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1993–94 Manchester City F.C. season

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Manchester City
1993–94 season
ChairmanPeter Swales (until February)
Francis Lee (from February)
ManagerPeter Reid (player-manager)
Brian Horton
StadiumMaine Road
Premier League16th
FA CupFourth round
League CupFourth round
Top goalscorerLeague: Sheron (6)
All: Sheron/Quinn (6)
Highest home attendance35,155 vs Manchester United
7 November 1993
Lowest home attendance9,280 vs Reading
22 September 1993
Average home league attendance26,709 (9th highest in league)

The 1993–94 season was Manchester City's fifth consecutive season in the top tier of English football, and their second in the Premier League.

Season summary

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Manchester City sacked manager Peter Reid just four games into the season, and quickly confirmed Brian Horton of Oxford United as his replacement.

City were a competitive, attacking side during Reid's three seasons as manager, when they finished fifth in his first two seasons and ninth in the next campaign. But under Horton, they found it increasingly difficult to find the net - just 36 goals were scored in the league all season, and no player scored more than 6 goals. The mid-season sale of David White to Leeds United robbed them of one of their last quality performers, and his replacement David Rocastle (signed from Leeds in a separate deal) failed to live up to expectations.

Despite their lack of goals, City avoided the drop and finished 16th - their lowest finish since relegation in 1987. Horton sought to reverse this decline by bringing in Nicky Summerbee, Uwe Rösler and Paul Walsh, while David Rocastle moved to Chelsea after less than a year at Maine Road.

Kit

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City introduced a home and third kit for the season, opting to retain the away kit following the traditional pattern of only replacing home and away kits in alternating seasons. The new home kit featured another pseudo-holographic pattern, this time of large Umbro diamonds from the chest to the left shoulder. The third kit simply adopted the away shirt's pinstripes but altered the colours to deep navy blue on white background. Umbro and Brother remained the kit manufacturers and sponsors respectively.

For this season, City also played in a Centenary shirt to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the club adopting the name Manchester City. The kit featured very thin pinstripe diagonal lines instead of the Umbro diamonds of the main shirt, and replaced the club badge with the coat of arms of the city of Manchester itself, ensconced in a laurel wreath and featuring a motto which simply read the club's name and the years of the centenary.

Home
Centenary
Away
Third

Final league table

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
14 Chelsea 42 13 12 17 49 53 −4 51 Qualification for the Cup Winners' Cup first round[a]
15 Tottenham Hotspur 42 11 12 19 54 59 −5 45
16 Manchester City 42 9 18 15 38 49 −11 45
17 Everton 42 12 8 22 42 63 −21 44
18 Southampton 42 12 7 23 49 66 −17 43
Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
Notes:
  1. ^ Chelsea qualified for the Cup Winners' Cup as FA Cup runners-up, as winners Manchester United qualified for the Champions League.

Results summary

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Overall Home Away
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts W D L GF GA GD W D L GF GA GD
42 9 17 16 37 49  −12 44 6 9 6 23 22  +1 3 8 10 14 27  −13

Source: [1]

Results

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Manchester City's score comes first[1]

