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2013–14 Premier League

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Premier League
Season2013–14
ChampionsManchester City
2nd Premier League title
4th English title
RelegatedCardiff City
Fulham
Norwich City
Champions LeagueManchester City
Liverpool
Chelsea
Arsenal
Europa LeagueEverton
Tottenham Hotspur
Hull City
Matches played380
Goals scored1,052 (2.77 per match)
Top goalscorerLuis Suárez (31 goals)[1]
Best goalkeeperPetr Čech
Wojciech Szczęsny
(16 clean sheets)[2]
Biggest home winManchester City 7–0 Norwich City[3]
(2 November 2013)
Biggest away winTottenham Hotspur 0–5 Liverpool[3]
(15 December 2013)
Highest scoringManchester City 6–3 Arsenal[3]
(14 December 2013)
Cardiff City 3–6 Liverpool[3]
(22 March 2014)
Longest winning run11 games[3]
Liverpool
Longest unbeaten run16 games[3]
Liverpool
Longest winless run9 games[3]
Fulham
Sunderland
West Bromwich Albion
Longest losing run7 games[3]
Crystal Palace
Highest attendance75,368[3]
Manchester United 4–1 Aston Villa
(29 March 2014)
Lowest attendance19,242[3]
Swansea City 3–3 Stoke City
(10 November 2013)
Total attendance13,929,810[3]
Average attendance36,657[3]
All statistics correct as of 11 May 2014.

The 2013–14 Premier League was the 22nd season of the Premier League, the top-flight English professional league for association football clubs. The fixtures were announced on 19 June 2013. The season started on Saturday 17 August 2013, and concluded on Sunday 11 May 2014.

On the final day of the season, Manchester City won the Premier League with a 2–0 victory over West Ham United, finishing with 86 points. Liverpool had looked on course to win the title with two weeks to go, but a loss and a draw in two of their last three matches left the team in second place with 84 points. Chelsea placed third, while perennial power and 2013 champion Manchester United had a disappointing season and ended up seventh. Norwich City, Fulham, and Cardiff City were the bottom three teams and were relegated to the Football League Championship.

Luis Suárez easily won the scoring title with 31 goals, and was also named Player of the Season. Goalkeepers Wojciech Szczęsny of Arsenal and Petr Čech of Chelsea led the league with 16 clean sheets each. Tony Pulis of Crystal Palace won the Manager of the Season award.

Teams

A total of 20 teams contested the league, including 17 sides from the 2012–13 season[4] and three promoted from the 2012–13 Football League Championship.[5]

On 16 April 2013, Cardiff City earned promotion from the 2012–13 Football League Championship. They returned to the top division after being absent for 51 years.[6] This is the first season that Cardiff City are in the Premier League. This season features both Cardiff City and Swansea City which means that it is the first time the South Wales derby is featured in the top flight.[7] It is also the first time that two clubs outside of England are featured in the top flight of English football in the same season.

On 4 May 2013, Hull City earned promotion to the Premier League after a brief absence of three seasons. Hull needed to beat Cardiff City on the final day of the season to maintain second place, but a draw was sufficient following Watford's dramatic loss at home to Leeds United.[8]

On 27 May 2013, Crystal Palace claimed the final promotion place, after beating Watford in the Football League Championship play-off final[9] with Kevin Phillips converting the winning penalty in extra time. Palace are playing in the Premier League for the first time since the 2004–05 season.

The three teams promoted replace Queens Park Rangers, Reading and Wigan Athletic who were all relegated to the Championship at the end of the previous season.

Stadiums and locations

Note: Table lists clubs in alphabetical order.
Team Stadium[10] Capacity[10]
Arsenal Emirates Stadium 60,338
Aston Villa Villa Park 42,682
Cardiff City Cardiff City Stadium 27,815
Chelsea Stamford Bridge 41,798
Crystal Palace Selhurst Park 26,255
Everton Goodison Park 39,571
Fulham Craven Cottage 25,700
Hull City KC Stadium 25,400
Liverpool Anfield 45,276
Manchester City Etihad Stadium 47,405
Manchester United Old Trafford 75,731
Newcastle United St James' Park 52,405
Norwich City Carrow Road 27,244
Southampton St Mary's Stadium 32,589
Stoke City Britannia Stadium 27,740
Sunderland Stadium of Light 48,707
Swansea City Liberty Stadium 20,750
Tottenham Hotspur White Hart Lane 36,284
West Bromwich Albion The Hawthorns 26,445
West Ham United Boleyn Ground 35,016

