2006–07 FA Premier League
The 2006–07 FA Premier League was the 15th season of the FA Premier League since its establishment in 1992. The season started on 19 August 2006 and concluded on 13 May 2007. On 12 February 2007, the FA Premier League renamed itself simply the Premier League, complete with new logo, sleeve patches and typeface. The sponsored name remains the Barclays Premier League.
Manchester United ended the season as Premiership champions for the ninth time in fifteen years, after Chelsea failed to win against Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium on 6 May 2007. This left them seven points behind United, with two games to go, confirming the Manchester club as champions once more.
The three relegation spots were occupied by Watford and Sheffield United who each lasted one season in the league, along with Charlton Athletic who went down after seven seasons.
Teams
Twenty teams competed in the league – the top seventeen teams from the previous season and the three teams promoted from the Championship. The promoted teams were Reading, Sheffield United and Watford. They replaced Birmingham City, West Bromwich Albion and Sunderland, ending their top flight spells of four, two and one year respectively.Stadiums and locations
Team | Location | Stadium | Capacity |
Arsenal | London | Emirates Stadium | 60,600 |
Aston Villa | Birmingham | Villa Park | 42,553 |
Blackburn Rovers | Blackburn | Ewood Park | 31,367 |
Bolton Wanderers | Bolton | Reebok Stadium | 28,723 |
Charlton Athletic | London | The Valley | 27,111 |
Chelsea | London | Stamford Bridge | 42,360 |
Everton | Liverpool | Goodison Park | 40,569 |
Fulham | London | Craven Cottage | 24,600 |
Liverpool | Liverpool | Anfield | 48,677 |
Manchester City | Manchester | City of Manchester Stadium | 48,000 |
Manchester United | Old Trafford | Old Trafford | 76,212 |
Middlesbrough | Middlesbrough | Riverside Stadium | 35,049 |
Newcastle United | Newcastle upon Tyne | St James' Park | 52,387 |
Portsmouth | Portsmouth | Fratton Park | 20,220 |
Reading | Reading | Madejski Stadium | 24,250 |
Sheffield United | Sheffield | Bramall Lane | 32,609 |
Tottenham Hotspur | London | White Hart Lane | 36,240 |
Watford | Watford | Vicarage Road | 19,920 |
West Ham United | London | Boleyn Ground | 35,146 |
Wigan Athletic | Wigan | JJB Stadium | 25,138 |
Personnel and kits
Team | Manager | Captain | Kit manufacturer | Shirt sponsor |
Arsenal | Arsène Wenger | Thierry Henry | Nike | Fly Emirates |
Aston Villa | Martin O'Neill | Gareth Barry | Hummel | 32red.com |
Blackburn Rovers | Mark Hughes | Ryan Nelsen | Lonsdale | bet24.com |
Bolton Wanderers | Sammy Lee | Kevin Nolan | Reebok | Reebok |
Charlton Athletic | Alan Pardew | Luke Young | Joma | Llanera |
Chelsea | José Mourinho | John Terry | Adidas | Samsung Mobile |
Everton | David Moyes | Phil Neville | Umbro | Chang |
Fulham | Lawrie Sanchez | Brian McBride | Airness | Pipex |
Liverpool | Rafael Benítez | Steven Gerrard | Adidas | Carlsberg |
Manchester City | Stuart Pearce | Richard Dunne | Reebok | Thomas Cook |
Manchester United | Sir Alex Ferguson | Gary Neville | Nike | AIG |
Middlesbrough | Gareth Southgate | George Boateng | Erreà | 888.com |
Newcastle United | Nigel Pearson | Scott Parker | Adidas | Northern Rock |
Portsmouth | Harry Redknapp | Dejan Stefanović | Jako | Oki |
Reading | Steve Coppell | Graeme Murty | Puma | Kyocera |
Sheffield United | Neil Warnock | Chris Morgan | Le Coq Sportif | Capital One |
Tottenham Hotspur | Martin Jol | Ledley King | Puma | Mansion.com |
Watford | Aidy Boothroyd | Gavin Mahon | Diadora | loans.co.uk |
West Ham United | Alan Curbishley | Nigel Reo-Coker | Reebok | Jobserve |
Wigan Athletic | Paul Jewell | Arjan De Zeeuw | JJB | JJB |
Managerial changes
League table
Results
Season statistics
Scoring
- Biggest win: 6 goals – Reading 6–0 West Ham United
- Highest scoring match: 8 goals – Arsenal 6–2 Blackburn Rovers
- First goal: Rob Hulse for Sheffield United against Liverpool
- Last goal: Harry Kewell for Liverpool against Charlton Athletic
