2012–13 In English Football

The 2012–13 season was the 133rd season of competitive football in England.

Football in England
Season2012–13
Men's football
Premier LeagueManchester United
ChampionshipCardiff City
League OneDoncaster Rovers
League TwoGillingham
Conference PremierMansfield Town
FA CupWigan Athletic
League CupSwansea City
Community ShieldManchester City
← 2011–12 England 2013–14 →

The season began on 11 August 2012 for the Football Conference and 18 August 2012 for both the Premier League and The Football League. The regular season of the Football Conference season ended on 20 April 2013 followed by League One and League Two both ending on 27 April 2013 whilst The Championship ended on 4 May 2013 and finally the Premier League on 19 May 2013.

Promotion and relegation

Pre season

League Promoted to League Relegated from League
Premier League
Championship
League One
League Two

Post season

League Promoted to League Relegated from League
Premier League
Championship
League One
League Two

New clubs

Clubs removed

  • Witney Town F.C. from the Hellenic Football League Premier Division (level 9, step 5) were evicted from their ground in early February 2013 for failing to pay the rent. The club subsequently folded due to lack of funds.

England national football team

2014 FIFA World Cup qualification

v 2012–13 In English Football  England
7 September 2012 Matchday 1 Moldova 2012–13 In English Football  0–5 2012–13 In English Football  England Chişinău
21:45 Bulgaru 2012–13 In English Football  3' Report Lampard 2012–13 In English Football  4' (pen.), 29'
Johnson 2012–13 In English Football  5'
Defoe 2012–13 In English Football  32'
Milner 2012–13 In English Football  74'
Baines 2012–13 In English Football  84'
Stadium: Zimbru Stadium
Attendance: 10,250
Referee: 2012–13 In English Football  Pol Van Boekel
v 2012–13 In English Football  Ukraine
11 September 2012 Matchday 2 England 2012–13 In English Football  1–1 2012–13 In English Football  Ukraine London
20:00 Lampard 2012–13 In English Football  87' (pen.)
Defoe 2012–13 In English Football  47'
Gerrard 2012–13 In English Football  54' 2012–13 In English Football  88'
Lescott 2012–13 In English Football  70'
Milner 2012–13 In English Football  74'
Johnson 2012–13 In English Football  90+3'
Report Konoplyanka 2012–13 In English Football  39'
Selin 2012–13 In English Football  56'
Harmash 2012–13 In English Football  79'
Khacheridi 2012–13 In English Football  86'
Stadium: Wembley Stadium
Attendance: 68,102
Referee: 2012–13 In English Football  Cüneyt Çakır
v 2012–13 In English Football  San Marino
12 October 2012 Matchday 3 England 2012–13 In English Football  5–0 2012–13 In English Football  San Marino London
20:00 Rooney 2012–13 In English Football  35' (pen.), 69'
Welbeck 2012–13 In English Football  38', 71'
Oxlade-Chamberlain 2012–13 In English Football  77'
Report Simoncini 2012–13 In English Football  35'
Rinaldi 2012–13 In English Football  65'
Stadium: Wembley Stadium
Attendance: 85,654
Referee: 2012–13 In English Football  Gediminas Mažeika
v 2012–13 In English Football  England
17 October 2012 Matchday 4 Poland 2012–13 In English Football  1–1 2012–13 In English Football  England Warsaw
16:00 Glik 2012–13 In English Football  70', 2012–13 In English Football  65'
Polanski 2012–13 In English Football  11'
Report Rooney 2012–13 In English Football  31'
Cole 2012–13 In English Football  38'
Stadium: National Stadium
Attendance: 43,000
Referee: 2012–13 In English Football  Gianluca Rocchi
v 2012–13 In English Football  England
22 March 2013 Matchday 5 San Marino 2012–13 In English Football  0–8 2012–13 In English Football  England Serravalle
20:00 Simoncini 2012–13 In English Football  53' Report Della Valle 2012–13 In English Football  12' (o.g.)
Oxlade-Chamberlain 2012–13 In English Football  28'
Defoe 2012–13 In English Football  35', 77'
Young 2012–13 In English Football  39'
Lampard 2012–13 In English Football  42'
Rooney 2012–13 In English Football  54'
Sturridge 2012–13 In English Football  70'
Stadium: Stadio Olimpico
Attendance: 4,952
Referee: 2012–13 In English Football  Alain Bieri
v 2012–13 In English Football  England
26 March 2013 Matchday 6 Montenegro 2012–13 In English Football  1–1 2012–13 In English Football  England Podgorica
20:00 Novaković 2012–13 In English Football  28'
Volkov 2012–13 In English Football  63'
Damjanović 2012–13 In English Football  76'
Džudović 2012–13 In English Football  90+2'
Delibašić 2012–13 In English Football  90+3'
Report Rooney 2012–13 In English Football  6'
Johnson 2012–13 In English Football  30'
Welbeck 2012–13 In English Football  42'
Stadium: Podgorica City Stadium
Attendance: 12,000
Referee: 2012–13 In English Football  Jonas Eriksson

