Thursday 22 May 2014

Premier League 2013-14 Season Review: Blue Moon rises again

By Simon Wright – Follow me on Twitter @Siwri88

It was one of the most closely fought Premier League years of recent times. The title was only settled on the final day of the season in a campaign that was full of unexpected twists and turns, but lacked a fitting finale to it.

A comfortable final day win at home to West Ham United ensured the blue half of Manchester celebrated again, as Manchester City (pictured below) won their second crown in three years.
Vincent Kompany and Manchester City regained the Premier League crown in an epic tussle
Manuel Pellegrini won the league in his maiden season in the Etihad dugout, as they held off challenges from a resurgent Liverpool, Jose Mourinho’s Chelsea and Arsenal to claim top honours.

It was a season of change. No fewer than 10 managers lost their jobs during the campaign, we saw the introduction of goal-line technology, a striker who found redemption and swept the awards board and a manager who decided his head would do the talking in one of the league’s craziest moments of madness ever seen.

Simon Wright now reviews the 2013-14 campaign from the opening kick in August to the final whistle in May as the Barclays Premier League continued its reputation as the most unpredictable division on the planet.


CHAMPIONS: Manchester City
RUNNERS-UP: Liverpool
THIRD PLACE: Chelsea
RELEGATED: Norwich City, Fulham, Cardiff City
TOP SCORERS: Luis Suarez (Liverpool) 31, Daniel Sturridge (Liverpool) 21, Yaya Toure (Manchester City) 20, Sergio Aguero (Manchester City) 17, Wayne Rooney (Manchester United) 17, Edin Dzeko (Manchester City) 16, Olivier Giroud (Arsenal) 16, Wilfried Bony (Swansea City) 16, Romelu Lukaku (Everton) 15, Jay Rodriguez (Southampton) 15, Eden Hazard (Chelsea) 14, Loic Remy (Newcastle United) 14, Steven Gerrard (Liverpool) 13, Rickie Lambert (Southampton) 13, Robin van Persie (Manchester United) 12, Emmanuel Adebayor (Tottenham Hotspur) 11, Aaron Ramsey (Arsenal) 10, Christian Benteke (Aston Villa) 10, Alvaro Negredo (Manchester City) 9, Raheem Sterling (Liverpool) 9, Samuel Eto’o (Chelsea) 9, Danny Welbeck (Manchester United) 9, Adam Lallana (Southampton) 9, Oscar (Chelsea) 8, Lukas Podolski (Arsenal) 8, Kevin Mirallas (Everton) 8
BIGGEST WIN: Manchester City 7-0 Norwich City (2 November 2013)                                    
HIGHEST SCORING GAMES: Manchester City 6-3 Arsenal (14 December 2013), Cardiff City 3-6 Liverpool (22 March 2014), Manchester City 7-0 Norwich City (2 November 2013)
PFA PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Luis Suarez (Liverpool) 
PFA YOUNG PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Eden Hazard (Chelsea)

The 2013-14 Barclays Premier League campaign was going to be a season of charge, especially at the top. The top three clubs from 2012-13 all changed managers at the start of a new campaign. David Moyes was ‘The Chosen One’ to begin life at Manchester United after Sir Alex Ferguson. The calm Chilean Manuel Pellegrini replaced the sacked Roberto Mancini at Manchester City and Jose Mourinho made his second coming to Chelsea as Roman Abramovich finally indicated that he had found no-one suitable to replace the so-called ‘Special One.

There were other new managers arriving too. Roberto Martinez moved on from relegated Wigan to succeed the departing Moyes at Everton and Mark Hughes returned from the managerial exile at Stoke City after the Potters elected to go down a fresh direction without Tony Pulis.

The transfer market was dominated by three players and their futures – that of Gareth Bale, Luis Suarez and Wayne Rooney. Suarez was the subject of a ridiculous £40,000,001 bid from Arsenal – intended to trigger a clause in his contract. The striker spoke out and wanted to leave but the owners stood firm and he remained a Liverpool player. Rooney was courted by Chelsea but stayed loyal to the new regime at Old Trafford and would sign a new contract by the season’s climax. It was Bale who went though as Real Madrid got their man. Tottenham received £85.3m for the Welsh wizard – becoming the most expensive transfer in the history of football.

Manchester City spent nearly £100m combined on the Sevilla pair Jesus Navas and Alvaro Negredo, Fernandinho from Shakhtar Donetsk and Montenegro striker Stevan Jovetic. After missing out on Rooney, Mourinho went for Samuel Eto’o after a restructuring plan saw Russian club Anzhi sell all their stars. Willian was another who ended up at Stamford Bridge as the Blues stole the Brazilian at the last minute from under Tottenham’s noses.

With the Bale money, Spurs spent it on almost a brand new team. Spanish striker Roberto Soldado and Roma playmaker Erik Lamela were the biggest additions – costing £56m in total. Liverpool paid £17m to PSG for rising defender Mamadou Sakho and Southampton forked out £8.5m for Lyon centre back Dejan Lovren.

Domestic moves saw Romelu Lukaku go out on loan again, but this time to Everton. The Toffees made a similar move for out-of-favour Gareth Barry and Martinez went back to his former club Wigan on deadline day to acquire James McCarthy for £13m. Joe Kinnear controversially returned to Newcastle as director of football, although he only made one addition which was the loan signing of Loic Remy from relegated QPR. Adel Taarabt swapped the Hoops for the Cottagers of Fulham on a loan deal too and newly promoted Hull City broke their transfer record for Tottenham midfielder Tom Huddlestone.

As deadline day ticked down, Manchester United were noticeably quiet. Despite pursuing the likes of Cesc Fabregas and Leighton Baines, no new signings were made until the final hour. Moyes eventually forking out a club record £27m for Everton’s Marouane Fellaini. It was a deal that would backfire badly for both player and boss.

Spend, spend Arsene!
Whilst their rivals paid out big amounts to strengthen their squads, Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger decided again not to make any moves. The fans grew frustrated, especially as the debt on the Emirates Stadium that had restricted deals before had now been paid off.

