2001–02 Coventry City F.C. season

Coventry City
2001–02 season
Chairman Bryan Richardson (until 30 January)
Mike McGinnity (from 30 January)
Manager Gordon Strachan (until 10 September)
Roland Nilsson (player-manager until 16 April)
Gary McAllister (from 24 April)
Stadium Highfield Road
First Division 11th
FA Cup Third round
League Cup Third round
Top goalscorer Lee Hughes (14)
Average home league attendance 15,436

During the 2001–02 English football season, Coventry City F.C. competed in the Football League First Division, following relegation from the FA Premier League the previous season.

Season summary

Despite the signing of prolific striker Lee Hughes from local rivals West Bromwich Albion, Coventry City were unable to make a genuine push for an immediate return to the Premier League and finished well away from promotion in 11th place. Manager Gordon Strachan had been sacked after five games with only one win and Coventry 19th; this heralded the beginning of an eleven-match unbeaten run which saw Coventry top the table with a third of the season gone, but from then three straight losses took them down to ninth. Coventry never regained the form from that unbeaten run, but with seven games left to play they stood fourth and appeared almost certain to gain a playoff place. Unfortunately, Coventry only gained one point from those last seven games and fell down to 11th place.

Final league table

Pos Team Pld W D L F A W D L F A F A GD Pts
1 Manchester City 46193163191238453310852+5699
2 West Bromwich Albion 4615443611124725186129+3289
3 Wolverhampton Wanderers 4613463318127443257643+3386
4 Millwall 461535432278826266948+2177
5 Birmingham City 461445442079726297049+2176
6 Norwich City 4615623616731324356051+975
7 Burnley 4611753929105831337062+875
8 Preston North End 4613734521751126387159+1272
9 Wimbledon 46986302295933356357+667
10 Crystal Palace 4613374222731328407062+866
11 Coventry City 4612473319821326345953+666
12 Gillingham 4612563826651226416467–364
13 Sheffield United 46887343077919245354–160
14 Watford 4610583830661124266256+659
15 Bradford City 4610112413959928376976–755
16 Nottingham Forest 4671152621571124305051–154
17 Portsmouth 469683631481124416072–1253
18 Walsall 4610672927361422445171–2051
19 Grimsby Town 469773428371316445072–2250
20 Sheffield Wednesday 4667102837671021344971–2250
21 Rotherham United 4671333229361420375266–1449
22 Crewe Alexandra 468872332451424444776–2949
23 Barnsley 469953733261522535986–2748
24 Stockport County 46511719441715235842102 –6026
Key
Football League Champions, promoted to FA Premier League
Promoted to FA Premier League
Participated in play-offs
Promoted to Premier League through play-offs
Relegated

Results

Coventry City's score comes first[1]

Legend

Win Draw Loss

Football League First Division

DateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
11 August 2001 Stockport CountyA2–09,329Hughes, Carsley
19 August 2001 Wolverhampton WanderersH0–122,902
24 August 2001 Bradford CityA1–215,085Bothroyd
27 August 2001 Nottingham ForestH0–018,467
8 September 2001 Grimsby TownH0–114,980
15 September 2001 Sheffield UnitedA1–016,168Delorge
19 September 2001 Manchester CityH4–318,804Pearce (own goal), Konjić, Hughes, Thompson
22 September 2001 PortsmouthH2–018,303Bothroyd, Carsley
25 September 2001 BarnsleyA1–111,692Martínez
29 September 2001 GillinghamA2–19,435Martínez, Chippo
14 October 2001 WalsallA1–07,515Thompson
17 October 2001 Rotherham UnitedA0–06,582
21 October 2001 Crewe AlexandraH1–015,788Hughes (pen)
24 October 2001 WimbledonA1–05,883Thompson
27 October 2001 Sheffield WednesdayH2–017,381Safri, Hughes (pen)
31 October 2001 Preston North EndH2–215,755Thompson (2)
3 November 2001 MillwallA2–315,748Martínez, Bothroyd
17 November 2001 BurnleyH0–216,849
25 November 2001 Birmingham CityA0–218,279
28 November 2001 Crystal PalaceH2–013,695Delorge, Mills
1 December 2001 WimbledonH3–117,303Hughes, Mills, Thompson
9 December 2001 WatfordH0–213,251
12 December 2001 West Bromwich AlbionA0–122,543
15 December 2001 Norwich CityA0–217,889
23 December 2001 Bradford CityH4–014,977Hughes (2, 1 pen), Thompson, Joachim
26 December 2001 Grimsby TownA1–07,568Hughes
29 December 2001 Nottingham ForestA1–222,706Chippo
13 January 2002 Wolverhampton WanderersA1–321,009Bothroyd
19 January 2002 Stockport CountyH0–012,448
29 January 2002 Crystal PalaceA3–116,197Bothroyd, Hall, McSheffrey
2 February 2002 GillinghamH1–214,337Bothroyd
6 February 2002 Rotherham UnitedH2–012,893Konjić, Hughes
9 February 2002 Crewe AlexandraA6–17,835Delorge (2), Hughes (3), Thompson
16 February 2002 WalsallH2–113,736Thompson, Chippo
23 February 2002 BarnsleyH4–015,092Chippo, Thompson (2), Mills
26 February 2002 PortsmouthA0–112,336
3 March 2002 Manchester CityA2–433,335Mills (2)
6 March 2002 Sheffield UnitedH1–012,963Thompson
9 March 2002 Norwich CityH2–116,744Hughes (2, 1 pen)
16 March 2002 WatfordA0–315,833
24 March 2002 Birmingham CityH1–117,945Healy
29 March 2002 Sheffield WednesdayA1–221,470Healy
1 April 2002 West Bromwich AlbionH0–121,513
6 April 2002 Preston North EndA0–415,665
12 April 2002 MillwallH0–115,335
21 April 2002 BurnleyA0–118,751