International Friendlies

v 2012–13 In English Football  Brazil
6 February 2013 England 2012–13 In English Football  2–1 2012–13 In English Football  Brazil London
19:30 Rooney 2012–13 In English Football  27'
Lampard 2012–13 In English Football  60'
Report Fred 2012–13 In English Football  48' Stadium: Wembley Stadium
Attendance: 87,453
Referee: 2012–13 In English Football  Pedro Proença
v 2012–13 In English Football  Republic of Ireland
29 May 2013 England 2012–13 In English Football  1–1 2012–13 In English Football  Republic of Ireland London
20:00 Lampard 2012–13 In English Football  23' Report Long 2012–13 In English Football  13' Stadium: Wembley Stadium
Referee: 2012–13 In English Football  William Collum
v 2012–13 In English Football  England
2 June 2013 Brazil 2012–13 In English Football  2–2 2012–13 In English Football  England Rio de Janeiro
20:00 Fred 2012–13 In English Football  57'
Paulinho 2012–13 In English Football  82'
Oxlade-Chamberlain 2012–13 In English Football  67'
Rooney 2012–13 In English Football  79'
Stadium: Maracanã Stadium

League tables

Premier League

In Sir Alex Ferguson's final season as manager, Manchester United comfortably won their 13th Premier League title and their 20th overall, topping the table in mid-November and never surrendering their lead, though a run of just three wins in their last eight matches meant that they squandered the chance to become the first ever top-flight side to earn a hundred points in a season. Neighbours and defending champions Manchester City finished in second place, though they never looked like seriously challenging for a second successive title, and this, combined with poor performances across other competitions, cost Roberto Mancini his job. Despite enduring a turbulent season in which Champions League-winning manager Roberto Di Matteo was dismissed early in the campaign and replaced by the extremely unpopular appointment of former Liverpool boss Rafael Benítez on an interim basis, Chelsea did improve on the previous season's finish by three places and 11 points, and also won the Europa League for the first time in their history. The final Champions League spot was taken by Arsenal; despite being well off the pace for much of the season following the £24 million departure of Robin van Persie in the summer, they managed to snatch fourth place with an excellent late run of form, consigning rivals Tottenham Hotspur to the Europa League once again.

David Moyes ended 11 years in charge of Everton by guiding the Toffees to a solid finish of sixth place, finishing two points ahead of arch rivals Liverpool, who hit the headlines again for all the wrong reasons when striker Luis Suárez received a lengthy ban after biting Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanović during a league game. Swansea City qualified for the Europa League by winning the League Cup, becoming the first Welsh club to qualify for a major European club competition, whilst West Bromwich Albion finished eighth, their best finish in the Premier League era.

West Ham United fared the best out of the three promoted teams, losing just four home games all season and finishing impressively in tenth place, despite repeated speculation that manager Sam Allardyce would be sacked and replaced with a manager with a reputation for a more attractive style of play. Southampton finished four places below them, flirting with relegation all season before Nigel Adkins was sacked and replaced by the relatively unknown Mauricio Pochettino, who guided the Saints to 19 points from their remaining 16 games.

