2010–11 Premier League

Premier League
Season 2010–11
Champions Manchester United
12th Premier League title
19th English title
Relegated West Ham United
Blackpool
Birmingham City
Champions League Manchester United
Chelsea
Manchester City
Arsenal
Europa League Tottenham Hotspur
Birmingham City
Stoke City
Fulham
Matches played 380
Goals scored 1063 (2.8 per match)
Top goalscorer Dimitar Berbatov
Carlos Tevez
(20 goals)
Biggest home win Chelsea 6–0 West Bromwich Albion
(14 August 2010)
Arsenal 6–0 Blackpool
(21 August 2010)
Newcastle United 6–0 Aston Villa
(22 August 2010)
Manchester United 7–1 Blackburn Rovers
(27 November 2010)[1]
Biggest away win Wigan Athletic 0–6 Chelsea
(21 August 2010)[1]
Highest scoring Manchester United 7–1 Blackburn Rovers
(27 November 2010)[1]
Everton 5–3 Blackpool
(5 February 2011)
Newcastle United 4–4 Arsenal
(5 February 2011)
Longest winning run 5 games[1]
Chelsea
Longest unbeaten run 24 games[1]
Manchester United
Longest winless run 10 games[1]
Blackburn Rovers
Longest losing run 5 games[1]
Blackpool
Bolton Wanderers
West Bromwich Albion
West Ham United
Highest attendance 75,486[1]
Manchester United v Bolton Wanderers
Lowest attendance 14,042[1]
Wigan Athletic v Wolverhampton Wanderers
Total attendance 13,372,318[1]
Average attendance 35,190

The 2010–11 Premier League (known as the Barclays Premier League for sponsorship reasons) was the 19th season of the Premier League since its establishment in 1992. The 2010–11 fixtures were released on 17 June 2010 at 09:00 BST.[2] The season began on 14 August 2010,[3] and ended on 22 May 2011. Chelsea were the defending champions.[4]

Manchester United secured the title with a 1–1 draw away to Blackburn Rovers on 14 May 2011.[5][6] This was their nineteenth English league title, breaking a tie with Liverpool which had stood since Manchester United won their eighteenth title in 2009.[7] Manchester United, Chelsea, Manchester City and Arsenal all secured a berth for the 2011–12 UEFA Champions League, while Tottenham Hotspur qualified for the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League via league position. At the bottom, West Ham United, Blackpool, and Birmingham City were relegated to the Championship.[8][9][10]

Rule changes

The Premier League introduced a cap on the number of players in a squad. From this season onwards, clubs had to declare a squad of no more than 25 players when the summer transfer window shuts, and then again at the end of the January transfer window. Players aged 21 and under could be selected without being registered in the 25.

Also being introduced this season was the "home grown players" rule, which aims to encourage the development of young footballers at Premier League clubs. The new rule required clubs to name at least eight players in their squad of 25 players that have been registered domestically for a minimum of three seasons prior to their 21st birthday.[11]

All of the Premier League teams submitted their 25-man squads on 1 September 2010 deadline.[12]

Teams

A total of twenty teams contested the league, including seventeen sides from the 2009–10 season and three promoted teams from the 2009–10 Football League Championship.

Hull City, Burnley and Portsmouth were relegated from 2009–10 Premier League after finishing the season in the bottom three places of the league table. From the three teams relegated, Portsmouth had the longest tenure as a Premier League member as the club completed a seven-year stay at the highest level of English football. In comparison, Hull City and Burnley had to return to the Championship after two and one years respectively.

2009–10 Football League Championship champions Newcastle United and runners-up West Bromwich Albion secured direct promotion to the Premier League. Both teams made their immediate return to the Premier League after being relegated at the end of the 2008–09 season. Blackpool beat Cardiff City 3–2 in the Championship play-off Final to join them after 39 years of absence from the top flight.[13]

It was the first time since 1983–84 that all four major West Midlands clubs—Birmingham City, West Bromwich Albion, Aston Villa and Wolverhampton Wanderers—had been in the top division at the same time.[14] It was also the first time that the Black Country derby was contested in the Premier League. With Portsmouth and Hull relegated and no teams from their respective regions replacing them, only four of the nine regions of England were represented in the 2010–11 Premier League – the fewest number of regions represented in a national football division in modern times. Yorkshire and the Humber, the East Midlands, East, South East and South West are all unrepresented.

