2001–02 Manchester United F.C. season

The 2001–02 season was Manchester United's tenth season in the Premier League, their 100th season in league football, and their 27th consecutive season in the top division of English football.[1] The second full season of the new millennium was a great disappointment for the Red Devils in comparison to the previous three years. The club finished in third place in the Premier League, their lowest finish in the history of the Premier League at the time, and they were knocked out of the FA Cup in the fourth round. League Cup success was not expected, and the club duly obliged by playing what was effectively a reserve team against a strong Arsenal side in the third round, the day after both teams were on League duty. United's best success in the 2001–02 season came in the UEFA Champions League, in which they reached the semi-finals before being knocked out by Bayer Leverkusen on away goals. Ultimately, United's failure to win anything boiled down a dismal run of form in November and early December when they suffered five defeats in seven league games, including three defeats in a row against Arsenal, Chelsea and West Ham United in December. They also lost six home games in the Premier League, their worst home record since the 1977–78 season. They only lost three more league games all season, but that terrible form earlier in the campaign counted against United for the rest of the campaign and they finished 10 points behind champions Arsenal (who sealed their crown by beating United 1–0 at Old Trafford in the penultimate game of the season) and three points behind runners-up Liverpool.

Manchester United
2001–02 season
ChairmanMartin Edwards
ManagerSir Alex Ferguson
Premier League3rd
FA CupFourth Round
League CupThird Round
UEFA Champions LeagueSemi-finals
Charity ShieldRunners-up
Top goalscorerLeague:
Ruud van Nistelrooy (23)

All:
Ruud van Nistelrooy (36)
Highest home attendance67,683 vs Middlesbrough (23 March 2002)
Lowest home attendance64,827 vs Lille (18 September 2001)
Average home league attendance67,586

Before the season began, Sir Alex Ferguson had announced his intention to retire from football at the end of the season, and the club began the process of trying to find a successor for the most successful manager in their history. However, Ferguson went back on his decision to retire, citing his wife and three sons as the reason for the u-turn.[2]

Assistant manager Steve McClaren left the club before the start of the season to become the manager of Middlesbrough. Youth team coach and former player Mike Phelan was promoted to first-team coach and took over some of the assistant manager's responsibilities, but McClaren was not replaced until the summer of 2002, when Carlos Queiroz was appointed the new assistant manager.

Winger Ryan Giggs was honoured with a testimonial match against Celtic, having now been at United for more than a decade.

£19 million striker Ruud van Nistelrooy did what was expected of him by scoring 36 goals in all competitions and collecting the PFA Player of the Year award, but £28.1 million national record signing Juan Sebastián Verón was a major disappointment in midfield, though it was in defence where United were at their weakest following the shock departure of Jaap Stam to Lazio just after the start of the season, and the surprise acquisition of 35-year-old Frenchman Laurent Blanc as his successor.

2001–02 was the final season at Old Trafford for veteran players Denis Irwin and Ronny Johnsen after 12 and six years at the club respectively. Also on the way out of the club were goalkeeper Raimond van der Gouw and striker Dwight Yorke. Striker Andy Cole left United after seven years when he sealed a transfer to Blackburn Rovers at the end of December.

Pre-season and friendlies

Date Opponents H/A Result
F–A
Scorers Attendance
22 July 2001 Malaysia All-Stars N 6–0 Van Nistelrooy (2) 7', 36', Beckham 29', Cole (2) 46', 78', Chadwick 71' 68,000
24 July 2001 Team Singapore A 8–1 Solskjær (2) 30', 45', P. Neville 40', Beckham 52', Yorke (2) 65', 71', Van Nistelrooy 73', Giggs 90' 44,000
29 July 2001 Thailand A 2–1 Giggs 29', Yorke 78' 65,000
1 August 2001 Celtic H 3–4 Van Nistelrooy (2) 24', 84', Verón 64' 66,957
4 August 2001 Wrexham A 2–2 Solskjær 31', Verón 58' 7,614
4 August 2001 Hereford United A 6–0 Butt 23', Fortune 45', 65', Yorke 69', Cole 78', 87' 4,625
8 August 2001 Bury A 3–0 P. Neville 49', Yorke 62', Solskjær 69' 9,929
12 November 2001 Barnsley A 0–1