FA Cup

Main article: 2001–02 FA Cup
RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
R316 January 2002 Tottenham HotspurH0–220,758

League Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
R211 September 2001 Peterborough UnitedA2–2 (won 4-2 on pens)5,729Thompson, Carsley
R39 October 2001 ChelseaH0–212,582

Squad

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

No. Position Player
2 England DF Marc Edworthy
3 England DF Marcus Hall
4 Argentina DF Horacio Carbonari (on loan from Derby County)
5 Republic of Ireland DF Gary Breen
6 England DF Richard Shaw
7 England MF David Thompson
8 Wales MF Paul Trollope
9 England FW Lee Hughes
10 England FW Julian Joachim
11 Morocco DF Youssef Chippo
12 England FW Lee Mills
13 Sweden GK Magnus Hedman
14 Republic of Ireland DF Barry Quinn
15 England MF John Eustace
16 Republic of Ireland MF Keith O'Neill
17 Peru FW Ysrael Zúñiga
18 Scotland MF Gavin Strachan
19 Honduras MF Iván Guerrero
21 England FW Jay Bothroyd
22 Bosnia and Herzegovina DF Muhamed Konjić
No. Position Player
23 Denmark GK Morten Hyldgaard
24 Sweden DF Roland Nilsson (player-manager)
25 Honduras FW Jairo Martínez
26 England DF Calum Davenport
27 Morocco MF Youssef Safri
28 Belgium MF Laurent Delorge
29 England FW Gary McSheffrey
31 Norway FW Runar Normann
32 Wales MF Lee Fowler
33 England GK Gary Montgomery
34 Sweden DF Richard Spong
35 Republic of Ireland MF Colin Healy (on loan from Celtic)
36 England MF Robert Betts
37 Scotland MF Craig Strachan
38 Scotland MF Gary McPhee
39 Sweden MF Andreas Dahl
40 England DF Thomas Cudworth
41 England MF Craig Pead
42 Republic of Ireland MF Barry Ferguson

Left club during season

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

No. Position Player
1 England GK Chris Kirkland (to Liverpool)
4 England DF Paul Williams (to Southampton)
8 Republic of Ireland MF Lee Carsley (to Everton)
12 England MF Paul Telfer (to Southampton)
No. Position Player
20 Sweden MF Tomas Gustafsson (to Copenhagen)
30 Scotland GK Andy Goram (to Oldham Athletic)
30 England GK Tim Flowers (on loan from Leicester City)
35 England MF Carlton Palmer (to Stockport County)

Reserve squad

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

No. Position Player
Sweden GK Per Fahlman
Northern Ireland MF Ruaidhri Higgins
No. Position Player
Northern Ireland MF Mark Magennis
England MF Mark Noon

Transfers

In

Out

Loan in

Loan out

References

  1. http://www.statto.com/football/teams/coventry-city/2001-2002/results
  2. "Coventry seal Hughes deal". BBC Sport. 8 August 2001. Retrieved 11 July 2013.
  3. "Safri signs for Coventry". BBC News. 11 August 2001.
  4. Goram initially signed a month-to-month deal before signing with the club for the rest of the season on 24 October.
  5. Tynan, Gordon (1 January 2002). "Coventry sign cut-price Mills". The Independent. London. Retrieved 11 July 2013.
  6. "Hadji completes Villa move". BBC News. 6 July 2001.
  7. "Celtic sign trio on deadline day". BBC Sport. 2 August 2001. Retrieved 11 July 2013.
  8. "Palmer named Stockport boss". BBC News. 6 November 2001.
  9. "Carsley joins Everton". BBC Sport. 8 February 2002. Retrieved 11 July 2013.
  10. "Nilsson hangs up boots". BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 8 April 2002. Retrieved 11 July 2013.
  11. Palmer originally signed on loan for three months, but the loan was terminated early.
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