From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Southampton F.C.
1999–2000 season
Chairman Rupert Lowe
Manager Dave Jones (until 27 January)
Glenn Hoddle (from 28 January)
Stadium The Dell
Premiership 15th
FA Cup Fourth round
League Cup Fourth round
Top goalscorer Marian Pahars (13)
Highest home attendance15,257 vs West Ham United
(5 February 2000, Premier League)
Lowest home attendance10,960 vs Manchester City
(21 September 1999, League Cup)
Average home league attendance15,132

During the 1999–2000 English football season, Southampton Football Club competed in the FA Premier League.

Season summary

Manager Dave Jones was given leave from his duties in January to concentrate on clearing his name in connection with child abuse charges, and former England boss Glenn Hoddle was appointed on a temporary basis. [1] Hoddle did well to keep the Saints clear of relegation, and safety was achieved with a 15th-place finish and a respectable 44 points. As the new season approached, it was still unclear as to whether Jones would ever return to the club.

Matt Le Tissier scored a modest six goals during the season, but that was sufficient to bring his total number of Premier League goals to 100, making him the first midfielder to reach this milestone.[ citation needed] Le Tissier reached the milestone in Southampton's 2–1 defeat to Sunderland on 1 April 2000 with a goal from the penalty spot. [2]

Final league table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
13 Everton 38 12 14 12 59 49 +10 50
14 Coventry City 38 12 8 18 47 54 −7 44
15 Southampton 38 12 8 18 45 62 −17 44
16 Derby County 38 9 11 18 44 57 −13 38
17 Bradford City 38 9 9 20 38 68 −30 36 Qualification for the Intertoto Cup second round
Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
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 12 8 18 45 62  βˆ’17 44 8 4 7 26 22  +4 4 4 11 19 40  βˆ’21
Results by round
Round1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738
GroundAHHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHAHHAAHAAHAHAHHAHAH
ResultWLWLWLLDDLDDWLLDLLLWLWWWLDLLWDLWWLLLDW
Position5146109131313131414141414161616161616171716141615151615151515151515151515
Source: 11v11.com: 1999-2000 Southampton results
A = Away; H = Home; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Loss

Results

Southampton's score comes first [3]

Legend

Win Draw Loss

FA Premier League

Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Scorers
7 August 1999 Coventry City A 1–0 19,915 Østenstad
11 August 1999 Leeds United H 0–3 15,206
15 August 1999 Newcastle United H 4–2 15,013 Kachloul (2), Pahars, M. Hughes
21 August 1999 Everton A 1–4 31,755 Pahars
28 August 1999 Sheffield Wednesday H 2–0 14,815 Kachloul, Oakley
11 September 1999 Middlesbrough A 2–3 32,165 Kachloul, Pahars
18 September 1999 Arsenal H 0–1 15,242
25 September 1999 Manchester United A 3–3 55,249 Pahars, Le Tissier (2)
4 October 1999 Derby County H 3–3 14,208 Pahars, Oakley, Ripley
16 October 1999 Leicester City A 1–2 19,556 Pahars
23 October 1999 Liverpool H 1–1 15,241 Soltvedt
30 October 1999 Wimbledon A 1–1 15,754 Pahars
6 November 1999 Aston Villa A 1–0 26,474 Richards
20 November 1999 Tottenham Hotspur H 0–1 15,248
28 November 1999 Leeds United A 0–1 39,288
4 December 1999 Coventry City H 0–0 15,168
18 December 1999 Sunderland A 0–2 40,860
26 December 1999 Chelsea H 1–2 15,232 Davies
28 December 1999 Watford A 2–3 18,459 Boa Morte, Davies
3 January 2000 Bradford City H 1–0 15,027 Davies
16 January 2000 Newcastle United A 0–5 35,623
22 January 2000 Everton H 2–0 15,232 Tessem, Oakley
5 February 2000 West Ham United H 2–1 15,257 Pahars, Charles (own goal)
12 February 2000 Sheffield Wednesday A 1–0 23,470 Tessem
26 February 2000 Arsenal A 1–3 38,044 Richards
4 March 2000 Middlesbrough H 1–1 15,223 Pahars
8 March 2000 West Ham United A 0–2 23,484
11 March 2000 Tottenham Hotspur A 2–7 36,024 Tessem, Khalej
18 March 2000 Aston Villa H 2–0 15,218 Davies (2)
25 March 2000 Chelsea A 1–1 34,956 Tessem
1 April 2000 Sunderland H 1–2 15,245 Le Tissier (pen)
8 April 2000 Bradford City A 2–1 17,439 Windass (own goal), Pahars
15 April 2000 Watford H 2–0 15,252 Davies, Pahars
22 April 2000 Manchester United H 1–3 15,245 Pahars
24 April 2000 Derby County A 0–2 29,403
29 April 2000 Leicester City H 1–2 15,178 Kachloul
7 May 2000 Liverpool A 0–0 44,015
14 May 2000 Wimbledon H 2–0 15,249 Bridge, Pahars

