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2007–08 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season

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Queens Park Rangers
2007–2008 season
ChairmanGianni Paladini
ManagerJohn Gregory
Mick Harford
Luigi De Canio
StadiumLoftus Road
Championship14th
FA CupThird round
League CupFirst round
Top goalscorerLeague:
All: Akos Buzsaky 10
Highest home attendance18,309 4 May 2008 West Bromwich Albion
Lowest home attendance5,260 14 October 2007 Leyton Orient
Average home league attendance13,958

During the 2007–08 season, Queens Park Rangers were playing in the Football League Championship.

Review

Pre-season

Manager John Gregory began rebuilding the squad before the new season, bringing in Daniel Nardiello, Chris Barker and John Curtis on free transfers. Andrew Howell, Kieron St Aimie and Aaron Goode all signed one-year professional contracts after impressing in the youth team under Joe Gallen, who was later sacked, despite his under 18s winning the league. Gregory also signed more backroom staff, including Paul Hunter as the new physio, Mick Harford as assistant manager, Ed de Goey and Warren Neill as coaches and Steve Brown and Keith Ryan as youth team coaches. Creative left winger Lee Cook was sold to rivals Fulham for a deal reported as potentially worth between £2.5 million and £4.5 million. Michael Mancienne also extended his loan for a further season. On 26 July, QPR completed the loan signing of Ben Sahar for three months (subsequently extended until January 2008). The signings of Lee Camp and Simon Walton followed the day after on 27 July, totalling £500,000.

During pre-season, new signing Simon Walton fractured his leg in a non-competitive 2–1 victory against Fulham and was side-lined for several months.

Tragic start

The season began turbulently, with a draw against recently promoted Bristol City, a loss in the League Cup 2–1 at home to League One Leyton Orient followed by a further 2–0 defeat at home by Cardiff City. The match against Burnley on 25 August was postponed after promising teenage player Ray Jones was killed in a car crash in the early hours of the morning.[1] A week later QPR crashed to a 3–0 defeat at home to Southampton, followed by a draw with Leicester and a further home defeat by Plymouth (0–2) before picking up only their second point of the month (and the third of the season) at home to Watford on 22 September.

New manager

On 1 October it was announced that John Gregory had been sacked after 13 months in charge. This came after a comprehensive 5–1 defeat in front of the Sky Sports cameras against West Bromwich Albion on 30 September. First-team coach Mick Harford was placed in temporary charge.[2] Three consecutive fixtures against East Anglian opposition saw Rangers defeated at the hands of Colchester before earning their first win of the season at home to Norwich and salvaging a draw with Ipswich at Loftus Road. After a goalless draw at Preston and a rare victory away to Charlton, Harford left the club later in the month and was replaced by Luigi De Canio. His first game in charge was a 2–0 victory against Hull City.[3]

Signs of recovery

Following the arrival of De Canio, Rangers endured defeats at the hands of Coventry, Stoke, Blackpool and Crystal Palace before a brief run of four games without defeat in mid-December indicated signs of a recovery. On 11 December 2007 QPR were drawn away from home at Chelsea in the third round of the FA Cup, a tie due to be played on 5 January 2008. The fixture would be the first competitive West London derby between the two sides since 1996.

The Christmas and New Year period was largely successful for the club with Rangers bouncing back from a defeat at Plymouth on Boxing Day and picking up wins away from home at second-placed Watford (4–2) and at Loftus Road against fellow strugglers Leicester (3–1).

Investment

Shortly prior to the traditional Christmas fixture period on 20 December 2007 it was announced that the family of Lakshmi Mittal had purchased a 20 per cent shareholding in the club. As part of the investment Lakshmi Mittal's son-in-law took a place on the board of directors.[4] Continuing the theme of previous seasons a number of loan signings featured for the club including Gavin Mahon, Ákos Buzsáky and Rowan Vine. The investment potential of the club's new backers resulted in a number of speculative storylines in the football press throughout the season, including rumoured signings of former World Player of the Year winners Luís Figo and Zinedine Zidane, the latter as a possible manager.[5]

New recruits

Rangers signed several players during the January transfer window: Ákos Buzsáky who had previously been on loan from Plymouth Argyle, Hogan Ephraim from West Ham, Kieran Lee on loan from Manchester United, Gavin Mahon on loan from Watford, Matthew Connolly from Arsenal, Patrick Agyemang from Preston and Fitz Hall from Wigan. Early in January QPR also managed to secure striker Rowan Vine in a permanent move following his brief loan spell which had ended in December.