It got really ugly in north London on the opening day when Aston Villa blew the Gunners apart with a stunning demonstration of how to play counter-attacking football. Arsenal lost 3-1 and the supporters started hurling ‘Spend, spend, spend Wenger’ banners out around the ground.

He eventually did buy on deadline day and what a capture. £42m was paid to Real Madrid for German superstar Mesut Ozil, doubling the club’s previous transfer record. By then, Arsenal were back in the top three including a north London derby success over a new-look Tottenham side.

It was Liverpool who were the surprise early pacesetters. Brendan Rodgers side played carefully in the opening three weeks and his measures paid off. Three goals, all scored by Daniel Sturridge were enough for three 1-0 wins to ensure they had the only 100 per cent record in the division. One of those winners from Sturridge came in early September against Manchester United as Moyes suffered an early taster of what was to come.

One of the biggest upsets in the entire campaign came in late August. On a bright late summer’s August afternoon, Cardiff City memorably defeated Manchester City in their first home match among the elite. Frazier Campbell scored twice in a sensational 3-2 win but there were already evident cracks in the cordial dialogue between owner Vincent Tan and manager Malky Mackay.

Di Canio bites the dust
The other main headline in the opening two months was the poisonous atmosphere around Sunderland. Despite bringing in 12 players, the club was on the verge of meltdown under Paolo di Canio.

Constant criticism of the first team players in the media, plus excluding the popular Phil Bardsley and Lee Cattermole from his plans made him a scapegoat in the local and national media and with the Black Cats fans. Those who couldn’t work out whether he was a genius or an idiot quickly had their answer and after a public remonstration to the visiting fans following a 3-0 defeat at West Brom on 21 September, he became the first boss to bite the dust in 2013-14. The former Brighton manager Gus Poyet replaced him and Sunderland became a much better environment for this decision.

Meanwhile in Manchester, David Moyes got another indication of the task he had at Old Trafford. Manchester United were trounced 4-1 in the first Manchester derby of the season, with Sergio Aguero scoring twice. The following week, United caved to a shock 2-1 defeat by West Brom. Albion recorded their first victory at the Theatre of Dreams since 1978 with goals from Morgan Amalfitano and youngster Saido Berahino. Already, the champions crown was slipping.

Vilified after his bite out of Branislav Ivanovic in April of the previous campaign, Luis Suarez returned in late September from his 10-match ban for the incident. He made a scoring return too in Liverpool’s 3-1 away win at bottom club Sunderland and he didn’t stop scoring until the season ended.

With Chelsea losing for the first time under Mourinho’s second spell 1-0 to Everton and Manchester City slipping to a 3-2 loss away to Aston Villa; it was Arsenal who led the way at the end of September. Helped by the goals of Aaron Ramsey and Olivier Giroud and with Ozil settling in quickly, the Gunners had chalked up five successive victories. The gloom over the club from six weeks earlier had most definitely disappeared.

Carnage at Cardiff
When Jordan Mutch scored a stunning 90th minute winner to help Cardiff to a 2-1 win away at Fulham, the Bluebirds were sitting in a fine seventh place in the table. It rapidly went downhill from there.

Chief scout Ian Moody was unceremoniously fired by owner Vincent Tan at the start of October and replaced with an unknown individual from Kazakhstan, who was one of Tan’s closest friends. An ally of Mackay, Moody’s departure sparked carnage which remained at the club for the rest of the campaign. Cardiff’s form on the field started to take a nosedive in October with successive defeats to Newcastle and Chelsea, followed by a 0-0 draw away against Norwich City. They plunged into the bottom half and the chaos wouldn’t end there.

Moody eventually turned up as the director of football at Crystal Palace who were also about to experience a managerial change. After a pitiful 4-1 defeat at home to fellow strugglers Fulham, not helped by a Goal of the Season contender from Patjim Kasami, Ian Holloway resigned from his post, believing he had lost the dressing room in south London. After Keith Millen stood in as caretaker for four games, the call went out to Pulis to try and save the Eagles. However with just four points from 11 games, they already looked good as doomed.

Arsenal held onto top spot throughout October, with Jack Wilshere starting to show some good form. He finished off one of the team goals of the campaign as Norwich couldn’t cope with the Gunners’ incisive movements in a 4-1 defeat, where Ozil also scored twice. At the wrong end of the league, Fabio Borini hit an 87th minute winner in the Tyne & Wear derby to spearhead Sunderland to a 2-1 triumph over Newcastle and their first win of the campaign and for new boss Poyet.

The month ended with a gladiatorial showdown at Stamford Bridge. Chelsea and Manchester City were deadlocked at 1-1 going into stoppage time when a nightmare mix-up between Matija Nastasic and Joe Hart allowed Fernando Torres in to score the winner. Cue ecstatic celebrations from Mourinho on the touchline which rattled Pellegrini, who didn’t shake his hand at the full-time whistle. It also was the final straw with Hart’s form too. After a series of erratic performances, England’s number one was set for a spell on the bench at Eastlands.

City’s goalscoring power
Troubles on the road were plaguing Manchester City’s title challenge so far. A fourth away defeat would follow in November when they lost 1-0 for the fourth successive year to Sunderland. The back in-favour Bardsley scored the solitary goal. The Citizens had only collected four points from six trips away from the Etihad Stadium.

At home though they were a different proposition. Norwich were battered 7-0 at the start of November on a miserable afternoon that summed up the Canaries season. Three weeks later, Tottenham fell behind inside 13 seconds to a goal from Jesus Navas and ended up shipping six. It seemed like Manchester City were going to be invincible at home.

Asmir Begovic put himself in the select list of goalkeepers to score in the Premier League. The Bosnian’s goal kick inside the opening minute of Stoke’s home match with Southampton looped over a bemused Artur Boruc and into the net with help from the predictable gust at the Britannia Stadium. Despite that, the Saints were in great form as Hull found out a week later. Adam Lallana scored a superb individual goal in a 4-1 victory for the home side. Under the guidance of Mauricio Pochettino, Southampton had climbed into third place in the table, playing some great football and producing top home-grown talent from this country. The likes of Lallana, Luke Shaw and Jay Rodriguez would blossom all season on the south coast.