At the bottom of the table, Queens Park Rangers were relegated after a thoroughly dismal campaign in which they recorded the worst start in Premier League history, not winning a league game until December, and with not even Harry Redknapp's appointment as manager and a substantial investment in players during the January transfer window significantly improving their fortunes. Reading, who never quite adjusted to the pace of the top-flight after being promoted as champions the previous year, fared little better and were relegated in second-bottom place. Both Reading and QPR were relegated on the same day after a 0-0 draw against each other. Despite winning the FA Cup (and thereby qualifying for the following season's Europa League), Wigan Athletic finally succumbed to relegation after eight years of battling against the odds in the Premier League.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Manchester United (C) 38 28 5 5 86 43 +43 89 Qualification for the Champions League group stage
2 Manchester City 38 23 9 6 66 34 +32 78
3 Chelsea 38 22 9 7 75 39 +36 75
4 Arsenal 38 21 10 7 72 37 +35 73 Qualification for the Champions League play-off round
5 Tottenham Hotspur 38 21 9 8 66 46 +20 72 Qualification for the Europa League play-off round
6 Everton 38 16 15 7 55 40 +15 63
7 Liverpool 38 16 13 9 71 43 +28 61
8 West Bromwich Albion 38 14 7 17 53 57 −4 49
9 Swansea City 38 11 13 14 47 51 −4 46 Qualification for the Europa League third qualifying round
10 West Ham United 38 12 10 16 45 53 −8 46
11 Norwich City 38 10 14 14 41 58 −17 44
12 Fulham 38 11 10 17 50 60 −10 43
13 Stoke City 38 9 15 14 34 45 −11 42
14 Southampton 38 9 14 15 49 60 −11 41
15 Aston Villa 38 10 11 17 47 69 −22 41
16 Newcastle United 38 11 8 19 45 68 −23 41
17 Sunderland 38 9 12 17 41 54 −13 39
18 Wigan Athletic (R) 38 9 9 20 47 73 −26 36 Qualification for the Europa League group stage and relegation to Football League Championship
19 Reading (R) 38 6 10 22 43 73 −30 28 Relegation to Football League Championship
20 Queens Park Rangers (R) 38 4 13 21 30 60 −30 25
Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Play-offs (only if needed to decide champion, teams for relegation or teams for UEFA competitions).
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated
Notes:

Leading goalscorer: Robin van Persie (Manchester United) – 26

Championship

After a decade of trying and play-off heartbreak, Cardiff City finally secured their long-awaited promotion to the Premier League, leading the division for nearly the entire season and being promoted as champions. Hull City finished the season as runners-up under manager Steve Bruce, returning to the top-flight after an absence of three years. This was despite a shaky end to the season which saw them fail to win any of their last four fixtures. Ian Holloway made it two promotions in three attempts as Crystal Palace were promoted through the play-offs, earning a record-breaking fourth promotion to the Premier League. The Eagles' success ensured that they became the first club to win the second-tier play-off final four times, and also the first club to win the play-off final at four separate venues – at home at Selhurst Park in a two-legged final format in 1989, the old Wembley in 1997, the Millennium Stadium in 2004 and the new Wembley in 2013.

Bolton Wanderers fared the best out of the newly relegated clubs and looked good value to secure a play-off place throughout the season, but narrowly missed out after drawing their final game and Leicester's last minute win at Nottingham Forest. Blackburn Rovers in contrast, despite a strong start to the season spent the latter part of it battling relegation, with indifferent spells of form during the season and the presence of three permanent managers seeing them slide towards the bottom 3 before finally pulling away under the caretaker management of Gary Bowyer.

Bristol City, who had been in a gradual downward spiral since failing to win promotion to the Premier League in 2008, were relegated in bottom place after a dismal end to the season. The arrival of Sean O'Driscoll and a run of 5 home victories from 6 failed to save them. Making even bigger headlines were Wolverhampton Wanderers, who suffered their second successive relegation, giving them the unwanted distinction of having suffered successive relegations from the top and second tiers on two separate occasions (the first being in the 1983–84 and 1984–85 seasons). The final relegation spot was filled by Peterborough United, who despite recovering well from seven consecutive losses at the start of the season, ended up being relegated with the joint-highest ever points total for a relegated team.

