1994–95 Leicester City F.C. season

During the 1994–95 English football season, Leicester City F.C. competed in the FA Premier League.

Leicester City
1994–95 season
ChairmanMartin George
ManagerBrian Little (until 22 November)
Kevin MacDonald (caretaker 22 November - 14 December)
Mark McGhee (from 14 December)
Premiership21st (relegated)
FA CupFifth round
League CupSecond round
Top goalscorerLeague: Roberts (9)
All: Roberts (11)
Highest home attendance21,393 vs Liverpool
(26 Dec 1994, Premier League)
Lowest home attendance14,258 vs Brighton & HA
(5 Oct 1994, League Cup)
Average home league attendance19,532

Season summary edit

Leicester City finally made it back to the top flight after a seven-year exile and two successive Wembley playoff final defeats. Even with one of the country's most sought-after young managers in Brian Little, they were still tipped to go straight back down to the First Division. They would ultimately have a very shaky to indifferent start to the season, winning just two of their first 10 games, yet one of them being perhaps their finest performance of the season. On 16 October, they were 4–1 leaders against Southampton by 82 minutes; however, their leaky defense would be evident for the rest of the season (they eventually conceded 80 league goals and only kept four clean sheets all season) and within the final two minutes of that game, they conceded two goals to only narrowly win the game 4–3. By the time manager Brian Little moved to Aston Villa in November, the Foxes looked doomed, and Little's successor Mark McGhee was unable to prove the pundits wrong. Leicester were never out of the bottom two after November and were relegated with just 6 wins and only Ipswich Town below them. The sale of key player Mark Draper at least gave the club a cash windfall to reduce the financial impact of relegation.

Final league table edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
18 Aston Villa 42 11 15 16 51 56 −5 48
19 Crystal Palace (R) 42 11 12 19 34 49 −15 45 Relegation to Football League First Division
20 Norwich City (R) 42 10 13 19 37 54 −17 43
21 Leicester City (R) 42 6 11 25 45 80 −35 29
22 Ipswich Town (R) 42 7 6 29 36 93 −57 27
Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(R) Relegated
Results summary
Overall Home Away
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts W D L GF GA GD W D L GF GA GD
42 6 11 25 45 80  −35 29 5 6 10 28 37  −9 1 5 15 17 43  −26

Source: Statto

Results by round
Round123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142
GroundHAAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHHAHAAAHAAAHAHHAHHAHAHHA
ResultLLLDLWDDLWLLLLWLDLDLDLLLWLDDLDLLLLLWLLLWDD
Position182122202120181920181819212120212121212121212222222222212222222222222221212121212121
Source: Statto.com
A = Away; H = Home; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Loss

Results edit

Leicester City's score comes first[1]

Legend edit

Win Draw Loss

FA Premier League edit

Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Scorers
21 August 1994 Newcastle United H 1–3 20,048 Joachim
23 August 1994 Blackburn Rovers A 0–3 21,050
27 August 1994 Nottingham Forest A 0–1 21,601
31 August 1994 Queens Park Rangers H 1–1 18,695 Gee
10 September 1994 Wimbledon A 1–2 7,683 Lowe
17 September 1994 Tottenham Hotspur H 3–1 21,300 Joachim (2), Lowe
24 September 1994 Everton A 1–1 28,003 Draper
3 October 1994 Coventry City H 2–2 19,372 Roberts (2)
8 October 1994 Chelsea A 0–4 18,397
15 October 1994 Southampton H 4–3 20,020 Blake (2), Roberts, Carr
24 October 1994 Leeds United A 1–2 28,547 Blake
29 October 1994 Crystal Palace H 0–1 20,022
5 November 1994 West Ham United A 0–1 18,780
20 November 1994 Manchester City H 0–1 19,006
23 November 1994 Arsenal H 2–1 20,774 Lowe, Seaman (own goal)
26 November 1994 Norwich City A 1–2 20,657 Draper
3 December 1994 Aston Villa H 1–1 20,896 Gee
10 December 1994 Newcastle United A 1–3 34,400 Oldfield
17 December 1994 Blackburn Rovers H 0–0 20,559
26 December 1994 Liverpool H 1–2 21,393 Roberts
28 December 1994 Manchester United A 1–1 43,789 Whitlow
31 December 1994 Sheffield Wednesday H 0–1 20,624
2 January 1995 Ipswich Town A 1–4 15,803 Roberts
14 January 1995 Crystal Palace A 0–2 12,707
25 January 1995 Manchester City A 1–0 21,007 Robins
4 February 1995 West Ham United H 1–2 20,375 Robins
11 February 1995 Arsenal A 1–1 31,373 Draper
22 February 1995 Aston Villa A 4–4 30,825 Robins, Roberts, Lowe (2)
25 February 1995 Coventry City A 2–4 20,633 Lowe, Roberts
4 March 1995 Everton H 2–2 20,447 Draper, Roberts
8 March 1995 Queens Park Rangers A 0–2 10,189
11 March 1995 Nottingham Forest H 2–4 20,423 Lowe, Draper
15 March 1995 Leeds United H 1–3 20,068 Roberts
18 March 1995 Tottenham Hotspur A 0–1 30,851
1 April 1995 Wimbledon H 3–4 15,489 Robins, Willis, Lawrence
5 April 1995 Norwich City H 1–0 15,992 Parker
8 April 1995 Sheffield Wednesday A 0–1 22,551
15 April 1995 Manchester United H 0–4 21,281
17 April 1995 Liverpool A 0–2 36,012
29 April 1995 Ipswich Town H 2–0 15,248 Whitlow, Lowe
6 May 1995 Chelsea H 1–1 18,140 Willis
14 May 1995 Southampton A 2–2 15,101 Parker, Robins

