2002–03 Football League First Division

Football League First Division
Season 2002–03
Champions Portsmouth
(3rd divisional title)
Promoted Portsmouth
Leicester City
Wolverhampton Wanderers
Relegated Sheffield Wednesday
Brighton & Hove Albion
Grimsby Town
Matches played 557
Goals scored 1,512 (2.71 per match)
Top goalscorer Svetoslav Todorov
(26 goals)
Biggest home win Nottm Forest 6–0 Stoke,
Wolves 6–0 Gillingham
Biggest away win Millwall 0–6 Rotherham
Highest scoring Grimsby 6–5 Burnley,
Burnley 4–7 Watford
Longest winning run 7 games
Portsmouth
Longest unbeaten run 15 games
Leicester City
Longest winless run 16 games
Stoke City
Longest losing run 12 games
Brighton & Hove Albion
Average attendance 15,599
2003–04

The 2002–03 Football League First Division (referred to as the Nationwide First Division for sponsorship reasons) was the eleventh season of the league under its current format as the second tier of English football.

Portsmouth won the division to return to the Premier League after a fifteen-year absence. In Harry Redknapp's first full season in charge the team secured the title on 27 April, with a victory over Rotherham, having been promoted with four games to spare by defeating Burnley.

Leicester City were promoted at the first attempt following their relegation. Their promotion was contentious as they entered administration during the season due to debts in excess of £50 million stemming from their loss of Premier League income and major investment in a new stadium, but were able to write-off these entirely when a new consortium took control and therefore avoided having to sell off players. Following this incident, the Football League would introduce rules that penalised any club entering administration with a ten-point points deduction; although Leicester would still have finished in second place had been this been applied.

Wolverhampton Wanderers won the play-offs to reach the modern-day Premiership for the first time after a 3–0 win in the play-off final against a Sheffield United team which had reached the semi-finals of both domestic cup competitions. This marked a return to top-flight football for Wolves after a nineteen-year exodus that had seen them fall as low as the fourth tier. Also leaving the division were Sheffield Wednesday, Brighton & Hove Albion and Grimsby Town, who were all relegated.

Team changes from previous season

From the First Division

Promoted to the Premiership:

Relegated to the Second Division:

To the First Division

Relegated from the Premiership:

Promoted from the Second Division:

Team overview

Stadia and locations

Team Location Stadium Capacity
Bradford City Bradford Bradford & Bingley Stadium 25,136
Burnley Burnley Turf Moor 22,546
Brighton & Hove Albion Brighton Withdean Stadium 8,850
Coventry City Coventry Highfield Road 23,489
Crystal Palace London Selhurst Park 26,309
Derby County Derby Pride Park 33,597
Gillingham Gillingham Priestfield Stadium 11,582
Grimsby Town Cleethorpes Blundell Park 10,033
Ipswich Town Ipswich Portman Road 30,311
Leicester City Leicester Walkers Stadium 32,500
Millwall London The New Den 20,146
Nottingham Forest Nottingham City Ground 30,576
Norwich City Norwich Carrow Road 26,018
Portsmouth Portsmouth Fratton Park 20,224
Preston North End Preston Deepdale 23,408
Reading Reading Madejski Stadium 24,161
Rotherham United Rotherham Millmoor 8,300
Sheffield United Sheffield Bramall Lane 32,702
Sheffield Wednesday Sheffield Hillsborough 39,812
Stoke City Stoke Britannia Stadium 27,740
Walsall Walsall Bescot Stadium 11,300
Watford Watford Vicarage Road 17,504
Wimbledon London Selhurst Park1 26,309
Wolverhampton Wanderers Wolverhampton Molineux 27,828
  • Note 1: Wimbledon rented the use of Crystal Palace's Selhurst Park home.

Personnel and sponsoring

Team Manager Kit maker Sponsor
Bradford City Nicky Law BCAFC JCT600
Burnley Stan Ternent TFG Sports Lanway
Brighton & Hove Albion Martin Hinshelwood Erreà Skint Records
Coventry City Gary McAllister CCFC Subaru
Crystal Palace Trevor Francis Le Coq Sportif Churchill Insurance
Derby County John Gregory Erreà Pedigree
Gillingham Andy Hessenthaler Gills Leisure SeaFrance
Grimsby Town Paul Groves Avec Dixon
Ipswich Town George Burley Punch TXU Energi
Leicester City Micky Adams Le Coq Sportif LG
Millwall Mark McGhee Strikeforce 24seven
Nottingham Forest Paul Hart Umbro Pinnacle Insurance
Norwich City Nigel Worthington Xara Digital Phone Company
Portsmouth Harry Redknapp Pompey Sport Ty
Preston North End Craig Brown Voi NewReg.com
Reading Alan Pardew Kit@ Westcoast
Rotherham United Ronnie Moore Bodyline T-Mobile
Sheffield United Neil Warnock Le Coq Sportif Desun
Sheffield Wednesday Terry Yorath Diadora Chupa Chups
Stoke City Steve Cotterill Le Coq Sportif Britannia
Walsall Colin Lee Xara Banks's
Watford Ray Lewington Kit@ Toshiba
Wimbledon Stuart Murdoch Patrick Go MK
Wolverhampton Wanderers Dave Jones Admiral Doritos

