2010–11 Birmingham City F.C. season

Birmingham City F.C.
2010–11 season
Chairman Vico Hui
Manager Alex McLeish (until 12 June 2011)
Chris Hughton (from 22 June)
Stadium St Andrew's
Premier League 18th (relegated)
FA Cup Sixth round
(eliminated by Bolton Wanderers)
League Cup Winners
Top goalscorer League: Craig Gardner (8)
All: Craig Gardner (10)
Highest home attendance 28,270 (v. Newcastle United, 15 February 2011)
Lowest home attendance 6,431 (v. Rochdale, League Cup 2nd round, 26 August 2010)
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours

The 2010–11 season was Birmingham City Football Club's seventh season in the Premier League and their 57th in the top tier of English football. It ran from 1 July 2010 to 30 June 2011. Led by Scotland national team manager Alex McLeish, the team finished in 18th place in the League, so were relegated to the Championship for the 2011–12 season. They reached the quarter-final of the FA Cup, and won the League Cup, their first major trophy since 1963, by beating favourites Arsenal 2–1 in the final with goals from Nikola Žigić and Obafemi Martins. The top scorer for the season was Craig Gardner with ten goals in all competitions, of which eight were in the League. McLeish resigned as manager on 12 June 2011.

Contents

Pre-season

Following Carson Yeung's takeover of the club in 2009, Birmingham travelled to their owner's native China for their 2010–11 pre-season tour. They began with a 3–2 victory against a Hong Kong League XI to win the inaugural Xtep Cup. The winning goal was scored by Garry O'Connor, set up by debutant Nikola Žigić from a Stuart Parnaby cross.[1] In the second match, O'Connor scored the only goal of the game against Beijing Guoan on a dreadful pitch in the Bird's Nest Stadium,[2] and Birmingham then beat Liaoning Whowin with goals from O'Connor and Sebastian Larsson to achieve a hat-trick of victories over Chinese opposition.[3] While in China club officials and players performed promotional activities including attending the launch in Beijing of the 2010–11 kit, supplied for the first time by Chinese manufacturer Xtep.[4]

Back on home soil, Birmingham continued their good form at Pride Park Stadium, where they were victorious against a Derby County side featuring former Blues midfielder Robbie Savage.[5] The following day, a Birmingham XI including first-team players rested for the match against Derby drew 2–2 against Northampton Town, succumbing to a late header from Liam Davis.[6] Birmingham came from two goals down to beat Milton Keynes Dons. James McFadden missed a first-half penalty, but two second-half goals from Cameron Jerome and an 88th-minute winner from O'Connor were enough to see off the League One opposition.[7] Real Mallorca, the visitors for the only home friendly of the 2010 pre-season, inflicted Birmingham's only defeat with a goal from Emilio Nsue. Craig Gardner played in an unfamiliar right-back position with both Stephen Carr and Stuart Parnaby injured.[8]

Premier League

August

Birmingham opened their Premier League campaign with a visit to Sunderland. Goalkeeper Ben Foster made his debut, and Garry O'Connor returned to the team after two operations on a chronic hip problem caused him to miss most of the previous season. Captain Stephen Carr fouled Fraizer Campbell to concede a penalty which Darren Bent converted, though the foul appeared to have been committed outside the penalty area. Home captain Lee Cattermole had already avoided punishment for cutting O'Connor's head open with an elbow, but still received two yellow cards and was sent off before half-time. Carr doubled Sunderland's lead with an own goal when an attempted headed clearance looped over Foster. Alex McLeish brought on new signing Nikola Žigić, who "injected a note of panic hitherto undetected" in the home team's defence as Sebastian Larsson's crosses produced goals from Scott Dann and a late equaliser from Liam Ridgewell after a goalmouth scramble.[9]

Žigić marked his first start, at home to Blackburn Rovers, by pulling Chris Samba's shirt to concede a penalty. After Foster saved Morten Gamst Pedersen's spot-kick – one of many saves in a man-of-the-match performance – Blackburn took the lead. Craig Gardner equalised three minutes later with a tap-in from James McFadden's cushioned volley, and after Nikola Kalinić had hit the post, Gardner scored the winner in the second half with a 25 yards (23 m) shot. Matt Derbyshire, on loan from Olympiacos, made his debut as a second-half substitute.[10]

In an eventful visit to Bolton Wanderers, Birmingham took an early lead after a passing move involving McFadden, Lee Bowyer and Cameron Jerome was finished by Roger Johnson with his first goal for the club. After 36 minutes, Johnson fouled goalkeeper Jussi Jääskeläinen as both competed for a bouncing ball. As the players got to their feet, Jääskeläinen slapped Johnson acoss the face and was sent off. Five minutes into the second half McFadden's cross was headed down by Jerome for Gardner to score a scrappy goal at his second attempt. Bolton pulled one back from the penalty spot after Johnson was judged to have fouled Gary Cahill, then with ten minutes left, a foul was given against Barry Ferguson, who had appeared to be squeezed between two Bolton players. From just outside the penalty area, former Birmingham forward Robbie Blake struck a superb free kick to tie the scores. There were late chances for both sides but the score remained 2–2. BBC Sport's reporter suggested that "Birmingham's flickers of poise and invention" were "positive signs" for the season to come.[11]