The first top flight south Wales derby also took place in November. Steven Caulker’s second half header ensured Cardiff beat Swansea 1-0 in the Welsh capital and claimed the bragging rights in the country for now. Another derby in November was the Merseyside clash at Goodison and what a game it was. A late Sturridge equaliser saw Liverpool rescue a 3-3 draw with Everton but had it not been for the goalkeeping exploits of Tim Howard and Simon Mignolet, it could well have ended 8-8! Arsenal suffered only their second defeat of the campaign at Old Trafford. Robin van Persie found the net again against his former employers in United’s 1-0 win.

One team who had a great month were Newcastle United. Helped by the goalscoring exploits of Remy, the creative influence of Yohan Cabaye and some heroic saves by Tim Krul, the Magpies notched together four straight wins with Chelsea and Tottenham among their noticeable scalps. It wasn’t so good for Fulham and after a meek showing in a 3-0 defeat to West Ham United; Martin Jol’s services were dispensed with 24 hours later.

The axe on Christmas
Christmas is normally a time for giving and receiving but they were only giving at the home ground of the champions. The fortress that formally stood around Old Trafford was fast turning into a festive gift shop! First, Moyes could only look on with pain etched on his face as his former club Everton claimed a 1-0 win at the start of the month. Bryan Oviedo grabbed the winner; the Toffees first win at the ground since August 1992. Three days later, it got worse as Newcastle ended their 41-year drought at the Theatre of Dreams. Cabaye scored the solitary goal as United dropped to ninth and 12 points off the top. The board kept faith with ‘The Chosen One…’ for now at least.

Other owners decided not to though. Getting a new manager seemed to be the hottest fashion accessory during winter. Rene Meulensteen succeeded Jol at Fulham but he began with four defeats in six games – the worst was a 6-0 mauling away at Hull City where Huddlestone ended his three-year drought for a goal and got rid of his ‘afro’ haircut with it! West Brom panicked after losing four games in a row and wielded the axe on Steve Clarke. The Scot was placed on gardening leave and was eventually replaced by Pepe Mel.

The end also dawned on Andre Villas-Boas at Tottenham. A 5-0 drubbing at home by free-scoring Liverpool spelt the end for AVB at White Hart Lane and probably in this country too. Tim Sherwood was promoted from the academy into the hotseat on an 18-month contract. Lastly, Mackay was finally given the chop by the clueless Tan at Cardiff on 27 December. He had told his boss to resign or be sacked before a trip to Anfield six days earlier. Mackay survived that game, but not a 3-0 home defeat to Southampton on Boxing Day. Manchester United legend Ole Gunnar Solskjaer was brought in and Mackay took his unfair dismissal to the lawyers as he issued legal action against the Malaysian owner.

Player of the month undoubtedly was Luis Suarez. The Uruguayan was winning back fans and neutrals with his stunning performances and goalscoring exploits. He became the first player in the history of the league to score three hat-tricks against the same opposition as Norwich City once again felt the full force of his power. Suarez scored a stunning four goals in Liverpool’s 5-1 win on 4 December. He added another six during the month, including a double at home to Cardiff and another brace in the Tottenham triumph. Despite losing Sturridge, skipper Steven Gerrard and Sakho to lengthy injury absences – Liverpool were top on Christmas Day.

They ended 2013 though down in fifth spot. Whilst their defensive naivety was exposed in a 6-3 reverse at Manchester City, Arsenal went into the New Year on top of the table, helped by plucky away wins on Boxing Day against West Ham United and three days later on Tyneside over Newcastle United. Liverpool slipped to consecutive defeats over the festive period by the same scoreline (2-1) to Manchester City and Chelsea. With Lukaku banging in the goals, Everton were quietly going about their business, in the top four and having only been beaten twice so far. The bottom three consisted of Sunderland, Fulham and West Ham.

18th century football!  
2014 began with Manchester City in top form and now having sorted out their early difficulties on the road. They started the month in third and ended it top of the pile. Their year began with a 3-2 win on a soaking lunchtime in south Wales over struggling Swansea City.

After getting some luck in a 2-0 triumph against Newcastle United, the club scored their 100th goal incredibly in all competitions by this stage of the year when Cardiff were seen off 4-2. Edin Dzeko was the recipient of this honour. The month concluded with another five-star performance against Tottenham. Sherwood’s men were blown away 5-1 by their opponents. With Hart back at the top of his game after his break from first team action and the likes of Aguero, Dzeko and Negredo smashing in the goals, who could stop Pellegrini’s men?

Arsenal did concede top spot after drawing 2-2 at Southampton but were still right in the heart of the battle. Chelsea too, but they dropped two points in a disappointing scoreless contest with West Ham United. After the game, Mourinho had the cheek to accuse West Ham of playing “18th century football!” Pot, kettle, black spring to mind with this quote Jose!

Sunderland began climbing the table in the right direction and got out of the bottom three for the first time in the season, thanks to the goalscoring exploits of Adam Johnson. He hit a treble in a 4-1 victory over relegation rivals Fulham at Craven Cottage and ended up with an impressive tally of six goals in four matches. The Poyet factor was working on Wearside.

Sunderland’s local rivals suffered a huge blow in the January transfer window as Cabaye was transferred to oil-rich French side PSG and no replacement was brought into Newcastle. Kinnear left his role as director of football shortly afterwards. Arsenal, Liverpool and Manchester City kept their chequebooks in their pockets during the reinforcement month but Chelsea added Nemanja Matic and Mohamed Salah to their ranks and Hull City boss Steve Bruce splashed out £14m on a new strike partnership in Croatian Nikica Jelavic from Everton and Shane Long who was discarded from West Brom’s plans without much of a fight. The biggest transfer though came in Manchester where United shattered their transfer record again – this time to acquire Juan Mata from Chelsea for £38m. Fed up of warming the bench under Mourinho in west London, the Spaniard hoped the move would give him a new lease of life.

