2002–03 Stoke City F.C. season

Stoke City
2002–03 season
Chairman Gunnar Gíslason
Manager Steve Cotterill,
Dave Kevan,
Tony Pulis
Stadium Britannia Stadium
Football League First Division 21st (50 Points)
FA Cup Fifth Round
League Cup First Round
Top goalscorer League: Andy Cooke (6)
All: Chris Iwelumo (7)
Highest home attendance 21,023 vs Brighton & Hove Albion (5 March 2003)
Lowest home attendance 10,406 vs Walsall (26 February 2003)
Average home league attendance 14,532
Home colours

The 2002–03 season was Stoke City's 96th season in the Football League and the 36th in the second tier.

Stoke now back in the First Division appointed young manager Steve Cotterill prior to the start of the season. Cotterill had got an impressive reputation following his success with Cheltenham Town but after just 13 matches in charge he shocked the club by quitting in favour of becoming assistant manager at Sunderland. Dave Kevan took over as caretaker until Tony Pulis was appointed in November. His task was to ensure Stoke survived which looked a tough ask as Stoke went 16 matches without a win and when Stoke did manage to get a positive result they lost 6–0 at Nottingham Forest. Following that defeat Pulis improved his defence and results were slowly being ground out and it went to the final day of the season against Reading knowing that if they win they will stay up and thanks to Ade Akinbiyi Stoke won 1–0 and finished four points from relegation.[1]

Season review

League

With Gudjon Thordarson failing to gain a new contract the Stoke board moved to appoint Steve Cotterill from Cheltenham Town.[1] Cotterill was seen as one of the best young managers in the country and it was hoped that he would be a long term appointment.[2] He brought in Chris Greenacre a striker from Mansfield Town where he had been a prolific goalscorer. The season started with a 0–0 draw away at Sheffield Wednesday and their first win came at home to Bradford City. This was followed by a 4–3 defeat at Preston North End and defeats by Derby and Burnley.[1] Stoke then went five matches unbeaten to lift them away from danger but the club was shocked on 10 October 2002 as Cotterill quit the club in favour of becoming assistant manager at Sunderland.[1][3]

Dave Kevan assumed a caretaker manager role and in his four matches in charge Stoke lost them all to start a worrying run of results.[1] The board had expected to appoint George Burley as manager but somewhat surprisingly Tony Pulis was the man given the job.[1] Pulis had previously turned down the chance to manage the club in 1999 and his appointment was not a popular one with the supporters.[1] In his first match in charge away at Walsall he received a less than warm welcome and Stoke crashed to a 4–2 defeat.[1] It took Pulis' team nine more matches to register a victory and after it looked as though Stoke could start pulling away from relegation they suffered humiliation by losing 6–0 at Nottingham Forest and the survival bid looked grim.[1]

But Pulis signed a number of players on loan which included Ade Akinbiyi, Paul Warhurst, Lee Mills, and goalkeepers Steve Banks and Mark Crossley.[1] Pulis made Stoke a difficult team to beat and after three hard-fought goalless draws against teams trying to gain promotion Stoke gained vital victories against Watford, Rotherham United, Wimbledon and Coventry City.[1] This took the relegation fight to the last day of the season with Stoke needing a victory against Reading to ensure their stay in First Division would be extended.[1] A 55th-minute strike from Ade Akinbiyi sealed the win they needed and Stoke could start building for the future.[1][4]

FA Cup

Two 3–0 wins against Wigan Athletic and Bournemouth set up a tie against Premier League Chelsea and two second half goals gave the Londoners a 2–0 victory.[1]

League Cup

Stoke lost in the first round to Bury 1–0 at Gigg Lane.[1]