Stadia and locations

Team Stadium Stadium capacity1
Arsenal Emirates Stadium 60,361
Aston Villa Villa Park 42,789
Birmingham City St Andrew's 30,079
Blackburn Rovers Ewood Park 31,367
Blackpool Bloomfield Road 16,220
Bolton Wanderers Reebok Stadium 28,723
Chelsea Stamford Bridge 42,449
Everton Goodison Park 40,157
Fulham Craven Cottage 25,700
Liverpool Anfield 45,276[15]
Manchester City Eastlands 47,405
Manchester United Old Trafford 75,797
Newcastle United St James' Park 52,409
Stoke City Britannia Stadium 27,740
Sunderland Stadium of Light 49,000
Tottenham Hotspur White Hart Lane 36,230
West Bromwich Albion The Hawthorns 26,484
West Ham United Boleyn Ground 35,303
Wigan Athletic DW Stadium 25,133
Wolverhampton Wanderers Molineux 29,195

Personnel and kits

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players and Managers may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

Team Manager1 Captain Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
Arsenal France Wenger, ArseneArsène Wenger Spain Fàbregas, CescCesc Fàbregas Nike Emirates
Aston Villa France Houllier, GerardGérard Houllier Bulgaria Petrov, StiliyanStiliyan Petrov Nike FxPro
Birmingham City Scotland Macleish, AlexAlex McLeish Republic of Ireland Carr, StephenStephen Carr Xtep F&C Investments
Blackburn Rovers Scotland Kean, SteveSteve Kean New Zealand Nelsen, RyanRyan Nelsen Umbro Crown Paints
Blackpool England Holloway, IanIan Holloway Scotland Adam, CharlieCharlie Adam Carbrini Wonga.com
Bolton Wanderers Republic of Ireland Coyle, OwenOwen Coyle England Davies, KevinKevin Davies Reebok 188BET
Chelsea Italy Ancelotti, CarloCarlo Ancelotti England Terry, JohnJohn Terry Adidas Samsung
Everton Scotland Moyes, DavidDavid Moyes England Neville, PhilPhil Neville Le Coq Sportif Chang Beer
Fulham Wales Hughes, MarkMark Hughes England Murphy, DannyDanny Murphy Kappa FxPro
Liverpool Scotland Dalglish, KennyKenny Dalglish England Gerrard, StevenSteven Gerrard Adidas Standard Chartered
Manchester City Italy Mancini, RobertoRoberto Mancini Argentina Tevez, CarlosCarlos Tevez Umbro Etihad Airways
Manchester United Scotland Ferguson, AlexSir Alex Ferguson England Neville, GaryGary Neville Nike Aon
Newcastle United England Pardew, AlanAlan Pardew England Nolan, KevinKevin Nolan Puma Northern Rock
Stoke City Wales Pulis, TonyTony Pulis England Shawcross, RyanRyan Shawcross Adidas Britannia
Sunderland England Bruce, SteveSteve Bruce England Cattermole, LeeLee Cattermole Umbro Tombola
Tottenham Hotspur England Redknapp, HarryHarry Redknapp England Dawson, MichaelMichael Dawson Puma Autonomy
West Bromwich Albion England Hodgson, RoyRoy Hodgson Northern Ireland Brunt, ChrisChris Brunt Umbro Homeserve
West Ham United England Keen, KevinKevin Keen (caretaker) England Upson, MatthewMatthew Upson Macron SBOBET
Wigan Athletic Spain Martinez, RobertoRoberto Martínez Scotland Caldwell, GaryGary Caldwell MiFit 188BET
Wolverhampton Wanderers Republic of Ireland Maccarthy, MickMick McCarthy England Henry, KarlKarl Henry BURRDA Sportingbet

Nike produced a new match ball, the Nike Total 90 Tracer, which was electric blue, black and white during the autumn and spring. A high-visibility version in yellow was released for the winter.[17] Additionally, Umbro provided officials with new kits in black, lime green, yellow, red and cyan blue for the season. Tune Ventures, parent company of Air Asia, took over as sponsor of the referee kits for the next three seasons.[18]