On 4 August 2001, United played two friendly matches simultaneously, against Wrexham (Brian Flynn's and Kevin Reeves' testimonial) and Hereford United. The first-team squad was split in two, with Jimmy Ryan taking charge at Hereford.[3][4][5]

FA Charity Shield

Date Opponents H/A Result
F–A
Scorers Attendance
12 August 2001 Liverpool N 1–2 Van Nistelrooy 51' 70,227

Premier League

Date Opponents H/A Result
F–A
Scorers Attendance League
position
19 August 2001 Fulham H 3–2 Beckham 36', Van Nistelrooy (2) 51', 53' 67,534 4th
22 August 2001 Blackburn Rovers A 2–2 Giggs 20', Beckham 78' 29,836 3rd
26 August 2001 Aston Villa A 1–1 Alpay 90' (o.g.) 42,632 5th
8 September 2001 Everton H 4–1 Verón 4', Cole 40', Fortune 46', Beckham 90' 67,534 2nd
15 September 2001 Newcastle United A 3–4 Van Nistelrooy 29', Giggs 62', Verón 64' 52,056 4th
22 September 2001 Ipswich Town H 4–0 Johnsen 13', Solskjær (2) 20', 90', Cole 89' 67,551 3rd
29 September 2001 Tottenham Hotspur A 5–3 Cole 46', Blanc 58', Van Nistelrooy 72', Verón 76', Beckham 87' 36,038 2nd
13 October 2001 Sunderland A 3–1 Varga 35' (o.g.), Giggs 59', Cole 66' 48,305 3rd
20 October 2001 Bolton Wanderers H 1–2 Verón 25' 67,559 3rd
27 October 2001 Leeds United H 1–1 Solskjær 89' 67,555 5th
4 November 2001 Liverpool A 1–3 Beckham 50' 44,361 6th
17 November 2001 Leicester City H 2–0 Van Nistelrooy 21', Yorke 50' 67,651 4th
25 November 2001 Arsenal A 1–3 Scholes 14' 38,174 6th
1 December 2001 Chelsea H 0–3 67,544 7th
8 December 2001 West Ham United H 0–1 67,582 9th
12 December 2001 Derby County H 5–0 Solskjær (2) 6', 58', Keane 10', Van Nistelrooy 63', Scholes 89' 67,577 5th
15 December 2001 Middlesbrough A 1–0 Van Nistelrooy 76' 34,358 5th
22 December 2001 Southampton H 6–1 Van Nistelrooy (3) 1', 34', 54', Solskjær 41', Keane 72', P. Neville 78' 67,638 4th
26 December 2001 Everton A 2–0 Giggs 78', Van Nistelrooy 85' 39,948 5th
30 December 2001 Fulham A 3–2 Giggs (2) 5', 47', Van Nistelrooy 45' 21,159 5th
2 January 2002 Newcastle United H 3–1 Van Nistelrooy 24', Scholes (2) 50', 62' 67,646 2nd
13 January 2002 Southampton A 3–1 Van Nistelrooy 9', Beckham 45', Solskjær 63' 31,858 1st
19 January 2002 Blackburn Rovers H 2–1 Van Nistelrooy 45' (pen.), Keane 81' 67,552 1st
22 January 2002 Liverpool H 0–1 67,599 1st
29 January 2002 Bolton Wanderers A 4–0 Solskjær (3) 15', 39', 64', Van Nistelrooy 83' 27,350 1st
2 February 2002 Sunderland H 4–1 P. Neville 6', Beckham 25', Van Nistelrooy (2) 28', 44' (pen.) 67,587 1st
10 February 2002 Charlton Athletic A 2–0 Solskjær (2) 33', 74' 26,475 1st
23 February 2002 Aston Villa H 1–0 Van Nistelrooy 50' 67,592 1st
3 March 2002 Derby County A 2–2 Scholes 41', Verón 60' 33,041 1st
6 March 2002 Tottenham Hotspur H 4–0 Beckham (2) 15', 64', Van Nistelrooy (2) 43' (pen.), 76' 67,599 1st
16 March 2002 West Ham United A 5–3 Beckham (2) 17', 89' (pen.), Butt 22', Scholes 55', Solskjær 64' 35,281 1st
23 March 2002 Middlesbrough H 0–1 67,683 1st
30 March 2002 Leeds United A 4–3 Scholes 9', Solskjær (2) 37', 39', Giggs 54' 40,058 2nd
6 April 2002 Leicester City A 1–0 Solskjær 61' 21,447 2nd
20 April 2002 Chelsea A 3–0 Scholes 15', Van Nistelrooy 41', Solskjær 86' 41,725 2nd
27 April 2002 Ipswich Town A 1–0 Van Nistelrooy 45' (pen.) 28,433 2nd
8 May 2002 Arsenal H 0–1 67,580 3rd
11 May 2002 Charlton Athletic H 0–0 67,571 3rd
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Arsenal (C) 38 26 9 3 79 36 +43 87 Qualification for the Champions League first group stage
2 Liverpool 38 24 8 6 67 30 +37 80
3 Manchester United 38 24 5 9 87 45 +42 77 Qualification for the Champions League third qualifying round
4 Newcastle United 38 21 8 9 74 52 +22 71
5 Leeds United 38 18 12 8 53 37 +16 66 Qualification for the UEFA Cup first round[lower-alpha 1]
Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champions
Notes:
  1. Since Arsenal qualified for the Champions League, their UEFA Cup place as FA Cup winners defaulted to Chelsea, the losing finalists.