Overall
- Most wins: 28 – Manchester United
- Fewest wins: 5 – Watford
- Most losses: 21 – West Ham United
- Fewest losses: 3 – Chelsea
- Most goals scored: 83 – Manchester United
- Fewest goals scored: 29 – Manchester City and Watford
- Most goals conceded: 60 – Fulham and Charlton Athletic
- Fewest goals conceded: 24 – Chelsea
Home
- Most wins: 15 – Manchester United
- Fewest wins: 3 – Watford
- Most losses: 10 – Wigan Athletic
- Fewest losses: 0 – Chelsea
- Most goals scored: 46 – Manchester United
- Fewest goals scored: 10 – Manchester City
- Most goals conceded: 30 – Wigan Athletic
- Fewest goals conceded: 7 – Liverpool
Away
- Most wins: 13 – Manchester United
- Fewest wins: 1 – Fulham and Charlton Athletic
- Most losses: 14 – Sheffield United
- Fewest losses: 3 – Manchester United and Chelsea
- Most goals scored: 37 – Manchester United
- Fewest goals scored: 8 – Sheffield United
- Most goals conceded: 42 – Fulham
- Fewest goals conceded: 13 – Chelsea
Statistics
Goals
Historic goals
15,000th goal
The Premier League expected to have the league's 15,000th goal scored at some point in the period between Christmas and New Year. The target was reached on 30 December when Moritz Volz scored for Fulham against Chelsea. Barclays, the Premiership's sponsor, donated £15,000 to the Fulham Community Sports Trust in Volz' name. Additionally, a fan who correctly predicted that Volz would score the historic goal in a contest presented the player with a special award prior to Fulham's game against Watford at Craven Cottage on 1 January. The honour of scoring the 15,000th goal led to Volz being nicknamed "15,000 Volz".Goalkeeper scores
On 17 March 2007, Tottenham Hotspur goalkeeper Paul Robinson scored against Watford from an 83-yard free kick, which bounced over his England teammate Ben Foster, who was in goal for the Hornets, leading Spurs to a 3–1 win at White Hart Lane. This was the third goal scored by a goalkeeper in Premiership history. The other two were scored by Peter Schmeichel, for Aston Villa against Everton on 21 October 2001, and Brad Friedel, for Blackburn Rovers against Charlton Athletic on 21 February 2004. In those two cases, the teams they played for lost. Robinson became the first keeper to score for the winning team in a Premiership match.Relegation controversy
escaped relegation on the final day of the season with a 1–0 win over Manchester United, with Carlos Tevez scoring the winner. Sheffield United were relegated, along with Charlton and Watford. Tevez was subsequently found to have been ineligible to play, as he was not owned by West Ham, but by a third party. Sheffield United sued to keep their Premier League status and, when that failed, went to an FA arbitration panel seeking up to £30m compensation. The arbitration panel found in favour of Sheffield. The two clubs subsequently settled out of court for an undisclosed sum.Monthly awards
Annual awards
This season's awards were dominated by Manchester United, who, as a team, picked up a total of eight individual awards, five of which went to Cristiano Ronaldo. They also had eight players in the Team of the Year.PFA Players' Player of the Year
The PFA Players' Player of the Year award for 2007 was won by Cristiano Ronaldo. He had won the PFA Young Player of the Year award earlier on in the awards ceremony, making him the first player to win both awards in the same year since Andy Gray managed the same feat in 1977. Didier Drogba came second, while Paul Scholes was third.The shortlist for the PFA Players' Player of the Year award, in alphabetical order, is as follows:
- Didier Drogba
- Cesc Fàbregas
- Steven Gerrard
- Ryan Giggs
- Cristiano Ronaldo
- Paul Scholes
PFA Young Player of the Year
The shortlist for the award was as follows:
- Kevin Doyle
- Cesc Fàbregas
- Aaron Lennon
- Micah Richards
- Cristiano Ronaldo
- Wayne Rooney
PFA Team of the Year
Defence: Gary Neville, Patrice Evra, Rio Ferdinand, Nemanja Vidić
Midfield: Steven Gerrard, Paul Scholes, Ryan Giggs, Cristiano Ronaldo
Attack: Didier Drogba, Dimitar Berbatov