As the transfer window closed, Birmingham signed Spartak Moscow captain and defender Martin Jiránek and Chile international winger Jean Beausejour, and Barcelona's Alexander Hleb joined on loan for the season.[12] Marcus Bent, who had not played for Birmingham since 2009, joined fellow Premier League club Wolverhampton Wanderers on loan, and youngsters Jake Jervis and Luke Hubbins went on loan to fourth-tier club Notts County.[13] Contract talks with Alex McLeish broke down, leading acting chairman Peter Pannu to deny reports of a "bust-up", and contract talks with Sebastian Larsson resumed.[14]

September

McFadden and Ferguson were instrumental as Birmingham extended their unbeaten Premier League home record to 17 matches with a goalless draw against Liverpool. Pepe Reina kept the visitors in the game with a succession of fine saves from Jerome, Gardner and others.[15]

In the run-up to the visit to West Bromwich Albion, James McFadden suffered an anterior cruciate ligament injury which was to keep him out for the season,[16] "football consultant" Sammy Yu left the club,[17] and Alex McLeish signed a new three-year contract. The home side appeared to have no answer to Jerome's early goal, but Roberto di Matteo brought Graham Dorrans on at half time, moved Peter Odemwingie from the wing to play up front, and the game was transformed. Odemwingie forced an own goal off Scott Dann and scored a second as Albion won 3–1. Bowyer was substituted to avoid the likelihood of his being sent off, and the player had to apologise after a foul-mouthed exchange with a female supporter.[18]

At home to Wigan Athletic, the unbeaten home run extended to a day short of twelve months. A dull game was enlivened by an altercation between Roger Johnson and Hugo Rodallega for which both were booked, the skills of Charles N'Zogbia and the home supporters' adverse reactions thereto, Cameron Jerome missing chances, and Craig Gardner's reckless tackle on Franco di Santo for which he was sent off.[19]

October

Having gone 18 top-flight games unbeaten to equal the club record, Birmingham made little impression as Everton won their first match of the season. After Johnson made a mistake to allow Yakubu in, Foster took enough pace off his shot to give Ridgewell time to make a goalline clearance, but gave Everton the lead when he prodded Leon Osman's cross past Foster, and Tim Cahill's stoppage-time header doubled the lead.[20]

Two weeks later, Birmingham took the lead through a Žigić header, Arsenal equalised from the penalty spot after Marouane Chamakh went down after minimal contact from Scott Dann, and Chamakh himself scored the winner just after half time. On a day when manager Arsène Wenger had used his programme notes to highlight the problem of reckless tackling, England hopeful Jack Wilshere was sent off for a two-footed lunge on Žigić, and Emmanuel Eboué was fortunate to escape a red card for a scissors-tackle on Liam Ridgewell.[21]

At home to newly promoted Blackpool, whose attacking style had earned them the best away record in the Premier League, Birmingham played them at their own game, with Alex Hleb given a free role behind Garry O'Connor and Nikola Žigić, and outclassed them 2–0. The goals came from Ridgewell's close-range header after Žigić had headed against the bar, and from Žigić himself after Charlie Adam gave the ball away. The Guardian's reporter suggested that "if City had had more pace and movement up front than was offered by Garry O'Connor and Nikola Zigic, they would have won by five or six."[22]

In an improvement for Birmingham on the last time the clubs had met, they had the better of a goalless draw at Aston Villa. The referee missed a clear handball by Nigel Reo-Coker, the same player could have been sent off for an apparent knee in the back of Craig Gardner, Cameron Jerome passed to goalkeeper Brad Friedel with Zigic unmarked in the box, and Ashley Young could have won the game for Villa right at the end with a shot that came off the angle of post and bar.[23]

November

Former co-owner David Gold, now co-owner of West Ham United, was banned from attending the clubs' meeting on 6 November for referring to vice-chairman Peter Pannu in the press as "disgusting". The club later accepted Gold's apology.[24] On the field, Birmingham played the diamond formation that had been effective against Blackpool. Apart from the sprinklers suddenly coming on soon after kickoff, the highlight of the first half was Foster's fine save to tip a short-range shot from Carlton Cole onto the post. Early in the second half, West Ham took a two-goal lead and nearly scored a third when Victor Obinna's shot from distance hit the woodwork. After Gardner and Beauseajour replaced Hleb and Fahey, Birmingham came back to draw with a Jerome goal from a Zigic knockdown and a characteristic Ridgewell tap-in when Robert Green failed to gather a Larsson free kick. They could have won it late on when Jerome's shot was deflected on to the crossbar by Danny Gabbidon, and West Ham's penalty appeal against Beausejour for shirt-pulling was turned down.[25]