FA Cup

Date Round Opponents H/A Result
F–A
Scorers Attendance
6 January 2002 Round 3 Aston Villa A 3–2 Solskjær 77', Van Nistelrooy (2) 80', 82' 38,444
26 January 2002 Round 4 Middlesbrough A 0–2 17,624

League Cup

Date Round Opponents H/A Result
F–A
Scorers Attendance
5 November 2001 Round 3 Arsenal A 0–4 30,693

UEFA Champions League

Group stage

Date Opponents H/A Result
F–A
Scorers Attendance Group
position
18 September 2001 Lille H 1–0 Beckham 90' 64,827 1st
25 September 2001 Deportivo La Coruña A 1–2 Scholes 40' 33,108 2nd
10 October 2001 Olympiacos A 2–0 Beckham 66', Cole 82' 73,537 1st
17 October 2001 Deportivo La Coruña H 2–3 Van Nistelrooy (2) 7', 40' 65,585 2nd
23 October 2001 Olympiacos H 3–0 Solskjær 80', Giggs 88', Van Nistelrooy 90' 66,769 2nd
31 October 2001 Lille A 1–1 Solskjær 6' 37,400 2nd

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Spain Deportivo La Coruña 6 2 4 0 10 8 +2 10 Advance to second group stage
2 England Manchester United 6 3 1 2 10 6 +4 10
3 France Lille 6 1 3 2 7 7 0 6 Transfer to UEFA Cup
4 Greece Olympiacos 6 1 2 3 6 12 6 5
Source: RSSSF

Second group stage

Date Opponents H/A Result
F–A
Scorers Attendance Group
position
20 November 2001 Bayern Munich A 1–1 Van Nistelrooy 74' 59,000 2nd
5 December 2001 Boavista H 3–0 Van Nistelrooy (2) 31', 62', Blanc 55' 66,274 1st
20 February 2002 Nantes A 1–1 Van Nistelrooy 90' (pen.) 38,285 1st
26 February 2002 Nantes H 5–1 Beckham 18', Solskjær (2) 31', 78', Silvestre 38', Van Nistelrooy 64' (pen.) 66,492 1st
13 March 2002 Bayern Munich H 0–0 66,818 1st
19 March 2002 Boavista A 3–0 Blanc 14', Solskjær 29', Beckham 51' (pen.) 13,223 1st