Arsenal start to fade
When Arsenal travelled to Anfield to face Liverpool for a lunchtime kick-off on 8 February, they were back on top of the table and seven points clear of their opponents. Liverpool had dropped costly points at home to Aston Villa and away at West Brom and looked to be fighting Tottenham and Everton for the final Champions League spot. By the full-time whistle, both team’s season objectives turned around in different directions.

Arsenal simply couldn’t cope with Liverpool’s fast-paced start. They caved in dramatically, shipping four goals in a breathless first 20 minutes. The only surprise was Suarez didn’t find the target. Martin Skrtel and Raheem Sterling got doubles as the home side won 5-1 – just 10 days after dishing out a 4-0 scoreline on their Merseyside rivals. Daniel Sturridge also scored as part of a run of games where he would find the target in seven successive Premier League encounters.

Arsenal’s challenge started to fade after that result. Four days later, they played out a forgettable 0-0 draw with Manchester United at the Emirates and Liverpool quickly overhauled their deficit to the leaders. In the other big showdown of the month, Mourinho produced a tactical masterclass to frustrate Manchester City at the Etihad. Chelsea became the first team to win at the home of the champions-elect in the campaign as Branislav Ivanovic drilled in the only goal of the game.

With that, Chelsea took control of the title race. A majestic hat-trick from Young Player of the Year Eden Hazard sank Newcastle 3-0 at Stamford Bridge and they ended February as the team to catch. Manchester City’s response to defeat by the Blues was to draw another blank with Norwich at Carrow Road and then see a game with Sunderland postponed by heavy winds and driving rain in the area.

Meanwhile the battle to stay among the elite was intensifying, with almost half the division scrapping for survival. Michael Laudrup became casualty number seven of the Premier League season. The Dane was fired as Swansea slipped into the bottom six following a run of insipid performances. Former captain Gary Monk was appointed to steer the club through the rest of the season and beyond. Fulham then made another change days later. Having collected just three wins from his 12 games, Rene Meulensteen collected his P45. Felix Magath, never relegated as a manager in his days managing eight Bundesliga clubs was brought in to try and rescue the sinking club down by the River Thames. Going in the right direction though were West Ham. Sam Allardyce spearheaded his club from 18th to 10th with four wins in a row, with Kevin Nolan responding to criticism for two childish red cards in quick succession during the winter round of fixtures by scoring six times in these four games.

Pardew’s moment of madness
At around 4.15pm on Saturday, 1 March – Alan Pardew lost the plot and created one of the Premier League’s craziest moments ever seen in its lifespan. With his team cruising at 3-1 up away against Hull City, he reacted badly to receiving a shove from Hull’s David Meyler as the midfielder was trying to get the ball for a throw-in. Pardew (pictured below) leant forward with his head and butted Meyler in a complete moment of madness.
How stupid can you get? Alan Pardew stunned football with this head-butt in March
Pardew was sent to the stands and the book was thrown at him. Newcastle fined him and warned him about his future conduct and the FA banned the Englishman for seven matches – three of which were for permission to even enter the stadium. With Cabaye sold, Remy injured and now their boss public enemy number one Newcastle’s season continued to unravel and they never really recovered.

The same could be said for Manchester United. New low points came in March when both Liverpool and Manchester City won so easily at Old Trafford. The 3-0 scorelines didn’t flatter them and it could have been more in both cases. Liverpool’s visit saw them win three penalties in that match – the first time ever that has happened at the ex-champions’ ground. Steven Gerrard scored two of them but missed the third and the departing captain Nemanja Vidic received a red card against the Merseysiders for the fourth time in his career. Sections of the United support had enough and hired a plane to fly over the stadium during the Aston Villa game at the end of the month with the banner ‘Wrong One – Moyes Out!’ Liverpool fans chose a better banner, going with ‘David Moyes – Footballing Genius!’ Either way, the stressed look on the Scot’s face suggested he was a manager on seriously borrowed time.

Another manager who looked totally crestfallen was Arsene Wenger. Any outside hope Arsenal had of getting back into title contention went when they imploded in his 1000th game in charge at Chelsea. For once, the Blues had a day where they actually enjoyed attacking their opponents. Chelsea won 6-0, their biggest margin of victory ever against the Gunners. The match is also remembered for a calamitous gaffe by referee Andre Marriner. When Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain handled on the goal-line, he correctly awarded a spot-kick, but then sent Kieran Gibbs off the pitch instead! It was another ridiculous moment from the men in the middle who had another season of regularly questionable decisions in key matches.

Mourinho had continued to dismiss Chelsea’s title claims, even when they briefly went seven points clear after handing Tottenham another hefty beating in mid-March. His claims seemed to be validated when his side slipped to shock consecutive defeats on the road. First was a loss to Aston Villa, where Willian, Ramires and Mourinho himself were all sent off. A fortnight later, a rare error from John Terry saw the defender head into his own net to seal a surprising 1-0 victory to Crystal Palace. When Liverpool beat Tottenham 4-0 the next day, the Reds suddenly had the destiny of the title in their own hands for the first time.

Gerrard’s emotion and slip
April was always going to pack a punch at both ends of the table. At the top, three sides could win the title, whilst at least seven clubs were still fighting for their lives to escape relegation.

The month started with a potential Champions League shootout between Everton and Arsenal. Wenger’s side had now slipped into the clutches of the impressive Toffees, who were in a sequence of seven successive victories. Everton outclassed Arsenal on that day, winning 3-0 to take control of the race for fourth. Unfortunately for Roberto Martinez’s side, three defeats in the run-in ensured they finished seven points off the top four, but with 72 points, still set a record points tally for the club in their Premier League life. All of the top three won, although Manchester City’s 4-1 success against Southampton was overshadowed by a cruel ACL injury to Saints striker Jay Rodriguez that meant he would miss the World Cup finals for England. On that weekend, Chris Hughton lost his job at Norwich following a home defeat to West Brom. Neil Adams took over for the final five games and with a devilish run-in against Liverpool, Manchester United, Chelsea and Arsenal; relegation looked all but a formality for the Canaries.