FA Cup edit

Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R3 7 January 1995 Enfield H 2–0 17,351 Oldfield, Roberts
R4 30 January 1995 Portsmouth A 1–0 14,928 Roberts
R5 18 February 1995 Wolverhampton Wanderers A 0–1 28,544

League Cup edit

Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R2 1st Leg 21 September 1994 Brighton & Hove Albion A 0–1 11,041
R2 2nd Leg 5 October 1994 Brighton & Hove Albion H 0–2 (lost 0–3 on agg) 14,258

Squad edit

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   ENG Gavin Ward
2 DF   ENG Simon Grayson
3 DF   ENG Mike Whitlow
4 DF   ENG Jimmy Willis
5 DF   ENG Steve Walsh (captain)
6 FW   ENG Mark Robins
7 FW   ENG Julian Joachim
8 MF   ENG Mark Blake
9 FW   WAL Iwan Roberts
10 MF   ENG Mark Draper
11 FW   ENG Ian Ormondroyd
12 DF   ENG Richard Smith
14 DF   ENG Nicky Mohan
15 DF   IRL Brian Carey
18 MF   ENG Garry Parker
No. Pos. Nation Player
19 DF   ENG Colin Hill
20 MF   ENG David Oldfield
21 MF   ENG Lee Philpott
22 DF   JAM Jamie Lawrence
23 FW   ENG Emile Heskey
24 DF   ENG Neil Lewis
25 FW   ENG David Lowe
26 FW   ENG Phil Gee
27 FW   ENG Lee Ellison
29 MF   ENG Sam McMahon
30 MF   ENG Ian Thompson
31 DF   ENG Scott Eustace
32 GK   ENG Russell Hoult
33 GK   ENG Kevin Poole

Left the club during season edit

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
22 MF   ENG Gary Mills (to Notts County)
16 MF   ENG Franz Carr (to Aston Villa)
6 MF   ENG Steve Agnew (to Sunderland)
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 MF   ENG Steve Thompson (to Burnley)
34 DF   SCO Mike Galloway (on loan from Celtic)

Transfers edit

In edit

Date Pos Name From Fee
7 July 1994 DF Nicky Mohan Middlesbrough £330,000
22 July 1994 MF Mark Draper Notts County £1,250,000
12 August 1994 FW Lee Ellison Darlington Free transfer
11 October 1994 MF Franz Carr Sheffield United £100,000
6 January 1995 DF Jamie Lawrence Doncaster Rovers £125,000
16 January 1995 FW Mark Robins Norwich City £1,000,000
10 February 1995 MF Garry Parker Aston Villa £300,000

Out edit

Date Pos Name To Fee
25 July 1994 DF Neal Timson Hereford United Free transfer
12 August 1994 DF Colin Gibson Blackpool Free transfer
26 September 1994 MF Gary Mills Notts County £50,000
11 January 1995 MF Steve Agnew Sunderland £250,000
10 February 1995 MF Franz Carr Aston Villa £250,000
24 February 1995 MF Steve Thompson Burnley £200,000
Transfers in:   £3,105,000
Transfers out:   £750,000
Total spending:   £2,355,000

References edit

  1. ^ "Leicester City 1994-1995 Results - statto.com". Archived from the original on 25 March 2013. Retrieved 26 January 2013.
  2. ^ "FootballSquads - Leicester City - 1994/95".