2003–04 Birmingham City F.C. season

Birmingham City F.C.
2003–04 season
Chairman David Gold
Manager Steve Bruce
Ground St Andrew's
Premier League 10th
FA Cup Fifth round
(eliminated by Sunderland)
League Cup Second round
(eliminated by Blackpool)
Top goalscorer League: Mikael Forssell (17)
All: Mikael Forssell (19)
Highest home attendance 29,588 vs Arsenal, 22 November 2003
Lowest home attendance 18,688 vs Blackburn Rovers, FA Cup 3rd round, 3 January 2004
Average home league attendance 29,073[1]

The 2003–04 season was Birmingham City Football Club's 101st season in the English football league system, their second season in the Premier League, and their 52nd season in the top tier of English football. They finished 10th in the 20-team league, three places higher than the previous season. They entered the FA Cup at the third round stage and lost to Sunderland in the fifth after a replay, and lost their opening second-round League Cup-tie to Blackpool. Top scorer was loan signing Mikael Forssell with 19 goals, 17 of which were scored in the league.

Pre-season

Pre-season friendlies

DateOpponents VenueResultScore
F–A
Scorers AttendanceReport
19 July 2004 Burton AlbionA W4–0John (2) 8' 60', Dunn (2) 40' 43' 1,952 [2]
24 July 2004 Newcastle United1A L1–2Devlin 73' (pen) [3][4]
26 July 2004 Malaysia XI1A W4–0John (2) 8' 50', Clemence 76', Hughes 82' [5]
30 July 2004 Port ValeA L0–2 [6]
2 August 2004 BurnleyA W2–2Horsfield 8', Dunn 27' [7]
5 August 2004 WalsallA W3–1John, Dugarry, Carter 8,000 [8]
9 August 2004 Real MallorcaH D0–0 [9]

Premier League

Season review

Having avoided relegation in their first season in the Premier League with seven wins from the last eleven games, Birmingham were expected to struggle.[10] They were unbeaten in the league at the end of September, and went into November still in fourth place. During a poor spell in the middle of the season Steve Bruce's side fell as low as tenth, though they rallied again and stood one point off fourth place with eight matches to go.[11] In contrast to the previous season, one win from the last eleven games gave Birmingham a tenth-place finish, six points behind city rivals Aston Villa, who had been struggling against relegation at the turn of the year.[10][12]

August

Birmingham's first game of the season was televised live on Sky Sports on August 16. They beat Tottenham Hotspur 1-0 at St Andrew's, courtesy of a debut goal by David Dunn. The midfielder netted from the penalty spot after Anthony Gardner fouled Robbie Savage.

Steve Bruce's side battled to draw 0-0 at Southampton the following weekend. Both sides had chances to win the match as James Beattie struck the post and Stern John saw a shot cleared off the line.

Birmingham overcame Newcastle United 1-0 at St James' Park as their impressive form continued. Gary Speed brought down Damien Johnson in the box but Dunn saw his penalty saved. Dunn scored the rebound to give Birmingham a second league win in three games. In the game, referee Matt Messias unintentionally floored Blues midfielder Robbie Savage with a flying elbow as he signalled a free-kick.

The win saw Birmingham climb to 6th in the table as they entered September.

September

Birmingham signed Mikael Forssell on a season-long loan from Chelsea before the transfer window shut. The Finn impressed on his debut live on Sky Sports in a lively 2-2 draw against Fulham at St Andrew's. Louis Saha gave the away side an early lead but Forssell equalised moments before half-time. Sylvain Legwinski was harshly sent off for tripping David Dunn. Fulham still took a late lead through Luis Boa Morte but Forssell levelled from close range on 82 minutes. Darren Purse was then dismissed by referee Steve Dunn after an altercation with Boa Morte in the aftermath of the goal.

Leeds lost 2-0 to Birmingham at Elland Road after they had Roque Junior sent off on 77 minutes. He brought down Mikael Forssell in the box and David Dunn stepped up to take the spot-kick. He saw his penalty saved by Paul Robinson but the assistant referee deemed the goalkeeper moved before the ball was kicked. Robbie Savage made no mistake with the retake and Forssell's smart finish late on sealed the win.