January onwards

Around 6,000 Rangers fans made the short trip to Stamford Bridge on the first weekend in January to see QPR put up a determined effort against their Premier League neighbours Chelsea in the FA Cup third round. Ultimately the R's lost 1–0 to an unfortunate deflected own goal from Lee Camp. The Cup defeat was followed by defeat away to Sheffield United. The month ended for Rangers with a 2–0 home win over Barnsley followed by a defeat at Cardiff. As the January transfer window closed, QPR secured American goalkeeper Matt Pickens and Northern Irish defender Damien Delaney and parted ways with a number of players including Marcus Bignot, Danny Cullip, Nick Ward, Dominic Shimmin, Sampsa Timoska, Shabazz Baidoo, Kieron St Aimie, Stefan Moore and Pat Kanyuka. Adam Bolder, Daniel Nardiello and Simon Walton were also put out on loan.

February

The club started February well defeating third-placed Bristol City 3–0 at Loftus Road followed by a 3–2 away win at Southampton. Showing some signs of a recovery from the start to the season, the Southampton victory left QPR 6 points off the playoffs and 8 points above the relegation zone. At the same time, Flavio Briatore took over from Alejandro Agag as the chairman of QPR's holding company.[6] Briatore's arrival also signalled the demise of the club mascot, 'Jude the stadium cat'. According to newspaper reports, the black cat was incompatible with Briatore's superstitions and the matchday programme on 2 February subsequently announced Jude the Cat had "gone on holiday".[7] On 12 February the club's erratic form then saw them fall to a 6th home defeat of the season, losing to Burnley 2–4 after at one stage leading 2–0.

Taking advantage of their next league fixture opponents Barnsley playing Liverpool in the FA Cup on 16 February, QPR organised a mid-season training camp to the Vale de Lobo resort in the Algarve region of Portugal.[8] Gareth Ainsworth was appointed club captain in place of Adam Bolder following his loan move to Sheffield Wednesday. Rangers closed out February with draws against Sheffield United (1–1) at home and away in the rearranged fixture with Barnsley (0–0).

March

A televised fixture at home to Stoke on 2 March saw QPR convincingly defeat the second-placed side 3–0, continuing the club's successful form against the top sides in the division.[9] In contrast, Rangers' following game against relegation-zone Coventry City ended in a hard-fought 0–0 draw with Coventry dominating much of the play, acknowledged by the praise directed at Lee Camp for his goalkeeping performance.[10][11] Similarly their next game against a struggling Sheffield Wednesday at Hillsborough saw them lose 2–1,[12] before returning to winning ways at home to Blackpool (3–2); a result which left them 12th in the league, 8 points outside the play-offs and 7 points above the relegation zone.[13] Reflecting the increasingly high profile of the club, the mid-week Blackpool match was watched from the Directors' Box by Asantehene King Otumfuo Nana Osei Tutu II as well as Real Madrid's president, Ramón Calderón accompanying the club's three owners Mittal, Ecclestone and Briatore.[14] Continuing their solid home form in which Rangers had lost just once in their previous ten games at Loftus Road and scored 22 goals, the club ran out 3–1 winners against a Scunthorpe side battling relegation. With only seven fixtures remaining, the victory meant QPR remained 12th in the Championship, 7 points from the play-off positions and 8 points clear of relegation.[15] Continuing speculation around the level of new investment in the club fuelled rumours of the possible signing of Luís Figo, although they were promptly dismissed by the player's representatives.[5]