Personnel and kits

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

Team Manager1 Captain Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
Arsenal Arsène Wenger Thomas Vermaelen Nike[11] Emirates[12]
Aston Villa Paul Lambert Ron Vlaar Macron[13] dafabet[14]
Cardiff City Ole Gunnar Solskjær Mark Hudson Puma[15] Malaysia[16]
Chelsea José Mourinho John Terry Adidas[17] Samsung[18]
Crystal Palace Tony Pulis Paddy McCarthy Avec[19] GAC Logistics[20]
Everton Roberto Martínez Phil Jagielka Nike[21] Chang[22]
Fulham Felix Magath Brede Hangeland Adidas[23] Marathonbet[24]
Hull City Steve Bruce Robert Koren Adidas[25] Cash Converters[25]
Liverpool Brendan Rodgers Steven Gerrard Warrior[26] Standard Chartered[27]
Manchester City Manuel Pellegrini Vincent Kompany Nike[28] Etihad Airways[29]
Manchester United Ryan Giggs
(interim player-manager)
Nemanja Vidić Nike[30] Aon[31]
Newcastle United Alan Pardew Fabricio Coloccini Puma[32] Wonga[33]
Norwich City Neil Adams Russell Martin Erreà[34] Aviva[35]
Southampton Mauricio Pochettino Adam Lallana Adidas[36] aap3[37]
Stoke City Mark Hughes Ryan Shawcross Adidas[38] Bet365[39]
Sunderland Gus Poyet John O'Shea Adidas[40] BFS Group[41]
Swansea City Garry Monk Ashley Williams Adidas[42] GWFX[43]
Tottenham Hotspur Tim Sherwood Michael Dawson Under Armour[44] HP[45]
West Bromwich Albion Pepe Mel Chris Brunt Adidas[46] Zoopla[47]
West Ham United Sam Allardyce Kevin Nolan Adidas[48] Alpari[49]

Managerial changes

A record ten managers left their position mid-season during the 2013–14 campaign.[50]

Team Outgoing manager Manner of departure Date of vacancy Position in table Incoming manager Date of appointment
Everton David Moyes End of contract 19 May 2013[51] Pre-season Roberto Martínez 5 June 2013[52]
Stoke City Tony Pulis Mutual consent 21 May 2013[53] Mark Hughes 30 May 2013[54]
Chelsea Rafael Benítez End of contract 27 May 2013[55] José Mourinho 3 June 2013[56]
Manchester United Sir Alex Ferguson Retired 1 July 2013[57] David Moyes 1 July 2013[58]
Sunderland Paolo Di Canio Sacked 22 September 2013[59] 20th Gus Poyet 8 October 2013[60]
Crystal Palace Ian Holloway Mutual consent 23 October 2013[61] 19th Tony Pulis 23 November 2013[62]
Fulham Martin Jol Sacked 1 December 2013[63] 18th René Meulensteen 1 December 2013[63]
West Bromwich Albion Steve Clarke 14 December 2013[64] 16th Pepe Mel 9 January 2014[65]
Tottenham Hotspur André Villas-Boas 16 December 2013[66] 7th Tim Sherwood 16 December 2013[67]
Cardiff City Malky Mackay 27 December 2013[68] 16th Ole Gunnar Solskjær 2 January 2014[69]
Swansea City Michael Laudrup 4 February 2014[70] 12th Garry Monk 4 February 2014[70]
Fulham René Meulensteen 14 February 2014[71] 20th Felix Magath 14 February 2014[71]
Norwich City Chris Hughton 6 April 2014[72] 17th Neil Adams 6 April 2014
Manchester United David Moyes 22 April 2014[73] 7th Louis van Gaal 19 May 2014 [74]

League table

Template:2013–14 Premier League table

Season summary

The 382 fixtures for the 2013–14 Premier League season were announced on 19 June 2013. The television broadcast rights were given two-to-three weeks later. The season started on Saturday 17 August 2013, and concluded on Sunday 11 May 2014.[75] During the 2013–14 season, the Premier League used goal-line technology for the first time.[76]

During the 2013–14 season, first place changed hands 25 times, compared to just four times during the 2012–13 season. That represented the most lead changes since the 2001–02 season – which had 29, the most ever. The championship was not decided until the final day of play for just the seventh time in league history.[50] Manchester City won the league with a 2–0 victory over West Ham United on the final day, finishing with 86 points.[77] In total, Manchester City led the league just 14 days throughout the season en route to their second championship in the last three seasons. The club scored 102 goals, one short of the record, while also conceding the second fewest goals in the league.[50]

With two weeks to go, Liverpool looked certain to win the championship before they had a loss and a draw in two of their final three games.[78] The team ended up in second place with 84 points. Chelsea came third, while perennial power and 2013 champions Manchester United had a disappointing season under new manager David Moyes (who was sacked in April) and finished seventh. It was their first finish outside the top four in Premier League history and their worst finish overall since 1989–90. Southampton's eighth place finish and Everton's 72 points were club records. Sunderland, who were dead last on Christmas Day, rallied to avoid relegation.[50] Norwich City, Fulham, and Cardiff City were the bottom three teams and were relegated to the Football League Championship.