Birmingham made their best start to a league season courtesy of their win over Portsmouth at St Andrews on September 27. Stephen Clemence and Stan Lazaridis each scored for Blues and moved their side to fourth in the table.

October

Manchester United stunted Birmingham's strong start by beating them 3-0 at Old Trafford on 4 October. Goalkeeper Maik Taylor was sent off by referee Mike Dean on 38 minutes after he fouled Paul Scholes. Ruud van Nistelrooy scored the penalty and Scholes and Ryan Giggs added to the lead in the second period.

Birmingham held Chelsea to a 0-0 draw at St Andrew's on 14 October. Birmingham's watertight defence kept Chelsea at bay and ensured they remained 4th in the league.

Aston Villa came to St Andrews's in search of their first win over arch-rivals Birmingham in the Premiership. They lost the two encounters the season before. Stephen Clemence came the closest for Birmingham with a long-range effort, which was denied by a fine Thomas Sorensen save.

Birmingham beat Bolton Wanderers 1-0 at the end of the month to notch their fifth league win of the season. The lively Forssell scored on 31 minutes after a swift counterattack. The clean sheet ensured Birmingham only conceded three goals in the whole of October.

November

A Matt Holland brace condemned Birmingham to their second defeat of the season as Charlton moved up to seventh place in the Premiership on November 3. The game saw Christophe Dugarry score his last goal for Birmingham with a powerful header on 64 minutes but the hosts were unable to rescue a late point.

Mikael Forssell scored his fifth league goal of the season in Birmingham's 1-1 draw at home to local rivals Wolverhampton Wanderers to give his side a 48th minute advantage, but the impressive forward Stefan Iversen snatched his side a draw.

Birmingham slipped to eighth after a 3-0 home loss to Arsenal on November 22. Freddie Ljungberg, Dennis Bergkamp and Robert Pires scored as Arsenal made it 13 games unbeaten.

The defeat was followed another loss as Liverpool rallied to beat Birmingham 3-1 at Anfield. Forssell gave Birmingham the lead on 33 minutes but Liverpool's dogged resilience saw them fight back. Goals from Steven Gerrard, Harry Kewell and Emile Heskey saw The Reds celebrate their first win over Birmingham in the Premiership.

December

December began badly for Birmingham as Blackburn Rovers thrashed them 4-0 at St Andrew's. Barry Ferguson grabbed his first Premiership goal since his switch from Rangers to set Rovers on their way in the 66th minute. Lucas Neill added the second just two minutes later, Tugay made sure of a vital three points with a superb piledriver before Paul Gallagher added a fourth. Christophe Dugarry was sent off on 72 minutes after receiving two yellow cards.

But Birmingham bounced back to defeat Leicester City 2-0 at the Walker's Stadium in a highly charged Midlands derby. Referee Mike Riley sent off Leicester skipper Matt Elliott after he caught David Dunn with his forearm in an aerial challenge. Minutes later Clinton Morrison opened his account for the season, latching onto Jamie Clapham's excellent cross. Leicester goalkeeper Ian Walker was sent off for handling outside his penalty area on 61 minutes before Forssell headed home City's second.

Birmingham scored twice in the last 10 minutes to come from behind and beat Manchester City at St Andrews on Boxing Day 2003. Robbie Fowler put Manchester City ahead on 14 minutes but Blues defender Jeff Kenna scored a rare goal to equalise on 81 minutes from a free-kick. And Birmingham won it on 87 minutes after Mikael Forssell netted for the eighth time in the league that season.

Wayne Rooney grabbed the only goal of the game when Birmingham made the trip up to Everton on December 28. Birmingham ended the calendar year in 10th place in the table.

January

Stephane Dalmat impressed and scored twice as Tottenham Hotspur thumped Birmingham 4-1 at White Hart Lane. Robbie Savage scored from the penalty spot on 68 minutes but Birmingham conceded three in a dismal first half and a late Robbie Keane strike.

Jeff Kenna struck against his former club in Birmingham's 2-1 win over Southampton at St Andrew's. It was Birmingham's first victory in three games but they had to come from behind after Brett Ormerod put Saints ahead on six minutes. A Fitz Hall own goal restored parity on 16 minutes after a header from a corner deflected off the defender and in. Kenna scored the winner after playing a great one-two with Clinton Morrison and side-footing past Antti Niemi. David Prutton was sent off minutes later for elbowing Kenna.

