1995–96 West Ham United F.C. season

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West Ham United
1995–96 season
Chairman Terry Brown
Manager Harry Redknapp
Stadium Upton Park
Premiership 10th
FA Cup Fourth round
League Cup Third round
Top goalscorer League: Cottee/Dicks (10)
All: Cottee (12)
Highest home attendance 24,324 vs Liverpool
(22 Nov 1995, Premier League)
Lowest home attendance 15,375 vs Bristol Rovers
(4 Oct 1995, League Cup)
Average home league attendance 22,340
Home colours

During the 1995–96 English football season, West Ham United competed in the FA Premier League (known as the FA Carling Premiership for sponsorship reasons).

Season summary

West Ham progressed further following the previous season's 14th-place finish (and last-minute scramble away from relegation danger) and climbed to 10th place in the final table – their best finish since they came third in 1986. They were never in any danger of going down, but they never looked like challenging for a UEFA Cup spot. Nor did they make much of an impact in the cup competitions, though striker Tony Cottee showed little sign of his advancing years, coming joint top scorer with penalty taking left-back Julian Dicks.

Manager Harry Redknapp spent heavily over the summer, mostly on foreign players, in hope of building a West Ham side capable of chasing European qualification and major trophies.

The season also brought the debut of two teenage players - defender Rio Ferdinand and midfielder Frank Lampard.

Final league table

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Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification or relegation
1 Manchester United (C) 38 25 7 6 73 35 +38 82 1996–97 UEFA Champions League Group stage
2 Newcastle United 38 24 6 8 66 37 +29 78 1996–97 UEFA Cup First round
3 Liverpool 38 20 11 7 70 34 +36 71 1996–97 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup First round 1
4 Aston Villa 38 18 9 11 52 35 +17 63 1996–97 UEFA Cup First round
5 Arsenal 38 17 12 9 49 32 +17 63
6 Everton 38 17 10 11 64 44 +20 61
7 Blackburn Rovers 38 18 7 13 61 47 +14 61
8 Tottenham Hotspur 38 16 13 9 50 38 +12 61
9 Nottingham Forest 38 15 13 10 50 54 −4 58
10 West Ham United 38 14 9 15 43 52 −9 51
11 Chelsea 38 12 14 12 46 44 +2 50
12 Middlesbrough 38 11 10 17 35 50 −15 43
13 Leeds United 38 12 7 19 40 57 −17 43
14 Wimbledon 38 10 11 17 55 70 −15 41
15 Sheffield Wednesday 38 10 10 18 48 61 −13 40
16 Coventry City 38 8 14 16 42 60 −18 38
17 Southampton 38 9 11 18 34 52 −18 38
18 Manchester City (R) 38 9 11 18 33 58 −25 38 Relegation to 1996–97 Football League First Division
19 Queens Park Rangers (R) 38 9 6 23 38 57 −19 33
20 Bolton Wanderers (R) 38 8 5 25 39 71 −32 29

Updated to games played on 5 May 1996.
Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored
1 Liverpool qualified for the Cup Winners' Cup as FA Cup runners-up, as winners Manchester United already qualified for the Champions League.
(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.
P = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; F = Goals for; A = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points

Results

West Ham United's score comes first[1]

Legend

Win Draw Loss

FA Premier League

Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Scorers
19 August 1995 Leeds United H 1–2 22,901 Williamson
23 August 1995 Manchester United A 1–2 31,966 Bruce (own goal)
26 August 1995 Nottingham Forest A 1–1 26,645 Allen
30 August 1995 Tottenham Hotspur H 1–1 23,516 Hutchison
11 September 1995 Chelsea H 1–3 19,228 Hutchison
16 September 1995 Arsenal A 0–1 38,065
23 September 1995 Everton H 2–1 21,085 Dicks (2 pens)
2 October 1995 Southampton A 0–0 13,568
16 October 1995 Wimbledon A 1–0 9,411 Cottee
21 October 1995 Blackburn Rovers H 1–1 21,776 Dowie
28 October 1995 Sheffield Wednesday A 1–0 23,917 Dowie
4 November 1995 Aston Villa H 1–4 23,637 Dicks (pen)
18 November 1995 Bolton Wanderers A 3–0 19,047 Bishop, Cottee, Williamson
22 November 1995 Liverpool H 0–0 24,324
25 November 1995 Queens Park Rangers H 1–0 21,504 Cottee
2 December 1995 Blackburn Rovers A 2–4 26,638 Dicks (pen), Slater
11 December 1995 Everton A 0–3 31,778
16 December 1995 Southampton H 2–1 18,501 Cottee, Dowie
23 December 1995 Middlesbrough A 2–4 28,640 Cottee, Dicks
1 January 1996 Manchester City A 1–2 26,024 Dowie
13 January 1996 Leeds United A 0–2 30,658
22 January 1996 Manchester United H 0–1 24,197
31 January 1996 Coventry City H 3–2 18,884 Cottee, Rieper, Dowie
3 February 1996 Nottingham Forest H 1–0 21,257 Slater
12 February 1996 Tottenham Hotspur A 1–0 29,781 Dani
17 February 1996 Chelsea A 2–1 25,252 Dicks, Williamson
21 February 1996 Newcastle United H 2–0 23,843 Williamson, Cottee
24 February 1996 Arsenal H 0–1 24,217
2 March 1996 Coventry City A 2–2 17,459 Cottee, Rieper
9 March 1996 Middlesbrough H 2–0 23,850 Dowie, Dicks (pen)
18 March 1996 Newcastle United A 0–3 36,331
23 March 1996 Manchester City H 4–2 24,017 Dowie (2), Dicks, Dani
6 April 1996 Wimbledon H 1–1 20,402 Dicks
8 April 1996 Liverpool A 0–2 40,326
13 April 1996 Bolton Wanderers H 1–0 23,086 Cottee
17 April 1996 Aston Villa A 1–1 26,768 Cottee
27 April 1996 Queens Park Rangers A 0–3 18,828
5 May 1996 Sheffield Wednesday H 1–1 23,790 Dicks