Final league table

PosClubPWDLFAGDPts
1Portsmouth46291169745+5298
2Leicester City46261467340+3392
3Sheffield United462311127252+2080
4Reading46254176146+1579
5Wolverhampton Wanderers462016108144+3776
6Nottingham Forest462014128250+3274
7Ipswich Town461913148064+1670
8Norwich City461912156049+1169
9Millwall46199185969–1066
10Wimbledon461811177673+365
11Gillingham461614165665–962
12Preston North End461613176870–261
13Watford46179205470–1660
14Crystal Palace461417155952+759
15Rotherham United461514176262059
16Burnley461510216589–2455
17Walsall46159225769–1254
18Derby County46157245574–1952
19Bradford City461410225173–2252
20Coventry City461214204662–1650
21Stoke City461214204569–2450
22Sheffield Wednesday461016205673–1746
23Brighton & Hove Albion461112234967–1845
24Grimsby Town46912254885–3739

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

Stoke's score comes first

Legend

Win Draw Loss

Pre-Season Friendlies

MatchDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
114 July 2002Newcastle TownA7–13,379Winters, Goodfellow (2), Greenacre (3), Neal
222 July 2002Wacker BurghausenA0–2
326 July 2002Sturm GrazA1–1Handyside
431 July 2002West Bromwich AlbionH0–06,241
53 August 2002Birmingham CityH0–25,781

Football League First Division

MatchDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorersReports
1 10 August 2002 Sheffield WednesdayA0–026,746Report
2 14 August 2002 Leicester CityH0–114,028Report
3 17 August 2002 Bradford CityH2–112,424Cooke 4', Marteinsson 34'Report
4 24 August 2002 Preston North EndA3–415,422Clarke (2) 7', 65' (2 pens), Cooke 90+2'Report
5 26 August 2002 Norwich CityH1–113,931Commons 74'Report
6 31 August 2002 Derby CountyA0–221,723Report
7 14 September 2002 BurnleyA1–214,244Guðjónsson 74'Report
8 17 September 2002 Brighton & Hove AlbionA2–16,369Mooney 17' (pen), Cooke 90'Report
9 21 September 2002 Ipswich TownH2–114,587Shtanyuk 17', Cooke 80'Report
10 25 September 2002 Nottingham ForestH2–214,554Shtanyuk 13', Goodfellow 72'Report
11 28 September 2002 ReadingA1–113,646Vandeurzen 39'Report
12 5 October 2002 Crystal PalaceH1–114,214Iwelumo 85'Report
13 19 October 2002 Wolverhampton WanderersH0–216,885Report
14 23 October 2002 Sheffield UnitedA1–215,163Greenacre 84'Report
15 26 October 2002 Rotherham UnitedA0–47,078Report
16 30 October 2002 WatfordH1–211,215Mooney 72'Report
17 2 November 2002 WalsallA2–46,391Cooke (2) 77', 81'Report
18 9 November 2002 Grimsby TownH1–211,488Mooney 50' (pen)Report
19 16 November 2002 PortsmouthA0–318,701Report
20 23 November 2002 MillwallH0–113,776Report
21 30 November 2002 GillinghamA1–18,150Clarke 56'Report
22 7 December 2002 Coventry CityH1–212,760Hoekstra 35'Report
23 14 December 2002 PortsmouthH1–113,330Gunnarsson 34'Report
24 21 December 2002 WimbledonA1–11,697Iwelumo 88'Report
25 26 December 2002 Bradford CityA2–414,575Marteinsson 9', Karl Henry 23'Report
26 28 December 2002 Sheffield WednesdayH3–216,042Iwelumo (2) 16', 66', Gunnarsson 90+4'Report
27 1 January 2003 Preston North EndH2–114,862Gunnarsson 43', Hoekstra 45'Report
28 11 January 2003 Leicester CityA0–025,058Report
29 18 January 2003 Derby CountyH1–317,308Greenacre 63'Report
30 1 February 2003 Norwich CityA2–220,186Gunnarsson 63', Mills 88'Report
31 8 February 2003 Grimsby TownA0–25,657Report
32 22 February 2003 Nottingham ForestA0–624,085Report
33 26 February 2003 WalsallH1–010,409Mills 19'Report
34 1 March 2003 BurnleyH0–112,874Report
35 5 March 2003 Brighton & Hove AlbionH1–021,023Greenacre 83'Report
36 8 March 2003 Ipswich TownA0–024,547Report
37 15 March 2003 Sheffield UnitedH0–014,449Report
38 18 March 2003 Wolverhampton WanderersA0–025,235Report
39 22 March 2003 WatfordA2–112,570Hoekstra (2) 34' 49', (1 pen)Report
40 5 April 2003 GillinghamH0–012,746Report
41 9 April 2003 Rotherham UnitedH2–019,553Warhurst 21', Cooke 40'Report
42 12 April 2003 MillwallA1–38,725Shtanyuk 73'Report
43 19 April 2003 WimbledonH2–112,587Gunnarsson 29', Akinbiyi 45'Report
44 21 April 2003 Coventry CityA1–012,675Montgomery 87' (o.g.)Report
45 26 April 2003 Crystal PalaceA0–116,604Report
46 4 May 2003 ReadingH1–020,477Akinbiyi 55'Report