Whilst Chelsea were still in the fight, many believed the showdown on Sunday, 13 April between Liverpool and Manchester City would be the title decider. It came at a charged time for LFC, with the 25th anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster lurking around the corner. After an impeccable tribute to the 96 who never came home in 1989 from an FA Cup semi-final, the match lived up to all expectations. Goals from Sterling and Skrtel inside half an hour had Liverpool 2-0 up and their fans daring to dream that the impossible could become the possible. City responded in the second half with two goals from David Silva and had the momentum at 2-2. Then with 12 minutes left, a mistake by City captain Vincent Kompany of all people allowed Philippe Coutinho (pictured below) to strike the winner for the home side. At the final whistle, skipper Steven Gerrard was seen struggling to hold back the tears. The trophy that had eluded him throughout his career was now in touching distance. Liverpool had it to lose now.
Philippe Coutinho hit a late winner as Liverpool beat Manchester City in an April cracker
Sunderland suddenly got into the equation. When they surrendered 5-1 away at Tottenham, the Black Cats had collected one point from a possible 21 and were bottom, seven points adrift of safety. Gus Poyet said afterwards that they needed ‘a miracle.’ The miracle began at the Etihad where Connor Wickham scored twice and only a calamitous Vito Mannone error in the 89th minute denied the visitors a shock win. The draw gave them confidence though and they then outplayed Chelsea on their own backyard. Fabio Borini’s 78th minute penalty buried the Blues as far as their title challenge was concerned. Mourinho’s sarcastic comments about referee Mike Dean afterwards led to another fine from the authorities and more criticism about his side’s style of play. It was now a two-horse race.

Liverpool still had it in their own hands, with a six point lead over City, although the Citizens had a game in hand. The decisive moment came in the 44th minute of Liverpool’s home game with Chelsea on 27th April. Gerrard slipped on the halfway line and Demba Ba got away from the defence before finishing coolly infront of The Kop. On a day when Liverpool could have won it, their main players had an off-day. Despite parking the bus infront of the Anfield goal, the Blues ended up comfortable 2-0 winners as Willian scored a second in stoppage time. Later than afternoon, City won 2-0 at Crystal Palace to take command of the race for the title.

At the bottom, Cardiff’s 4-0 defeat to Sunderland left them in a precarious position. Solskjaer had only managed to spearhead his strugglers to three wins since taking over on 2 January. Although they won back-to-back games over Aston Villa and Norwich at the start of the month, Fulham were favourites to join Cardiff in the Championship after throwing away a 2-0 lead to draw 2-2 at home to Hull City. Sunderland’s great escape had meant Norwich were now favourites for the third spot. Swansea, Hull, West Ham and incredibly, Crystal Palace all achieved mathematical survival in April. Palace strung a fantastic run of five successive wins to take them to mid-table from almost certain relegation five months earlier. Pulis was the deserving winner of the Premier League Manager of the Year award.

David Moyes’ miserable tenure at Manchester United also finally came to an end in April. He was never going to look forward with any envy to a trip to Everton on 20 April. The home supporters enjoyed taunting their former boss as they won at a stroll 2-0. 48 hours later and with no hope of Champions League football, Moyes was finally given his marching orders after a nightmare year that has severely damaged his reputation in this country as a manager. Playing legend Ryan Giggs took charge for the remaining four games of the season, and would hang up his boots at the end of the campaign to become the assistant to Moyes’ long-term successor which is the experienced Dutch coach Louis van Gaal.

City win it, Liverpool bin it
The final month of the year began with the first two issues to be settled. Cardiff and Fulham were both relegated on the final Saturday of the season after messy campaigns for the pair. Cardiff lost 3-0 to Newcastle – one of only two sides the Magpies beat after the Pardew head-butt at Hull. Fulham put in their worst display of the season away at Stoke City. They were beaten 4-1 and it could have been more. For the first time in his managerial career, Felix Magath had been relegated but both he and Solskjaer have already insisted they will be staying. Despite a shocking run of form that saw them collect just four points in their last eight matches, Paul Lambert guided Aston Villa just about to safety and Midlands rivals West Brom did the same. Lambert will stay in the Villa Park dugout, but Pepe Mel left by mutual consent after just five rocky months at the Hawthorns.

Back in the title race and Manchester City triumphed 3-2 away to Everton. Usually the club’s bogey ground with only one win at Goodison since 2001, City fought back from conceding a magnificent opener from the talented Ross Barkley to win in an end-to-end contest. This defeat for Everton handed fourth spot to Arsenal, who also would go on to win silverware for the first time in nine years after a hard-fought extra-time win against Hull in the FA Cup final.

It was over to Liverpool then on Bank Holiday Monday against Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park. Win and they would at least keep the pressure on City but they binned it. Cruising at 3-0 up on the hour mark with goals from Joe Allen, Daniel Sturridge and PFA Player of the Year Luis Suarez, their gung-ho approach backfired. Pushing for a fourth rather than shutting up shop, they allowed the Eagles to incredibly draw it back to 3-3 with three goals in the last 12 minutes – two coming from substitute Dwight Gayle. The expression on the faces of the players and Brendan Rodgers at the full-time whistle was the telling point. The fight was all but over. 48 hours later, City’s routine 4-0 win over Aston Villa meant they went into the final day with a handy two-point cushion. On the same night, Sunderland’s great escape was complete after defeating West Brom 2-0, relegating Norwich City in the process.

So for the seventh time in the league’s history, the title battle went to the final day although it looked like a formality. Manchester City only needed a point at home to West Ham, who had nothing to play for but pride. Should they blow it, a Liverpool win against Newcastle might have been enough. They were behind at half-time to the Magpies though, as Martin Skrtel scored his fourth OG of the season, a new record in the Premier League. City were 1-0 up when Samir Nasri drilled them ahead in the 35th minute. West Ham never threatened and didn’t even register a noticeable shot on target at the Etihad and when Vincent Kompany stabbed home a second goal in the early exchanges of the second half, it was all over. Liverpool did recover at Anfield to win 2-1 but it was too late. Their 24-year wait for a league title goes on and so, the crown stays in Manchester but returns to the blue half of the city. Chelsea finished third, followed by Arsenal, Everton and Tottenham who sacked Tim Sherwood after the season’s conclusion. Seventh is Manchester United’s lowest in Premier League history and ensures they won’t be in Europe for the first time since 1990.