Birmingham recorded their second 0-0 draw against Chelsea that season when they visited Stamford Bridge on January 18. Defender Oliver Tebily cleared superbly off the line to deny William Gallas and Maik Taylor pulled off several fine saves to keep a clean sheet.

Newcastle visited St Andrew's on January 31. Gary Speed had given them the lead with an excellent 30-yard thunderbolt but, in a lively second-half, Bryan Hughes hit the bar and Shay Given denied Forssell with a smart stop. Deep in stoppage time, Stern John dramatically rescued a point for Birmingham when he turned home a long Kenny Cunningham free-kick.

February

Another Maik Taylor masterclass shutout Manchester City when Birmingham travelled to Eastlands on February 8. The game ended goalless after Taylor pulled off some stunning saves to deny Robbie Fowler, Antoine Sibierski and Jon Macken in particular.

Three days later Birmingham won impressively at Everton, thanks to goals by Damien Johnson, Stan Lazardis and Mikael Forssell. Birmingham took the lead on eight minutes through Johnson and doubled their advantage when Lazardis scored a spectacular second. Forssell's strike, his 10th league goal of the season, sealed a comfortable away victory.

But Birmingham fell two goals behind to Aston Villa in the Second City Derby on February 22 within 47 minutes. Darius Vassell and Thomas Hitzelsperger gave Villa the handsome advantage but Forssell rifled home for Blues on 60 minutes. Deep in stoppage time, Stern John pounced from two yards out to rescue a point for the plucky away side.

March

Birmingham City made it seven games without defeat after they beat Middlesbrough 3-1 at St Andrew's on March 3. Martin Taylor opened the scoring, deflecting in Mikael Forssell's shot to score his first goal for Birmingham. Robbie Savage then curled in a fine free-kick on 57 minutes. Szilard Nemeth pulled a goal back with a low shot for the visitors but Forssell scored on 79 minutes to seal his side's win. It was his 13th goal of the campaign. Boudewijn Zenden was sent off late on for receiving a second yellow card after a foul on the lively Damien Johnson.

Birmingham recorded back-to-back wins by doing the double over Bolton Wanderers a week later. Forssell scored for the fourth game in a row to give Steve Bruce's side a 29th minute advantage and Bryan Hughes netted his first goal of the season for Birmingham in the second half. The victory saw the club climb to fifth in the table.

