2000–01 FA Premier League


The 2000–01 FA Premier League was the ninth FA Premier League season and the third season running which ended with Manchester United as champions and Arsenal as runners-up. Sir Alex Ferguson became the first manager to win three successive English league titles with the same club. Liverpool, meanwhile, managed a unique cup treble – winning the FA Cup, League Cup and UEFA Cup. They also finished third in the Premier League and qualified for the Champions League. Nike replaced Mitre as manufacturer of the official Premier League match ball, a contract that has since been extended multiple times, with the most recent renewal made in November 2018 to the end of the 2024–25 season.
UEFA Cup places went to Leeds United, Chelsea, Ipswich Town, and Aston Villa, who qualified via the Intertoto Cup. None of the top six clubs in the Premier League had an English manager. The most successful English manager in the 2000–01 Premier League campaign was Peter Reid, whose Sunderland side finished seventh, having spent most of the season challenging for a place in Europe, and briefly occupied second place in the Premier League table.
Despite the success achieved by Sir Alex Ferguson and Gérard Houllier, the Manager of the Year Award went to George Burley. The Ipswich Town manager was in charge of a newly promoted side who began the season as relegation favourites and on a limited budget, guided his team to fifth place in the Premier League final table earning a total of 66 points - the highest total in Premier League history for a newly promoted side since the switch to a 20-team format -- and a place in the UEFA Cup for the first time in almost 20 years. 2000–01 was perhaps the best season yet for newly promoted teams in the Premier League. Charlton Athletic finished ninth, their highest finish since the 1950s. The only newly promoted team to suffer relegation was Manchester City, who in the space of six seasons had now been relegated three times and promoted twice. Relegated in bottom place were Bradford City, whose return to the top division after almost 80 years was over after just two seasons. The next relegation place went to Coventry City, who were finally relegated after 34 successive seasons of top division football, which had brought numerous relegation battles and league finishes no higher than sixth place.

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 Charlton Athletic, Manchester City and Ipswich Town, returning after a top flight absence of one, four and five years respectively. They replaced Wimbledon, Sheffield Wednesday and Watford. They were relegated after spending fourteen, nine and one year in the top flight respectively.

Stadia and Locations

TeamLocationStadiumCapacity
ArsenalLondon Arsenal Stadium38,419
Aston VillaBirminghamVilla Park42,573
Bradford CityBradfordValley Parade25,136
Charlton AthleticLondon The Valley27,111
ChelseaLondon Stamford Bridge42,055
Coventry CityCoventryHighfield Road23,489
Derby CountyDerbyPride Park Stadium33,597
EvertonLiverpool Goodison Park40,569
Ipswich TownIpswichPortman Road30,300
Leeds UnitedLeedsElland Road40,242
Leicester CityLeicesterFilbert Street22,000
LiverpoolLiverpool Anfield45,522
Manchester CityManchesterMaine Road35,150
Manchester UnitedOld TraffordOld Trafford68,174
MiddlesbroughMiddlesbroughRiverside Stadium35,049
Newcastle UnitedNewcastle upon TyneSt James' Park52,387
SouthamptonSouthamptonThe Dell15,200
SunderlandSunderlandStadium of Light49,000
Tottenham HotspurLondon White Hart Lane36,240
West Ham UnitedLondon Boleyn Ground35,647