It was a campaign of change, a season of revolution and evolution. A year where reputations were both created and destroyed. The Barclays Premier League season of 2013-14 was a classic and a massive improvement on the stale 2012-13 edition. Liverpool came so close, Chelsea gave it a good go but it was Manchester City who ended up deserved champions. The next chapter in 2014-15 could be the most intriguing to date.

The UoN Experience - How Good is University?

By Simon Wright – Follow me on Twitter @Siwri88

As the second anniversary passes which signalled the end of my education life and the finale to my journalism degree at the University of Northampton, I have decided to share my own personal experiences from my three years at UoN. This includes a look into how good is the University in general, a critical assessment of the video products I produced and what happened after graduation.

The final article looks at the University’s reputation in general. I ask whether I made the right decision in going to UoN, and summarise everything about the experience as a whole.

Two years have now fully passed and it is amazing to think of the time that just flies. Even in my role today, I sometimes get sudden jolts of memories from the UoN experience. It was a magnificent time and I certainly don’t regret going.

I was a late bloomer. I had the chance to go to University in 2007, two years before I actually did. I dropped out of the UCAS application process quite early on in sixth form because after some iffy AS level results, I knew I wasn’t ready for the challenge. I needed more time to prepare myself, both mentally and even psychologically.

It was the right decision at the time and still is now. If I had gone in 07, I think I might have struggled really badly and not lasted much more than six weeks. By not going until 2009, I think I became a better person. I wasn’t as selfish and greedy as I was in early forms of education.

Is UoN the best out there?
No is the simple answer to the above question, but it shouldn’t be either. There are over 200 universities across the United Kingdom and Northampton has plenty of competition in the Midlands region, let alone the rest of the country. Alternatives include Leicester, Nottingham, UCMK in Milton Keynes, Bedford, East Anglia and Coventry. There is always plenty of choice for the prospective student.
The home of British motorsport is Silverstone, based in Northampton
However, what UoN does is provide a good choice for anyone to study. There is good nightlife, you can’t fault the transport links with many other UK towns and cities, the town is home to the British Formula One Grand Prix (motorsport action from a media day pictured above) and excellent rugby union side Northampton Saints, as well as Northampton Town and Coventry City in the Football League and there is a reminder of both the new, regenerated areas and the more classical, traditional locations.

Sure it might lack some of the character of other places up and down the land but it isn’t as rubbish as some think it is. It is a nice place to settle down into a routine. The University’s Park Campus is an excellent, modern campus to be based at and to study on. Whilst Avenue Campus (where I was mainly based) looks a bit outdated, that still offers decent facilities and students in the School of the Arts have flourished here with excellent work in journalism, creative arts, fashion, literature and computing modules amongst many.

In conclusion, I had other options when I applied to UCAS for the second time. Among them were Middlesbrough (Teeside), Staffordshire and Bedfordshire. I chose Northampton because I felt it could offer me all I wanted in terms of a job outside of Uni, comfortable accommodation and a nice place to study and socialise. I know I made the right decision.

You can’t fault Northampton’s employability record too. It is among the top five in the UK. Over 90 per cent of graduates get a graduate job within the first year of getting that all-important certificate. That is excellent going.

Do I regret going when I did?
If I didn’t go to University when I did, I know I won’t have. I went at the right time for me. It meant I was more mature and probably less wild than what I was in 2007 but that was a good thing. 

Two years at Milton Keynes College was the best choice after sixth form. Not only did I get a BTEC National Diploma and learned plenty about the media industry, it put me in good stead for the future. I became more independent, wiser and more confident without showing a pure arrogance.

If I have a regret about my education, it was not going to MK College earlier than I did, but if I hadn’t, I won’t have got my A Levels in English Literature and General Studies.

Also, if I had made the step to University earlier than I did, I would have never met the people I did on my course such as Ellie, Tamika, Chris, Shane, Josie, Farida and everyone else. I was lucky to meet so many fantastic people and there was no guarantee that would have happened in 2007.

So for me, there are no regrets about going when I did to Uni and no regrets about the Uni I went to. I will always thank the University of Northampton for helping me, giving me a second home and will hold them grateful for the experience.

In summary, not everyone wants to go to University. For some, it doesn’t suit them but if you have a chance, then take the opportunity. It a fantastic experience and that is from someone who knows.

The UoN Experience - Graduation Aftermath and Advice

By Simon Wright – Follow me on Twitter @Siwri88

As the second anniversary passes which signalled the end of my education life and the finale to my journalism degree at the University of Northampton, I have decided to share my own personal experiences from my three years at UoN. This includes a look into how good is the University in general, a critical assessment of the video products I produced and what happened after graduation.

The penultimate article looks at the graduation aftermath and advice for those who are approaching the end of their degrees. The hard work that I had to endure during my degree was only about to get harder.

Just over two months after I officially finished my degree, it was time to put the smart suit on again and get ready for graduation day itself. Held at the Northampton Derngate Theatre, it was a polished and professional occasion with many people graduating on the same day (pictured with fellow journalism graduate Tamika below), not just from the School of the Arts but other areas of the University too.
With fellow hard-working graduate and close friend Tamika on graduation day in 2012
I had a big fear of tripping over my gown when it came to collecting my certificate but luckily it all went to plan. I shook the vice-chancellor’s hand and went off the stage feeling immensely proud of what I had achieved.

The target I had set from an early stage of the journalism degree was to achieve a 2:1. The economic recession was already in rapid form by the time I had started in Northampton and I knew it was going to be a hard aftermath once it was all complete. Therefore a 2:2 final classification was going to be totally useless to my future objectives.