FA Cup

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Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R3 6 January 1996 Southend United H 2–0 23,284 Moncur, Hughes
R4 7 February 1996 Grimsby Town H 1–1 22,030 Dowie
R4R 14 February 1996 Grimsby Town A 0–3 8,382

League Cup

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Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R2 1st Leg 20 September 1995 Bristol Rovers A 1–0 7,103 Moncur
R2 2nd Leg 4 October 1995 Bristol Rovers H 3–0 (won 4–0 on agg) 15,375 Dicks (pen), Bishop, Cottee
R3 25 October 1995 Southampton A 1–2 11,059 Cottee

First-team squad

Squad at end of season[2]

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

No. Position Player
1 Czech Republic GK Luděk Mikloško
2 England DF Tim Breacker
3 England DF Julian Dicks
4 United States DF Steve Potts
5 England DF Alvin Martin
7 England MF Ian Bishop
8 Denmark DF Marc Rieper
9 England FW Tony Cottee
10 England MF John Moncur
11 Netherlands FW Marco Boogers
12 Northern Ireland DF Keith Rowland
14 Northern Ireland FW Iain Dowie[3]
15 England DF Kenny Brown
16 Portugal FW Dani (on loan from Sporting CP)
No. Position Player
17 Australia MF Stan Lazaridis
18 Romania MF Ilie Dumitrescu
19 Australia MF Robbie Slater
20 England MF Danny Williamson
21 England GK Peter Shilton
22 England DF Adrian Whitbread
23 England MF Dale Gordon
24 Northern Ireland MF Michael Hughes (on loan from RC Strasbourg)
26 England MF Frank Lampard
28 Croatia DF Slaven Bilić
29 England FW Mark Watson
30 England GK Les Sealey
31 England GK Neil Finn
32 England DF Rio Ferdinand

Left club during season

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

No. Position Player
6 England MF Martin Allen (to Portsmouth)
14 England MF Matthew Rush (to Norwich City)
16 Scotland MF Don Hutchison (to Sheffield United)
18 England MF Simon Webster (retired)
21 United States GK Ian Feuer (to Luton Town)
No. Position Player
24 England MF Paul Mitchell (to Bournemouth)
25 Netherlands FW Jeroen Boere (to Crystal Palace)
25 United States MF John Harkes (on loan from Derby County)
27 England DF Chris Whyte (on loan from Birmingham City)

Reserve squad

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

No. Position Player
Australia GK Steve Mautone
Australia DF Chris Coyne
England MF Scott Canham
No. Position Player
England MF Darren Currie
England MF Emmanuel Omoyinmi

Transfers

In

Date Pos Name From Fee
1 July 1995 FW Marco Boogers Sparta Rotterdam £1,000,000
14 August 1995 MF Robbie Slater Blackburn Rovers £600,000
8 September 1995 FW Iain Dowie Crystal Palace £500,000
8 September 1995 MF Stan Lazaridis West Adelaide £300,000
11 January 1996 GK Peter Shilton Coventry City Free transfer
29 March 1996 GK Steve Mautone Canberra Cosmos £30,000

Out

Date Pos Name To Fee
1 July 1995 DF Jamie Victory Bournemouth Free transfer
15 August 1995 MF Matty Holmes Blackburn Rovers £1,200,000
18 August 1995 MF Matthew Rush Norwich City £330,000
7 September 1995 FW Jeroen Boere Crystal Palace £375,000
3 November 1995 FW Chris Moors Torquay United Free transfer
16 December 1995 GK Ian Feuer Luton Town £580,000
10 January 1996 MF Don Hutchison Sheffield United £1,200,000
7 February 1996 MF Darren Currie Shrewsbury Town £70,000
22 February 1996 MF Martin Allen Portsmouth £500,000
28 March 1996 MF Paul Mitchell Bournemouth Free transfer
Transfers in: Decrease £2,430,000
Transfers out: Increase £4,255,000
Total spending: Increase £1,825,000

Statistics

Starting 11

Considering starts in all competitions[4]