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 England Manchester United 6 3 3 0 13 3 +10 12 Advance to knockout stage
2 Germany Bayern Munich 6 3 3 0 5 2 +3 12
3 Portugal Boavista 6 1 2 3 2 8 6 5
4 France Nantes 6 0 2 4 4 11 7 2
Source: RSSSF

Knockout phase

Date Round Opponents H/A Result
F–A
Scorers Attendance
2 April 2002 Quarter-final
First leg
Deportivo La Coruña A 2–0 Beckham 15', Van Nistelrooy 41' 32,351
10 April 2002 Quarter-final
Second leg
Deportivo La Coruña H 3–2 Solskjær (2) 23', 56', Giggs 69' 65,875
24 April 2002 Semi-final
First leg
Bayer Leverkusen H 2–2 Živković 29' (o.g.), Van Nistelrooy 67' (pen.) 66,534
30 April 2002 Semi-final
Second leg
Bayer Leverkusen A 1–1 Keane 28' 22,500

Squad statistics

No. Pos. Name League FA Cup League Cup Europe Other Total
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
1GKFrance Fabien Barthez 320100015010490
2DFEngland Gary Neville 31(3)020001401048(3)0
3DFRepublic of Ireland Denis Irwin 10(2)000008(2)01019(4)0
4MFArgentina Juan Sebastián Verón 24(2)510001300038(2)5
5DFNorway Ronny Johnsen 9(1)100008(1)00017(2)1
6DFFrance Laurent Blanc 291200015200463
6DFNetherlands Jaap Stam 100000001020
7MFEngland David Beckham 23(5)1110001351038(5)16
8MFEngland Nicky Butt 20(5)120008(1)01031(6)1
9FWEngland Andy Cole 7(4)400001(3)1008(7)5
10FWNetherlands Ruud van Nistelrooy 29(3)230(2)20014101144(5)36
11MFWales Ryan Giggs 18(7)70(1)0001321032(8)9
12DFEngland Phil Neville 21(7)220103(4)00027(11)2
13GKNorthern Ireland Roy Carroll 6(1)0101010009(1)0
14DFEngland David May 200000100030
15MFEngland Luke Chadwick 5(3)01(1)01000007(4)0
16MFRepublic of Ireland Roy Keane (c) 283200011(1)11042(1)4
17GKNetherlands Raimond van der Gouw 0(1)0000(1)000000(2)0
18MFEngland Paul Scholes 30(5)820001311046(5)9
19FWTrinidad and Tobago Dwight Yorke 4(6)10(1)0101(2)00(1)06(10)1
20FWNorway Ole Gunnar Solskjær 23(7)1721005(10)70030(17)25
21FWUruguay Diego Forlán 6(7)000001(4)0007(11)0
22DFEngland Ronnie Wallwork 0(1)0101000002(1)0
23DFEngland Michael Clegg 00000(1)000000(1)0
24DFEngland Wes Brown 15(2)000005(2)00020(4)0
25MFSouth Africa Quinton Fortune 8(6)100003(2)00011(8)1
27DFFrance Mikaël Silvestre 31(4)0200010(3)11044(7)1
28MFScotland Michael Stewart 2(1)000100(1)0003(2)0
30DFRepublic of Ireland John O'Shea 4(5)000100(3)0005(8)0
32MFSweden Bojan Djordjic 000010000010
34DFEngland Lee Roche 000010000010
36FWEngland Jimmy Davis 000010000010
37FWEngland Danny Webber 000010000010
40FWEngland Daniel Nardiello 00000(1)000000(1)0
Own goals 200103

Transfers

United's first departures of the 2001–02 season were midfield duo Jonathan Greening and Mark Wilson, who both signed for Middlesbrough on 9 August. On 27 August, Jaap Stam was controversially sold to Lazio for a fee of £16.5 million, while on 8 November, Jesper Blomqvist signed for Everton.

Arriving in the summer transfer window were Northern Irish goalkeeper Roy Carroll, Dutch forward Ruud van Nistelrooy, Argentinian midfielder Juan Sebastián Verón and French defender Laurent Blanc. Out of these players, only van Nistelrooy made much of an impact, staying at United until 2006 and scoring 150 goals in 219 appearances for United.