So I was ecstatic to achieve the targeted aim and quite comfortably actually. In fact, I don’t think I was too far away from achieving a First Class Honours degree which is the top honour you could get. Honestly though if I had got that – I would have felt slightly undeserving of it. Whilst I had worked very hard, there were some weaknesses in my first year work and the design module in second year had been a spectacular flop. I was more than happy with the 2:1 and no-one can take that away.

Only one student in our group got First Class Honours and they totally deserved it too. By living, sleeping and breathing journalism, the individual got the result that fully recognised their efforts and I was proud to see that too.

From what I can recall, all of us graduated from journalism. The majority got their awards on the day I did in mid-July 2012; some had to wait until February 2013 but it was a proud and massive day in my life.

Tough roads lied in wait though.

Starting experience
To start with, any graduate just needs to gain experience in a working environment and if that means working without pay for a few weeks, then do it. It is not officially ‘volunteering’ but can feel like it.

This might be sending some articles online, to carrying out simple tasks around an office. It does mean learning on the job. However know when to stop when you start not to be recognised for working.

For me, I didn’t do that. By the time graduation day took place, I was already contributing to writing for a football website called Total Football Magazine. Initially it was preview pieces on matches for the European Football Championship tournament that summer in Poland/Ukraine. At first I didn’t mind doing it for free because I needed to get my name out there in the media spectrum. As the weeks and months went on though, I started to feel more and more dissatisfied.

In September of that year, I was promoted from a role of writer to deputy editor. However it still was unpaid and on reflection, I should have rejected the offer straightaway and refused to work unless I received some sort of salary contribution. Without any income coming in, things became more desperate. I applied for hundreds of positions and didn’t have one single interview. On top of that, the editor of who I was working for, was dabbling in other projects and showed little confidence in my abilities.

A paid freelance contract was agreed but eventually fell through, typically before Christmas 2012. In reality it was never going to happen. I kept emailing the editor for reassurances on the deal but although he did say it would go through, the replies were never convincing. I’m glad I stopped when I did and the website ultimately collapsed as a result. Whilst it was a good starting point, I was used by the system and seven months of effort came to nothing. It left me in a difficult position.

Take career guidance
May last year saw me have three one-to-one sessions with a careers advisor from the National Careers Service. Looking back at it now, it became a very valuable service. I learned some new skills in how to approach applying for positions. It was the guidance I was looking for.

Now that isn’t exciting and when I was first given the chance for some meetings with NCS, I wasn’t sure if it was needed. Yet after the three one-to-one sessions with the advisor I had, I felt much better and I had more luck/responses in applying for roles, even if some of these were still unsuccessful. Even do some unorthodox solutions; maybe advertise your services on Gumtree. It might not work, but if you don’t try in this environment, you won’t succeed.

You have to keep trying, even in the tough times. It can be morale zapping and on the first anniversary of my degree ending last year, I was in a thoroughly miserable place; there was no two ways about it.

The breakthrough
The breakthrough for me finally came last July.

I got calls for three interviews in seven days. First was for a football website company called Fanatix based in London. Second was for a publishing role with Topps Europe in Milton Keynes and third was as an online editor for the Phones4U website over in Staffordshire.

Ultimately I only attended the first two, as I had accepted a role before the Phones4U interview took place. It was the publishing job I took with Topps, which meant I could stay locally without having to move down the country and I could finally say I had a reason for why I did go to University.

I enjoy the job a lot, although there are difficult days as expected. I’ve been with the company now for just over 10 months and they’ve flown by in terms of time. The hard work paid off with a temporary contract becoming a short-term extension last October, followed by a permanent contract before Christmas last year. What a difference 12 months made.

There will be further challenges ahead, further goals too and probably movements in the future. However the journey to the golden sky of financial earning and security in a graduate job are complete for now.

Final piece of advice for graduates
My final piece of advice to those who are just entering the job market after graduation, or those even still looking to find something; don’t give up at all. Quitters never win on this planet and that’s a fact.

Apply for what you can. There will be rejections but even something like a simple email rejection response can be seen as a bonus. It means the company have clearly read what you’ve sent them and they probably just had a better qualified or skilled candidate ahead. Don’t forget – what you could be applying for might be a very popular role. If a recruiter gets 100 applications for one open position, don’t be surprised to find out they only pick five potential candidates for interview and you miss out.

There will be times of frustration and you wonder why you bother. That is bound to happen, but stay strong in the tough times. Perhaps take a motivational quote or an inspiring song and that should keep positivity up. And venture into every application with a frame of positivity. Going into this with negative thoughts will lead to a shoddy application and the recruiter will take one quick look, screw it up and chuck it in the bin. That is a waste of everyone’s time.

The most important avenue is to never give up. Trust in yourself and you can achieve anything.  

Sunday 18 May 2014

The UoN Experience - The Video Projects

By Simon Wright – Follow me on Twitter @Siwri88

As the second anniversary passes which signalled the end of my education life and the finale to my journalism degree at the University of Northampton, I have decided to share my own personal experiences from my three years at UoN. This includes a look into how good the University is in general, a critical assessment of the video projects I produced and what happened after graduation.

Books played their part in the final major project in third year
Whilst there were many assignments I did in my time at the University of Northampton, some were better than others. That includes video work which took on a bigger role as the years progressed. For the first time in the public eye and with the help of my YouTube account, here is some of the video work I did throughout the three years as I assess the strengths and weaknesses of each piece.

I am working on a video showreel which will go online both on YouTube and on Viewing Perspectives later in the summer.

The Credit Crunch – Filmed February 2010
Group: Simon Wright, Emily Shears, Miles Aitkenhead


This was the first video project I was involved with which was a short exercise project in first year, mainly in how to use the video cameras, film an interview and edit it into a sharp news piece. There were no prizes for this and that was rather thankful.

At college, I was so frightened of the practical equipment; I didn’t even want to switch a video camera on for fear of breaking it! Luckily that was something I didn’t worry about at University.
I was paired up with Emily and Miles and we basically had to film each other, and interview one another on how the credit crunch had affected students’ lifestyle at University, basically (their own life).

It’s far from a classic and I look better in another piece a few months later, but it was a start and I do believe that the clear errors in this film had been eradicated in the next two years.