League table

A total of 24 teams contest the division: 18 sides remaining in the division from last season, three relegated from the Premier League, and three promoted from the League One.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion or relegation
1 Cardiff City (C, P) 46 25 12 9 72 45 +27 87 Promotion to the Premier League
2 Hull City (P) 46 24 7 15 61 52 +9 79
3 Watford 46 23 8 15 85 58 +27 77 Qualification for Championship play-offs
4 Brighton & Hove Albion 46 19 18 9 69 43 +26 75
5 Crystal Palace (P, O) 46 19 15 12 73 62 +11 72
6 Leicester City 46 19 11 16 71 48 +23 68
7 Bolton Wanderers 46 18 14 14 69 61 +8 68
8 Nottingham Forest 46 17 16 13 63 59 +4 67
9 Charlton Athletic 46 17 14 15 65 59 +6 65
10 Derby County 46 16 13 17 65 62 +3 61
11 Burnley 46 16 13 17 62 60 +2 61
12 Birmingham City 46 15 16 15 63 69 −6 61
13 Leeds United 46 17 10 19 57 66 −9 61
14 Ipswich Town 46 16 12 18 48 61 −13 60
15 Blackpool 46 14 17 15 62 63 −1 59
16 Middlesbrough 46 18 5 23 61 70 −9 59
17 Blackburn Rovers 46 14 16 16 55 62 −7 58
18 Sheffield Wednesday 46 16 10 20 53 61 −8 58
19 Huddersfield Town 46 15 13 18 53 73 −20 58
20 Millwall 46 15 11 20 51 62 −11 56
21 Barnsley 46 14 13 19 56 70 −14 55
22 Peterborough United (R) 46 15 9 22 66 75 −9 54 Relegation to Football League One
23 Wolverhampton Wanderers (R) 46 14 9 23 55 69 −14 51
24 Bristol City (R) 46 11 8 27 59 84 −25 41
Updated to match(es) played on 4 May 2013. Source: BBC Sport
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champions; (O) Play-off winners; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated

Leading goalscorer: Glenn Murray (Crystal Palace) – 30

League One

Despite the departure of manager Dean Saunders, Doncaster Rovers made an immediate return to the Championship, winning the title in dramatic fashion on the final day of the season. Bournemouth were promoted as runners-up; they had initially looked set to battle relegation this season following an awful start under previous manager Paul Groves, but the decision to re-employ successful former manager Eddie Howe paid off handsomely, and saw them promoted to the second tier for only the second time in their history, and the first time since 1990. Yeovil Town won promotion through the play-offs, entering the Championship for the first time ever, and also meaning that manager Gary Johnson (who returned for his own second spell late in the previous season) had earned his third promotion with the club, having gotten them promoted from the Football Conference and League Two in 2003 and 2005 respectively. None of the three promoted clubs had ever played in the top flight at the time, be it the old Football League First Division or the current Premier League. The previous time this had happened was in 1979, when Shrewsbury Town, Watford and Swansea City were promoted (the latter two eventually competed in the top flight under both denominations).

Financially stricken Portsmouth finally hit rock-bottom, and were relegated to the Football League's lowest tier for the first time since 1980, just five years after winning the FA Cup, and three years after playing in the Premier League. They were consigned to bottom place after their second ten-point deduction in as many seasons, though unlike the previous season would have been relegated even without the deduction. Hartlepool United were relegated in second-bottom place, mostly due to a dreadful first half of the season which saw them win just once in their first 23 games, bringing an end to what had been the club's longest spell outside the bottom tier. Bury, who suffered their own financial problems and never quite recovered from the loss of manager Richie Barker days before the season began, also suffered relegation, and only finished above Hartlepool on goals scored. Scunthorpe United occupied the final relegation spot, being relegated for the second time in three seasons.