Legend

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Win Draw Loss

FA Premier League

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Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Scorers
14 August 1993 Leeds United H 1–1 32,366 Flitcroft
17 August 1993 Everton A 0–1 26,036
21 August 1993 Tottenham Hotspur A 0–1 24,535
24 August 1993 Blackburn Rovers H 0–2 25,185
27 August 1993 Coventry City H 1–1 21,537 Sheron
1 September 1993 Swindon Town A 3–1 14,300 Vonk, Mike, Quinn
11 September 1993 Queens Park Rangers H 3–0 24,445 Quinn, Sheron, Flitcroft
20 September 1993 Wimbledon A 0–1 8,481
25 September 1993 Sheffield United A 1–0 20,067 Sheron
4 October 1993 Oldham Athletic H 1–1 21,401 Sheron
16 October 1993 Arsenal A 0–0 29,567
23 October 1993 Liverpool H 1–1 30,403 White
1 November 1993 West Ham United A 1–3 16,605 Curle
7 November 1993 Manchester United H 2–3 35,155 Quinn (2)
20 November 1993 Norwich City A 1–1 16,626 Quinn
22 November 1993 Chelsea A 0–0 10,128
27 November 1993 Sheffield Wednesday H 1–3 23,416 Sheron
4 December 1993 Leeds United A 2–3 33,821 Griffiths, Sheron
8 December 1993 Everton H 1–0 20,513 Griffiths
11 December 1993 Tottenham Hotspur H 0–2 21,566
18 December 1993 Blackburn Rovers A 0–2 18,741
28 December 1993 Southampton H 1–1 24,712 Phelan
1 January 1994 Newcastle United A 0–2 35,585
15 January 1994 Arsenal H 0–0 25,642
22 January 1994 Liverpool A 1–2 41,872 Griffiths
5 February 1994 Ipswich Town H 2–1 28,188 Griffiths, Flitcroft
12 February 1994 West Ham United H 0–0 29,118
19 February 1994 Coventry City A 0–4 11,735
22 February 1994 Aston Villa A 0–0 19,254
26 February 1994 Swindon Town H 2–1 26,360 Rocastle, Horlock (own goal)
5 March 1994 Queens Park Rangers A 1–1 13,474 Rocastle
12 March 1994 Wimbledon H 0–1 23,981
19 March 1994 Sheffield United H 0–0 25,448
26 March 1994 Oldham Athletic A 0–0 16,464
29 March 1994 Ipswich Town A 2–2 13,099 Rösler, Walsh
2 April 1994 Aston Villa H 3–0 26,075 Beagrie, Walsh, Rösler
4 April 1994 Southampton A 1–0 16,377 Karl
9 April 1994 Newcastle United H 2–1 33,774 Walsh, D Brightwell
16 April 1994 Norwich City H 1–1 28,010 Rösler
23 April 1994 Manchester United A 0–2 44,333
30 April 1994 Chelsea H 2–2 33,594 Rösler, Walsh
7 May 1994 Sheffield Wednesday A 1–1 33,733 Rösler

FA Cup

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Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R3 8 January 1994 Leicester City H 4–1 22,613 Ingebrigtsen (3), Kernaghan
R4 29 January 1994 Cardiff City A 0–1 20,486

League Cup

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Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goalscorers
R2 1st leg 22 September 1993 Reading H 1–1 9,280 White
R2 2nd leg 6 October 1993 Reading A 2–1 (won 3–2 on agg) 10,052 Lomas, Quinn
R3 26 October 1993 Chelsea H 1–0 16,713 White
R4 1 December 1993 Nottingham Forest A 0–0 22,195
R4R 15 December 1993 Nottingham Forest H 1–2 14,117

Squad

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[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 England ENG Tony Coton
2 DF England ENG Andy Hill
3 DF Republic of Ireland IRL Terry Phelan
4 MF England ENG Steve McMahon
5 DF England ENG Keith Curle (captain)
6 DF Netherlands NED Michel Vonk
7 MF England ENG David Rocastle
8 FW England ENG Mike Sheron
9 FW Republic of Ireland IRL Niall Quinn
10 MF England ENG Garry Flitcroft
11 FW Wales WAL Carl Griffiths
12 DF England ENG Ian Brightwell
13 GK Wales WAL Martyn Margetson
14 MF England ENG Paul Lake
15 DF Republic of Ireland IRL Alan Kernaghan
16 FW England ENG Steve Finney
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 MF England ENG Mike Quigley
18 DF England ENG David Brightwell
19 MF Jamaica JAM Fitzroy Simpson
20 MF Netherlands NED Alfons Groenendijk
21 MF Northern Ireland NIR Steve Lomas
22 DF England ENG Richard Edghill
23 MF Scotland SCO David Kerr
24 FW England ENG Adie Mike
25 GK Wales WAL Andy Dibble
26 MF Norway NOR Kåre Ingebrigtsen
27 DF England ENG Rae Ingram
28 FW Germany GER Uwe Rösler
29 DF England ENG John Foster
30 FW England ENG Paul Walsh
31 MF Germany GER Steffen Karl (on loan from Borussia Dortmund)
32 MF England ENG Peter Beagrie

Out on loan during season

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
26 MF Norway NOR Kåre Ingebrigtsen (to Rosenborg until October 1993)

Left club during season

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
7 FW England ENG David White (to Leeds United)
11 MF England ENG Rick Holden (to Oldham Athletic)
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 MF England ENG Peter Reid (player-manager; to Southampton)
28 MF England ENG Carl Shutt (on loan from Birmingham City)

References

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  1. ^ "Manchester City 1993-1994 Home - statto.com". Archived from the original on 17 May 2012. Retrieved 17 May 2012.