Birmingham went two goals down at Stoke City, but came back to equalise with a 20-yard (18 m) shot from Keith Fahey and a glancing header by Jerome from a Larsson cross, and Gardner forced two saves from Asmir Begovic. Stoke manager Tony Pulis had spoken out before the game about referees' decisions repeatedly going against them, and Birmingham's defence "dithered" appealing for a handball which match referee Mark Clattenburg failed to notice as Dean Whitehead won the game for the home side.[26] The defending improved at Manchester City. The nearest the home side came to scoring was when Carlos Tévez handled the ball over the line and when a James Milner shot was blocked by Foster and the rebound cleared off the line by man-of-the-match Stephen Carr.[27]

Lee Bowyer, replacing the injured Craig Gardner, stole unmarked into the penalty area to meet a Jerome knockdown and take a 17th-minute lead at home to Chelsea. Thereafter, Ben Foster, criticised for his performance for England against France in midweek but now "defiance personified", made numerous saves including one where he "somehow clawed out a Didier Drogba header that was flying in the far corner", as Chelsea failed to score from 32 shots at goal.[28] Away at Fulham, Alex Hleb made a strong run through midfield to the penalty area and played a pinpoint pass which gave the onrushing Sebastian Larsson time to set himself and pass the ball into the net for his first goal of the season. After Dempsey arguably climbed on Keith Fahey's shoulders to head the equaliser, Birmingham came close to regaining the lead whan Scott Dann's header from a Larsson cross hit the bar, but lost Hleb to a hamstring injury.[29]

December

Craig Gardner was central to Birmingham achieving a draw at home to Tottenham Hotspur. Sébastien Bassong scored after Foster failed to deal with a Gareth Bale free kick, but the introduction of Nikola Žigić, a hero after scoring the winner against Aston Villa in the League Cup quarter-final in the week, made the difference. Ridgewell's powerful shot was blocked by Heurelho Gomes' groin, before Johnson's long ball found Žigić, who headed into the penalty area for Gardner to head home after a well-timed run.[30] Alex McLeish's assessed his team's 1–0 defeat at Wolverhampton Wanderers as "We didn't turn up at all for the first 60 minutes. We were outfought and then had a go. We need to start games the way we finish them."[31]

The visit of Newcastle United on 18 December was a late postponement because of heavy snowfall, and the away game at Everton was called off on Boxing Day morning when frozen pipes within Goodison Park burst.[32] In Birmingham's last match of 2010, Manchester United scored after an hour through Dimitar Berbatov, but in the 89th minute, Žigić appeared to foul Rio Ferdinand as he controlled Roger Johnson's cross with his arm, touching it on to Lee Bowyer who equalised from an arguably offside position.[33]

January

Birmingham began the new year outplayed by Arsenal by three goals to nil. Television replays highlighted incidents, unnoticed by the referee, in which Bowyer stamped on Bacary Sagna and seemed to rake his studs down the same player's Achilles. Suggestions in the media that he might be banned for six matches prompted Alex McLeish to argue that the football authorities were not treating all clubs equally when using television evidence.[34] Bowyer received the standard three-match ban for violent conduct.[35]

Birmingham went to Blackpool as the only Premier League team without an away win. After Blackpool lost at St Andrew's in October, manager Ian Holloway had promised that if Birmingham used the same attacking tactics when they came to Bloomfield Road, his players would know how to counter them.[22] He was nearly right. Hleb returned from injury to play behind Jerome and Derbyshire and scored the opening goal after being gifted the ball in the penalty area. Former Birmingham player DJ Campbell equalised, both sides hit the woodwork, the visitors were particularly profligate in front of goal, but Scott Dann scored an 89th-minute winner with a poacher's finish from Johnson's knock-down.[36]

Without Dann, whose hamstring injury sustained in the League Cup first leg was to keep him out for the rest of the season, Ridgewell moved to centre back and David Murphy started at left back, and loanee David Bentley made his debut in the Sunday lunchtime kickoff against Aston Villa. Both teams had chances to win but the 1–1 draw left both teams just outside the relegation zone. The attendance of 22,287 was the lowest figure for Premier League matches between the clubs.[37] With the League Cup semi-final four days later, Birmingham gave Jordon Mutch a League debut and rested Gardner, Jerome and Žigić as they visited Manchester United. They lost 5–0.[38]

February

Martin Jiránek made his Premier League debut at home to Manchester City in a match moved to the Wednesday at short notice because of City's FA Cup-tie being televised the previous Sunday. City's Micah Richards was knocked unconscious in collision with teammate Nigel de Jong, and manager Roberto Mancini accused Kevin Phillips of diving to earn the penalty from which Gardner gave Birmingham what BBC Sport's reporter termed a "deserved equaliser".[39] Returning to West Ham United having beaten them to reach the League Cup final, Birmingham ensured that it would be they and not the hosts who escaped from the relegation places when Nikola Žigić scored the only goal of the game midway through the second half.[40]