League table

A total of 24 teams contest the division: 17 sides remaining in the division from last season, three relegated from the Championship, and four promoted from League Two.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion, qualification or relegation
1 Doncaster Rovers (C, P) 46 25 9 12 62 44 +18 84 Promotion to Football League Championship
2 Bournemouth (P) 46 24 11 11 76 53 +23 83
3 Brentford 46 21 16 9 62 47 +15 79 Qualification for League One play-offs
4 Yeovil Town (O, P) 46 23 8 15 71 56 +15 77
5 Sheffield United 46 19 18 9 56 42 +14 75
6 Swindon Town 46 20 14 12 72 39 +33 74
7 Leyton Orient 46 21 8 17 55 48 +7 71
8 Milton Keynes Dons 46 19 13 14 62 45 +17 70
9 Walsall 46 17 17 12 65 58 +7 68
10 Crawley Town 46 18 14 14 59 58 +1 68
11 Tranmere Rovers 46 19 10 17 58 48 +10 67
12 Notts County 46 16 17 13 61 49 +12 65
13 Crewe Alexandra 46 18 10 18 54 62 −8 64
14 Preston North End 46 14 17 15 54 49 +5 59
15 Coventry City 46 18 11 17 66 59 +7 55
16 Shrewsbury Town 46 13 16 17 54 60 −6 55
17 Carlisle United 46 14 13 19 56 77 −21 55
18 Stevenage 46 15 9 22 47 64 −17 54
19 Oldham Athletic 46 14 9 23 46 59 −13 51
20 Colchester United 46 14 9 23 47 68 −21 51
21 Scunthorpe United (R) 46 13 9 24 49 73 −24 48 Relegation to Football League Two
22 Bury (R) 46 9 14 23 45 73 −28 41
23 Hartlepool United (R) 46 9 14 23 39 67 −28 41
24 Portsmouth (R) 46 10 12 24 51 69 −18 32
Updated to match(es) played on 27 April 2013. Source: BBC Sport
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored
(C) Champions; (O) Play-off winners; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated
Notes:

Leading goalscorer: Paddy Madden (Yeovil Town) – 23

League Two

Gillingham won the division and returned to League One after a three-year absence, as Martin Allen's appointment as manager brought immediate success. Rotherham United celebrated their return to their hometown (after four years of playing in Sheffield) by winning promotion as runners-up. Port Vale, whose promotion challenge had been derailed by a ten-point administration penalty in the previous season, took the final automatic promotion spot. The play-offs were won by Bradford City, who were victorious in their second Wembley appearance this season (their first being in the League Cup final).

Aldershot Town were relegated back to the Football Conference after five years, experiencing relegation for the first time since the club's formation in 1992. After surviving relegation on the last day for three seasons in a row, Barnet's luck finally ran out (despite their best points total in four years and the high-profile appointment of Edgar Davids as player-manager) and they were relegated from the Football League for the second time.

League table

Twenty-four teams contest the division: 18 sides remaining in the division from last season, four relegated from League One, and two promoted from Conference National.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion, qualification or relegation
1 Gillingham (C, P) 46 23 14 9 66 39 +27 83 Promotion to Football League One
2 Rotherham United (P) 46 24 7 15 74 59 +15 79
3 Port Vale (P) 46 21 15 10 87 52 +35 78
4 Burton Albion 46 22 10 14 71 65 +6 76 Qualification for League Two play-offs
5 Cheltenham Town 46 20 15 11 58 51 +7 75
6 Northampton Town 46 21 10 15 64 55 +9 73
7 Bradford City (O, P) 46 18 15 13 63 52 +11 69
8 Chesterfield 46 18 13 15 60 45 +15 67
9 Oxford United 46 19 8 19 59 60 −1 65
10 Exeter City 46 18 10 18 63 62 +1 64
11 Southend United 46 16 13 17 61 55 +6 61
12 Rochdale 46 16 13 17 68 70 −2 61
13 Fleetwood Town 46 15 15 16 55 57 −2 60
14 Bristol Rovers 46 16 12 18 60 69 −9 60
15 Wycombe Wanderers 46 17 9 20 50 60 −10 60
16 Morecambe 46 15 13 18 55 61 −6 58
17 York City 46 12 19 15 50 60 −10 55
18 Accrington Stanley 46 14 12 20 51 68 −17 54
19 Torquay United 46 13 14 19 55 62 −7 53
20 AFC Wimbledon 46 14 11 21 54 76 −22 53
21 Plymouth Argyle 46 13 13 20 46 55 −9 52
22 Dagenham & Redbridge 46 13 12 21 55 62 −7 51
23 Barnet (R) 46 13 12 21 47 59 −12 51 Relegation to the Conference Premier
24 Aldershot Town (R) 46 11 15 20 42 60 −18 48
Updated to match(es) played on 27 April 2013. Source: BBC Sport[needs update]
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored
(C) Champions; (O) Play-off winners; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated
Notes:

Leading goalscorer: Tom Pope (Port Vale) – 31

Football Conference (Top Division)

Promoted as champions of the Football Conference were Mansfield Town, who coincidentally were one of the teams replaced by Aldershot at the end of the 2007–08 season. They were joined by 2013 Conference National play-off final winners Newport County, who joined the Football League for the first time as the current incarnation of the club (their forerunners last played in the League in 1988). The play-off final between Newport County and Wrexham was the first Wembley Stadium final to feature two Welsh clubs.

AFC Telford United were relegated in bottom place after a terrible run of form which saw them win just one of their last 30 matches, along with getting through four different managers during the course of the season. Ebbsfleet United finished second-bottom amid financial worries caused by the collapse of their MyFootballClub ownership scheme. Barrow occupied third-bottom place, ultimately being cost dearly by their poor goalscoring record. Stockport County were the final relegated side, being relegated to the Conference North just three years after being in League One, and eleven years after being in the second tier.

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion, qualification or relegation
1 Mansfield Town (C, P) 46 30 5 11 92 52 +40 95 Promotion to Football League Two
2 Kidderminster Harriers 46 28 9 9 82 40 +42 93 Qualification for Conference Premier play-offs
3 Newport County (P) 46 25 10 11 85 60 +25 85
4 Grimsby Town 46 23 14 9 70 38 +32 83
5 Wrexham 46 22 14 10 74 45 +29 80
6 Hereford United 46 19 13 14 73 63 +10 70
7 Luton Town 46 18 13 15 70 62 +8 67
8 Dartford 46 19 9 18 67 63 +4 66
9 Braintree Town 46 19 9 18 63 72 −9 66
10 Forest Green Rovers 46 18 11 17 63 49 +14 65
11 Macclesfield Town 46 17 12 17 65 70 −5 63
12 Woking 46 18 8 20 73 81 −8 62
13 Alfreton Town 46 16 12 18 69 74 −5 60
14 Cambridge United 46 15 14 17 68 69 −1 59
15 Nuneaton Town 46 14 15 17 55 63 −8 57
16 Lincoln City 46 15 11 20 66 73 −7 56
17 Gateshead 46 13 16 17 58 61 −3 55
18 Hyde 46 16 7 23 63 75 −12 55
19 Tamworth 46 15 10 21 55 69 −14 55
20 Southport 46 14 12 20 72 86 −14 54
21 Stockport County (R) 46 13 11 22 57 76 −19 50 Relegation to Conference North
22 Barrow (R) 46 11 13 22 45 83 −38 46
23 Ebbsfleet United (R) 46 8 15 23 55 89 −34 39 Relegation to Conference South
24 AFC Telford United (R) 46 6 17 23 52 79 −27 35 Relegation to Conference North
Updated to match(es) played on 20 April 2013. Source: Football Conference
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champions; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated

Managerial changes

Name Club Date of departure Replacement Date of appointment
Sean Dyche Watford 3 July 2012 Gianfranco Zola 7 July 2012
Steve Cotterill Nottingham Forest 12 July 2012 Sean O'Driscoll 19 July 2012
Sean O'Driscoll Crawley Town 19 July 2012 Richie Barker 7 August 2012
Richie Barker Bury 7 August 2012 Kevin Blackwell 26 September 2012
Andy Thorn Coventry City 26 August 2012 Mark Robins 19 September 2012
John Sheridan Chesterfield 28 August 2012 Paul Cook 25 October 2012
Terry Brown AFC Wimbledon 19 September 2012 Neal Ardley 10 October 2012
Gary Waddock Wycombe Wanderers 22 September 2012 Gareth Ainsworth 8 November 2012
John Ward Colchester United 24 September 2012 Joe Dunne 27 September 2012
Steve Kean Blackburn Rovers 28 September 2012 Henning Berg 31 October 2012
Paul Groves Bournemouth 3 October 2012 Eddie Howe 12 October 2012
Owen Coyle Bolton Wanderers 9 October 2012 Dougie Freedman 25 October 2012
Eddie Howe Burnley 12 October 2012 Sean Dyche 30 October 2012
Dougie Freedman Crystal Palace 23 October 2012 Ian Holloway 3 November 2012
Paul Jewell Ipswich Town 24 October 2012 Mick McCarthy 1 November 2012
Neale Cooper Hartlepool United 24 October 2012 John Hughes 13 November 2012
Paul Cook Accrington Stanley 25 October 2012 Leam Richardson 1 November 2012
Alan Knill Scunthorpe United 29 October 2012 Brian Laws 29 October 2012
Ian Holloway Blackpool 3 November 2012 Michael Appleton 7 November 2012
Michael Appleton Portsmouth 7 November 2012 Guy Whittingham 24 April 2013
Roberto Di Matteo Chelsea 21 November 2012 Rafael Benítez 21 November 2012
Mark Hughes Queens Park Rangers 23 November 2012 Harry Redknapp 24 November 2012
Micky Mellon Fleetwood Town 1 December 2012 Graham Alexander 6 December 2012
Mark McGhee Bristol Rovers 15 December 2012 John Ward 17 December 2012
Sean O'Driscoll Nottingham Forest 26 December 2012 Alex McLeish 27 December 2012
Henning Berg Blackburn Rovers 27 December 2012 Michael Appleton 11 January 2013
Mark Robson Barnet 28 December 2012 Edgar Davids 28 December 2012
Keith Hill Barnsley 29 December 2012 David Flitcroft 13 January 2013
Carl Fletcher Plymouth Argyle 1 January 2013 John Sheridan 6 January 2013
Ståle Solbakken Wolverhampton Wanderers 5 January 2013 Dean Saunders 7 January 2013
Dean Saunders Doncaster Rovers 7 January 2013 Brian Flynn 17 January 2013
Michael Appleton Blackpool 11 January 2013 Paul Ince 18 February 2013
Derek McInnes Bristol City 12 January 2013 Sean O'Driscoll 14 January 2013
Nigel Adkins Southampton 18 January 2013 Mauricio Pochettino 18 January 2013
John Coleman Rochdale 21 January 2013 Keith Hill 22 January 2013
Simon Grayson Huddersfield Town 24 January 2013 Mark Robins 14 February 2013
Paul Dickov Oldham Athletic 3 February 2013 Lee Johnson 18 March 2013
Keith Curle Notts County 3 February 2013 Chris Kiwomya 23 February 2013
Alex McLeish Nottingham Forest 5 February 2013 Billy Davies 7 February 2013
Graham Westley Preston North End 13 February 2013 Simon Grayson 18 February 2013
Mark Robins Coventry City 14 February 2013 Steven Pressley 8 March 2013
Paolo Di Canio Swindon Town 18 February 2013 Kevin MacDonald 28 February 2013
Dean Holdsworth Aldershot Town 20 February 2013 Andy Scott 22 February 2013
John Still Dagenham & Redbridge 26 February 2013 Wayne Burnett 2 May 2013
Gary Mills York City 2 March 2013 Nigel Worthington 4 March 2013
Brian McDermott Reading 11 March 2013 Nigel Adkins 26 March 2013
Michael Appleton Blackburn Rovers 19 March 2013 Gary Bowyer 24 May 2013
Gary Smith Stevenage 20 March 2013 Graham Westley 30 March 2013
Paul Sturrock Southend United 25 March 2013 Phil Brown 25 March 2013
Martin O'Neill Sunderland 30 March 2013 Paolo Di Canio 31 March 2013
Neil Warnock Leeds United 1 April 2013 Brian McDermott 12 April 2013
Danny Wilson Sheffield United 10 April 2013 Chris Morgan 10 April 2013
Martin Ling Torquay United 29 April 2013 Alan Knill 7 May 2013
Leam Richardson Accrington Stanley 30 April 2013 James Beattie 13 May 2013
Brian Flynn Doncaster Rovers 3 May 2013 Paul Dickov 20 May 2013
Dean Saunders Wolverhampton Wanderers 7 May 2013 Kenny Jackett 31 May 2013
Kenny Jackett Millwall 7 May 2013 Steve Lomas 17 June
John Hughes Hartlepool United 9 May 2013 Colin Cooper 24 May 2013
Roberto Mancini Manchester City 13 May 2013 Manuel Pellegrini 14 June 2013
Tony Pulis Stoke City 21 May 2013 Mark Hughes 30 May 2013
Rafael Benítez Chelsea 28 May 2013 José Mourinho 3 June 2013

