To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

1991–92 Southampton F.C. season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Southampton F.C.
1991–92 season
ChairmanGuy Askham
ManagerIan Branfoot
StadiumThe Dell
First Division16th
FA CupQuarter finals
Rumbelows CupFourth Round
Full Members CupRunners-up
Top goalscorerLeague: Shearer (13)
All: Shearer (16)
Average home league attendance14,070

During the 1991–92 English football season, Southampton F.C. competed in the Football League First Division.

Season summary

In the 1991–92 season, Ian Branfoot took over as Southampton boss but their fortunes fared no better and only managed to secure a 16th-place finish despite reaching the Full Members Cup final at Wembley only to lose 3–2 against Nottingham Forest.

During the summer of 1992, Branfoot became "the most popular manager in English football", as he took telephone calls from clubs "trying to bargain with players they don't want plus cash", conceding that he would be forced to sell 21-year-old top scorer Alan Shearer, following a season of speculation about Shearer's future, with the likes of Liverpool and Manchester United being linked with Shearer's signature in the autumn of 1991. Despite this interest, Shearer decided to stay at Southampton until the end of the season before making a decision about his future.

Although Branfoot eventually accepted that a sale was inevitable, he claimed that "whatever happens, we are in the driving seat".[1] Eventually, Shearer was sold to newly promoted Blackburn Rovers for a national record fee of £3.6 million, with Blackburn's top scorer David Speedie reluctantly moving to The Dell as part of the deal. Despite Branfoot's claim to be "in the driving seat", Saints failed to include a "sell-on clause" in the contract.[2]

Squad

[3] [4]

No. Nat. Pos Player Games Played (League) Goals Scored (League) References
13 England GK Ian Andrews
1 England GK Tim Flowers 41 0 [N 1]
2 England DF Jason Dodd 28 0 [N 2]
5 England DF Richard Hall 26 3 [N 3]
15 England DF Francis Benali 22 0 [N 4]
26 Wales DF David Hughes 0 0 [N 5]
Republic of Ireland DF Jeff Kenna 14 0 [N 6]
England DF Jon Gittens
12 England DF Stuart Gray
10 England MF Neil Maddison
England MF Steve Wood
Wales MF Barry Horne 34 1 [N 7]
England MF David Lee
4 England MF Terry Hurlock 29 0 [N 8]
England MF Tommy Widdrington 3 0 [N 9]
7 England MF Matthew Le Tissier 32 6 [N 10]
Netherlands MF Danny Hoekman
England FW Nicky Banger
England FW Alan Shearer 41 13 [N 11]
9 Northern Ireland FW Iain Dowie 30 9 [N 12]

Transfers

In

Player Nat. Pos. From Transfer Fee
Danny Hoekman Netherlands MF Manchester City Free
Iain Dowie Northern Ireland FW West Ham United £528,000
David Lee England MF Bury £385,440
Steve Wood England MF Millwall £422,400
David Hughes Wales MF Weymouth Undisclosed
Terry Hurlock England MF Rangers Undisclosed

Out

Player Nat. Pos. To Transfer Fee
Paul Rideout England FW Notts County Undisclosed
Steve Davis England DF Burnley £626,560
Alan McLoughlin Republic of Ireland MF Portsmouth £528,000
Gareth Taylor Wales FW Bristol Rovers Free
Jimmy Case England MF Bournemouth Free
Sergey Gotsmanov Belarus MF Hallescher FC Undisclosed
Rod Wallace England FW Leeds United Undisclosed

Loaned out

Player Nat. Pos. To
Paul Tisdale England MF Northampton Town
Jon Gittens England MF Middlesbrough
Kevin Moore England DF Bristol Rovers
Alan McLoughlin Republic of Ireland MF Aston Villa

Final league table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
14 Chelsea 42 13 14 15 50 60 −10 53
15 Tottenham Hotspur 42 15 7 20 58 63 −5 52
16 Southampton 42 14 10 18 39 55 −16 52
17 Oldham Athletic 42 14 9 19 63 67 −4 51
18 Norwich City 42 11 12 19 47 63 −16 45
Source: World Football
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored

Results

[17][18]

