2004–05 Newcastle United F.C. season

Newcastle United
2004–05 season
Chairman Freddy Shepherd
Manager

Bobby Robson

John Carver

Graeme Souness
Stadium St James' Park
FA Premier League 14th
FA Cup Semi-finals
League Cup Fourth Round
UEFA Cup Quarter-finals
Top goalscorer League:
Craig Bellamy (7)
Alan Shearer (7)
All:
Alan Shearer (19)
Average home attendance 51,844
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours

During the 2004-05 season, Newcastle United participated in the Premier League. The season began poorly for Newcastle, with no wins in their first four matches, and manager Bobby Robson was sacked, bringing to an end his 5-year tenure at the club. Robson's surprise replacement was former Blackburn Rovers manager Graeme Souness, but, despite a positive start, he was unable to mount a challenge anywhere near the Champions League challenge the team had managed the previous season.

Towards the end of the season, team-mates Lee Bowyer and Kieron Dyer were sent off for fighting with each other during a game. Their suspensions, coupled with several injuries, left Newcastle light on players. The club finished in 14th place in the league for the 2004/2005 season, 9 places below the fifth place finish club chairman Freddy Shepherd had deemed "not good enough" 12 months earlier.

Contents

Season summary

After nearly five years in charge, Sir Bobby Robson was dismissed on August 30, following a largely indifferent start to the season and alleged discontent in the dressing room. The team lost two and drew two of their first four games, three in which they actually surrendered from leading positions: they drew 2-2 at Middlesbrough after taking the lead twice; they surrendered a 2-0 lead against recently-promoted Norwich City to draw 2-2 and they surrendered a 2-1 lead at Villa Park to lose 4-2 to Aston Villa. A split had grown between Robson and the club owners when they had made a number of high-profile signings, apparently without consulting him - in particular, that of Patrick Kluivert. He was further undermined by the club's high profile, but ultimately futile, offer for Everton's Wayne Rooney, who instead moved to Manchester United. Following Rooney's transfer, Robson stated his dismay at the tendency for overpaid young players to demand all the perks without proving themselves on the pitch. Events during the ensuing season on and off the pitch would go a long way to confirm Robson's assessment, who was later given a £1 million severance payment by Newcastle.

Graeme Souness, who had guided Blackburn Rovers to the League Cup and sixth place in the Premiership in recent years, was appointed as Robson's replacement. A ten-match unbeaten run following his appointment suggested that Souness could take Newcastle back to Champions League qualification, but following that the club's form dipped.

Craig Bellamy, a key player in Newcastle's strike force, was loaned to Celtic in January for the remainder of the season, after Souness discovered Craig had told team-mates he was going to fake an injury. Captain Alan Shearer backed Souness's demand that Bellamy apologise for his behaviour to the whole squad, but he refused to listen. Their dip in performance due to the absence of Shearer through injury worried the fan base, leading to fans debating on whether Bellamy should have departed the club.

In November 2004, club chairman Freddy Shepherd again caused controversy, stating there was no debt owed by the "elite" clubs of the Premiership to the rest of the FA - but with his own team underperforming, this was somewhat ironic as well as inappropriate.

An unbeaten run in all competitions in February and March was ended in April with a home defeat against Aston Villa; during the match, Lee Bowyer and Kieron Dyer were sent off for an on-pitch fight. As a result of the incident, later described as "the blackest day" by Shepherd, Bowyer was fined six weeks' wages (about £200,000) and both players received playing bans from the FA. The event overshadowed the announcement that Alan Shearer (expected to retire that season) had extended his playing contract for a further year and was to take up a coaching role with the club.

A rift opened up between Souness and Shepherd, with Souness complaining that the squad, lacking strength in depth after poor judgment in the transfer market (with the promised major signings not materialising) was not up to the challenge. Souness also criticised the state of the club's training ground, stating it was the main reason why so many injuries had taken their toll on the players.

Cup competitions

Newcastle had qualified for the UEFA Cup with a fifth-placed finish the previous season, and managed to reach the quarter-finals. Newcastle defeated Portuguese side Sporting Lisbon in the home leg, but were most comprehensively outplayed in the away match and lost 4-1, in the process suffering several injuries. In the same week they played Manchester United in an FA Cup semi-final at the Millennium Stadium. The scoreline, again 4-1, reflected the one-sided nature of the encounter. This left the Intertoto Cup as the team's only route into European competition in the 2005–06 season.

Team kit

The team kit for the 2004-05 season was produced by Adidas. The main shirt sponsor was Northern Rock.

Club transfers

In

Date Pos. Name From Fee
July 2004 MF James Milner Leeds United £5,000,000
July 2004 FW Patrick Kluivert Barcelona Free
July 2004 MF Nicky Butt Manchester United £2,000,000
August 2004 MF Charles N'Zogbia Le Havre £250,000
August 2004 DF Stephen Carr Tottenham Hotspur £2,000,000
September 2004 DF Ronny Johnsen Aston Villa Free
January 2005 DF Celestine Babayaro Chelsea £1,000,000
January 2005 DF Jean-Alain Boumsong Rangers £8,000,000
January 2005 DF Amdy Faye Portsmouth £2,000,000

Out

Date Pos. Name To Fee
May 2004 MF Bradley Orr Bristol City Free
May 2004 DF Steven Caldwell Sunderland Free
May 2004 MF Brian Kerr Motherwell Free
May 2004 DF Andy Griffin Portsmouth Free
May 2004 FW Calvin Zola Tranmere Rovers Free
May 2004 FW Michael Bridges Sunderland Loan end
July 2004 FW Lomano Tresor LuaLua Portsmouth £1,750,000
July 2004 MF Hugo Viana Sporting CP Loan
July 2004 MF Gary Speed Bolton Wanderers £750,000
August 2004 DF Jonathan Woodgate Real Madrid £13,400,000
December 2004 DF Olivier Bernard Southampton £400,000
January 2005 FW Craig Bellamy Celtic Loan

Squad

Squad at end of season[1]

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

No. Position Player
1 GK Shay Given (vice-captain)
2 DF Stephen Carr
3 DF Robbie Elliott
4 MF Nicky Butt
5 DF Andrew O'Brien
6 DF Jean-Alain Boumsong
7 MF Jermaine Jenas
8 MF Kieron Dyer
9 FW Alan Shearer (captain)
10 FW Craig Bellamy
11 FW Patrick Kluivert
12 GK Steve Harper
14 MF Charles N'Zogbia
15 MF Amdy Faye
16 MF James Milner
17 MF Darren Ambrose
No. Position Player
18 DF Aaron Hughes
19 DF Titus Bramble
22 DF Jamie McClen
23 FW Shola Ameobi
24 GK Tony Caig
27 DF Steven Taylor
28 FW Michael Chopra
29 MF Lee Bowyer
32 MF Laurent Robert
33 DF Celestine Babayaro
38 MF Matty Pattison
39 MF Martin Brittain
41 DF Kris Gate
42 DF Peter Ramage
43 GK Ben Smith
45 MF Hugo Viana

Left club during season

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

No. Position Player
6 DF Jonathan Woodgate (to Real Madrid)
25 DF Ronny Johnsen (to Sandefjord)
No. Position Player
35 DF Olivier Bernard (to Southampton)
40 FW Lewis Guy (to Doncaster Rovers)

Starting 11

Only considering Premiership starts

Matches

Pre-season

Premier League

UEFA Cup

FA Cup

League Cup

References

  1. ^ [1]

External links