Transfers

Diary of the season

Welsh success

The 2012–13 season was one of particular success for Welsh clubs playing in the English league system. Swansea City of the Premier League became the first Welsh club to win the Football League Cup; Cardiff City gained promotion to the Premier League by winning the Football League Championship; Newport County and Wrexham reached the final of the Football Conference play-offs, with Newport winning to gain promotion to the Football League, while Wrexham gained a measure of consolation by winning the FA Trophy.

Deaths

Retirements

References

This article uses material from the Wikipedia English article 2012–13 in English football, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license ("CC BY-SA 3.0"); additional terms may apply (view authors). Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.
®Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wiki Foundation, Inc. Wiki English (DUHOCTRUNGQUOC.VN) is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wiki Foundation.

Tags:

2012–13 In English Football Promotion and relegation2012–13 In English Football New clubs2012–13 In English Football Clubs removed2012–13 In English Football England national football team2012–13 In English Football League tables2012–13 In English Football Managerial changes2012–13 In English Football Transfers2012–13 In English Football Diary of the season2012–13 In English Football Deaths2012–13 In English Football Retirements2012–13 In English Football

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Apple Network ServerAnne HathawayTerry HillGallipoli campaignResults of the 2019 Indian general electionFallout (video game)RedditKevin DurantBasque languageArticle 370 of the Constitution of IndiaLionel Messi2024 Formula One World ChampionshipBlack holeIndiaSandeep WarrierCaliforniaJonathan KnightGreenland sharkAnimal (2023 Indian film)Priscilla PresleyKu Klux KlanSelena GomezThe Zone of Interest (film)Shubman Gill27 ClubRonnie O'SullivanBastion (comics)Ravisrinivasan Sai KishoreJerry SeinfeldThailandCosmo JarvisJack NicholsonWordleJames Clavell2019 Indian general electionPassover SederSerena WilliamsSpainCeline DionXXX (2002 film)Alec BaldwinRule 34Caitlin ClarkMagnus CarlsenEminemDogSolo LevelingArun Jaitley Cricket StadiumNicole Mitchell (meteorologist)Russian invasion of UkraineWish (film)Arne SlotAaron Taylor-JohnsonConan O'BrienAmber Heard2024 Indian general election in MaharashtraRussiaPhilippinesAndrew TateThe Office (American TV series)Canelo ÁlvarezPremier LeagueJeffrey EpsteinTyrese HaliburtonList of most-streamed artists on Spotify2024 Mutua Madrid Open – Women's singlesNetherlandsStephen HawkingNew ZealandTemperatureMinecraftCzech RepublicAll I Want for Christmas Is YouOttoman EmpireSerie AJennifer Pan🡆 More