FA Cup

Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R3 13 December 1999 Ipswich Town A 1–0 14,383 Richards
R4 8 January 2000 Aston Villa A 0–1 25,025

League Cup

Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R2 1st Leg 15 September 1999 Manchester City A 0–0 17,476
R2 2nd Leg 21 September 1999 Manchester City H 4–3 (4-3 on agg) 10,960 Dodd (pen), Oakley (2), Richards
R3 13 October 1999 Liverpool H 2–1 13,822 Richards, Soltvedt
R4 1 December 1999 Aston Villa A 0–4 17,608

First-team squad

Squad at end of season [4]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Wales  WAL Paul Jones
2 DF England  ENG Jason Dodd
3 DF England  ENG John Beresford
4 MF England  ENG Chris Marsden
5 DF Norway  NOR Claus Lundekvam
6 DF England  ENG Dean Richards
7 MF England  ENG Matt Le Tissier (captain)
8 MF England  ENG Matt Oakley
10 FW England  ENG Kevin Davies
11 DF England  ENG David Howells
12 DF England  ENG Richard Dryden
13 GK England  ENG Neil Moss
14 MF England  ENG Stuart Ripley
15 DF England  ENG Francis Benali
16 FW England  ENG James Beattie
17 FW Latvia  LVA Marian Pahars
18 DF England  ENG Wayne Bridge
No. Pos. Nation Player
19 MF Portugal  POR Dani Rodrigues
20 GK England  ENG Scott Bevan
21 FW Norway  NOR Jo Tessem
22 MF Wales  WAL David Hughes
24 DF France  FRA Patrick Colleter
25 DF England  ENG Garry Monk
26 MF Latvia  LVA Imants Bleidelis
27 DF Morocco  MAR Tahar El Khalej
28 MF England  ENG Kevin Gibbens
30 MF Morocco  MAR Hassan Kachloul
31 FW England  ENG Shayne Bradley
32 MF Norway  NOR Trond Egil Soltvedt
33 MF England  ENG Adam Sims
34 DF Portugal  POR Bruno Leal [5]
35 FW Portugal  POR LuΓ­s Boa Morte
37 DF England  ENG Phil Warner

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. Pos. Nation Player
9 FW Wales  WAL Mark Hughes (to Everton)
10 FW Norway  NOR Egil Østenstad (to Blackburn Rovers)
21 MF Wales  WAL Andy Williams (to Swindon Town)
23 DF England  ENG Scott Hiley (to Portsmouth)
26 DF Scotland  SCO Scott Marshall (to Brentford)
No. Pos. Nation Player
27 FW England  ENG David Hirst (retired)
29 MF Portugal  POR Marco Almeida (on loan from Sporting CP)
36 DF England  ENG Chris Collins (to Stevenage Borough)
DF England  ENG Stephen Jenkins (to Brentford)

Reserve squad

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
- MF England  ENG Brian Howard

References

  1. ^ "Hoddle takes Southampton post". BBC News. 28 January 2000. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  2. ^ "Devilish Phillips eclipses Saints". BBC Sport. 1 April 2000. Retrieved 27 October 2011.
  3. ^ Ltd, Statto Organisation. "Southampton results for the 1999-2000 season - Statto.com".
  4. ^ "FootballSquads - Southampton - 1999/00".
  5. ^ "Bruno: A name for the future". dailyecho.cuk.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Southampton F.C.
1999–2000 season
Chairman Rupert Lowe
Manager Dave Jones (until 27 January)
Glenn Hoddle (from 28 January)
Stadium The Dell
Premiership 15th
FA Cup Fourth round
League Cup Fourth round
Top goalscorer Marian Pahars (13)
Highest home attendance15,257 vs West Ham United
(5 February 2000, Premier League)
Lowest home attendance10,960 vs Manchester City
(21 September 1999, League Cup)
Average home league attendance15,132

During the 1999–2000 English football season, Southampton Football Club competed in the FA Premier League.