Obafemi Martins had a quiet debut at home to Stoke City. A dull match was goalless until stoppage time, when Asmir Begovic fumbled Bentley's shot, Jerome robbed him of the ball, flicked it up from the byline and Zigic outjumped John Carew and headed the winner to give Birmingham their first consecutive Premier League wins for more than a year.[41] McLeish suggested that fatigue might be a factor in Birmingham's "flat" performance three days later as they lost 2–0 at home to Newcastle United to leave themselves in 14th place, three points above the relegation zone.[42]

March

Jean Beausejour scored his first Premier League goal in a losing cause at home to West Bromwich Albion, Birmingham's first league match after the League Cup win.[43] His second, a header from a Jordon Mutch cross, took the lead at Everton on the Wednesday, but the match was drawn. In the second half, referee Peter Walton had taken the field without his yellow card, so had to act out issuing a caution to Mutch using an imaginary card.[44] Having exited the relegation places the previous week, Birmingham conceded a stoppage-time goal at Wigan Athletic to find themselves back in it. Ridgewell scored early on from what appeared to be an offside position, and Jiránek left the field soon afterwards with an injury, but Wigan equalised through Tom Cleverley before Maynor Figueroa scored a stoppage-time winner from 20 yards (18 m). They had exited the relegation places the previous week, but the defeat left them in 19th place, though if they won their game in hand, the three points would take them to a mid-table 13th.[45]

April

After two goals scored by Kevin Phillips from a Larsson corner and Craig Gardner after a one-two with Cameron Jerome, a Larsson goal disallowed for offside and a Roger Johnson volley drawing a good save from Jaaskelainen, Birmingham should have been comfortable. However, Johan Elmander scored an excellent volleyed goal from distance, Bolton Wanderers took heart, and only fine goalkeeping from Ben Foster kept the visitors at bay.[46] Lee Bowyer's tap-in from Jerome's pass took the lead at Blackburn Rovers, and shortly before half-time Roger Johnson received lengthy treatment for a head injury before leaving the pitch for further attention. Seven minutes into stoppage time, he returned to the field, apparently distracting defensive partner Ridgewell who allowed Junior Hoilett to steal the ball and take it past Foster to equalise. Curtis Davies replaced Johnson for the second half, the first time in nearly two seasons with the club that Johnson had been substituted.[47]

A 2–0 defeat of Sunderland, with goals from Larsson and Gardner, gave Birmingham seven points from the last three games. With six games left to play, they were in 14th place, five points above the relegation zone with a game in hand on most teams below them, albeit with some difficult games to come.[48] Chelsea had little difficulty in beating Birmingham 3–1, the visitors' goal coming from the penalty spot; Larsson and Gardner had a lengthy discussion as to who should take the kick, eventually won by Larsson. McLeish confirmed afterwards that Gardner would be the designated penalty-taker in future.[49] Maxi Rodríguez, in the starting eleven only because Andy Carroll was injured, scored a hat-trick as Ben Foster sustained an injury trying to prevent Liverpool's second goal and had to be replaced by Colin Doyle, making his first Premier League appearance since 2007.[50]

May

David Bentley left the ground "in a huff" when not included in the matchday squad for the home game with Wolverhampton Wanderers. Wolves took an early lead from the penalty spot before Michael Mancienne failed to deal with Foster's clearance. Larsson, having run the length of the field, collected the loose ball and clipped it past the goalkeeper. In an aggressive game, Gardner was booked after an altercation with Jamie O'Hara, and had been the victim of a wild tackle by Richard Stearman (who went unpunished) when he "went down under pressure" from Jody Craddock and received a second yellow card for simulation. His second dismissal of the season meant he would miss two of the club's last three games. Birmingham's ten men held on for the draw, which left them four points clear of the relegation zone.[51]

Foster kept Birmingham in the game at Newcastle United until Liam Ridgewell was sent off for handling the ball on the goalline. Newcastle scored the resultant penalty, doubled their lead from a Steven Taylor header, then Bowyer pulled a goal back just before half-time when Jerome's shot was parried. Larsson missed a clear chance to equalise, shooting over the bar after Tim Krul fumbled Beausejour's cross, but the home side also had chances to extend their lead.[52]

With Jerome injured, Phillips and Derbyshire started at home to Fulham, and youngster Akwasi Asante was the only forward among the substitutes. The players seemed nervous, made little impression, were unable to deal with the power of Brede Hangeland, who scored both Fulham goals, and the only serious chance came when Martin Jiránek turned Stuart Parnaby's cross towards goal with his chest. Birmingham finished the match with only ten men, after losing Hleb, Bowyer, Parnaby and Jiránek to injury, and in 17th place in the league, ahead of Blackpool and Wigan Athletic only on goal difference after they and Wolverhampton Wanderers all won.[53][54]

Birmingham went into their final match away at Tottenham Hotspur as one of five teams still at risk of relegation. Doing no worse than Blackpool and Wigan would keep them safe, and there were more complicated calculations depending on the result of the match between Blackburn Rovers and Wolverhampton Wanderers. Jerome, who had undergone specialist treatment all week on his injured heel, was able to start the game, and Curtis Davies was an excellent replacement for Jiránek. Roman Pavlyuchenko put Tottenham one up early in the second half, but Gardner's 79th-minute equaliser put his team ahead of Wolverhampton and safe. With stoppage time approaching, Wolves scored again to leave Birmingham needing another goal. The message appeared to take time getting through to the players, but they eventually threw everyone forward, leaving themselves open at the back, and Pavlyuchenko scored a spectacular winner to ensure fifth place and Europa League qualification. Birmingham were relegated in 18th place.[54][55]