Two teams (Manchester City and Liverpool) scored more than 100 goals for the first time in league history. The feat has only once been achieved before – by Chelsea in 2009–10. Luis Suárez easily won the golden boot for most goals with 31, ahead of team-mate Daniel Sturridge who came second with 21 goals. Wojciech Szczęsny of Arsenal and Petr Čech of Chelsea led the league with 16 clean sheets each. In a game against Southampton, Asmir Begovic became just the fifth goalkeeper in league history to score.[50] Begovic's goal was also the fastest of the season, occurring just 12 seconds into the game.[79] Mile Jedinak had the most tackles with 133. Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho lost a home game for the first time in his Premier League career, ending a run of 77 straight home games unbeaten stretching over two stints as Chelsea manager.[50]

Result table

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Season statistics

Scoring

  • First goal: Daniel Sturridge for Liverpool against Stoke City (37th minute, 13:22 BST)[80] (17 August 2013)
  • Fastest goal: 12 seconds (Asmir Begović (GK); Stoke City 1–1 Southampton[79] 2 November 2013)
  • Largest winning margin: 7 goals[3]
    • Manchester City 7–0 Norwich City (2 November 2013)
  • Highest scoring game: 9 goals[3]
    • Manchester City 6–3 Arsenal (14 December 2013)
    • Cardiff City 3–6 Liverpool (22 March 2014)
  • Most goals scored in a match by a single team: 7 goals[3]
    • Manchester City 7–0 Norwich City (2 November 2013)
  • Most goals scored in a match by a losing team: 3 goals[citation needed]
    • Sunderland 3–4 Chelsea (4 December 2013)
    • Manchester City 6–3 Arsenal (14 December 2013)
    • Stoke City 3–5 Liverpool (12 January 2014)
    • Aston Villa 4–3 West Bromwich Albion (29 January 2014)
    • Liverpool 4–3 Swansea City (23 February 2014)
    • Cardiff City 3–6 Liverpool (22 March 2014)

Top scorers

Rank Player Club Goals[1]
1 Luis Suárez Liverpool 31
2 Daniel Sturridge Liverpool 21
3 Yaya Touré Manchester City 20
4 Sergio Agüero Manchester City 17
Wayne Rooney Manchester United
6 Wilfried Bony Swansea City 16
Edin Džeko Manchester City
Olivier Giroud Arsenal
9 Romelu Lukaku Everton 15
Jay Rodriguez Southampton

Hat-tricks

Player For Against Result Date
Luis Suárez Liverpool West Bromwich Albion 4–1[81] 26 October 2013
Luis Suárez4 Liverpool Norwich City 5–1[82] 4 December 2013
Adam Johnson Sunderland Fulham 4–1[83] 11 January 2014
Samuel Eto'o Chelsea Manchester United 3–1[84] 19 January 2014
Eden Hazard Chelsea Newcastle United 3–0[85] 8 February 2014
André Schürrle Chelsea Fulham 3–1[86] 1 March 2014
Yaya Touré Manchester City Fulham 5–0[87] 22 March 2014
Luis Suárez Liverpool Cardiff City 6–3[88] 22 March 2014

4 Player scored 4 goals

Clean sheets

Player

Rank Player Club Clean sheets[2]
1 Petr Čech Chelsea 16
Wojciech Szczęsny Arsenal
3 Tim Howard Everton 15
4 Artur Boruc Southampton 14
Hugo Lloris Tottenham Hotspur
6 Joe Hart Manchester City 13
7 David de Gea Manchester United 12
John Ruddy Norwich City
Julian Speroni Crystal Palace
10 Vito Mannone Sunderland 11

Club

  • Fewest clean sheets: 5[3]
    • Fulham

Discipline

Player

Club

  • Most yellow cards:[90] 78
    • Aston Villa
  • Most red cards:[90] 7
    • Sunderland

Awards

Monthly awards

Month Manager of the Month Player of the Month Reference
Manager Club Player Club
August Brendan Rodgers Liverpool Daniel Sturridge Liverpool [91]
September Arsène Wenger Arsenal Aaron Ramsey Arsenal [92]
October Mauricio Pochettino Southampton Sergio Agüero Manchester City [93]
November Alan Pardew Newcastle United Tim Krul Newcastle United [94]
December Manuel Pellegrini Manchester City Luis Suárez Liverpool [95]
January Manuel Pellegrini Manchester City Adam Johnson Sunderland [96]
February Sam Allardyce West Ham United Daniel Sturridge Liverpool [97]
March Brendan Rodgers Liverpool Luis Suárez & Steven Gerrard (shared) Liverpool [98]
April Tony Pulis Crystal Palace Connor Wickham Sunderland [99]

