1996–97 FA Premier League


The 1996–97 FA Premier League was the fifth season of the FA Premier League since its formation in 1992. The majority of the season was contested by the reigning champions, Manchester United, along with Newcastle United, Arsenal and Liverpool. The title was eventually won by Manchester United, after Liverpool and Newcastle's failure to win in their penultimate games of the season; at 75 points it is the lowest points total for a Premier League champion and lowest since the 3-1-0 points system was introduced in the 1981–82 season.
Middlesbrough – despite spending millions of pounds on high-profile foreign players like Emerson, Fabrizio Ravanelli, Branco and Gianluca Festa – were relegated on the final day of the season and were on the losing side in both the FA Cup and League Cup finals. Middlesbrough finished in 19th place, but they would have been placed outside the relegation zone without a three-point deduction imposed for unilaterally postponing a December 1996 fixture at Blackburn Rovers, with the Middlesbrough board blaming the decision on the absence of 23 players ill or injured. This sanction meant Coventry City, who had been in the top division since 1967, finished in 17th place and avoided relegation. The decision was controversial and later resurfaced in 2006–07 when West Ham escaped a points deduction and subsequently avoided relegation.
Another relegation place went to Nottingham Forest, who sacked manager Frank Clark in December. Stuart Pearce took over as temporary player-manager, spending three months in charge and winning the January 1997 Manager of the Month award. In March, Pearce quit as manager to be replaced by Dave Bassett, formerly of Crystal Palace. Also relegated, due to a 1–0 defeat to Wimbledon in their last game of the season, were Sunderland, who were leaving Roker Park after 99 years and relocating to the 42,000-seat Stadium of Light on the banks of the River Wear for the start of the 1997–98 season in Division One.

Teams

Twenty teams competed in the league – the top seventeen teams from the previous season and the three teams promoted from the First Division. The promoted teams were Sunderland, Derby County and Leicester City. This was also both Sunderland and Derby County's first season in the Premier League. They replaced Manchester City, Queens Park Rangers and Bolton Wanderers, ending their top flight spells of seven, thirteen and one year respectively.

Stadiums and Locations

TeamLocationStadiumCapacity
ArsenalLondon Arsenal Stadium
Aston VillaBirminghamVilla Park
Blackburn RoversBlackburnEwood Park
ChelseaLondon Stamford Bridge
Coventry CityCoventryHighfield Road
Derby CountyDerbyBaseball Ground
EvertonLiverpool Goodison Park
Leeds UnitedLeedsElland Road
Leicester CityLeicesterFilbert Street
LiverpoolLiverpool Anfield
Manchester UnitedOld TraffordOld Trafford
MiddlesbroughMiddlesbroughRiverside Stadium
Newcastle UnitedNewcastle upon TyneSt James' Park
Nottingham ForestWest BridgfordCity Ground
Sheffield WednesdaySheffieldHillsborough Stadium
SouthamptonSouthamptonThe Dell
SunderlandSunderlandRoker Park
Tottenham HotspurLondon White Hart Lane
West Ham UnitedLondon Boleyn Ground
WimbledonLondon Selhurst Park

Personnel and kits

TeamManagerCaptainKit manufacturerShirt sponsor
Arsenal Arsène Wenger Tony AdamsNikeJVC
Aston Villa Brian Little Andy TownsendReebokAST Research
Blackburn Rovers Tony Parkes Tim SherwoodAsicsCIS
Chelsea Ruud Gullit Dennis WiseUmbroCoors
Coventry City Gordon Strachan Gary McAllisterLe Coq SportifPeugeot
Derby County Jim Smith Igor ŠtimacPumaPuma
Everton Dave Watson Dave WatsonUmbroDanka
Leeds United George Graham Lucas RadebePumaPackard Bell
Leicester City Martin O'Neill Steve WalshFox LeisureWalkers
Liverpool Roy Evans John BarnesReebokCarlsberg
Manchester United Alex Ferguson Eric CantonaUmbroSharp
Middlesbrough Bryan Robson Nigel PearsonErreàCellnet
Newcastle United Kenny Dalglish Peter BeardsleyAdidasNewcastle Brown Ale
Nottingham Forest Dave Bassett Stuart PearceUmbroLabatt's
Sheffield Wednesday David Pleat Peter AthertonPumaSanderson
Southampton Graeme Souness Matt Le TissierPonySanderson
Sunderland Peter Reid Kevin BallAvecVaux Breweries
Tottenham Hotspur Gerry Francis Gary MabbuttPonyHewlett-Packard
West Ham United Harry Redknapp Julian DicksPonyDagenham Motors
Wimbledon Joe Kinnear Vinnie JonesLottoElonex

Managerial changes

League table

Results

Season statistics

Scoring

Top scorers

RankPlayerClubGoals
1 Alan ShearerNewcastle United25
2 Ian WrightArsenal23
3 Robbie FowlerLiverpool18
3 Ole Gunnar SolskjærManchester United18
5 Dwight YorkeAston Villa17
6 Les FerdinandNewcastle United16
6 Fabrizio RavanelliMiddlesbrough16
8 Dion DublinCoventry City13
8 Matt Le TissierSouthampton13
10 Dennis BergkampArsenal12
10 Steve ClaridgeLeicester City12
10 Stan CollymoreLiverpool12
10 JuninhoMiddlesbrough12

Hat-tricks

PlayerForAgainstResultDateRef
Nottingham ForestCoventry City3–0 17 8 1996
MiddlesbroughLiverpool3–3 17 8 1996
ArsenalSheffield Wednesday4–1 16 9 1996
LAston VillaNewcastle United4–3 30 9 1996
EvertonSouthampton7–1 16 11 1996
4LiverpoolMiddlesbrough5–1 14 12 1996
Newcastle UnitedLeicester City4–3 2 2 1997
Leicester CityDerby County4–2 22 2 1997
Tottenham HotspurSunderland4–0 4 3 1997
MiddlesbroughDerby County6–1 5 3 1997
Blackburn RoversWimbledon3–1 15 3 1997
West Ham UnitedSheffield Wednesday5–1 3 5 1997

Top assists

RankPlayerClubAssists
1 Eric CantonaManchester United12
2 Neal ArdleyWimbledon11
3 Dennis BergkampArsenal9
3 Andy HinchcliffeEverton9
3 Gary McAllisterCoventry City9
3 Gianfranco ZolaChelsea9
7 Nick BarmbyEverton8
7 David BeckhamManchester United8
7 Stig Inge BjørnebyeLiverpool8
7 Les FerdinandNewcastle United8

Awards

Monthly awards

Annual awards

AwardWinnerClub
Premier League Manager of the Season Alex FergusonManchester United
Premier League Player of the Season JuninhoMiddlesbrough
PFA Players' Player of the Year Alan ShearerNewcastle United
PFA Young Player of the Year David BeckhamManchester United
FWA Footballer of the Year Gianfranco ZolaChelsea