Personnel and kits

TeamManagerCaptainKit manufacturerShirt sponsor
Arsenal Arsène Wenger Tony AdamsNikeDreamcast
Aston Villa John Gregory Gareth SouthgateDiadoraNTL
Bradford City Jim Jefferies Stuart McCallAsicsJCT600 Ltd
Charlton Athletic Alan Curbishley Mark KinsellaLe Coq SportifRedbus
Chelsea Claudio Ranieri Marcel DesaillyUmbroAutoglass
Coventry City Gordon Strachan Mustapha HadjiCCFC GarmentsSubaru
Derby County Jim Smith Darryl PowellPumaEDS
Everton Walter Smith Dave WatsonPumaOne2One
Ipswich Town George Burley Matt HollandPunchGreene King
Leeds United David O'Leary Lucas RadebeNikeStrongbow
Leicester City Peter Taylor Matt ElliottLe Coq SportifWalkers Crisps
Liverpool Gérard Houllier Jamie RedknappReebokCarlsberg Group
Manchester City Joe Royle Alf-Inge HålandLe Coq SportifEidos
Manchester United Sir Alex Ferguson Roy KeaneUmbroVodafone
Middlesbrough Terry Venables
Bryan Robson
Paul InceErreàBT Cellnet
Newcastle United Bobby Robson Alan ShearerAdidasNewcastle Brown Ale
Southampton Stuart Gray Matt Le TissierSaintsFriends Provident
Sunderland Peter Reid Michael GrayNikeReg Vardy
Tottenham Hotspur Glenn Hoddle Sol CampbellAdidasHolsten
West Ham United Glenn Roeder Steve LomasFilaDr. Martens

Managerial changes

TeamOutgoing managerManner of departureDate of vacancyPosition in tableIncoming managerDate of appointment
Leicester City Martin O'NeillEnd of contract1 June 2000Pre-season Peter Taylor12 June 2000
Bradford City Paul JewellSigned by Sheffield Wednesday18 June 2000Pre-season Chris Hutchings18 June 2000
Chelsea Gianluca VialliSacked12 September 200010th Claudio Ranieri17 September 2000
Bradford City Chris HutchingsSacked6 November 200019th Stuart McCall 6 November 2000
Bradford City Stuart McCall End of caretaker spell20 November 200020th Jim Jefferies20 November 2000
Tottenham Hotspur George GrahamSacked16 March 200113th Glenn Hoddle30 March 2001
Southampton Glenn HoddleSigned by Tottenham Hotspur30 March 20019th Stuart Gray30 March 2001
West Ham United Harry RedknappMutual consent9 May 200114th Glenn Roeder 12 May 2001

League table

Results

Season statistics

Scoring

Top scorers

RankPlayerClubGoals
1 Jimmy Floyd HasselbainkChelsea23
2 Marcus StewartIpswich Town19
3 Thierry HenryArsenal17
3 Mark VidukaLeeds United17
5 Michael OwenLiverpool16
6 Teddy SheringhamManchester United15
7 Emile HeskeyLiverpool14
7 Kevin PhillipsSunderland14
9 Alen BokšićMiddlesbrough12
10 James BeattieSouthampton10

Hat-tricks

PlayerForAgainstResultDateRef
Manchester CitySunderland4–2 23 8 2000
LiverpoolAston Villa3–1 6 9 2000
PLiverpoolDerby County4–0 15 10 2000
4ChelseaCoventry City6–1 21 10 2000
Manchester UnitedSouthampton5–0 28 10 2000
4Leeds UnitedLiverpool4–3 4 11 2000
PTottenham HotspurLeicester City3–0 25 11 2000
ArsenalNewcastle United5–0 9 12 2000
ArsenalLeicester City6–1 26 12 2000
SunderlandBradford City4–1 26 12 2000
Manchester UnitedArsenal6–1 25 2 2001
ArsenalWest Ham United3–0 3 3 2001
Ipswich TownSouthampton3–0 2 4 2001
LiverpoolNewcastle United3–0 5 5 2001

Top assists

RankPlayerClubAssists
1 David BeckhamManchester United12
2 Nolberto SolanoNewcastle United10
3 Jimmy Floyd HasselbainkChelsea9
3 Thierry HenryArsenal9
3 Vladimír ŠmicerLiverpool9
6 Ryan GiggsManchester United8
6 Graham StuartCharlton Athletic8
8 Stephen ClemenceTottenham Hotspur7
8 Paolo Di CanioWest Ham United7
8 Hassan KachloulSouthampton7

Awards

Monthly awards

Annual awards

AwardWinnerClub
Premier League Manager of the Season George BurleyIpswich Town
Premier League Player of the Season Patrick VieiraArsenal
PFA Players' Player of the Year Teddy SheringhamManchester United
PFA Young Player of the Year Steven GerrardLiverpool
FWA Footballer of the Year Teddy SheringhamManchester United