1996–97 Stoke City F.C. season

Stoke City
1996–97 season
Chairman Peter Coates
Manager Lou Macari
Stadium Victoria Ground
Football League First Division 12th (64 Points)
FA Cup Third Round
League Cup Fourth Round
Top goalscorer League: Mike Sheron (19)
All: Mike Sheron (19)
Highest home attendance 22,500 vs West Bromwich Albion (4 May 1997)
Lowest home attendance 7,456 vs Charlton Athletic (4 December 1996)
Average home league attendance 12,751
Home colours

The 1996–97 season was Stoke City's 90th season in the Football League and 34th in the second tier. It was also Stoke's final season at their Victoria Ground.

After 119 years Stoke were all set to move to a new stadium with the 1996–97 season confirmed as the final season at the Victoria Ground. With Stoke agreeing with the council to pay £6 million towards the cost, manager Lou Macari had no money to spend on new players having to rely on free or cheap transfers and loan signings instead. It was a very inconsistent season results wise as Stoke finished in 12th position with 64 points. The final league match at the Victoria Ground saw a repeat of the very first league match against West Bromwich Albion, Stoke won 2–1 with Graham Kavanagh scoring Stoke's final goal at the Vic. Stoke moved to the Britannia Stadium ahead of the 1997–98 season.[1]

Season review

League

The final season at the Victoria Ground was a big milestone in the club's history and was met with mixed reaction from the club's supporters, some of whom were happy to move and some who wanted the Victoria Ground to remain.[1] The first ramifications of the move became clear in the summer of 1996 as a number of players wanted a move away as the club began trying to find the £6 million they need.[1] Nigel Gleghorn and Vince Overson were the first to depart both joining Burnley.[1] Funds were generated by the sale of Graham Potter to Southampton for £300,000 and Lee Sandford to Sheffield United for £450,000.[1] The board did permit Macari to spend £200,000 on Richard Forsyth who became the club's first player signed for a fee since 1994.[1]

With the club losing three very good players the supporters were downbeat about the team's prospects ahead of the 1996–97 season.[1] So an opening five-match unbeaten run took many by surprise and Stoke were early season table-toppers as Macari won the manager of the month award.[1] A 3–0 defeat at Barnsley brought reality back and prompted the signings of Gerry McMahon and Graham Kavanagh and the sale of John Dreyer.[1] There were some serious questions now being raised as to how Stoke could afford the £6 million needed for their new stadium and they found part of the answer as a deal was struck with the Britannia building society who bought the naming rights to the stadium as well as shirt sponsorship for around £1.3 million. Henceforth the new ground would be known as the Britannia Stadium.[1]

On the pitch Stoke won one match in seven and went from promotion contenders to mid-table also-rans.[1] And with Macari struggling for players he promoted Andy Griffin to the first team as Stoke's away form continued to be dire.[1] They lost eight of their final nine away fixtures scoring just once which was an own goal.[1] Fortunately their home form held up as the landmark games came and went. Stoke won the last evening game and drew the last Saturday match, while the final Potteries derby at the Vic was won 2–0.[1]

The final league match at the Victoria Ground saw a re-run of the first with Stoke coming up against West Bromwich Albion in a carnival atmosphere.[1] Stoke won 2–1 with Gerry McMahon and Graham Kavanagh scoring Stoke's goals.[1] However manager Lou Macari announced he was leaving at the end of the season which was a surprise but he was 'stripped of his duties' before he left and later launched a lawsuit against Peter Coates for wrongful dismissal.[1] Less of a surprise was the departure of Mike Sheron who joined Queens Park Rangers for £2.75 million exactly the amount Stoke needed to make up their contribution to the cost of the new stadium.[1] And so Stoke went into a new era at the Britannia Stadium with no manager and their best player gone.[1]

FA Cup

Stoke suffered a poor defeat at home in the third round losing 1–0 to Stockport County.[1]