Season summary

Manager Dave Jones was given leave from his duties in January to concentrate on clearing his name in connection with child abuse charges, and former England boss Glenn Hoddle was appointed on a temporary basis. [1] Hoddle did well to keep the Saints clear of relegation, and safety was achieved with a 15th-place finish and a respectable 44 points. As the new season approached, it was still unclear as to whether Jones would ever return to the club.

Matt Le Tissier scored a modest six goals during the season, but that was sufficient to bring his total number of Premier League goals to 100, making him the first midfielder to reach this milestone.[ citation needed] Le Tissier reached the milestone in Southampton's 2–1 defeat to Sunderland on 1 April 2000 with a goal from the penalty spot. [2]

Final league table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
13 Everton 38 12 14 12 59 49 +10 50
14 Coventry City 38 12 8 18 47 54 −7 44
15 Southampton 38 12 8 18 45 62 −17 44
16 Derby County 38 9 11 18 44 57 −13 38
17 Bradford City 38 9 9 20 38 68 −30 36 Qualification for the Intertoto Cup second round
Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
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 12 8 18 45 62  βˆ’17 44 8 4 7 26 22  +4 4 4 11 19 40  βˆ’21
Results by round
Round1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738
GroundAHHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHAHHAAHAAHAHAHHAHAH
ResultWLWLWLLDDLDDWLLDLLLWLWWWLDLLWDLWWLLLDW
Position5146109131313131414141414161616161616171716141615151615151515151515151515
Source: 11v11.com: 1999-2000 Southampton results
A = Away; H = Home; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Loss

Results

Southampton's score comes first [3]

Legend

Win Draw Loss

FA Premier League

Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Scorers
7 August 1999 Coventry City A 1–0 19,915 Østenstad
11 August 1999 Leeds United H 0–3 15,206
15 August 1999 Newcastle United H 4–2 15,013 Kachloul (2), Pahars, M. Hughes
21 August 1999 Everton A 1–4 31,755 Pahars
28 August 1999 Sheffield Wednesday H 2–0 14,815 Kachloul, Oakley
11 September 1999 Middlesbrough A 2–3 32,165 Kachloul, Pahars
18 September 1999 Arsenal H 0–1 15,242
25 September 1999 Manchester United A 3–3 55,249 Pahars, Le Tissier (2)
4 October 1999 Derby County H 3–3 14,208 Pahars, Oakley, Ripley
16 October 1999 Leicester City A 1–2 19,556 Pahars
23 October 1999 Liverpool H 1–1 15,241 Soltvedt
30 October 1999 Wimbledon A 1–1 15,754 Pahars
6 November 1999 Aston Villa A 1–0 26,474 Richards
20 November 1999 Tottenham Hotspur H 0–1 15,248
28 November 1999 Leeds United A 0–1 39,288
4 December 1999 Coventry City H 0–0 15,168
18 December 1999 Sunderland A 0–2 40,860
26 December 1999 Chelsea H 1–2 15,232 Davies
28 December 1999 Watford A 2–3 18,459 Boa Morte, Davies
3 January 2000 Bradford City H 1–0 15,027 Davies
16 January 2000 Newcastle United A 0–5 35,623
22 January 2000 Everton H 2–0 15,232 Tessem, Oakley
5 February 2000 West Ham United H 2–1 15,257 Pahars, Charles (own goal)
12 February 2000 Sheffield Wednesday A 1–0 23,470 Tessem
26 February 2000 Arsenal A 1–3 38,044 Richards
4 March 2000 Middlesbrough H 1–1 15,223 Pahars
8 March 2000 West Ham United A 0–2 23,484
11 March 2000 Tottenham Hotspur A 2–7 36,024 Tessem, Khalej
18 March 2000 Aston Villa H 2–0 15,218 Davies (2)
25 March 2000 Chelsea A 1–1 34,956 Tessem
1 April 2000 Sunderland H 1–2 15,245 Le Tissier (pen)
8 April 2000 Bradford City A 2–1 17,439 Windass (own goal), Pahars
15 April 2000 Watford H 2–0 15,252 Davies, Pahars
22 April 2000 Manchester United H 1–3 15,245 Pahars
24 April 2000 Derby County A 0–2 29,403
29 April 2000 Leicester City H 1–2 15,178 Kachloul
7 May 2000 Liverpool A 0–0 44,015
14 May 2000 Wimbledon H 2–0 15,249 Bridge, Pahars

