1999–2000 Norwich City F.C. season

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Norwich City
1999–2000 season
Chairman Bob Cooper
Manager Bruce Rioch (until 13 March)
Bryan Hamilton (from 5 April)
Stadium Carrow Road
First Division 12th
FA Cup Third round
Worthington Cup Second round
Top goalscorer League: Iwan Roberts (17)
All: Iwan Roberts (19)
Highest home attendance 19,948 (vs. Ipswich Town, 21 November 1999)
Lowest home attendance 12,468 (vs. Bolton Wanderers, 24 October 1999)
Average home league attendance 15,539

During the 1999–2000 English football season, Norwich City F.C. competed in the Football League First Division.

Season summary

Manager Bruce Rioch resigned in March after failing to take Norwich anywhere near a place high enough to qualify for promotion to the Premier League. He was replaced by former Northern Ireland manager (and player for Norwich's arch-rivals Ipswich Town) Bryan Hamilton.

At the end of the season, top-scorer Iwan Roberts was named the club's player of the year. It was the second consecutive season the Welsh striker had won the award.

Kit

Norwich signed a two-year kit manufacturing deal with Alexandra plc. Norfolk-based mustard maker Colman's remained the kit sponsors.

Final league table

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!Pos Team P W D L F A Pts
1. Charlton Athletic 46 27 10 9 79 45 91
2. Manchester City 46 26 11 9 78 40 89
3. Ipswich Town 46 25 12 9 71 42 87
4. Barnsley 46 24 10 12 88 67 82
5. Birmingham City 46 22 11 13 65 44 77
6. Bolton Wanderers 46 21 13 12 69 50 76
7. Wolverhampton Wanderers 46 21 11 14 64 48 74
8. Huddersfield Town 46 21 11 14 62 49 74
9. Fulham 46 17 16 13 49 41 67
10. Queens Park Rangers 46 16 18 12 62 53 66
11. Blackburn Rovers 46 15 17 14 55 51 62
12. Norwich City 46 14 15 17 45 50 57
13. Tranmere Rovers 46 15 12 19 57 68 57
14. Nottingham Forest 46 14 14 18 53 55 56
15. Crystal Palace 46 13 15 18 57 67 54
16. Sheffield United 46 13 15 18 59 71 54
17. Stockport County 46 13 15 18 55 67 54
18. Portsmouth 46 13 12 21 55 66 51
19. Crewe Alexandra 46 14 9 23 46 67 51
20. Grimsby Town 46 13 12 21 41 67 51
21. West Bromwich Albion 46 10 19 17 43 60 49
22. Walsall 46 11 13 22 52 77 46
23. Port Vale 46 7 15 24 48 69 36
24. Swindon Town 46 8 12 26 38 77 36

P = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; F = Goals for; A = Goals against; Pts = Points

Results

Norwich City's score comes first[1]