Rangers travelled to play-off hopefuls Wolves on the Easter weekend (22 March) and squandered the lead three times, twice in injury time periods at the end of each half and ultimately conspiring in a 3–3 final score.[16] On 25 March the board announced a five-year kit sponsorship deal with Lotto Sport Italia, which could be worth up to £20 million should QPR win promotion to the Premier League. The contract comes into effect for the 2008–09 season and is the most financially rewarding in the club's history.[17] On 29 March Rangers frustrated Ipswich's play-off ambitions by holding them to a goal—less draw at Portman Road – principally as a result of Lee Camp's goalkeeping heroics.[18] Following the match approximately 15 QPR supporters caused an affray at Manningtree station prompting three arrests.[19]

April

On 1 April QPR fan website Vital QPR declared an exclusive that Microsoft founder Bill Gates was to invest in the club,[20] which, despite being an apparent April Fools' Day joke, was repeated on general news and QPR fan sites.[21] Striker Rowan Vine fractured his leg in a training incident on 3 April 2008 and was ruled out for the rest of the season.[22] Two days later on 5 April, Rangers narrowly avoided a 2–0 home defeat to an in-form Preston side by dramatically scoring twice in injury time at the end of the second half.[23]

After a Friday which saw Briatore promote his vision of QPR as a global super brand,[24] and with both relegation and promotion now an irrelevance[25] QPR travelled to Hull City on 12 April to face a team who had netted five and kept two clean-sheets in their previous two games. A contentious first-half goal by Rangers was cancelled-out late in the game by Hull's Michael Turner.[26] The 1–1 result left QPR 14th in the Championship and ten points adrift of the play-offs with just 3 games (9 points) remaining.

Rangers nevertheless continued to contribute to the fate of the Championship's promotion hopefuls, despite being unable to affect their own playoff chances, consigning fellow-Londoners Charlton Athletic to a further season in the second tier after beating them 1–0 at Loftus Road courtesy of Dexter Blackstock.[27] A heavy defeat to Norwich at Carrow Road (0–3), where Damion Stewart was sent off after just 4 minutes, drew April to a disappointing close.[28]

End of the season

QPR's final game of the season on 4 May was at home against Championship title hopefuls West Brom, the team whose comprehensive defeat of Rangers in September signalled the end of John Gregory's reign. Prior to the game QPR unveiled a new badge which was introduced to signify a new era for the club,[29] although newspapers had earlier erroneously speculated that the announcement would reveal Zinedine Zidane as the new manager.[30] Following a red card for Martin Rowlands, Rangers fell to a 2–0 defeat and suffered the indignity of seeing the Championship title trophy presented to West Brom at Loftus Road. The result meant QPR finished 14th in the Championship table with 58 points, 12 points below the play-off zone and 6 points from relegation.

Following the game Martin Rowlands was named both the club's Ray Jones Players' Player of the Year and the Supporters' Player of the Year. Chelsea loan player and England U21 international defender Michael Mancienne was awarded the Supporters' Young Player of the Year award. Akos Buzsaky won the Kiyan Prince Goal of the Season award for his goal against Blackpool at Loftus Road on 11 March. Zesh Rehman was also awarded for his Community Commitment.[31]

On 8 May, QPR announced that Luigi De Canio had left the club "by mutual consent" and that a further announcement regarding a new manager for the following season would be made in due course.[32]

Kit

Le Coq Sportif continued as QPR's kit manufacturers. Retailer Cargiant continued as kit sponsors.

Players

First-team squad

Squad at end of season

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 Lee Camp[notes 1]
2 DF Republic of Ireland IRL Damien Delaney
3 DF England ENG Chris Barker
4 MF England ENG Gavin Mahon
5 DF Jamaica JAM Damion Stewart
6 DF England ENG Michael Mancienne (on loan from Chelsea)
9 FW England ENG Dexter Blackstock[notes 2]
10 MF Hungary HUN Ákos Buzsáky
11 MF England ENG Gareth Ainsworth
12 GK England ENG Jake Cole
14 MF Republic of Ireland IRL Martin Rowlands[notes 3]
16 DF England ENG Matthew Connolly
17 FW Ghana GHA Patrick Agyemang[notes 4]
18 GK United States USA Matt Pickens
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 DF England ENG Kieran Lee (on loan from Manchester United)
23 MF England ENG Stefan Bailey
25 MF England ENG Hogan Ephraim
26 FW England ENG Rowan Vine
28 DF Pakistan PAK Zesh Rehman[notes 5]
29 DF England ENG Fitz Hall
32 MF England ENG Mikele Leigertwood[notes 6]
33 GK Australia AUS Reece Crowther
35 GK England ENG Chris Goodchild
36 MF Colombia COL Ángelo Balanta
37 FW England ENG Romone Rose
DF England ENG Aaron Goode
DF England ENG Andrew Howell
GK England ENG Sean Thomas