Managerial changes

Team Outgoing manager Manner of departure Date of vacancy Table Incoming manager Date of appointment
West Ham United Italy Gianfranco Zola Contract terminated 11 May 2010[19] Pre-season Israel Avram Grant 3 June 2010[20]
Liverpool Spain Rafael Benítez Mutual agreement 3 June 2010[21] England Roy Hodgson 1 July 2010[22]
Fulham England Roy Hodgson Signed by Liverpool 1 July 2010[22] Wales Mark Hughes 29 July 2010[23]
Aston Villa Northern Ireland Martin O'Neill Resigned 9 August 2010[24] France Gérard Houllier 8 September 2010[25]
Newcastle United Republic of Ireland Chris Hughton Sacked 6 December 2010[26] 11th England Alan Pardew 9 December 2010[27]
Blackburn Rovers England Sam Allardyce Sacked 13 December 2010[28] 13th Scotland Steve Kean 22 December 2010[29]
Liverpool England Roy Hodgson Sacked 8 January 2011[30] 12th Scotland Kenny Dalglish 8 January 2011[30]
West Bromwich Albion Italy Roberto Di Matteo Sacked 6 February 2011[31] 16th England Roy Hodgson 11 February 2011[32]
West Ham United Israel Avram Grant Sacked 15 May 2011[33] 20th (relegated) England Sam Allardyce 1 June 2011[34]

Ownership changes

Club New owner Previous owner Date
Liverpool New England Sports Ventures Tom Hicks and George N. Gillett, Jr. 15 October 2010[35]
Blackburn Rovers Venky's (India) Limited Jack Walker Trust 19 November 2010[36]

League table

Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification or relegation
1 Manchester United (C) 38 23 11 4 78 37+41 80 2011–12 UEFA Champions League Group stage
2 Chelsea 38 21 8 9 69 33+36 71
3 Manchester City 38 21 8 9 60 33+27 71
4 Arsenal 38 19 11 8 72 43+29 68 2011–12 UEFA Champions League Play-off round
5 Tottenham Hotspur 38 16 14 8 55 46+9 62 2011–12 UEFA Europa League Play-off round
6 Liverpool 38 17 7 14 59 44+15 58
7 Everton 38 13 15 10 51 45+6 54
8 Fulham 38 11 16 11 49 43+6 49 2011–12 UEFA Europa League First qualifying round 1
9 Aston Villa 38 12 12 14 48 5911 48
10 Sunderland 38 12 11 15 45 5611 47
11 West Bromwich Albion 38 12 11 15 56 7115 47
12 Newcastle United 38 11 13 14 56 571 46
13 Stoke City 38 13 7 18 46 482 46 2011–12 UEFA Europa League Third qualifying round 2
14 Bolton Wanderers 38 12 10 16 52 564 46
15 Blackburn Rovers 38 11 10 17 46 5913 43
16 Wigan Athletic 38 9 15 14 40 6121 42
17 Wolverhampton Wanderers 38 11 7 20 46 6620 40
18 Birmingham City (R) 38 8 15 15 37 58 –21 39 2011–12 UEFA Europa League Play-off round 3
Relegation to the 2011–12 Football League Championship
19 Blackpool (R) 38 10 9 19 55 7823 39 Relegation to the 2011–12 Football League Championship
20 West Ham United (R) 38 7 12 19 43 7027 33

Source: Barclays Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored
1 Fulham, as the highest-ranked team from the Fair Play table not yet qualified for any European competition, entered the first qualifying round of the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League.[37]
2 Stoke City qualified for the third qualifying round of the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League as 2010–11 FA Cup runners-up to Champions League-qualified Manchester City.
3 Birmingham City qualified for the play-off round of the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League after winning the 2010–11 Football League Cup, worth a third qualification round spot, and subsequently being moved up a round due to the outcome of the 2011 FA Cup Final.
(C) = Champion; (R) = Relegated; (P) = Promoted; (E) = Eliminated; (O) = Play-off winner; (A) = Advances to a further round.
Only applicable when the season is not finished:
(Q) = Qualified to the phase of tournament indicated; (TQ) = Qualified to tournament, but not yet to the particular phase indicated; (RQ) = Qualified to the relegation tournament indicated; (DQ) = Disqualified from tournament.

