2003–04 West Ham United F.C. season

West Ham United
2003–04 season
Chairman Terry Brown
Manager Glenn Roeder (until 24 August)
Sir Trevor Brooking (caretaker)
Alan Pardew (from October)
Stadium Boleyn Ground
First Division 4th (qualified for play-offs)
Play-offs Runners-up
FA Cup Fifth round
League Cup Third round
Top goalscorer League:
Marlon Harewood (13)

All:
Jermain Defoe (15)
Average home league attendance 31,325

During the 2003–04 English football season, West Ham United competed in the First Division. It was their first season in English football's second tier since the 1992–93 season, having been relegated from the Premiership in 18th place last season.

Season summary

Manager Glenn Roeder was sacked three games into the season. Sir Trevor Brooking took over as caretaker manager until October, when the club signed Alan Pardew of Reading as their new manager. Despite the loss of key players like Joe Cole, Paolo Di Canio and Glen Johnson before the start of the season, and David James and Jermain Defoe during the season, Pardew managed to guide the Hammers to fourth place, qualifying for the play-offs. West Ham managed to beat Ipswich Town in the semi-final, but were beaten in the final by Crystal Palace, meaning the Hammers were consigned to another season in English football's second tier.

Final league table

Pos Team Pl W D L F A GD Pts
1. Norwich City 46 28 10 8 79 39 +40 94
2. West Bromwich Albion 46 25 11 10 64 42 +22 86
3. Sunderland 46 22 13 11 62 45 +17 79
4. West Ham United 46 19 17 10 67 45 +22 74
5. Ipswich Town 46 21 10 15 84 72 +12 73
6. Crystal Palace 46 21 10 15 72 61 +11 73
7. Wigan Athletic 46 18 17 11 60 45 +15 71
8. Sheffield United 46 20 11 15 65 56 +9 71
9. Reading 46 20 10 16 55 57 -2 70
10. Millwall 46 18 15 13 55 48 +7 69
11. Stoke City 46 18 12 16 58 55 +3 66
12. Coventry City 46 17 14 15 67 54 +13 65
13. Cardiff City 46 17 14 15 68 58 +10 65
14. Nottingham Forest 46 15 15 16 61 51 +10 60
15. Preston North End 46 15 14 17 69 71 -2 59
16. Watford 46 15 12 19 54 68 -14 57
17. Rotherham United 46 13 15 18 53 61 -8 54
18. Crewe Alexandra 46 14 11 21 57 66 -9 53
19. Burnley 46 13 14 19 60 77 -17 53
20. Derby County 46 13 13 20 53 67 -14 52
21. Gillingham 46 14 9 23 48 67 -19 51
22. Walsall 46 13 12 21 45 65 -20 51
23. Bradford City 46 10 6 30 38 69 -31 36
24. Wimbledon (later MK Dons) 46 8 5 33 41 89 -48 29

Results

West Ham United's score comes first

Legend

Win Draw Loss

Football League First Division

DateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
9 August 2003 Preston North EndA2-118,246Defoe, Connolly
16 August 2003 Sheffield UnitedH0-028,972
23 August 2003 Rotherham UnitedA0-18,739
26 August 2003 Bradford CityH1-030,370Defoe
30 August 2003 Ipswich TownA2-129,679Defoe, Connolly
13 September 2003 ReadingH1-032,634Dailly
16 September 2003 Crewe AlexandraA3-09,575Connolly (2), Etherington
20 September 2003 GillinghamA0-211,418
28 September 2003 MillwallH1-131,626Connolly
1 October 2003 Crystal PalaceH3-031,861Defoe, Mellor (2)
4 October 2003 Derby CountyA1-022,810Hutchison
15 October 2003 Norwich CityH1-131,308Edworthy (own goal)
18 October 2003 BurnleyH2-231,474Connolly, Hutchison
22 October 2003 Nottingham ForestH1-129,544Defoe
25 October 2003 Cardiff CityA0-019,202
1 November 2003 Coventry CityA1-119,126Defoe
8 November 2003 West Bromwich AlbionH3-430,359Defoe, Deane (2)
22 November 2003 WatfordA0-020,950
25 November 2003 WimbledonA1-18,118Deane
29 November 2003 Wigan AthleticH4-034,375Horlock, Jarrett (own goal), Harewood (2, 1 pen)
6 December 2003 West Bromwich AlbionA1-126,194Deane
9 December 2003 Stoke CityH0-124,365
13 December 2003 SunderlandH3-230,329Defoe (2), Pearce
20 December 2003 WalsallA1-19,272Harewood
26 December 2003 Ipswich TownH1-235,021Defoe
28 December 2003 Nottingham ForestA2-027,491Harewood, Defoe
10 January 2004 Preston North EndH1-228,777Connolly
17 January 2004 Sheffield UnitedA3-322,787Carrick, Harley, Harewood
31 January 2004 Rotherham UnitedH2-134,483Deane, Dailly
7 February 2004 Bradford CityA2-113,078Zamora, Harewood
21 February 2004 Norwich CityA1-123,940Harewood
28 February 2004 Cardiff CityH1-031,858Zamora
2 March 2004 BurnleyA1-112,440Connolly (pen)
6 March 2004 WalsallH0-033,177
9 March 2004 WimbledonH5-029,818Etherington (3), Zamora, Reo-Coker
13 March 2004 SunderlandA0-229,533
17 March 2004 Crewe AlexandraH4-231,158Harewood (2), Reo-Coker, McAnuff
21 March 2004 MillwallA1-414,055Harewood (pen)
27 March 2004 GillinghamH2-134,551Zamora, Etherington
3 April 2004 ReadingA0-221,718
10 April 2004 Derby CountyH0-028,207
12 April 2004 Crystal PalaceA0-123,977
17 April 2004 Coventry CityH2-027,890Zamora, Connolly (pen)
24 April 2004 Stoke CityA2-018,227Connolly, Harewood
1 May 2004 WatfordH4-034,685Hutchison, Dailly, Harewood (2, 1 pen)
9 May 2004 Wigan AthleticA1-120,669Deane