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
7 MF England ENG Adam Bolder (on loan to Sheffield Wednesday)
8 FW Wales WAL Daniel Nardiello[notes 7] (on loan to Barnsley)
19 MF England ENG Simon Walton (on loan to Hull City)
No. Pos. Nation Player
28 DF Pakistan PAK Zesh Rehman (on loan to Blackpool)
FW England ENG Danny Maguire (on loan to AFC Wimbledon)

Transfers

In

Date Pos. Name From Fee Source
5 June 2007 DF England Chris Barker Wales Cardiff City Free [33]
27 June 2007 FW Wales Daniel Nardiello England Barnsley Free [34]
30 June 2007 DF England John Curtis England Nottingham Forest Free [35]
27 July 2007 GK England Lee Camp England Derby County £300k [36]
27 July 2007 MF England Simon Walton England Charlton Athletic £200k [37]
31 August 2007 MF England Mikele Leigertwood England Sheffield United £900k [38]
2 January 2008 DF England Matthew Connolly England Arsenal Undisclosed [39]
2 January 2008 MF England Hogan Ephraim England West Ham United Undisclosed [39]
2 January 2008 MF Hungary Ákos Buzsáky England Plymouth Argyle Undisclosed [39]
3 January 2008 FW Ghana Patrick Agyemang England Preston North End Undisclosed [40]
4 January 2008 DF England Fitz Hall England Wigan Athletic Undisclosed [41]
8 January 2008 FW England Rowan Vine England Birmingham City £1m [42]
17 January 2008 DF Republic of Ireland Damien Delaney England Hull City Undisclosed [43]
7 February 2008 GK United States Matt Pickens Unattached Free [44]

Out

Date Pos. Name To Fee Source
1 July 2007 GK England Simon Royce Unattached Released [45]
1 July 2007 GK Wales Paul Jones Unattached Released [45]
1 July 2007 DF Italy Mauro Milanese Unattached Released [45]
1 July 2007 MF Cameroon Armel Tchakounte Unattached Released [45]
1 July 2007 MF Canada Marc Bircham[notes 8] Unattached Released [45]
1 July 2007 MF Northern Ireland Steve Lomas[notes 9] Unattached Released [45]
1 July 2007 FW England Kevin Gallen Unattached Released [45]
1 July 2007 FW England Paul Furlong Unattached Released [45]
19 July 2007 MF England Lee Cook England Fulham £2.5m [46]
November 2007 DF England Danny Cullip Unattached Contract terminated
4 December 2007 MF Australia Nick Ward Unattached Contract terminated [47]
3 January 2008 MF Northern Ireland Tommy Doherty[notes 10] England Wycombe Wanderers Free [48]
15 January 2008 DF England Marcus Bignot Unattached Contract terminated [49]
17 January 2008 DF Democratic Republic of the Congo Patrick Kanyuka Unattached Contract terminated [43]
17 January 2008 MF England Kieron St Aimie Unattached Contract terminated [43]
17 January 2008 FW England Shabazz Baidoo Unattached Contract terminated [43]
23 January 2008 FW England Stefan Moore Unattached Contract terminated [50]
28 January 2008 DF England Dominic Shimmin Unattached Contract terminated
January 2008 FW Denmark Marc Nygaard Denmark Randers Undisclosed
7 February 2008 DF Finland Sampsa Timoska Unattached Contract terminated [51]

Competitions

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
12 Cardiff City 46 16 16 14 59 55 +4 64
13 Burnley 46 16 14 16 60 67 −7 62
14 Queens Park Rangers 46 14 16 16 60 66 −6 58
15 Preston North End 46 15 11 20 50 56 −6 56
16 Sheffield Wednesday 46 14 13 19 54 55 −1 55
Updated to match(es) played on 4 May 2008. Source: The Football League
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.