Match details

DateLeague
position
Opponents VenueResultScore
F–A
Scorers AttendanceReport
16 August 2003 6thTottenham HotspurH W1–0Dunn 36' pen. 29,358 [13]
23 August 2003 6thSouthamptonA D0–0 31,656 [13]
30 August 2003 6thNewcastle UnitedA W1–0Dunn 61' 52,006 [13]
14 September 2003 8thFulhamH D2–2Forssell (2) 45', 82' 27,250 [13]
20 September 2003 7thLeeds UnitedA W2–0Savage 79' pen., Forssell 84' 34,305 [13]
27 September 2003 4thPortsmouthH W2–0Clemence 21', Lazaridis 50' 29,057 [13]
4 October 2003 5thManchester UnitedA L0–3 67,633 [13]
14 October 2003 4thChelseaH D0–0 29,460 [13]
19 October 2003 4thAston VillaH D0–0 29,546 [13]
25 October 2003 4thBolton WanderersA W1–0Forssell 31' 25,023 [13]
3 November 2003 4thCharlton AthleticH L1–2Dugarry 64' 27,225 [13]
8 November 2003 5thWolverhampton WanderersA D1–1Forssell 49' 28,831 [13]
22 November 2003 5thArsenalH L0–3 29,588 [13]
30 November 2003 8thLiverpoolA L1–3Forssell 33' 42,683 [13]
6 December 2003 8thBlackburn RoversH L0–4 29,354 [13]
13 December 2003 8thLeicester CityA W2–0Morrison 42', Forssell 66' 30,639 [13]
26 December 2003 8thManchester CityH W2–1Kenna 81', Forssell 87' 29,520 [13]
28 December 2003 9thEvertonA L0–1 39,631 [13]
7 January 2004 10thTottenham HotspurA L1–4Savage 68' pen. 30,016 [13]
10 January 2004 8thSouthamptonH W2–1Clemence 16', Kenna 67' 29,071 [13]
18 January 2004 9thChelseaA D0–0 41,073 [13]
31 January 2004 9thNewcastle UnitedH D1–1John 90' 29,513 [13]
8 February 2004 10thManchester CityA D0–0 46,967 [13]
11 February 2004 9thEvertonH W3–0Johnson 8', Lazaridis 39', Forssell 49' 23,331 [13]
22 February 2004 8thAston VillaA D2–2Forssell 60', John 90' 40,061 [13]
3 March 2004 7thMiddlesbroughH W3–1Martin Taylor 23', Savage 57', Forssell 79' 29,369 [13]
6 March 2004 5thBolton WanderersH W2–0Forssell 24', Hughes 69' 28,003 [13]
13 March 2004 6thLeicester CityH L0–1 29,491 [13]
20 March 2004 7thMiddlesbroughA L3–5Forssell (2) 23', 59', Morrison 45' 30,244 [13]
27 March 2004 6thLeeds UnitedH W4–1Hughes (2) 12', 67, Forssell (2) 69', 82' pen. 29,069 [13]
3 April 2004 6thFulhamA D0–0 14,667 [13]
10 April 2004 6thManchester UnitedH L1–2Grainger 53' 29,548 [13]
12 April 2004 8thPortsmouthA L1–3John 67' 20,104 [13]
17 April 2004 8thCharlton AthleticA D1–1Morrison 84' 29,115 [13]
25 April 2004 9thWolverhampton WanderersH D2–2Forssell 34', Morrison 41' 29,494 [13]
1 May 2004 9thArsenalA D0–0 38,061 [13]
8 May 2004 10thLiverpoolH L0–3 29,553 [13]
15 May 2004 10thBlackburn RoversA D1–1John 83' 26,070 [13]

League table (part)

Final Premier League table (part)
Pos Club Pld W D L F A GD Pts
8th Bolton Wanderers381411134856853
9th Fulham381410145246652
10th Birmingham City381214124348550
11th Middlesbrough38139164452848
12th Southampton381211154445147
Key Pos = League position; Pld = Matches played;
W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost;
F = Goals for; A = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points
Source [12]

Results summary

OverallHomeAway
PldWDLGFGAGDPtsWDLGFGAGDWDLGFGAGD
38 12 14 12 43 48  −5 50 8 5 6 26 24  +2 4 9 6 17 24  −7

Source: [12]

FA Cup

Main article: 2003–04 FA Cup

Birmingham reached the fifth round of the 2003–04 FA Cup before losing to Sunderland of Division One after a replay.

Round DateOpponentsVenue ResultScore
F–A
Scorers AttendanceReport
Third round 3 January 2004Blackburn RoversH W4–0Morrison 23', Clemence 36', Forssell 78', Hughes 84' 18,688 [13]
Fourth round 24 January 2004WimbledonH W1–0Hughes 4' 22,159 [13]
Fifth round 14 February 2004SunderlandA D1–1Forssell 28' 24,966 [13]
Fifth round replay 25 February 2004SunderlandH L0–2 25,645 [13]

League Cup

Birmingham lost in the second round of the 2003–04 League Cup to Blackpool of Division Two.

Round DateOpponentsVenue ResultScore
F–A
Scorers AttendanceReport
Second round 23 September 2003BlackpoolA L0–1 7,370 [13]

Transfers

In

Date Player Club Fee Ref
1 July 2003 Christophe Dugarry Bordeaux Free [14]
7 July 2003 David Dunn Blackburn Rovers £5.5m [15]
23 July 2003 Luciano Figueroa Rosario Central £2.5m [16]
2 February 2004 Martin Taylor Blackburn Rovers £1.25m [17]

