2002–03 Derby County F.C. season

Derby County
2002–03 season
Chairman Lionel Pickering
Manager John Gregory (until 21 March)
George Burley (from 31 March)
Stadium Pride Park Stadium
First Division 18th
FA Cup Third round
League Cup Second round
Top goalscorer League: Christie (8)
All: Christie (9)
Highest home attendance 33,016 (vs. Reading, 10 August 2002)
Lowest home attendance 21,014 (vs. Millwall, 16 April 2003)
Average home league attendance 25,469

During the 2002–03 English football season, Derby County competed in the Football League First Division, following relegation from the FA Premier League the previous season.

Season summary

Derby were expected to make a bid for an immediate return to the Premiership, but struggled all season which resulted in manager John Gregory being sacked in March and replaced by former Ipswich Town manager George Burley, who led the team to a secure but disappointing 18th-place finish.

Kit

Derby retained the previous season's home kit, manufactured by Italian company Erreà and sponsored by Pedigree.

Final league table

Pos Team Pld W D L F A W D L F A F A GD Pts
1Portsmouth4617335222128345239745+5298
2Leicester City4616524012109433287340+3392
3Sheffield United4613733823104934297252+2080
4Reading46133733211211028256146+1579
5Wolverhampton Wanderers4691044019116641258144+3776
6Nottingham Forest4614725723671025278250+3274
7Ipswich Town461058493998631258064+1670
8Norwich City4614453617581024326049+1169
9Millwall4611663432831225375969–1066
10Wimbledon4612563928661137457673+365
11Gillingham461067333168923345665–962
12Preston North End4611754429561224416870–261
13Watford4611573326641321445470–1660
14Crystal Palace4681052917671030355952+759
15Rotherham United468962725751135376262±059
16Burnley4610493544561230456589–2455
17Walsall46103103434561223355769–1254
18Derby County469593332621522425574–1952
19Bradford City467882735721424385173–2252
20Coventry City466611233168923314662–1650
21Stoke City469682525381220444569–2450
22Sheffield Wednesday467792932391127415673–1746
23Brighton & Hove Albion4676102931461320364967–1845
24Grimsby Town4656122639461322464885–3739
  • Pld = Matches ; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; F = Goals for; A = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points
  • NB: In the Football League goals scored (F) takes precedence over goal difference (GD).
Key
Football League Champions, promoted to FA Premier League
Promoted to FA Premier League
Participated in play-offs
Promoted to Premier League through play-offs
Relegated

Results

Derby County's score comes first[1]

Legend

Win Draw Loss

Football League First Division

DateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
10 August 2002ReadingH3-033,016Lee, Ravanelli, Christie
13 August 2002GillinghamA0-18,775
17 August 2002Grimsby TownA2-15,810Bolder (2)
24 August 2002Wolverhampton WanderersH1-429,954Christie
26 August 2002Rotherham UnitedA1-28,408Strupar
31 August 2002Stoke CityH2-021,723Christie (2)
7 September 2002BurnleyH1-222,343Bolder
14 September 2002Leicester CityA1-331,049Riggott
17 September 2002Crystal PalaceA1-014,948Kinkladze
21 September 2002Preston North EndH0-229,257
28 September 2002Ipswich TownA1-024,439Carbonari
5 October 2002WalsallH2-225,247Christie (2)
12 October 2002Bradford CityA0-013,385
20 October 2002Nottingham ForestH0-030,547
26 October 2002MillwallA0-38,116
30 October 2002Sheffield UnitedH2-123,525McLeod, Burton
2 November 2002Sheffield WednesdayA3-119,747Morris (2), McLeod
9 November 2002PortsmouthH1-226,587Higginbotham (pen)
16 November 2002Brighton & Hove AlbionA0-16,845
25 November 2002WimbledonH3-225,597Elliott, Burton, Morris
30 November 2002Norwich CityA0-120,522
7 December 2002WatfordH3-021,653Morris, Riggott, Burton
14 December 2002Brighton & Hove AlbionH1-025,786Higginbotham (pen)
21 December 2002Coventry CityA0-313,185
26 December 2002Grimsby TownH1-327,141Morris
28 December 2002ReadingA1-216,299Burley (pen)
1 January 2003Wolverhampton WanderersA1-126,442Christie
11 January 2003GillinghamH1-122,769Zavagno (pen)
18 January 2003Stoke CityA3-117,308Christie, Zavagno, Morris
1 February 2003Rotherham UnitedH3-026,257Kinkladze, Bolder, McLeod
8 February 2003PortsmouthA2-619,503Morris, Kinkladze (pen)
15 February 2003Sheffield WednesdayH2-226,311Bolder (2)
22 February 2003BurnleyA0-215,063
1 March 2003Leicester CityH1-124,307Burley
5 March 2003Crystal PalaceH0-122,682
8 March 2003Preston North EndA2-114,003Ravanelli (2)
15 March 2003Bradford CityH1-223,735Morris
19 March 2003Nottingham ForestA0-329,725
22 March 2003Sheffield UnitedA0-218,401
5 April 2003Norwich CityH2-123,643Burley, Kenton (own goal)
12 April 2003WimbledonA2-01,934Valakari, Boertien
16 April 2003MillwallH1-221,014Kinkladze
19 April 2003Coventry CityH1-023,921Ravanelli
21 April 2003WatfordA0-211,909
26 April 2003WalsallA2-38,416Valakari, Ravanelli
4 May 2003Ipswich TownH1-428,785Lee