Legend

Win Draw Loss

Football League First Division

Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Scorers
11 August 1999 West Bromwich Albion A 1-1 16,196 Dalglish
14 August 1999 Birmingham City H 0-1 15,261
21 August 1999 Charlton Athletic A 0-1 19,623
28 August 1999 Blackburn Rovers H 0-2 15,407
30 August 1999 Walsall A 2-2 6,187 Marshall, Coote
11 September 1999 Crewe Alexandra H 2-1 13,172 Roberts, Eadie
18 September 1999 Huddersfield Town A 0-1 12,823
26 September 1999 Stockport County A 2-2 7,603 Roberts, Dalglish
28 September 1999 Manchester City H 1-0 15,130 Roberts
2 October 1999 Fulham H 1-2 16,332 Forbes
16 October 1999 Port Vale A 1-0 5,790 Fleming
19 October 1999 Sheffield United A 0-0 11,907
24 October 1999 Bolton Wanderers H 2-1 12,468 Russell (2)
26 October 1999 Stockport County H 2-0 16,880 Flynn (own goal), Roberts
30 October 1999 Fulham A 1-1 13,552 Roberts
6 November 1999 Nottingham Forest H 1-0 15,818 Sutch
12 November 1999 Swindon Town A 0-0 7,405
21 November 1999 Ipswich Town H 0-0 19,948
23 November 1999 Crystal Palace A 0-1 12,110
28 November 1999 Grimsby Town A 1-2 5,333 Kenton
4 December 1999 West Bromwich Albion H 2-1 15,183 Roberts, Russell
17 December 1999 Tranmere Rovers A 2-1 5,863 Roberts (2)
26 December 1999 Queens Park Rangers H 2-1 17,823 Breacker (own goal), Llewellyn
28 December 1999 Wolverhampton Wanderers A 0-1 25,072
3 January 2000 Portsmouth H 2-1 16,637 Fleming, Roberts (pen)
8 January 2000 Barnsley H 2-2 14,039 Roberts (2)
15 January 2000 Birmingham City A 0-2 21,007
22 January 2000 Charlton Athletic H 0-3 15,642
5 February 2000 Walsall H 1-1 16,837 Llewellyn
12 February 2000 Manchester City A 1-3 32,681 Roberts
19 February 2000 Grimsby Town H 3-0 13,533 McDermott (own goal), Russell, Llewellyn
26 February 2000 Huddersfield Town H 1-1 16,464 Roberts
29 February 2000 Blackburn Rovers A 1-1 15,671 Sutch
4 March 2000 Crewe Alexandra A 0-1 5,450
8 March 2000 Nottingham Forest A 1-1 15,640 Roberts
11 March 2000 Crystal Palace H 0-1 15,064
19 March 2000 Ipswich Town A 2-0 21,760 Roberts (2)
22 March 2000 Swindon Town H 0-2 13,662
25 March 2000 Queens Park Rangers A 2-2 11,918 Marshall (2)
1 April 2000 Tranmere Rovers H 1-1 13,734 Marshall
8 April 2000 Portsmouth A 1-2 14,003 Marshall
15 April 2000 Wolverhampton Wanderers H 1-0 15,910 Roberts
22 April 2000 Port Vale H 0-0 15,526
24 April 2000 Barnsley A 1-2 15,253 Bellamy
28 April 2000 Sheffield United H 2-1 16,921 Fleming, Bellamy
7 May 2000 Bolton Wanderers A 0-1 17,987

FA Cup

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Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R3 11 December 1999 Coventry City H 1-3 15,702 Llewellyn

League Cup

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Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R1 1st Leg 10 August 1999 Cheltenham Town H 2-0 12,276 Roberts (2)
R1 2nd Leg 24 August 1999 Cheltenham Town A 1-2 (won 3-2 on agg) 4,203 Marshall
R2 1st Leg 14 September 1999 Fulham H 0-4 11,760
R2 2nd Leg 21 September 1999 Fulham A 0-2 (lost 0-6 on agg) 5,246

Squad

[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 England GK Andy Marshall
2 England DF Daryl Sutch
4 England MF Lee Marshall
5 England DF Craig Fleming
6 England DF Matt Jackson (captain)
7 France MF Cedric Anselin
8 Wales FW Craig Bellamy
9 Wales FW Iwan Roberts
10 Northern Ireland MF Phil Mulryne
11 England DF Des Hamilton (on loan from Newcastle United)
12 England DF Darel Russell
13 England GK Robert Green
14 Scotland FW Paul Dalglish
No. Position Player
16 England FW Adrian Coote
17 England MF Adrian Forbes
18 Scotland MF Garry Brady (on loan from Newcastle United)
19 England DF Darren Kenton
20 Wales MF Chris Llewellyn
21 Scotland DF Malky Mackay
25 France MF Jean-Yves de Blasiis
26 Netherlands MF Raymond de Waard
27 England GK Danny Gay
31 Netherlands DF Fernando Derveld
32 Switzerland FW Gaetano Giallanza
33 Northern Ireland FW Paul McVeigh (from March)

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
3 Norway DF Erik Fuglestad (to Viking)
11 England MF Darren Eadie (to Leicester City)
15 England MF Shaun Carey (to Rushden & Diamonds)
18 Scotland MF Peter Grant (to Reading)
22 Republic of Ireland MF Mike Milligan (to Blackpool)
23 England DF Che Wilson (to Bristol Rovers)
No. Position Player
24 England MF Darren Way (to Yeovil Town)
26 Senegal DF Pape Seydou Diop (on loan from Lens)
28 England MF Ross Fitzsimon (released)
29 England FW Kevin Parker (released)
30 England DF Matthew Joynson (released)

References