League table (part)

Final Premier League table (part)
Pos Club Pld W D L F A GD Pts
16th Wigan Athletic 38 9 15 14 40 61 -21 42
17th Wolverhampton Wanderers 38 11 7 20 46 66 -20 40
18th Birmingham City 38 8 15 15 37 58 -21 39
19th Blackpool 38 10 9 19 55 78 -23 39
20th West Ham United 38 7 12 19 43 70 -27 33
Key Pos = League position; Pld = Matches played;
W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost;
F = Goals for; A = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points
Source [56]

Results summary

Overall Home Away
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts W D L GF GA GD W D L GF GA GD
38 8 15 15 37 58 −21 39 6 8 5 19 22 −3 2 7 10 18 36 −18

Last updated: end of season
Source: [56]

Results by round

Round 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38
Ground A H A H A H H A H A H A A H A H A H H A H A H A H H H A A H A H A A H A H A
Result D W D D L D L L W D D L D W D D L D L W D L D W W L L D L W D W L L D L L L
Position 6 4 6 5 11 11 15 16 12 14 14 17 18 13 14 14 16 16 19 15 16 17 17 16 14 14 18 17 19 15 15 14 15 15 15 16 17 18

Source: [57]
Ground: A = Away; H = Home. Result: D = Draw; L = Lose; W = Win; P = Postponed.

FA Cup

Birmingham were drawn away against Millwall for their opening match in the 2010–11 FA Cup. With the League Cup semi-final scheduled for three days later, Alex McLeish made seven changes from the side that had beaten Blackpool in midweek, including a first start for Jordon Mutch after his successful loan spell at Watford. They might have expected more competition from a team just outside the play-off positions in the Championship, but two goals from Matt Derbyshire, a precise free kick from David Murphy, and a powerful header from Cameron Jerome shortly after coming on a late substitute gave them a 4–0 lead. Had Millwall's finishing been better – Steve Morison failed to take a early chance when through on goalkeeper Maik Taylor, James Henry had an attempt disallowed for offside, and Morison's weak penalty was saved by Taylor – they might well have achieved more than Danny Schofield's consolation.[58]

In the fourth round, Birmingham made nine changes from the eleven that had started the League Cup semi-final three days before. After Nikola Žigić headed wide and Kevin Phillips' header was deflected onto the crossbar, they went two goals down at home to mid-table Championship club Coventry City. David Bentley's 25-yard (23 m) shot was too hot for Keiren Westwood and went in off the underside of the bar, then in the second half Stuart Parnaby scored his first senior goal for nearly five years after Alexander Hleb had drawn Westwood out of goal. After 73 minutes, man-of-the-match Phillips controlled a ball from Jean Beausejour on his thigh and volleyed in for the winner.[59]

A stronger Birmingham team than that selected in previous rounds enjoyed a comfortable win against Sheffield Wednesday of League One in the fifth round. Goals from Beausejour and Obafemi Martins, his first for the club, were both set up by Hleb before he left the field on a stretcher, the victim of a late tackle by James O'Connor. Murphy scored a third from close range to take Birmingham into the quarter-finals for the second year running. Roger Johnson punched the dug-out after he was substituted with half an hour remaining, but McLeish said he took the sensible course, to avoid the risk of a second yellow card which would mean Johnson missing the approaching League Cup final.[60]

Bolton Wanderers had to take the lead three times to eliminate a Birmingham side so short of fit players that they started the 19-year-old Mutch in central midfield, gave a squad number to 17-year-old defender Alpaslan Ozturk, and were still unable to name a full complement of seven substitutes. Johan Elmander scored for Bolton after 21 minutes, and within the next ten minutes Birmingham had lost Barry Ferguson and Jiránek to injury. Jerome took advantage of a defensive error to equalise with a tidy finish from 16 yards (15 m) and each side made penalty appeals that were correctly turned down. Bolton regained the lead from the penalty spot when Curtis Davies fouled Kevin Davies before Phillips first hit the post, then from a flick-on by the 17-year-old Nathan Redmond, "somehow Phillips swivelled, scissor-kicking a volley from outside the area over the head of Jaaskelainen and in". McLeish brought on striker Derbyshire in place of Murphy and went for the win, but in stoppage time, Kevin Davies headed across goal for Lee Chung-Yong to take the visitors into the semi-finals.[61]

League Cup

Birmingham began their League Cup campaign in the second round, drawn at home to Rochdale of League One in the first competitive meeting between the clubs. They made eight changes to the previous starting eleven, giving debuts to Enric Vallès and, from the substitutes' bench, Nathan Redmond, at 16 years 173 days the club's second-youngest first-team debutant after Trevor Francis. A goal down after 26 minutes, Birmingham equalised two minutes later through a "harsh" penalty, scored by James McFadden, as Marcus Holness was adjudged to have fouled Matt Derbyshire. Goals followed from David Murphy, playing his first game since breaking his kneecap in April 2009, and Derbyshire, but a second Rochdale goal made for a tense last quarter of an hour.[62]

