Recalling memories of the 2001/02 season, it is easy to be sucked into thinking that not much has changed in the Premier League over the past ten years. Back then, star-studded squads at Arsenal and Manchester United were in thick of the title race, as were a talented Liverpool team. Arsene Wenger and Sir Alex Ferguson were in the midst of a great rivalry and the league was attracting more and more of the biggest names from across the globe. Meanwhile, the likes of Everton, Sunderland, Bolton and Fulham were fighting to keep their heads above water in the relegation dogfight. While the Gunners are no longer the powerhouse of the Thierry Henry era, the rest of these recollections ring true in today’s Premier League.
But a closer examination of the league table from May 2002 provides a reminder that the top flight has undergone radical changes over the past ten years, with new challengers emerging and established giants collapsing.
Chelsea, for instance, finished sixth but 24 points behind champions Arsenal and even the most diehard fans at Stamford Bridge would not have classed the squad as future champions. Then came the Roman Abramovich era, lifting the Blues from a top six hopeful to a title contender. Given their success under Jose Mourinho between 2004 and 2006, it is hard to believe that just a few years earlier, Chelsea were battling just to qualify for the UEFA Cup.
What about the teams above Chelsea in fourth and fifth? Few would remember that they were Newcastle and Leeds, who have both endured rollercoaster decades. The late Sir Bobby Robson helped Newcastle surpass all expectations as Alan Shearer, Laurent Robert and Craig Bellamy fired the Magpies to the top of table at Christmas, though they eventually had to settle for a Champions League spot. The mood on Tyneside was jubilant but Newcastle never built on their run in 2001/02, sacking Robson too soon and stuttering before dropping out of the top flight in 2009. Against all odds, Alan Pardew has steered the 2011 squad to an outstanding start.
But a closer examination of the league table from May 2002 provides a reminder that the top flight has undergone radical changes over the past ten years, with new challengers emerging and established giants collapsing.
Chelsea, for instance, finished sixth but 24 points behind champions Arsenal and even the most diehard fans at Stamford Bridge would not have classed the squad as future champions. Then came the Roman Abramovich era, lifting the Blues from a top six hopeful to a title contender. Given their success under Jose Mourinho between 2004 and 2006, it is hard to believe that just a few years earlier, Chelsea were battling just to qualify for the UEFA Cup.
What about the teams above Chelsea in fourth and fifth? Few would remember that they were Newcastle and Leeds, who have both endured rollercoaster decades. The late Sir Bobby Robson helped Newcastle surpass all expectations as Alan Shearer, Laurent Robert and Craig Bellamy fired the Magpies to the top of table at Christmas, though they eventually had to settle for a Champions League spot. The mood on Tyneside was jubilant but Newcastle never built on their run in 2001/02, sacking Robson too soon and stuttering before dropping out of the top flight in 2009. Against all odds, Alan Pardew has steered the 2011 squad to an outstanding start.
Leeds, meanwhile, had a more sudden reversal of fortunes. David O’Leary’s side was buoyant in 2002 with years of success seemingly ahead. Boasting stars like Rio Ferdinand, Harry Kewell and Mark Viduka, Leeds even topped the table for the first half of the campaign. But when the big spending caught up with the club, the slump towards League One began. Relegation in 2004 devastated a club that was in the Champions League semi-final only three years earlier. Leeds, contending again this year in the Championship, are clawing their way back but there is still a long way to go.
In total, the 2001/02 season featured eight teams that have since dropped from the Premier League – a staggering statistic that reflects the turbulent nature of life at English football’s top table. Among the other teams to suffer after 2002 are Southampton, who are hoping to return to the top flight this season, Ipswich, Leicester, Derby and West Ham, who finished a respectable seventh that year.
To further illustrate the point, back in 2002, the landscape looked rather different for some of the current Premier League sides. Wigan, for instance, managed a mid-table spot in the old Division Two, with Stoke and QPR fifth and eighth respectively. Plus, spare a thought for Swansea, who finished 20th in the fourth tier of English football and could not have been much further from playing host to the likes of Manchester United and Arsenal.
And then there was Manchester City, who topped the old Division One in 2002 and earned a return to the big time after a spell in the football wilderness. Now, ten years later, equipped with some of the game’s biggest talents, they are the favourites to win the Premier League. What better illustration of the huge shifts that have occurred over the past decade? And what better evidence for the beauty of the promotion/relegation system?
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