Out

Date Player Fee Joineddagger Ref
8 July 2003 Tommy Mooney Free Swindon Town [18]
8 August 2003 Joey Hutchinson Free Darlington [19]
14 August 2003 Michael Johnson Nominal Derby County [19]
5 September 2003 Geoff Horsfield £500,000 Wigan Athletic [20]
12 September 2003 Paul Devlin £150,000 Watford [20]
23 December 2003 Luciano Figueroa Contract cancelled (Cruz Azul) [21]
2 February 2004 Jovan Kirovski Released (Los Angeles Galaxy) [22]
11 March 2004 Christophe Dugarry Released (Qatar SC) [23]
12 March 2004 Jeff Kenna Free Derby County [24]
25 March 2004 Craig Fagan Free Colchester United [25]
30 March 2004 Tommy Williams Released Peterborough United [26]
18 June 2004 Darren Purse £750,000 West Bromwich Albion [27]
30 June 2004 Bryan Hughes Released (Charlton Athletic) [28]
dagger Brackets round club names denote the player joined that club after his Birmingham City contract expired.

Loan in

Date Player Club Return Ref
8 August 2003 Maik Taylor Fulham End of season [29]
28 August 2003 Mikael Forssell Chelsea End of season [19][30]

Loan out

Date Player Club Return Ref
1 August 2003 Craig Fagan Colchester United 25 March 2004 [25]
10 October 2003 Andrew Barrowman Crewe Alexandra One month [31]
21 November 2003 Mat Sadler Northampton Town Two months [32]
24 December 2003 Nico Vaesen Gillingham One month [33]
1 January 2004 Tommy Williams Peterborough United Three months [26][34]
12 February 2004 Martin Grainger Coventry City 18 March 2004 [35]
13 February 2004 Nico Vaesen Bradford City One month [36]
18 March 2004 Nico Vaesen Crystal Palace End of season [37]

Appearances and goals

Numbers in parentheses denote appearances as substitute.
Players with squad numbers struck through and marked Left club during playing season left the club during the playing season.
Players with names in italics and marked * were on loan from another club for the whole of their season with Birmingham.
Players included in matchday squads
No. Pos Nat Name League FA Cup League Cup Total Discipline
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals! A yellow rectangle, denoting the yellow penalty card shown to a player being cautioned A red rectangle, denoting the red penalty card shown to a player being sent off
1GK ENG Ian Bennett 4 (2)000004 (2)000
2Left club during playing seasonDF IRE Jeff Kenna 14 (3)2400018 (3)210
3DF ENG Martin Grainger 3 (1)100003 (1)100
4DF IRE Kenny Cunningham 360401041031
5DF ENG Darren Purse 90300012011
6MF SEN Aliou Cissé 5 (10)00 (1)0106 (11)061
7Left club during playing seasonMF SCO Paul Devlin 0 (2)000000 (2)090
8MF WAL Robbie Savage 3134000343120
9Left club during playing seasonFW ENG Geoff Horsfield 2 (1)000002 (1)000
9FW FIN Mikael Forssell 32173 (1)20 (1)035 (2)1910
10MF ENG Bryan Hughes 17 (9)33 (1)20020 (10)500
11MF AUS Stan Lazaridis 25 (5)2201028 (5)200
12GK NIR Maik Taylor 340401039022
13GK IRE Colin Doyle 0000000000
14FW TRI Stern John[lower-alpha 1] 7 (22)41 (1)0109 (23)400
15Left club during playing seasonFW USA Jovan Kirovski 0 (6)00 (1)00 (1)00 (8)000
15DF ENG Martin Taylor 11 (1)1000011 (1)100
16MF ENG David Dunn 20 (1)2301024 (1)220
18GK BEL Nico Vaesen 0000000000
19FW IRE Clinton Morrison 19 (13)4411024 (13)510
21Left club during playing seasonFW FRA Christophe Dugarry 12 (2)10 (1)00012 (3)161
22MF NIR Damien Johnson[lower-alpha 2] 351401040170
23DF ENG Jamie Clapham 22 (3)00 (1)01023 (4)000
24MF ENG Darren Carter 1 (4)00 (3)0001 (7)000
25DF ENG Matthew Upson 300201033020
26DF CIV Olivier Tébily 17 (10)0200019 (10)040
27FW SCO Andrew Barrowman 0 (1)000000 (1)000
28MF ENG Carl Motteram 0000000000
32MF ENG Stephen Clemence 32 (3)21 (1)11034 (4)340
35Left club during playing seasonFW ARG Luciano Figueroa 0 (1)0000 (1)00 (2)000
  1. Soccerbase omits four substitute appearances in the Premier League by Stern John.
  2. Soccerbase counts four of Damien Johnson's Premier League starts as substitute appearances.
Players not included in matchday squads
No. Pos Nat Name
20Left club during playing seasonMF ENG Tom Williams
27Left club during playing seasonDF ENG Joey Hutchinson
29Left club during playing seasonDF ENG Craig Fagan
30DF ENG Mat Sadler
34MF ENG Neil Kilkenny