Results

Home ╲ Away ARS AST BIRBLBBLPBOLCHEEVEFULLIVMCIMUNNEWSTKSUNTOTWBAWHUWIGWOL
Arsenal 12 21 00 60 41 31 21 21 11 00 10 01 10 00 23 23 10 30 20
Aston Villa 24 00 41 32 11 00 10 22 10 10 22 10 11 01 12 21 30 11 01
Birmingham City 03 11 21 20 21 10 02 02 00 22 11 02 10 20 11 13 22 00 11
Blackburn Rovers 12 20 11 22 10 12 10 11 31 01 11 00 02 00 01 20 11 21 30
Blackpool 13 11 12 12 43 13 22 22 21 23 23 11 00 12 31 21 13 13 21
Bolton Wanderers 21 32 22 21 22 04 20 00 01 02 22 51 21 12 42 20 30 11 10
Chelsea 20 33 31 20 40 10 11 10 01 20 21 22 20 03 21 60 30 10 20
Everton 12 22 11 20 53 11 10 21 20 21 33 01 10 20 21 14 22 00 11
Fulham 22 11 11 32 30 30 00 00 25 14 22 10 20 00 12 30 13 20 21
Liverpool 11 30 50 21 12 21 20 22 10 30 31 30 20 22 02 10 30 11 01
Manchester City 03 40 00 11 10 10 10 12 11 30 00 21 30 50 10 30 21 10 43
Manchester United 10 31 50 71 42 10 21 10 20 32 21 30 21 20 20 22 30 20 21
Newcastle United 44 60 21 12 02 11 11 12 00 31 13 00 12 51 11 33 50 22 41
Stoke City 31 21 32 10 01 20 11 20 02 20 11 12 40 32 12 11 11 01 30
Sunderland 11 10 22 30 02 10 24 22 03 02 10 00 11 20 12 23 10 42 13
Tottenham Hotspur 33 21 21 42 11 21 11 11 10 21 00 00 20 32 11 22 00 01 31
West Bromwich Albion 22 21 31 13 32 11 13 10 21 21 02 12 31 03 10 11 33 22 11
West Ham United 03 12 01 11 00 13 13 11 11 31 13 24 12 30 03 10 22 31 20
Wigan Athletic 22 12 21 43 04 11 06 11 11 11 02 04 01 22 11 00 10 32 20
Wolverhampton Wanderers 02 12 10 23 40 23 10 03 11 03 21 21 11 21 32 33 31 11 12

Source: Barclays Premier League
1 ^ The home team is listed in the left-hand column.
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.
For coming matches, an a indicates there is an article about the match.

Season statistics

Scoring

Top scorers

Rank Player Club Goals[40]
1 Bulgaria Dimitar Berbatov Manchester United 20
Argentina Carlos Tevez Manchester City 20
3 Netherlands Robin van Persie Arsenal 18
4 England Darren Bent Sunderland/Aston Villa 17
5 Nigeria Peter Odemwingie West Bromwich Albion 15
6 England DJ Campbell Blackpool 13
England Andy Carroll Newcastle/Liverpool 13
Mexico Javier Hernández Manchester United 13
Netherlands Dirk Kuyt Liverpool 13
France Florent Malouda Chelsea 13
Netherlands Rafael van der Vaart Tottenham Hotspur 13