Results

Football League Championship

Date Opponents Venue Result Score
F–A
Scorers Attendance Ref
11 August 2007 Bristol City A D 2–2 Blackstock 34' Stewart 90' 18,228 [52]
18 August 2007 Cardiff City H L 0–2 12,596 [53]
1 September 2007 Southampton H L 0–3 15,560 [54]
15 September 2007 Leicester City A D 1–1 Leigertwood 82' 21,893 [55]
18 September 2007 Plymouth Argyle H L 0–2 10,850 [56]
22 September 2007 Watford H D 1–1 Moore 59' 14,240 [57]
30 September 2007 West Bromwich Albion A L 1–5 Ainsworth 24' 24,757 [58]
2 October 2007 Colchester United A L 2–4 Ephraim 29', Vine 58' 5,361 [59]
8 October 2007 Norwich City H W 1–0 Rowlands 67' pen. 10,514 [60]
20 October 2007 Ipswich Town H D 1–1 Nygaard 73' 13,946 [61]
23 October 2007 Preston North End A D 0–0 11,407 [62]
27 October 2007 Charlton Athletic A W 1–0 Bolder 72' 23,671 [63]
3 November 2007 Hull City H W 2–0 Ephraim 26', Leigertwood 56' 12,375 [64]
6 November 2007 Coventry City H L 1–2 Buzsaky 50' 11,922 [65]
10 November 2007 Crystal Palace A D 1–1 Sinclair 45' 17,010 [66]
24 November 2007 Sheffield Wednesday H D 0–0 15,241 [67]
27 November 2007 Stoke City A L 1–3 Vine 63' 11,147 [68]
1 December 2007 Blackpool A L 0–1 8,527 [69]
4 December 2007 Crystal Palace H L 1–2 Stewart 10' 13,300 [70]
8 December 2007 Scunthorpe United A D 2–2 Buzsaky 12', 42' 5,612 [71]
11 December 2007 Burnley A W 2–0 Stewart 60', Vine 90' 10,522 [72]
15 December 2007 Wolverhampton Wanderers H D 0–0 13,482 [73]
22 December 2007 Colchester United H W 2–1 Buzsaky 27', 52' 12,464 [74]
26 December 2007 Plymouth Argyle A L 1–2 Ainsworth 20' 16,502 [75]
29 December 2007 Watford A W 4–2 Rowlands 13' pen., Stewart 29', Rowlands 40', Buzsaky 80' 18,698 [76]
1 January 2008 Leicester City H W 3–1 Stewart 15', Bolder 26', Blackstock 56' 13,326 [77]
12 January 2008 Sheffield United A L 1–2 Agyemang 45' 28,894 [78]
19 January 2008 Barnsley H W 2–0 Agyemang 5', Vine 45' 16,197 [79]
29 January 2008 Cardiff City A L 1–3 Ephraim 76' 13,602 [80]
2 February 2008 Bristol City H W 3–0 Agyemang 18', 33', Buzsaky 63' 16,502 [81]
9 February 2008 Southampton A W 3–2 Rowlands 38', Agyemang 45', 60' 22,505 [82]
12 February 2008 Burnley H L 2–4 Mahon 14', Agyemang 30' 13,410 [83]
23 February 2008 Sheffield United H D 1–1 Balanta 19' 15,383 [84]
26 February 2008 Barnsley A D 0–0 9,019 [85]
2 March 2008 Stoke City H W 3–0 Leigertwood 12', 21', Buzsaky 56' 13,398 [9]
5 March 2008 Coventry City A D 0–0 15,225 [10]
8 March 2008 Sheffield Wednesday A L 1–2 Delaney 15' 18,555 [12]
11 March 2008 Blackpool H W 3–2 Buzsaky 11', Vine 40', Rowlands 47' 11,538 [13]
15 March 2008 Scunthorpe United H W 3–1 Rowlands 43' pen., Agyemang 79', Vine 90' 14,499 [86]
22 March 2008 Wolverhampton Wanderers A D 3–3 Buzsaky 28', Blackstock 49' pen., Leigertwood 79' 24,290 [16]
29 March 2008 Ipswich Town A D 0–0 24,517 [18]
5 April 2008 Preston North End H D 2–2 Ainsworth 90', Blackstock 90' 14,966 [23]
12 April 2008 Hull City A D 1–1 Blackstock 14' 22,468 [26]
19 April 2008 Charlton Athletic H W 1–0 Blackstock 15' 17,035 [27]
26 April 2008 Norwich City A L 0–3 25,497 [28]
4 May 2008 West Bromwich Albion H L 0–2 18,309 [29]

