemouth £2 million[66][67]

Loan in

Date from Date to Pos. Name From
31 August 2016 30 June 2017[a] FW Ivory Coast Wilfried Bony England Manchester City[69][70]
31 August 2016 3 January 2017 GK England Lee Grant England Derby County[71][70]
31 August 2016 30 June 2017 DF Netherlands Bruno Martins Indi Portugal Porto[72][70]
  1. ^ A £2 million loan fee is applied for Bony's loan.[68]

Loan out

Date from Date to Pos. Name To
1 July 2016 1 September 2017[a] MF England Mark Waddington Scotland Kilmarnock[74]
15 August 2016 1 January 2017 MF Morocco Moha El Ouriachi England Shrewsbury Town[75]
15 August 2016 1 January 2017 FW England George Waring England Shrewsbury Town[75]
31 August 2016 30 June 2017[b] DF Germany Philipp Wollscheid Germany Wolfsburg[77]
31 August 2016 30 June 2017 FW Spain Joselu Spain Deportivo de La Coruña[78]
  1. ^ On 1 September 2016, Kilmarnock released Mark Waddington cutting his loan deal short.[73]
  2. ^ A £1.1 million loan fee has been applied to Wollscheid's loan.[76]

Under-23s

Premier League 2 Division 2

Match Date Opponent Venue Result Scorers Report
1 13 August 2016 West Ham United H 0–3 Report
2 22 August 2016 Norwich City A 1–0 Abdallah Report
3 27 August 2016 Blackburn Rovers H 0–1 Report
4 12 September 2016 Newcastle United A 1–1 N'Goy Report
5 17 September 2016 Fulham H 1–2 Waddington Report
6 26 September 2016 West Bromwich Albion A 1–2 N'Goy Report
7 14 October 2016 Middlesbrough H 3–1 N'Goy, Telford (2) Report
8 22 October 2016 Brighton & Hove Albion H 1–1 Telford Report
9 31 October 2016 Swansea City A 1–2 Campbell Report
10 26 November 2016 Aston Villa H 2–4 Abdallah, Shenton Report
11 12 December 2016 Blackburn Rovers A
12 16 December 2016 Newcastle United H
13 9 January 2017 Fulham A
14 14 January 2017 West Bromwich Albion H
15 30 January 2017 Middlesbrough A
16 4 February 2017 Wolverhampton Wanderers H
17 20 February 2017 Aston Villa A
18 6 March 2017 West Ham United A
19 11 March 2017 Norwich City H
20 10 April 2017 Brighton & Hove Albion A
21 22 April 2017 Swansea City H
22 Wolverhampton Wanderers A

EFL Trophy

Round Date Opponent Venue Result Scorers Report
Northern Section Group C Match 1 30 August 2016 Bradford City A 0–1 Report
Northern Section Group C Match 2 4 October 2016 Morecambe A 1–3 Adam Report
Northern Section Group C Match 3 8 November 2016 Bury H 1–1 Bojan Report

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