FA Cup

Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R3 13 December 1999 Ipswich Town A 1–0 14,383 Richards
R4 8 January 2000 Aston Villa A 0–1 25,025

League Cup

Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R2 1st Leg 15 September 1999 Manchester City A 0–0 17,476
R2 2nd Leg 21 September 1999 Manchester City H 4–3 (4-3 on agg) 10,960 Dodd (pen), Oakley (2), Richards
R3 13 October 1999 Liverpool H 2–1 13,822 Richards, Soltvedt
R4 1 December 1999 Aston Villa A 0–4 17,608

First-team squad

Squad at end of season [4]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Wales  WAL Paul Jones
2 DF England  ENG Jason Dodd
3 DF England  ENG John Beresford
4 MF England  ENG Chris Marsden
5 DF Norway  NOR Claus Lundekvam
6 DF England  ENG Dean Richards
7 MF England  ENG Matt Le Tissier (captain)
8 MF England  ENG Matt Oakley
10 FW England  ENG Kevin Davies
11 DF England  ENG David Howells
12 DF England  ENG Richard Dryden
13 GK England  ENG Neil Moss
14 MF England  ENG Stuart Ripley
15 DF England  ENG Francis Benali
16 FW England  ENG James Beattie
17 FW Latvia  LVA Marian Pahars
18 DF England  ENG Wayne Bridge
No. Pos. Nation Player
19 MF Portugal  POR Dani Rodrigues
20 GK England  ENG Scott Bevan
21 FW Norway  NOR Jo Tessem
22 MF Wales  WAL David Hughes
24 DF France  FRA Patrick Colleter
25 DF England  ENG Garry Monk
26 MF Latvia  LVA Imants Bleidelis
27 DF Morocco  MAR Tahar El Khalej
28 MF England  ENG Kevin Gibbens
30 MF Morocco  MAR Hassan Kachloul
31 FW England  ENG Shayne Bradley
32 MF Norway  NOR Trond Egil Soltvedt
33 MF England  ENG Adam Sims
34 DF Portugal  POR Bruno Leal [5]
35 FW Portugal  POR LuΓ­s Boa Morte
37 DF England  ENG Phil Warner

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. Pos. Nation Player
9 FW Wales  WAL Mark Hughes (to Everton)
10 FW Norway  NOR Egil Østenstad (to Blackburn Rovers)
21 MF Wales  WAL Andy Williams (to Swindon Town)
23 DF England  ENG Scott Hiley (to Portsmouth)
26 DF Scotland  SCO Scott Marshall (to Brentford)
No. Pos. Nation Player
27 FW England  ENG David Hirst (retired)
29 MF Portugal  POR Marco Almeida (on loan from Sporting CP)
36 DF England  ENG Chris Collins (to Stevenage Borough)
DF England  ENG Stephen Jenkins (to Brentford)

Reserve squad

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
- MF England  ENG Brian Howard

References

  1. ^ "Hoddle takes Southampton post". BBC News. 28 January 2000. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  2. ^ "Devilish Phillips eclipses Saints". BBC Sport. 1 April 2000. Retrieved 27 October 2011.
  3. ^ Ltd, Statto Organisation. "Southampton results for the 1999-2000 season - Statto.com".
  4. ^ "FootballSquads - Southampton - 1999/00".
  5. ^ "Bruno: A name for the future". dailyecho.cuk.

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