Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 2001–02 FA Premier League (known as the FA Barclaycard Premiership for sponsorship reasons) was the tenth season of the competition. It began with a new sponsor, Barclaycard , and was titled the FA Barclaycard Premiership, replacing the previous sponsor, Carling .
2001–02 FA Premier League by team ... 2019–20 Premier League by team (20 P) 2020–21 Premier League by team ...
2001–02 season; Chairman: Terry Brown: Manager: Glenn Roeder: Stadium: Boleyn Ground: FA Premier League: 7th: FA Cup: Fourth round (knocked out by Chelsea) League Cup: Second round (knocked out by Reading) Top goalscorer: League: Frédéric Kanouté (11) All: Jermain Defoe (14) Average home league attendance: 31,359
The competition adopts a promotion and relegation system with the Football League which comes into place at the end of each season. Since the inaugural season in 1992–93, 50 teams have competed in the Premier League. At the end of the 1994–95 season, the league was reduced from 22 teams to 20.
2001–02 season; Chairman: Peter Ridsdale: Manager: David O'Leary: Stadium: Elland Road: Premier League: 5th: FA Cup: Third round: League Cup: Fourth round: UEFA Cup: Fourth round: Top goalscorer: League: Robbie Fowler Mark Viduka (12 each) All: Mark Viduka (17) Highest home attendance: 40,287 vs. Newcastle United (22 December 2001, Premier ...
The Premier League is an association football league that serves as the top tier of the English football league system. The league was founded in 1992 when the clubs of the First Division decided to break away from the Football League , [ 1 ] as a commercially independent entity that negotiated its own broadcast and sponsorship agreements.
The 2001–02 season was Arsenal Football Club's 10th season in the Premier League and their 76th consecutive season in the top flight of English football. [2] [3] Having ended the previous season as FA Cup finalists and league runners-up to Manchester United, the club went one better in this campaign, by completing the domestic double – their second in four years and third overall.
Graph showing Burnley's league performance from the inaugural season of the Football League in 1888–89 to the present Burnley Football Club, an English association football club based in Burnley, Lancashire, was founded on 18 May 1882 as Burnley Rovers. [a] The suffix "Rovers" was soon dropped, and the club was simply known as "Burnley Football Club" at the time of its first recorded match ...