League Cup

Stoke edged past Northampton Town and drew Arsenal in the third round.[1] After a 1–1 draw at home Arsenal proved too strong at Highbury running out 5–2 winners.[1]

Final league table

PosClubPWDLFAGDPts
1Bolton Wanderers462814410053+4798
2Barnsley462214107655+2180
3Wolverhampton Wanderers462210146851+1776
4Ipswich Town462014126850+1874
5Sheffield United462013137552+2373
6Crystal Palace461914137848+3071
7Portsmouth46208185953+668
8Port Vale461716135855+367
9Queens Park Rangers461812166460+466
10Birmingham City461715145248+466
11Tranmere Rovers461714156356+765
12Stoke City461810185157–664
13Norwich City461712176368–563
14Manchester City461710195960–161
15Charlton Athletic461611195266–1459
16West Bromwich Albion461415176872–457
17Oxford United46169216468–457
18Reading461512195867–957
19Swindon Town46159225271–1954
20Huddersfield Town461315184861–1354
21Bradford City461212224772–2548
22Grimsby Town461113226081–2146
23Oldham Athletic461013235166–1543
24Southend United46815234286–4439

Key: P = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; F = Goals for; A = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points

Results

Legend

Win Draw Loss

Football League First Division

MatchDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
1 17 August 1996 Oldham AthleticA2–18,021Sheron (2) 27', 43'
2 24 August 1996 Manchester CityH2–121,116Forsyth 27', Sheron 32'
3 28 August 1996 Bradford CityH1–011,918Sheron 90' (pen)
4 31 August 1996 ReadingA2–213,540Sheron 25', Forsyth 76'
5 7 September 1996 Crystal PalaceH2–213,540Sheron 20', Dreyer 32'
6 10 September 1996 BarnsleyA0–311,696
7 14 September 1996 Birmingham CityA1–318,612Forsyth 66'
8 22 September 1996 Huddersfield TownH3–29,147Gayle 41', Sheron (2) 77', 85'
9 28 September 1996 Bolton WanderersA1–116,195Kavanagh 90'
10 13 October 1996 Port ValeA1–114,396Keen 65'
11 16 October 1996 West Bromwich AlbionA2–016,501Wallace 33', Forsyth 72'
12 19 October 1996 Sheffield UnitedH0–413,581
13 26 October 1996 PortsmouthH3–110,259McMahon (2) 59', 75', Sheron 71'
14 29 October 1996 Oxford UnitedA1–46,381Sheron 59'
15 2 November 1996 Queens Park RangersA1–17,354Kavanagh 4'
16 16 November 1996 Grimsby TownA1–15,601Forsyth 30'
17 23 November 1996 Southend UnitedH1–212,821Forsyth 52'
18 30 November 1996 PortsmouthA0–17,749
19 4 December 1996 Charlton AthleticH1–07,456Sheron 49'
20 7 December 1996 Tranmere RoversH2–09,931Sheron 27', Higgins 82' (o.g.)
21 14 December 1996 Swindon TownH2–010,102Stein (2) 44', 64'
22 21 December 1996 Ipswich TownA1–110,159Stein 23'
23 26 December 1996 BarnsleyH1–019,025Sheron 72'
24 1 January 1997 Huddersfield TownA1–212,019Stein 18'
25 10 January 1997 Birmingham CityH1–010,049Wallace 18'
26 18 January 1997 Charlton AthleticA2–19,901Sheron (2) 42', 43'
27 22 January 1997 Norwich CityH1–210,179Stein 14'
28 29 January 1997 Bolton WanderersH1–215,645Macari 84'
29 1 February 1997 Wolverhampton WanderersA0–227,408
30 7 February 1997 Oxford UnitedH2–18,609MacKenzie 9', Macari 37'
31 15 February 1997 Southend UnitedA1–24,625Harris 70' (o.g.)
32 22 February 1997 Queens Park RangersH0–013,121
33 28 February 1997 Tranmere RoversA0–09,127
34 5 March 1997 Grimsby TownH3–18,621Southall 48' (o.g.), Kavanagh 50', Griffin 78'
35 8 March 1997 Ipswich TownH0–111,933
36 15 March 1997 Swindon TownA0–18,879
37 18 March 1997 Wolverhampton WanderersH1–015,683Forsyth 47'
38 22 March 1997 Manchester CityA0–228,497
39 29 March 1997 Oldham AthleticH2–111,755Sheron 17', Macari 40'
40 31 March 1997 Bradford CityA0–113,579
41 5 April 1997 ReadingH1–19,961Forsyth 65'
42 12 April 1997 Norwich CityA0–213,805
43 15 April 1997 Crystal PalaceA0–211,382
44 20 April 1997 Port ValeH2–016,246Sheron (2) 44', 85'
45 25 April 1997 Sheffield UnitedA0–125,596
46 5 May 1997 West Bromwich AlbionH2–122,500McMahon 33', Kavanagh 69'