Departing during the winter transfer window were forward Andy Cole, who left United after six years, and Michael Clegg, who signed for Oldham Athletic on a free transfer. Paul Rachubka left United on 20 May for Charlton Athletic. Goalkeeper Raimond van der Gouw signed for West Ham United on 28 June on a free transfer, while on 30 June, defenders Denis Irwin, Ronny Johnsen and Ronnie Wallwork were released.

Luke Steele joined United on 11 May for a fee of £500,000.

In

Date Pos. Name From Fee
1 July 2001 GK Northern Ireland Roy Carroll England Wigan Athletic Undisclosed
1 July 2001 FW Netherlands Ruud van Nistelrooy Netherlands PSV Eindhoven £19m
12 July 2001 MF Argentina Juan Sebastián Verón Italy Lazio £28.1m
30 August 2001 DF France Laurent Blanc Italy Internazionale £2.5m
22 January 2002 FW Uruguay Diego Forlán Argentina Independiente £7.5m
11 May 2002 GK England Luke Steele England Peterborough United £500k

Out

Date Pos. Name To Fee
9 August 2001 MF England Jonathan Greening England Middlesbrough £2m[6]
9 August 2001 MF England Mark Wilson England Middlesbrough £1.5m[6]
27 August 2001 DF Netherlands Jaap Stam Italy Lazio £16.5m[7]
8 November 2001 MF Sweden Jesper Blomqvist England Everton Free[8]
29 December 2001 FW England Andy Cole England Blackburn Rovers Undisclosed[9]
19 February 2002 DF England Michael Clegg England Oldham Athletic Free[10]
17 May 2002 GK England Paul Rachubka England Charlton Athletic £200k[11][12]
28 June 2002 GK Netherlands Raimond van der Gouw England West Ham United Free[13]
30 June 2002 DF Republic of Ireland Denis Irwin Released
30 June 2002 DF Norway Ronny Johnsen Released
30 June 2002 DF England Ronnie Wallwork Released

Loan in

Date from Date to Position Name From
4 March 2002 30 June 2002 GK England Luke Steele England Peterborough United

Loan out

Date from Date to Position Name To
23 November 2001 22 December 2001 FW England Danny Webber England Port Vale
23 November 2001 17 May 2002 GK England Paul Rachubka England Oldham Athletic
7 December 2001 30 June 2002 MF Sweden Bojan Djordjic England Sheffield Wednesday
28 March 2002 27 April 2002 FW England Danny Webber England Watford

References

  1. "Manchester United Season 2001/02". StretfordEnd.co.uk. Retrieved 8 October 2007.
  2. "Ferguson's family decision". 6 February 2002.
  3. Man Utd star line-up turns on the style Hereford Times, 9 August 2001. Retrieved 21 July 2008.
  4. Bulls let in six but fans happy HU-FC.co.uk, 4 August 2001. Retrieved 21 July 2008.
  5. Double trouble for Reds' rivals Manchester Evening News, 6 August 2001. Retrieved 21 July 2008.
  6. "Man Utd duo complete Boro move". BBC Sport. 9 August 2001. Archived from the original on 20 March 2017. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  7. "Stam completes Lazio move". BBC Sport. 27 August 2001. Archived from the original on 1 October 2002. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  8. "Football Transfers". BBC Sport. 8 November 2001. Archived from the original on 10 November 2001. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  9. "Souness 'delighted' with Cole signing". BBC Sport. 30 December 2001. Archived from the original on 11 March 2023. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  10. "Latics seal Clegg coup". BBC Sport. 19 February 2002. Archived from the original on 11 March 2023. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  11. "Transfers – May, 2002". BBC Sport. 17 May 2002. Archived from the original on 11 March 2023. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  12. "Charlton sign Manchester United goalkeeper Paul Rachubka for an initial fee of £200,000". Charlton Athletic Football Club. 17 May 2002. Archived from the original on 2 June 2002. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  13. "Van der Gouw joins West Ham". BBC Sport. 28 June 2002. Archived from the original on 30 April 2022. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
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