Managerial changes

Team Outgoing manager Manner of departure Date of vacancy Position in table Replaced by Date of appointment
Brighton & Hove Albion Peter Taylor Resigned 29 April 2002 Off season Martin Hinshelwood 15 July 2002
Brighton & Hove Albion Martin Hinshelwood Moved to director of football position 7 October 2002 24th Steve Coppell 7 October 2002
Stoke City Steve Cotterill Resigned to become assistant manager at Sunderland 10 October 2002 15th Tony Pulis 1 November 2002
Ipswich Town George Burley Sacked 11 October 2002 19th Joe Royle 28 October 2002
Sheffield Wednesday Terry Yorath Resigned 31 October 2002 22nd Chris Turner 7 November 2002
Crystal Palace Trevor Francis Mutual consent 18 April 2003 11th Steve Kember 23 May 2003
Derby County John Gregory Sacked 9 May 20032 18th (end of season) George Burley 5 June 20033
  • Note 2: Although Gregory was dismissed on this date, he had already been suspended from his post on 21 March after "serious allegations" were made against him.
  • Note 3: Burley was initially appointed on 31 March as interim manager following John Gregory's suspension.

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion or relegation
1 Portsmouth (C, P) 46 29 11 6 97 45 +52 98 Promotion to 2003–04 FA Premier League
2 Leicester City (P) 46 26 14 6 73 40 +33 92
3 Sheffield United 46 23 11 12 72 52 +20 80 Qualification for First Division Playoffs
4 Reading 46 25 4 17 61 46 +15 79
5 Wolverhampton Wanderers (O, P) 46 20 16 10 81 44 +37 76
6 Nottingham Forest 46 20 14 12 82 50 +32 74
7 Ipswich Town 46 19 13 14 80 64 +16 70
8 Norwich City 46 19 12 15 60 49 +11 69
9 Millwall 46 19 9 18 59 69 −10 66
10 Wimbledon 46 18 11 17 76 73 +3 65
11 Gillingham 46 16 14 16 56 65 −9 62
12 Preston North End 46 16 13 17 68 70 −2 61
13 Watford 46 17 9 20 54 70 −16 60
14 Crystal Palace 46 14 17 15 59 52 +7 59
15 Rotherham United 46 15 14 17 62 62 0 59
16 Burnley 46 15 10 21 65 89 −24 55
17 Walsall 46 15 9 22 57 69 −12 54
18 Derby County 46 15 7 24 55 74 −19 52
19 Bradford City 46 14 10 22 51 73 −22 52
20 Coventry City 46 12 14 20 46 62 −16 50
21 Stoke City 46 12 14 20 45 69 −24 50
22 Sheffield Wednesday (R) 46 10 16 20 56 73 −17 46 Relegation to 2003–04 Second Division
23 Brighton & Hove Albion (R) 46 11 12 23 49 67 −18 45
24 Grimsby Town (R) 46 9 12 25 48 85 −37 39
Updated to match(es) played on 11 May 2003. Source: Soccerway
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champions; (O) Play-off winners; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated

Play-offs

Semi-finals Final
               
3 Sheffield United 1 4 5
6 Nottingham Forest 1 3 4
3 Sheffield United 0
5 Wolverhampton Wanderers 3
4 Reading 1 0 1
5 Wolverhampton Wanderers 2 1 3

Awards

Month Manager of the Month Notes
Manager Club
August Harry Redknapp Portsmouth
September Micky Adams Leicester City
October Ray Lewington Watford
November Alan Pardew Reading
December Gary McAllister Coventry City
January Neil Warnock Sheffield United
February Alan Pardew Reading
March Joe Royle Ipswich Town
April Mark McGhee Millwall
PFA Team of the Year
Pos. Player Club
GK Shaka Hislop Portsmouth
DF Denis Irwin Wolverhampton Wanderers
DF Joleon Lescott Wolverhampton Wanderers
DF Michael Dawson Nottingham Forest
DF Matthew Taylor Portsmouth
MF Muzzy Izzet Leicester City
MF Michael Brown Sheffield United
MF Paul Merson Portsmouth
MF Michael Tonge Sheffield United
FW David Johnson Nottingham Forest
FW Paul Dickov Leicester City