First Division play-offs

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
SF 1st Leg15 May 2004 Ipswich TownA0-128,435
SF 2nd Leg18 May 2004 Ipswich TownH2-0 (won 2-1 on agg)34,002Etherington, Dailly
F29 May 2004 Crystal PalaceN0-172,523

FA Cup

Main article: 2003–04 FA Cup
RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
R33 January 2004 Wigan AthleticA2-111,793Mullins, Connolly
R425 January 2004 Wolverhampton WanderersA3-124,413Deane, Harewood, Connolly
R514 February 2004 FulhamA0-014,705
R5R24 February 2004 FulhamH0-327,934

League Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
R113 August 2003 Rushden & DiamondsH3-113,715Connolly (2), Defoe
R223 September 2003 Cardiff CityA3-210,724Defoe (3)
R330 October 2003 Tottenham HotspurA0-136,053

First-team squad

Squad at end of season

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

No. Position Player
2 Czech Republic DF Tomáš Řepka
3 England DF Rufus Brevett
4 Scotland MF Don Hutchison[1]
5 England MF Rob Lee
6 England MF Michael Carrick
7 Scotland DF Christian Dailly
8 Republic of Ireland FW David Connolly[2]
10 England FW Marlon Harewood
11 Northern Ireland MF Steve Lomas[3]
12 England MF Matthew Etherington
14 England DF Wayne Quinn (on loan from Newcastle United)
15 England DF Anton Ferdinand
16 Northern Ireland MF Kevin Horlock[4]
17 England MF Hayden Mullins
No. Position Player
18 France FW Youssef Sofiane
19 England MF Adam Nowland
20 England MF Nigel Reo-Coker
21 Australia MF Richard Garcia
22 Wales DF Andy Melville
24 England DF Jon Harley (on loan from Fulham)
25 England FW Bobby Zamora
26 Jamaica MF Jobi McAnuff[5]
27 England DF Shaun Byrne
29 England FW Brian Deane
30 Czech Republic GK Pavel Srníček
32 England GK Stephen Bywater
34 England DF Elliott Ward
35 England DF Chris Cohen

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
1 England GK David James (to Manchester City)
9 England FW Jermain Defoe (to Tottenham Hotspur)
19 England DF Ian Pearce (to Fulham)
20 Sweden MF Niclas Alexandersson (on loan from Everton)
20 England MF Robbie Stockdale (on loan from Middlesbrough)
No. Position Player
22 England DF Matthew Kilgallon (on loan from Leeds United)
28 England MF David Noble (to Boston United)
30 France DF Sebastian Schemmel (to Portsmouth)
30 Sweden GK Rami Shaaban (on loan from Arsenal)
33 England FW Neil Mellor (on loan from Liverpool)

Reserve squad

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

No. Position Player
31 Republic of Ireland GK David Forde
36 Republic of Ireland MF Daryl McMahon
No. Position Player
37 France MF Sébastien Carole (on loan from AS Monaco)
38 England MF Mark Noble

References

  1. Hutchison was born in Gateshead, England.
  2. Connolly was born in Brent, England.
  3. Lomas was born in Hanover, Germany.
  4. Horlock was born in Bexley, England.
  5. McAnuff was born in Enfield, England.
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