First Division

16 August 1991 1 Southampton 2–3 Tottenham Hotspur Southampton, Hampshire
Hall
Shearer
Report Lineker
Durie
Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 18,581
14 September 1991 8 Southampton 0–1 Manchester United Southampton, Hampshire
Hughes 48' Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 19,264
17 September 1991 9 Southampton 1–0 Wimbledon Southampton, Hampshire
Cockerill Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 11,280
20 September 1991 10 Sheffield Wednesday 2–0 Southampton Sheffield, Yorkshire
Stadium: Hillsborough
Attendance: 27,291
28 September 1991 11 Southampton 0–4 Arsenal Southampton, Hampshire
Wright
Rocastle
Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 18,050
19 October 1991 13 Southampton 0–0 Norwich City Southampton, Hampshire
Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 12,516
1 November 1991 15 Southampton 0–3 Manchester City Southampton, Hampshire
Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 13,933
16 November 1991 16 Crystal Palace 1–0 Southampton Selhurst, London
Thomas Stadium: Selhurst Park
Attendance: 15,861
23 November 1991 17 Southampton 1–0 Chelsea Southampton, Hampshire
Shearer Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 14,933
6 December 1991 19 Southampton 1–1 Liverpool Southampton, Hampshire
Shearer Redknapp 74' Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 10,053
20 December 1991 20 Southampton 1–1 Notts County Southampton, Hampshire
Dowie Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 11,054
26 December 1991 21 Leeds United 3–3 Southampton Leeds, Yorkshire
Hodge
Speed
Dowie
Shearer
Stadium: Elland Road
Attendance: 22,805
1 January 1992 23 Southampton 1–2 Everton Southampton, Hampshire
Adams Ward
Beardsley
Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 16,546
31 January 1992 26 Norwich City 2–1 Southampton Norwich, Norfolk
Cockerill Stadium: Carrow Road
Attendance: 10,660
12 February 1992 27 Chelsea 1–1 Southampton Fulham, London
Townsend Horne Stadium: Stamford Bridge
Attendance: 7,148
21 February 1992 28 Southampton 0–0 Coventry City Southampton, Hampshire
Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 13,719
28 February 1992 29 Liverpool 0–0 Southampton Anfield, Merseyside
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 34,449
1 April 1992 34 Everton 0–1 Southampton Walton, Merseyside
Cockerill Stadium: Goodison Park
Attendance: 15,201
19 April 1992 40 Wimbledon 0–1 Southampton Selhurst, London
Hall Stadium: Selhurst Park
Attendance: 4,025
2 May 1992 42 Arsenal 5–1 Southampton Highbury, London
Wright
Smith
Campbell
Cockerill Stadium: Highbury
Attendance: 37,702
Round123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142
GroundHAAHHAAHHAHAHAHAHAHHAAHHAAAHAHHAHAHHAAHAHA
ResultLLWLDLDLWLLDDWLLWLDDDLLLWLDDDWWWWWWLWLLWWL
Source: statto.com
A = Away; H = Home; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Loss

League Cup (Rumbelows Cup)

9 October 1991 R2 L2 Southampton 2–2
(Agg: 5–3)
Scarborough Southampton, Hampshire
Cockerill
Le Tissier
Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 4,036

FA Cup

26 January 1992 R4 Southampton 0–0 Manchester United Southampton, Hampshire
Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 19,506
4 February 1992 R4R Manchester United 2–2
(AET)
(2–4 on penalties)
Southampton Old Trafford, Greater Manchester
Kanchelskis 42'
McClair 90'
Gray 8'
Shearer 21'
Stadium: Old Trafford
Attendance: 33,414
15 February 1992 R5 Bolton Wanderers 2–2 Southampton Burnden, Greater Manchester
Walker 79'
Green 87'
Hall 26', 29' Stadium: Burnden Park
Attendance: 20,136
25 February 1992 R5R Southampton 3–2
(AET)
Bolton Wanderers Southampton, Hampshire
Shearer
Horne (2)
Walker
Darby
Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 18,009
7 March 1992 R6 Southampton 0–0 Norwich City Southampton, Hampshire
Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 20,088
18 March 1992 R6R Norwich City 2–1 Southampton Norwich, Norfolk
Newman 55'
Sutton 116'
Ruddock 45' Stadium: Carrow Road
Attendance: 21,017

Full Members Cup (Zenith Data Systems Cup)

26 November 1991 R3S Plymouth Argyle 0–1 Southampton Plymouth, Devon
Le Tissier 70' Stadium: Home Park
Attendance: 5,578
21 January 1992 FS L1 Southampton 2–0 Chelsea Southampton, Hampshire
Shearer 15'
Hurlock 79'
Stadium: The Dell
Attendance: 8,726
29 January 1992 FS L2 Chelsea 1–3
(Agg: 1–5)
Southampton Fulham, London
Wise 37' (pen) Le Tissier 6' (pen), 20', 51' Stadium: Stamford Bridge
Attendance: 9,781
29 March 1992 F Nottingham Forest 3–2
(AET)
Southampton Wembley, London
Gemmill 15', 112'
Black 45'
Le Tissier 64'
Moore 70'
Stadium: Wembley Stadium
Attendance: 67,688

References

  1. ^ Quoted in Holley & Chalk (2003). In That Number. p. 224.
  2. ^ Holley & Chalk (2003). In That Number. p. 224.
  3. ^ "Southampton FC - Kader 1991/1992". worldfootball.net. Retrieved 24 April 2013.
  4. ^ "Football photographic encyclopedia". sportingheroes.net. Retrieved 24 April 2013.
  5. ^ "Tim FLOWERS". sportingheroes.net.
  6. ^ "Jason DODD". sportingheroes.net.
  7. ^ "Richard HALL". sportingheroes.net.
  8. ^ "Francis BENALI". sportingheroes.net.
  9. ^ "David HUGHES". sportingheroes.net.
  10. ^ "Jeff KENNA". sportingheroes.net.
  11. ^ "Barry HORNE". sportingheroes.net.
  12. ^ "Terry HURLOCK". sportingheroes.net.
  13. ^ "Tommy WIDDRINGTON". sportingheroes.net.
  14. ^ "Matthew LE TISSIER". sportingheroes.net.
  15. ^ "Alan SHEARER". sportingheroes.net.
  16. ^ "Iain DOWIE". sportingheroes.net.
  17. ^ "Southampton FC .:. Dates & results 1991/1992". worldfootball.net.
  18. ^ "Southampton football club: Record v other sides".
This page was last edited on 3 March 2024, at 15:40
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.