FA Cup

Main article: 2002–03 FA Cup
RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorersReport
R34 January 2003 Wigan AthleticH3–09,618Greenacre (2) 20', 67' Iwelumo 31'Report
R425 January 2003 BournemouthH3–012,004Iwelumo (2) 45', 51' (1 pen), Hoekstra 84'Report
R516 February 2003 ChelseaH0–226,615Report

League Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorersReport
R110 September 2002 BuryA0–12,581Report

Squad statistics

No. Pos. Name League FA Cup League Cup Total
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
1GKEngland Neil Cutler 2001010220
2DFEngland Wayne Thomas 4103010450
3DFRepublic of Ireland Clive Clarke 27(4)3000027(4)3
4DFScotland Peter Handyside 4402010470
5DFBelarus Sergei Shtanuk 4432010473
6MFIceland Brynjar Gunnarsson 4053010445
7MFIceland Bjarni Guðjónsson 25(11)12(1)01028(12)1
8FWEngland Andy Cooke 24(7)6001025(7)6
9FWEngland Lee Mills 7(4)200007(4)2
10FWEngland Chris Greenacre 18(12)4320021(12)6
11MFNetherlands Peter Hoekstra 26(4)42(1)10(1)028(6)5
12GKFinland Jani Viander 00000000
14GKEngland Ben Foster 00000000
15FWScotland Chris Iwelumo 15(17)4331019(17)7
16FWEngland Tommy Mooney 11(1)3000011(1)3
16DFEngland Frazer Richardson 70000070
17MFRepublic of Ireland James O'Connor 4303010470
18MFEngland Lewis Neal 7(9)01(2)0008(11)0
19FWEngland Marc Goodfellow 6(14)10(3)00(1)06(18)1
20MFEngland Mark Wilson 40000040
21MFIceland Pétur Marteinsson 7(5)21(1)0008(6)2
22MFEngland Brian Wilson 1(2)000001(2)0
23MFEngland Karl Henry 15(3)12(1)00(1)017(5)1
24MFScotland Kris Commons 6(2)1001091
25DFWales Gareth Owen 00000000
26FWNigeria Ade Akinbiyi 42000042
27MFBelgium Jurgen Vandeurzen 7(5)100007(5)1
27FWEngland Paul Warhurst 4(1)100004(1)1
28GKWales Mark Crossley 1200000120
29DFRepublic of Ireland Richard Keogh 00000000
30DFEngland Marcus Hall 23(1)0300026(1)0
31GKEngland Steve Banks 1402000160
32DFNorthern Ireland Mark Williams 5(1)000005(1)0
33FWEngland Laurence Hall 00000000
Own goals 1001

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 "Stoke City season review 2002-03 City leave it late to ensure survival". The Sentinel. 15 May 2003.
  2. "Cotterill unveiled by Stoke". London: The Telegraph. 27 May 2002. Retrieved 19 October 2011.
  3. "Stoke 'shocked' by Cotterill walkout". London: The Guardian. 10 October 2002. Retrieved 19 October 2011.
  4. "Akinbiyi keeps Stoke up". BBC Sport. 4 May 2003. Retrieved 12 June 2007.
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