FA Cup

Third round proper
Date Home team Score1 Away team Attendance
5 january 2008 Chelsea 1–0 Queens Park Rangers 41,289

1 Score after 90 minutes

League Cup

First round (South)
Date Home team Score1 Away team Attendance
14 October 2007 Queens Park Rangers 1–2 Leyton Orient 5,260

1 Score after 90 minutes

Statistics

Goalscorers

Rank Player Position Championship League Cup FA Cup Total
1 Hungary Ákos Buzsáky MF 10 0 0 10
2 Ghana Patrick Agyemang FW 9 0 0 9
3 England Martin Rowlands MF 6 1 0 7
4 England Rowan Vine FW 6 0 0 6
= England Dexter Blackstock FW 6 0 0 6
6 Jamaica Damion Stewart FW 5 0 0 5
= England Mikele Leigertwood MF 5 0 0 5
8 England Gareth Ainsworth MF 3 0 0 3
9 England Hogan Ephraim MF 2 0 0 2
= England Adam Bolder MF 2 0 0 2
11 England Stefan Moore FW 1 0 0 1
= Denmark Marc Nygaard FW 1 0 0 1
= England Scott Sinclair MF 1 0 0 1
= England Gavin Mahon MF 1 0 0 1
= Colombia Ángelo Balanta MF 1 0 0 1
= Republic of Ireland Damien Delaney DF 1 0 0 1
TOTAL 60 1 0 61

Clean sheets

Rank Player Position Championship League Cup FA Cup Total
1 England Lee Camp GK 14 0 0 14

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Notes

  1. ^ Camp was born in Derby, England, and represented them at U-21 level, but also qualifies to represent Northern Ireland internationally through his grandfather and would make his international debut for Northern Ireland in March 2011.
  2. ^ Blackstock was born in Oxford, England, and represented them at U-18, U-19, and U-21 level, but also qualified to represent Antigua and Barbuda internationally and would make his international debut for Antigua and Barbuda in February 2012.
  3. ^ Rowlands was born in Hammersmith and Fulham, England, but also qualified to represent the Republic of Ireland internationally and represented them at U-21 level before making his international debut for the Republic of Ireland in 2004.
  4. ^ Agyemang was born in Waltham Forest, England, but also qualified to represent Ghana internationally and made his international debut for Ghana in May 2003.
  5. ^ Rehman was born in Birmingham, England, and represented them at U-18, U-19, and U-20 level, but also qualifies to represent Pakistan internationally through his parents and made his international debut for Pakistan in December 2005.
  6. ^ Leigertwood was born in Enfield, England, but also qualified to represent Antigua and Barbuda internationally and would make his international debut for Antigua and Barbuda in November 2008.
  7. ^ Nardiello was born in Coventry, England, but also qualified to represent Wales internationally through his father, the United States through his mother, and Italy and Puerto Rico through his grandparents, and made his international debut for Wales in May 2007.
  8. ^ Bircham was born in Brent, England, but also qualified to represent Canada internationally through his grandfather and made his international debut for Canada in April 1999.
  9. ^ Lomas was born in Hanover, West Germany (now Germany), but was raised in Northern Ireland from the age of 2 and made his international debut for Northern Ireland in 1994.
  10. ^ Doherty was born in Bristol, England, but also qualified to represent Northern Ireland internationally through his grandfather and represented the Northern Ireland B team before making his international debut for Northern Ireland in June 2003.