FA Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
R34 January 2003BrentfordA0-18,709

League Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
R110 September 2002Mansfield TownA3-15,788Morris, Christie, Evatt
R22 October 2002Oldham AthleticH1-2 (a.e.t.)9,029Higginbotham (pen)

Players

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
2 England DF Warren Barton
3 Argentina DF Luciano Zavagno
5 England DF Steve Elliott
6 Scotland DF Paul Ritchie (on loan from Manchester City)
7 England MF Rob Lee
9 Belgium FW Branko Strupar[notes 1]
10 England FW Tommy Mooney (on loan from Birmingham City)
11 England FW Lee Morris
13 England GK Lee Grant
14 England DF Richard Jackson
16 Scotland MF Craig Burley
17 England DF Paul Boertien
18 Georgia (country) MF Georgi Kinkladze
21 Italy FW Fabrizio Ravanelli
22 England MF Adam Murray
23 England FW Marvin Robinson
24 England GK Andy Oakes
No. Position Player
25 England DF Ian Evatt
26 England MF Adam Bolder
28 France DF Youl Mawéné
31 England DF Chris Palmer
32 England MF Matt O'Halloran
33 Finland MF Simo Valakari
34 England FW Marcus Tudgay
35 England MF Lewis Hunt
36 Scotland MF Lewis Green
37 England DF Pablo Mills
38 Finland MF Kris Weckstrom
39 Republic of Ireland MF Barry Molloy
40 England FW Izale McLeod
41 England DF Tom Huddlestone
44 England MF Lee Holmes
45 England GK Lee Camp[notes 2]

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
1 Estonia GK Mart Poom (to Sunderland)
4 England DF Danny Higginbotham[notes 3] (to Southampton)
6 England DF Chris Riggott (to Middlesbrough)
8 England FW Nick Chadwick (on loan from Everton)
10 England FW Malcolm Christie (to Middlesbrough)
15 Scotland MF Brian O'Neil (to Preston North End)
No. Position Player
20 Jamaica FW Deon Burton[notes 4] (to Portsmouth)
27 France DF François Grenet (to Rennes)
29 Norway DF Bjørn Otto Bragstad (to SW Bregenz)
30 Argentina DF Horacio Carbonari (to Rosario Central)
31 Republic of Ireland MF Fiachra McArdle (released)

Transfers

In

Out

Loan out

References

Notes

  1. Strupar was born in Zagreb, SFR Yugoslavia (now Croatia) but became a naturalised Belgian citizen and made his international debut for Belgium in 1999.
  2. Camp was born in Derby, England, and represented them at U-21 level, but also qualifies to represent Northern Ireland internationally and would make his full international debut for Northern Ireland in March 2011.
  3. Higginbotham was born in Manchester, England, but also qualified to represent Gibraltar internationally through his maternal grandmother and would make his international debut for Gibraltar in November 2013.
  4. Burton was born in Reading, England, but also qualified to represent Jamaica internationally and made his international debut for Jamaica in September 1997.
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