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4 July 2001: Gary Pallister, 36-year-old central defender, retires after 17 years in professional football after three years back at Middlesbrough, who gave him his Football League break when he began his first spell with them in 1984. His biggest successes came at Manchester United between 1989 and 1998, where he won four league titles, three ...
None of the top six clubs in the Premier League had an English manager. The most successful English manager in the 2000–01 Premier League campaign was Peter Reid , whose Sunderland side finished seventh, having spent most of the season challenging for a place in Europe, and briefly occupied second place in the Premier League table.
The 2000–01 season was Manchester United's ninth season in the Premier League, and their 26th consecutive season in the top division of English football. [1] United won the Premier League for the third successive season and the seventh time since its inauguration in 1993.
1999–2000; 2000–01; 2001–02; 2002–03; 2003–04; ... Pages in category "2000–01 in English football" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 ...
The 2000–01 Football League ... Locations of the Football League First Division 2000–2001 teams. Crystal Palace. ... 2000–01 in English football;
9 November 2001: Tony Ford, 42-year-old midfielder with one of the highest appearance records of any postwar English footballer, retires from playing after leaving Rochdale and following their manager Steve Parkin to Barnsley as his assistant and deciding that he was not capable of playing second-tier football. [dead link ]
The 2000–01 Southampton F.C. season was the club's 100th season of competitive football, their 31st (and 23rd consecutive) in the top flight of English football, and their ninth in the FA Premier League.
The 2000–01 season saw Leeds United competing in the Premier League (known as the FA Carling Premiership for sponsorship reasons) and the UEFA Champions League. Competitions [ edit ]