Third-round opponents Milton Keynes Dons proved less of an obstacle. Birmingham made nine changes from their previous match, including a debut for Martin Jiránek, a first start for Jean Beausejour, and first games of the season for Kevin Phillips and Stuart Parnaby. Alexander Hleb, making his home debut, and Nikola Žigić each scored their first goal for the club and substitute Craig Gardner made the score 3–0 in a four-minute spell midway through the first half. Though MK Dons scored late on, Birmingham's victory was comfortable.[63]

Brentford, Birmingham's third consecutive visitors from League One, had beaten Premier League Everton on penalties in the third round. Sam Wood gave them the lead with a volley after 68 minutes, goalkeeper Richard Lee produced a fine save to deny Gardner's curling shot, and after Žigić headed over the bar with four minutes of normal time remaining, it seemed as though they were going to repeat the upset. But after two minutes of stoppage time, Liam Ridgewell squared the ball to Phillips who scored with a low shot. In extra time, Lee saved a header from Žigić, and the tie went to penalties. On Brentford's last attempt before sudden death, Craig Woodman hit the ball straight at Maik Taylor, who was able to deflect it onto the bar, so Birmingham scraped through to the fifth round.[64]

The quarter-final pitted Birmingham against local rivals Aston Villa, again at home. West Midlands Police had been sufficiently concerned about the potential for trouble and possible adverse effects on England's World Cup bid that they made an unsuccessful request for a change of date and had four times the usual number of officers on duty.[65] Sebastian Larsson opened the scoring with a penalty after Richard Dunne fouled Bowyer, then Gabby Agbonlahor equalised for Villa on the break after Žigić had an apparently valid goal disallowed. Cameron Jerome shot wide when one-on-one with goalkeeper Brad Friedel, and Ben Foster saved well from Ashley Young after parrying a shot from Agbonlahor, but neither side could make the breakthrough until, on 86 minutes, Žigić scrambled home a shot deflected off Luke Young.[66] At the end of the match, large numbers of Birmingham fans invaded the pitch and were separated from the visiting support by riot police. Missiles, including seats and a flare, believed by police to have originated in the visitors' section, were thrown back and forth, and the violence continued outside the ground.[67][68]

Birmingham were drawn against West Ham United in the two-legged semifinal. In the first leg, at Upton Park, West Ham had much the best of the first half, taking a deserved lead when Mark Noble scored from a tight angle with Foster's view at the near post obscured by Scott Dann. Dann sustained an injury just before half-time which was to keep him out for the rest of the season. Early in the second half, Birmingham equalised through Ridgewell's header from a corner, then took a man advantage when Victor Obinna was sent off for kicking Larsson in the groin. Even after a penalty was denied when Barry Ferguson was knocked flying by Matthew Upson, it looked as Birmingham would go on to win, but goalkeeper Foster blundered when he allowed a weak shot from Carlton Cole to go through him.[69] West Ham increased their lead to 3–1 on aggregate in the first half of the second leg when Cole collected a throw-in and shot past Foster from 25 yards (23 m). The half-time introduction of Žigić put pressure on West Ham's defence. A penalty appeal against Wayne Bridge for handball was rejected, but from the resultant corner, Lee Bowyer tied the scores on the night, and prolonged pressure led to Roger Johnson's 79th-minute headed goal which tied the scores overall. With the last play of normal time, Gardner's shot was touched onto the post by Robert Green, and the game went into extra time. Four minutes later, Gardner repeated the shot with enough power and accuracy to beat Green and give Birmingham the 4–3 aggregate lead which took them into the final.[70]

Final

Going into the final, media focus centred on the competition being the first element of Arsenal's potential quadruple, their failure to win a trophy for six years, and concerns over the fitness of their captain Cesc Fàbregas. Pundits and bookmakers were in agreement that there could be only one winner, though Cameron Jerome suggested that being overwhelming favourites would put extra pressure on Arsenal, and that if they had a weakness, it lay with their defence.[71]

To counteract Arsenal's perceived strength, their passing ability in midfield, McLeish set his side out in a 4–5–1 formation with three defensive midfielders – Ferguson covering the centre backs and Gardner and Bowyer closing opponents down and chasing – and wide players Fahey and Larsson supporting the tall but less mobile Žigić.[72] In the first two minutes, Bowyer ran on to a through ball from Žigić and was brought down by goalkeeper Wojciech Szczęsny for what appeared to be a penalty and a red card. Arsenal were relieved to see the linesman raise his flag for offside, though television replays showed his decision to have been wrong. With nearly half an hour gone, Larsson's corner seemed to confuse the Arsenal centre backs. Roger Johnson headed the ball towards goal and Žigić outjumped his opponents to head home. Towards half time, Jack Wilshere hit the crossbar, and when Birmingham failed to clear, Andrei Arshavin crossed for Robin van Persie to direct an aerial volley past Foster.[73]