Annual awards

Premier League Manager of the season

Tony Pulis won the manager of the season award.[100]

Premier League Player of the season

The Premier League Player of the Season was awarded to Luis Suarez.[100]

PFA Player of the Year

The PFA Players' Player of the Year was awarded to Luis Suarez.[101]

PFA Team of the Year

The PFA team of the year was:[102]

FWA Footballer of the Year

The FWA Footballer of the Year was also awarded to Luis Suarez.[103]

PFA Young Player of the Year

The PFA Young Player of the Year was also awarded to Eden Hazard.[103]

Golden Glove

The Premier League Golden Glove award was won by Petr Cech of Chelsea and Wojciech Szczęsny of Arsenal.[104]

References

  1. ^ a b "English Premier League Stats: Top Goal Scorers – 2013–14". ESPN FC. Entertainment and Sports Programming Network (ESPN). Retrieved 17 August 2013.
  2. ^ a b "Statistical Leaders – Clean Sheets". NBC Sports. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "English Premier League Stats – 2013–14". ESPN FC. Entertainment and Sports Programming Network (ESPN). Retrieved 17 August 2013.
  4. ^ "End of Season Run-in". Football365.co.uk. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
  5. ^ "Premier League 2013–14 season: Club-by-club guide". BBC Sport. 11 August 2013. Retrieved 15 August 2013.
  6. ^ Clutton, Graham (16 April 2013). "Premier League promotion party starts at Cardiff City after 0–0 draw against Charlton Athletic". Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  7. ^ "Manchester United FC star Ryan Giggs relishing South Wales derby spectacle in Premier League". Wales Online. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  8. ^ "Hull City 2–2 Cardiff". BBC Sport. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  9. ^ "Crystal Palace 1–0 Watford (aet)". BBC Sport. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  10. ^ a b "Premier League – Handbook Season 2013/14" (PDF). Premier League. Retrieved 13 August 2013.
  11. ^ "Hello kitty! Arsenal agree £170m kit deal with Puma.. the biggest in English football". The Daily Mirror. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  12. ^ "Arsenal football club in £150m Emirates deal". BBC News. 23 November 2012. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
  13. ^ "Aston Villa secure new £15 million kit deal with Macron". fcbusiness. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
  14. ^ "Dafabet announced as official main club sponsor". Aston Filla FC. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  15. ^ "Cardiff City Rebrand and New Kits 2012–13". Footballshirts.co.uk. 6 June 2012. Retrieved 4 May 2013.
  16. ^ Gaskell,Simon (1 February 2013). "Cardiff City investigate new crest as club confirms blue away kit will remain". www.walesonline.co.uk. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  17. ^ "Sponsors & Partners". Chelsea FC. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  18. ^ "New shirts please! Chelsea extend Samsung sponsorship deal". The Daily Mirror. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
  19. ^ "Avec". May 2013.
  20. ^ "GAC extends Crystal Palace sponsorship". www.logisticsmanager.com. 19 December 2011. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  21. ^ "Nike". Everton FC. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  22. ^ "Everton FC extends deal with ThaiBev's Chaing Beer". just-drinks.com. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
  23. ^ "adidas announcement". Fulham FC. Retrieved 17 May 2013.
  24. ^ "Marathonbet Join The Team". fulhamfc.com. Retrieved 4 July 2013.
  25. ^ a b Beill, Andy (18 April 2013). "Managing director answers club name change question, kit sponsors and season tickets". www.hullcityonline.com. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  26. ^ "Partners". Liverpool FC. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  27. ^ King, Dominic (28 April 2013). "Liverpool linked to multi-million sponsorship deal with Qatari firm Ooredoo". London: Daily Mail. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
  28. ^ Ogden, Mark (4 May 2012). "Manchester City's six-year kit deal with Nike could earn the Premier League leaders up to £12million a year". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  29. ^ Taylor, Daniel (8 July 2011). "Manchester City bank record £400m sponsorship deal with Etihad Airways". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
  30. ^ Ogden, Mark (15 December 2010). "Manchester United owners the Glazer family target world record £450 million kit deal to ease financial burden". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  31. ^ "Manchester United pen new multi-million dollar Aon deal". CNN.Com. 9 April 2013. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
  32. ^ "Newcastle agree lucrative new kit deal". mirrorfootball.co.uk. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
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