FA Cup

Main article: 1996–97 FA Cup
RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
R315 January 1997 Stockport CountyH0–29,961

League Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
R2 1st Leg18 September 1996 Northampton TownH1–06,093Worthington 60'
R2 2nd Leg24 September 1996 Northampton TownA2–1 (aet)5,088Sheron (2) 100', 108'
R323 October 1996 ArsenalH1–120,804Sheron 26'
R3 Replay11 November 1996 ArsenalA2–533,961Sheron (2) 35', 88'

Friendlies

MatchOpponentVenueResult
1Holywell TownA1–1
2Uttoxeter TownA6–2
3Northwich VictoriaA4–1
4Dunfermline AthleticA2–2
5HibernianA0–1
6Carlisle UnitedA1–0
7Cheltenham TownA3–0
8Shrewsbury TownA1–0
9Newcastle TownA1–0
10OsasunaH2–0

Squad statistics

Pos. Name League FA Cup League Cup Total
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
GKEngland Carl Muggleton 3300040370
GKEngland Mark Prudhoe 130100(1)014(1)0
DFPortugal Hugo Costa 1(1)0001(1)02(2)0
DFEngland Ian Cranson 60000060
DFEngland John Dreyer 1210030151
DFEngland Andy Griffin 29(5)1100(1)030(6)1
DFScotland Mark McNally 30000030
DFEngland Ally Pickering 39(1)0104044(1)0
DFIceland Lárus Sigurðsson 4501040500
DFEngland Ray Wallace 4521040502
DFEngland Justin Whittle 35(2)0102038(2)0
MFEngland Carl Beeston 17(1)0000017(1)0
MFScotland Mark Devlin 13(8)0103017(8)0
MFEngland Sean Flynn 50000050
MFEngland Richard Forsyth 4081030448
MFRepublic of Ireland Graham Kavanagh 32(6)4102035(6)4
MFEngland Kevin Keen 5(11)1002(2)07(13)1
MFEngland Neil MacKenzie 5(17)10(1)0005(18)1
MFNorthern Ireland Gerry McMahon 31(4)3103(1)035(5)3
MFEngland Kofi Nyamah 0(7)000000(7)0
MFEngland Simon Rodger 50000050
MFEngland Graham Stokoe 0(2)000000(2)0
MFNorthern Ireland Nigel Worthington 1200031151
FWEngland Martin Carruthers 0(1)0000(1)00(2)0
FWEngland John Gayle 8(4)1002010(4)1
FWScotland Mike Macari 15(15)30(1)00(3)015(19)3
FWEngland Mike Sheron 411910454624
FWEngland Mark Stein 1140000114
FWEngland Simon Sturridge 50000050
Own goals 3003

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Lowe, Simon (2000). Stoke City The Modern Era - A Complete Record. Desert Island Books. ISBN 1-874287-39-2.
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