Early in the second half, Beausejour replaced Gardner. A few minutes later he set up Fahey whose poor shot hit teammate Žigić. The ball rebounded to Fahey who reacted quickly to volley it goalwards, only for it to strike the inside of the post with Szczęsny beaten and bounce across the goal to safety.[74] Van Persie, who had hurt himself in the act of scoring, was struggling by the middle of the second half and was replaced by former Birmingham loanee Nicklas Bendtner. Towards the end of normal time, Birmingham were tiring; Johnson remained on the field after receiving treatment for a calf injury that restricted his movement, and neither he nor Ridgewell had been able to train in the week leading up to the game. The defenders and particularly Foster, who won the man of the match award for the second time in three years, prevented Arsenal from taking advantage.[73]

With seven minutes left of normal time, Obafemi Martins replaced Fahey for his League Cup debut. After 89 minutes, Foster cleared the ball long, Žigić touched it on, and when Laurent Koscielny attempted to play it, distracting Szczęsny from making what should have been a straightforward gather, the ball fell loose to Martins in front of goal. He tapped it into an empty net for "the easiest goal [he's] ever scored in [his] career", and celebrated with a trademark series of somersaults.[73][75] For the remaining few minutes, Birmingham defended stoutly, but Martins had a fine chance to increase the lead when he took the ball past Johan Djourou and the goalkeeper but found himself with too narrow a shooting angle. Jerome, who had come on during stoppage time, and Ferguson were both booked for time-wasting as Birmingham held on to win their first major trophy for nearly 50 years.[76]

Transfers

At the end of the 2009–10 season, Birmingham released first-team players Gary McSheffrey, Grégory Vignal, Franck Queudrue and Lee Carsley,[77] and chose not to sign loanee Christian Benítez on a permanent basis.[78] Goalkeeper Joe Hart returned to parent club Manchester City, to be replaced by Birmingham's first signing of the new season, Manchester United's Ben Foster, who joined for an estimated initial fee of £4 million.[79] Next to arrive was striker Nikola Žigić, who signed from Valencia shortly before joining up with the Serbian national team at the World Cup.[80] After young Spanish midfielder Enric Vallès joined on a one-year contract and Matt Derbyshire returned to England on loan from Olympiacos,[81][82] there were no more signings until transfer deadline day, when Barcelona midfielder Alexander Hleb arrived on a season-long loan and Chilean winger Jean Beausejour and Spartak Moscow captain and defender Martin Jiránek agreed permanent deals.[83] Jordon Mutch joined Championship club Watford on an initial one-month loan, later extended until January 2011,[84] and several fringe players left on loan. Garry O'Connor had two separate loan spells at Barnsley, initially to regain match fitness after injury, but was released in December to join that club on a permanent contract.[85]

In the January transfer window, Míchel joined AEK Athens on loan until the end of the season.[86] League Two club Burton Albion intended to take 16-year-old winger Nathan Redmond on loan, but the move fell foul of regulations forbidding first-year scholars to sign on loan for League clubs.[87] Tottenham Hotspur winger David Bentley and Nigerian international striker Obafemi Martins came in on loan,[88][89] and Aston Villa defender Curtis Davies signed a three-and-a-half-year deal for an estimated £3.5 million fee.[90] Sebastian Larsson, whose contract was due to expire at the end of the season, was given permission to speak to Newcastle United about a possible transfer, but personal terms were not agreed, and Kevin Phillips was told he could leave if "the right offer" were received.[91]

Among those players released at the end of the season when their contracts expired were first-teamers Larsson, Phillips, Jiránek, Lee Bowyer, Maik Taylor and Stuart Parnaby, and fringe players Marcus Bent, Jay O'Shea, Dan Preston and Robin Shroot. All the loanees returned to their owning clubs.[92]

In

Date Player Club Fee Ref
19 May 2010 Ben Foster Manchester United Undisclosed [79]
26 May 2010 Nikola Žigić Valencia Undisclosed [80]
1 July 2010 Enric Vallès (NAC Breda) Free [81]
31 August 2010 Martin Jiránek Spartak Moscow Undisclosed [83]
31 August 2010 Jean Beausejour Club América Undisclosed [83]
28 January 2011 Curtis Davies Aston Villa Undisclosed [90]
Brackets round club names indicate the player's contract with that club had expired before he joined Birmingham.

Out

Date Player Fee Joined Ref
12 December 2010 Garry O'Connor Released (Barnsley) [85]
30 June 2011 Marcus Bent Released (Mitra Kukar) [92]
30 June 2011 Lee Bowyer Released (Ipswich Town) [92][93]
30 June 2011 Martin Jiránek Released (Terek Grozny) [92][94]
30 June 2011 Sebastian Larsson Released (Sunderland) [92][95]
30 June 2011 Stuart Parnaby Released [92]
30 June 2011 Kevin Phillips Released (Blackpool) [92][96]
30 June 2011 Maik Taylor Released (Leeds United) [92]
30 June 2011 Mitch McPike Released [92]
30 June 2011 Jay O'Shea Released (Milton Keynes Dons) [92][97]
30 June 2011 Dan Preston Released (AFC Telford United) [92][98]
30 June 2011 Luke Rowe Released (Team Wellington) [92]
30 June 2011 Robin Shroot Released (Stevenage) [92][99]
Brackets round a club denote the player joined that club after his Birmingham City contract expired.