Strengths: Clearly spoken throughout, honest answers in the questions and clear Astons.
Weaknesses: Lack of weather conditions consistency, jumpy camera shots and the size of the picture frame.

Northampton Lift Tower – Filmed April 2010
Group: Simon Wright, Tamika Short, Rochelle Lye, Todd Murphy


The first year TV assignment involved a trip to the iconic Northampton Lift Tower, which is regularly seen over the skyline whenever you approach the town. There had been talk on it reopening to the public as a tourist attraction after it had been shutdown 13 years earlier.

Another student took control of the presenting duties and I resorted to doing the editing work, which was one of my best technical skills. I didn’t think it was a bad piece but there was most definitely room for improvement.

There were some excellent and useful interviews but heavy wind noise and a huge cut on the final cue of the presenter’s closing speech was not great – especially when there was little I could do about this in the editing suite.

Strengths: Good interview subjects, mix of interviews, some solid editing transitions.
Weaknesses: Presenter not in the centre of the shot, cut on the presenter’s closing speech, Wind noise, a far too long introduction.

Vision Products Opening – Filmed January 2011
Group: Me


This was a very interesting project which turned out to be my unexpected TV piece in second year. A notification about this appeared on the student dashboard a week before the official opening of the Precision Manufacturing plant in Brackmills, but as it was offered to the Monday workshop group (I was in the Tuesday group), it looked like a non-starter for myself.

However when only one person volunteered to cover this, I decided this was a great opportunity and not one I should turn down. However when the second person didn’t show on the day, it was left to me to do camera work, the interview and the editing all by myself. Not easy but just about manageable.

Vision Products had decided to open their plant up in Northampton rather than move abroad to provide jobs for locals in a difficult economic climate at the time. I went on the day when it was officially opened and it was an interesting morning with the head of marketing solutions, Pete French and the workforce.

I was generally happy with this – there were big improvements to first year video work and put me in good stead for the final year major project. Of course, there were weaknesses as expected but for a one-man job, it came out rather well.

Strengths: Decent cutaways, strong narration, excellent interview with the boss
Weaknesses: Solo job made it trickier, another interview would have been ideal, doing the introduction on site in Brackmills rather than in an editing room at University.

Local Libraries under Threat – Filmed February 2011
Group: Simon Wright, Tamika Short


With some doubt over whether I could use the Vision Products piece, I decided to do a back-up in reserve which featured the threat of closures of local libraries within Northampton.

I went with colleague and close friend Tamika to do some filming outside St. James’ Library, which was one of the libraries that had been under risk of being shutdown in cost-cutting measures by the council.

I remember the days we went were cold, wet and miserable and filming next to a gun shop was slightly disturbing! Generally, it wasn’t an awful piece but I preferred the earlier camera TV report I had already done due a lack of consistency with voiceovers and a struggle with cutaway shots as we didn’t get permission to sadly film inside St. James’ Library.

Strengths: Point of the story was made, good main interview piece to camera
Weaknesses: Stumbling voiceovers, lack of decent cutaways due to filming restrictions, look too small in the pieces to camera.

Parking Problems Documentary – Filmed April 2011
Group: Tamika Short, Simon Wright, Chris Ola, Parris O’Sullivan


The documentary for Film Style & Technique was put together in the first four months of 2011 and this is as far as I’m concerned, the best TV project I did in the three years of studying at the University of Northampton.

Paired up with Tamika again and fellow journalism students Chris and Parris, our aim was to create a five-minute documentary on an issue around University. I don’t quite know how we ended up doing something on car parking prices and lack of spacing around both campuses but it turned into an intriguing documentary.

There was a slow start but we got a fantastic amount of interviews (largely down to contacts of Chris and Parris), leaving Tamika and me to work on the editing, camera work and paperwork elements.

The final result was a balanced documentary that highlighted the problems and expressed students concerns but also allowed a University staff member to respond to the issues raised. I don’t think it could have gone any better. It was a great team and I found a real buzz in putting this together.

Strengths: Variety of interviews, good use of music, balanced piece with no 100% bias, decent cutaways.
Weaknesses: Some audio levels of the voiceovers weren’t fully equalised, microphone cables evident in occasional interviews.

The Current Affairs Radio Show – Recorded April 2012
Group: Lauren Bowen, Miles Aitkenhead, Simon Wright


In terms of audio work, the best piece which came in third and final year. I never really enjoyed studying radio but creating a radio show was an interesting aspect. It was another one of those modules where the theory wasn’t exactly thrilling but the practical side was much better.

As individuals, we had to produce two features for a 30-minute radio show. One was feature length of approximately five minutes and another was a short, sharp two-minute piece at best.

Our lecturer then paired us into groups of three. I worked with Lauren and Miles on this and we immediately gelled as a group and were well organised in putting this together. The Current Affairs Show features pieces on Human Trafficking, Racism in Football, Film and Music Reviews, the building of a University Technical College and a feature on the fallout of the 2011 UK riots after the shooting of Mark Duggan in Tottenham.

The final result was a polished, strong piece of current affairs programming.

Strengths: Working in such a strong group, a wide range of topics, strong links into pieces, adverts to break the programme up.
Weaknesses: None

Modern Technology – Filmed May 2012
Group: Simon Wright


And so to the final piece of video work and this was my final project of the three years at the University of Northampton. I chose to look at the advancements in modern technology and picked three aspects of the new enforcements on our everyday lives; eBooks, the MP3 music revolution and smartphones.

I got an excellent response to an online survey I created, came up with some strong interviews with varying opinions, and by doing the piece by myself with only requests for a few people to be involved in some cutaway shots – I did a professional and clean job of this 10-minute feature.

I wouldn’t change much on this if I did it again. Maybe work on hiding microphone wiring and positioning the camera better to centralise my interview subjects but I think this was a fitting end to my three-year degree.

Strengths: Wide variety of interviews, no heavy music reliance, doing online surveys and social media interaction, strong introduction and title sequence.

Weaknesses: Some static cutaways, a couple of interviews weren’t centralised enough, microphone wiring use.