References

General

Specific

  1. "Barclaycard Premiership 2003–2004 Season Attendance Table". Football365. 365 Media Group. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
  2. Rags (19 July 2004). "Burton Albion 0 - Blues 4". Singing The Blues. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  3. "Newcastle defeat Birmingham". BBC Sport. 24 July 2004. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  4. Barker, Richard (24 July 2004). "10-man Blues impress in Malaysian heat". Singing The Blues. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  5. Barker, Richard (26 July 2004). "Stern Double In Four Star Show". Singing The Blues. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  6. Cartlidge, Brian (30 July 2004). "Port Vale 2 - Blues 0". Singing The Blues. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  7. Cartlidge, Brian (2 August 2004). "Burnley 2 - Blues 2". Singing The Blues. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  8. Rags (5 August 2004). "Walsall 1 - Blues 3". Singing The Blues. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  9. Cartlidge, Brian (9 August 2004). "Blues 0 - Real Mallorca 0". Singing The Blues. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  10. 1 2 Tattum, Colin (19 May 2004). "Review of the season". Birmingham Evening Mail. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  11. "Birmingham City 2003–2004: English Premier League Table: 2004-03-28". Statto Organisation. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  12. 1 2 3 "Birmingham City 2003–2004: English Premier League Table". Statto Organisation. Retrieved 11 July 2013.
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 "Birmingham City Reports – 2003–2004". sportinglife.com. 365 Media Group. Archived from the original on 23 May 2012.
    "Fixtures & Results 2003/2004". Birmingham City F.C. Archived from the original on 5 January 2008. Individual match reports are linked from each page.
  14. "Dugarry signs new deal". BBC Sport. 11 May 2003. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  15. "Dunn signs for Blues". BBC Sport. 7 July 2003. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  16. "Figueroa joins Blues". BBC Sport. 23 July 2003. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  17. "Taylor seals Blues switch". BBC Sport. 2 February 2004. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  18. "Swindon sign Mooney". BBC Sport. 8 July 2003. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  19. 1 2 3 "Transfers – August 2003". BBC Sport. 5 September 2003. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  20. 1 2 "Transfers – September 2003". BBC Sport. 23 September 2003. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  21. "Figueroa leaves Birmingham". BBC Sport. 23 December 2003. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  22. "Taylor bound for Birmingham". UEFA. 2 February 2004. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  23. "Dugarry quits Birmingham". BBC Sport. 11 March 2004. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  24. "Kenna makes move to Derby". BBC Sport. 12 March 2004. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  25. 1 2 "Craig Fagan". Soccerbase. Centurycomm. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  26. 1 2 "Posh capture Williams". BBC Sport. 30 March 2004. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  27. "Baggies snatch Purse". BBC Sport. 18 June 2004. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  28. "Hughes moves to Charlton". BBC Sport. 1 July 2004. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  29. "Blues finally land Taylor". BBC Sport. 8 August 2003. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  30. "Forssell extends loan". BBC Sport. 26 November 2003. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  31. "Andrew Barrowman". Soccerbase. Centurycomm. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  32. "Matt Sadler". Soccerbase. Centurycomm. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  33. "Nico Vaesen". Soccerbase. Centurycomm. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  34. Luckings, Steve (1 January 2004). "Carter outlines desire". Sky Sports. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  35. "Coventry swoop for Grainger". BBC Sport. 12 February 2004. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
    "Injury-hit Blues recall Grainger". ESPN FC. 18 March 2004. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  36. "Bantams bag Vaesen". BBC Sport. 12 February 2004. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  37. Fudge, Simon (18 March 2004). "Vaesen takes Palace loan". Sky Sports. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
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