1994–95 FA Premier League


The 1994–95 FA Premier League was the third season of the competition, since its formation in 1992 as the top division of professional football in England. Due to the decision to reduce the number of clubs in the FA Premier League from 22 to 20 starting from the following season, four clubs were to be relegated.

Overview

Transfers

Just before the start of the season, the English transfer record was broken when Blackburn Rovers paid £5 million for 21-year-old Norwich City striker Chris Sutton. But that record was broken again in January when Manchester United paid £6 million for Newcastle United's Andy Cole, in a deal which also saw £1 million-rated Keith Gillespie move to Newcastle. Other significant transfers before and during the 1994–95 season included: Vinny Samways, David Rocastle, Jürgen Klinsmann, John Scales and Paul Kitson.

Summary

The title was won by Blackburn Rovers, whose last title success was in 1914, and also was Blackburn's first major trophy in 67 years.
Kenny Dalglish's side secured the championship on the last day of the season despite losing 2–1 at his former club Liverpool, as Manchester United could only manage a 1–1 draw at West Ham.
This meant that Blackburn Rovers qualified for the European Cup for the first time in their history, while Manchester United finished second earning a UEFA Cup place. A single point separated the two sides, who for more than half of the season enjoyed a wide gap in terms of point between themselves and the rest of the league, despite the likes of Nottingham Forest, Liverpool and Newcastle United looking like title contenders during the first three months of the season.
Also qualifying for the UEFA Cup were Nottingham Forest, Liverpool. Fifth-placed Leeds United also secured a place via the newly-introduced UEFA Fair Play ranking, by virtue of the Premier League's exemplary disciplinary record through the season.
The number of teams in the league for the following year would be reduced to 20. This was to be achieved by increasing the number of teams facing relegation to four, and reducing the number of teams being promoted from Division 1 to two. Ipswich Town were relegated in bottom place after winning just seven league games and conceding 93 goals. Newly promoted Leicester City also went down, winning just six times in the league and never being outside the bottom two after November. Norwich City, who had been in contention for a UEFA Cup place halfway through the season, suffered a nosedive in form during the second half of the season and were relegated just two seasons after being title contenders. The final relegation place on the last day of the season went to Crystal Palace, who still lost 3-2 despite a strong fightback at Newcastle after being 3-0 down.

Controversial incidents

In January 1995, Manchester United's 28-year-old French striker Eric Cantona assaulted a Crystal Palace fan who verbally abused him in his team's 1–1 draw at Selhurst Park. Cantona was banned from football for eight months, fined £20,000 and sentenced to 14 days in prison. The prison sentence was later reduced to 120 hours community service on appeal.
Chelsea midfielder Dennis Wise was convicted of criminal damage and assault, relating to a fight with a taxi driver in London. He was given a three-month prison sentence but the conviction and prison sentence were quickly overturned on appeal.
Arsenal midfielder Paul Merson admitted in November 1994 that he was an alcoholic and was also addicted to cocaine and gambling. He underwent a three-month drug rehabilitation programme before being allowed to resume his playing career.
Crystal Palace striker Chris Armstrong failed a drugs test in February 1995 but admitted that he had done wrong and returned to action after just four weeks undergoing rehabilitation. Armstrong was Palace's leading goalscorer in 1994–95, helping them reach the semi-finals of both domestic cup competitions, but was unable to prevent them from being relegated back to the First Division just one season after winning promotion.
Arsenal manager George Graham was sacked in February 1995 after nearly nine years in charge, when it was revealed that he had accepted an illegal payment of £425,000 from Norwegian agent Rune Hauge relating to the purchases of Norwegian and Danish players Pål Lydersen and John Jensen three years earlier. Graham was later banned from football for one year by the FA.

Teams

Twenty-two teams competed in the league – the top nineteen teams from the previous season and the three teams promoted from the First Division. The promoted teams were Crystal Palace, Nottingham Forest, and Leicester City. This was also Leicester City's first season in the Premier League. They replaced Sheffield United, Oldham Athletic and Swindon Town, who were relegated to the First Division after their top flight spells of four, three and one year respectively. This was the final season to be contested by twenty-two teams as all seasons after were contested by twenty teams.

Stadiums and locations

TeamLocationStadiumCapacity
ArsenalLondon Highbury
Aston VillaBirminghamVilla Park
Blackburn RoversBlackburnEwood Park
ChelseaLondon Stamford Bridge
Coventry CityCoventryHighfield Road
Crystal PalaceLondon Selhurst Park
EvertonLiverpool Goodison Park
Ipswich TownIpswichPortman Road
Leeds UnitedLeedsElland Road
Leicester CityLeicesterFilbert Street
LiverpoolLiverpool Anfield
Manchester CityManchester Maine Road
Manchester UnitedManchester Old Trafford
Newcastle UnitedNewcastle upon TyneSt James' Park
Norwich CityNorwichCarrow Road
Nottingham ForestWest BridgfordCity Ground
Queens Park RangersLondon Loftus Road
Sheffield WednesdaySheffieldHillsborough Stadium
SouthamptonSouthamptonThe Dell
Tottenham HotspurLondon White Hart Lane
West Ham UnitedLondon Boleyn Ground
WimbledonLondon Selhurst Park

Personnel and kits

TeamManagerCaptainKit manufacturerShirt sponsor
Arsenal

League table


Season statistics

Top scorers

RankPlayerClubGoals
1

Hat-tricks

PlayerForAgainstResultDate
sortname|Chris|Sutton

Discipline

Player

Club

  • Most yellow cards: 72
  • *Wimbledon
  • Fewest yellow cards: 35
  • *Liverpool
  • Most red cards: 8
  • *Leicester City
  • Fewest red cards: 0
  • *Leeds United
  • *Southampton

Awards

Annual awards

AwardWinnerClub
Premier League Manager of the Season

Attendances

Manchester United drew the highest average home attendance in the third edition of the Premier League.