Loan in

Date Player Club Return Ref
16 August 2010 Matt Derbyshire Olympiacos End of season [82]
31 August 2010 Alexander Hleb Barcelona End of season [83]
12 January 2011 David Bentley Tottenham Hotspur End of season [88]
31 January 2011 Obafemi Martins Rubin Kazan End of season [89]

Loan out

Date Player Club Return Ref
1 August 2010 Jordon Mutch Watford January 2011 [84]
5 August 2010 Jake Jervis Notts County 4 January 2011 [100]
7 August 2010 Robin Shroot Cheltenham Town January 2011 [101]
20 August 2010 Luke Hubbins Notts County January 2011 [102]
31 August 2010 Marcus Bent Wolverhampton Wanderers 4 January 2011 [103]
10 September 2010 Garry O'Connor Barnsley One month [104]
26 October 2010 Jay O'Shea Stevenage 16 January 2011 [105]
8 November 2010 Garry O'Connor Barnsley One month [106]
26 November 2010 Mitch McPike Kidderminster Harriers One month [107]
18 January 2011 Marcus Bent Sheffield United 16 April 2011 [108]
20 January 2011 Jay O'Shea Port Vale One month [109]
20 January 2011 Nathan Redmond Burton Albion 31 January 2011 [87]
21 January 2011 Míchel AEK Athens End of season [86]
21 January 2011 Jake Jervis Hereford United One month [110]
28 January 2011 Dan Preston Hereford United 13 April 2011 [111]

Appearances and goals

Source:[112]
No. Pos. Nat. Name League FA Cup League Cup Total Discipline
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
1 GK  NIR Maik Taylor 0 0 1 0 3 0 4 0 0 0
2 DF  IRE Stephen Carr 38 0 1 0 5 0 44 0 5 0
3 DF  ENG David Murphy 10 0 4 2 5 1 19 3 2 0
4 MF  ENG Lee Bowyer 29 4 1 0 5 1 36 5 7 0
5 DF  ENG Roger Johnson 38 2 1 0 6 1 45 3 6 0
6 DF  ENG Liam Ridgewell 36 4 2 0 5 1 43 5 6 1
7 MF  SWE Sebastian Larsson 35 4 1 0 5 1 41 5 6 0
8 MF  ENG Craig Gardner 29 8 2 0 6 2 37 10 7 2
9 FW  ENG Kevin Phillips 14 1 4 2 2 1 20 4 0 0
10 FW  ENG Cameron Jerome 34 3 4 2 4 0 42 5 3 0
11 FW  SCO Garry O'Connor 3 0 0 0 2 0 5 0 0 0
11 MF  ENG David Bentley 13 0 2 1 0 0 15 1 0 0
12 MF  SCO Barry Ferguson 35 0 1 0 5 0 41 0 3 0
13 GK  IRE Colin Doyle 1 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0
14 FW  ENG Matt Derbyshire 13 0 2 2 5 1 20 3 1 0
15 DF  ENG Scott Dann 20 2 1 0 4 0 25 2 5 0
16 FW  SCO James McFadden 4 0 0 0 1 1 5 1 0 0
17 MF  ESP Míchel 0 0 0 0 3 0 3 0 0 0
17 FW  NGA Obafemi Martins 4 0 1 1 1 1 6 2 0 0
18 MF  IRE Keith Fahey 24 1 3 0 5 0 32 1 2 0
19 FW  SRB Nikola Žigić 25 5 2 0 7 3 34 8 4 0
20 MF  ESP Enric Vallès 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 0
21 DF  ENG Stuart Parnaby 5 0 4 1 2 0 11 1 1 0
22 MF  BLR Alexander Hleb 19 1 3 0 2 1 24 2 0 0
23 FW  CHI Jean Beausejour 17 2 4 1 4 0 25 3 0 0
24 MF  IRE Jay O'Shea 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
25 MF  ENG Jordon Mutch 3 0 3 0 0 0 6 0 1 0
26 GK  ENG Ben Foster 38 0 1 0 4 0 43 0 3 0
27 MF  ENG Nathan Redmond 0 0 1 0 2 0 3 0 0 0
28 DF  CZE Martin Jiránek 10 0 3 0 3 0 16 0 2 0
29 FW  ENG Marcus Bent 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
30 FW  NED Akwasi Asante 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
31 DF  SCO Fraser Kerr 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
32 DF  ENG Curtis Davies 6 0 1 0 0 0 7 0 1 0
33 DF  BEL Alpaslan Öztürk 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
34 GK  ENG Jack Butland 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

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