Hat-tricks

Player For Against Result Date
Ivory Coast Drogba, DidierDidier Drogba Chelsea West Bromwich Albion 6–0 14 August 2010
England Walcott, TheoTheo Walcott Arsenal Blackpool 6–0 21 August 2010
England Carroll, AndyAndy Carroll Newcastle United Aston Villa 6–0 22 August 2010
Bulgaria Berbatov, DimitarDimitar Berbatov Manchester United Liverpool 3–2 19 September 2010
England Nolan, KevinKevin Nolan Newcastle United Sunderland 5–1 31 October 2010
Bulgaria Berbatov, DimitarDimitar Berbatov5 Manchester United Blackburn Rovers 7–1 27 November 2010
Italy Balotelli, MarioMario Balotelli Manchester City Aston Villa 4–0 28 December 2010
Republic of Ireland Best, LeonLeon Best Newcastle United West Ham United 5–0 5 January 2011
Bulgaria Berbatov, DimitarDimitar Berbatov Manchester United Birmingham City 5–0 22 January 2011
Netherlands Persie, Robin vanRobin van Persie Arsenal Wigan Athletic 3–0 22 January 2011
Argentina Tevez, CarlosCarlos Tevez Manchester City West Bromwich Albion 3–0 5 February 2011
France Saha, LouisLouis Saha4 Everton Blackpool 5–3 5 February 2011
Netherlands Kuyt, DirkDirk Kuyt Liverpool Manchester United 3–1 6 March 2011
England Rooney, WayneWayne Rooney Manchester United West Ham United 4–2 2 April 2011
Argentina Rodriguez, MaxiMaxi Rodríguez Liverpool Birmingham City 5–0 23 April 2011
Argentina Rodriguez, MaxiMaxi Rodríguez Liverpool Fulham 5–2 9 May 2011
Cameroon Tchoyi, SomenSomen Tchoyi West Bromwich Albion Newcastle United 3–3 22 May 2011

Discipline

Club

Player

Clean sheets

Awards

Monthly awards

Month Manager of the Month Player of the Month Reference
Manager Club Player Club
August Italy Carlo Ancelotti Chelsea England Paul Scholes Manchester United [42]
September Italy Roberto Di Matteo West Bromwich Albion Nigeria Peter Odemwingie West Bromwich Albion [43]
October Scotland David Moyes Everton Netherlands Rafael van der Vaart Tottenham Hotspur [44]
November Republic of Ireland Owen Coyle Bolton Wanderers Sweden Johan Elmander Bolton Wanderers [45]
December Italy Roberto Mancini Manchester City France Samir Nasri Arsenal [46]
January Scotland Sir Alex Ferguson Manchester United Bulgaria Dimitar Berbatov Manchester United [47]
February France Arsène Wenger Arsenal England Scott Parker West Ham United [48]
March Italy Carlo Ancelotti Chelsea Brazil David Luiz Chelsea [49]
April Italy Carlo Ancelotti Chelsea Nigeria Peter Odemwingie West Bromwich Albion [50][51]

Annual awards

PFA Player of the Year

The PFA Player of the Year was awarded to Gareth Bale.

FWA Footballer of the Year

The FWA Footballer of the Year was awarded to Scott Parker.[52]

PFA Young Player of the Year

The PFA Young Player of the Year was awarded to Jack Wilshere.[53]

PFA Fans' Player of the Year

The PFA Fans' Player of the Year was awarded to Raul Meireles.[54]

PFA Team of the Year

Goalkeeper: Edwin van der Sar (Manchester United)
Defence: Bacary Sagna (Arsenal), Nemanja Vidić (Manchester United), Vincent Kompany (Manchester City), Ashley Cole (Chelsea)
Midfield: Nani (Manchester United), Samir Nasri, Jack Wilshere (both Arsenal), Gareth Bale (Tottenham Hotspur)
Attack: Carlos Tevez (Manchester City), Dimitar Berbatov (Manchester United)

Barclays Player of the season

The Barclays Player of the Season award was won by Nemanja Vidić of Manchester United.[56]

FA Premier League Manager of the Year Award

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson, 69, received the FA Premier League Manager of the Year Award.[56]

Barclays Golden Glove

The Barclays Golden Glove award was won by Joe Hart of Manchester City.[57]

Barclays Golden Boot

Dimitar Berbatov of Manchester United and Carlos Tevez of Manchester City shared the Barclays Golden Boot this season, both finishing with 20 goals. Berbatov's 20 goals came in 32 appearances, with Tevez's 20 goals coming in 31 appearances. This was the first time either player had won the award, and the first time it had been shared since the 1998–99 season.[58]

Barclays Premier League Fair Play Award

The Fair Play Award was won by Chelsea, who finished on top of the Fair Play Table. Newcastle United were deemed to be the least sporting team, finishing bottom of the table.[59] Due to England being one of the three best teams in the UEFA Fair Play rankings, Fulham as the highest-ranked team not already qualified for a European competition were awarded a spot in the first qualifying round of the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League.[60]

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