About: 1998-99 season   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/uJ9I5dRX4Ayejh2e__NhQA==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The 1998-99 season was Liverpool's 107th season of football since they were established. This season saw the start of the joint management between Roy Evans and Gerard Houllier, until Evans left in November to leave Houllier as the sole manager. The season was largely mediocre, as Liverpool achieved a seventh place finish, and were knocked out of all cup competitions relatively early. Michael Owen and Robbie Fowler were in hot scoring form, tallying 41 goals between them.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • 1998-99 season
rdfs:comment
  • The 1998-99 season was Liverpool's 107th season of football since they were established. This season saw the start of the joint management between Roy Evans and Gerard Houllier, until Evans left in November to leave Houllier as the sole manager. The season was largely mediocre, as Liverpool achieved a seventh place finish, and were knocked out of all cup competitions relatively early. Michael Owen and Robbie Fowler were in hot scoring form, tallying 41 goals between them.
  • The 1998–99 season was the most successful in the history of Manchester United Football Club. After finishing the previous season without winning any titles, United won a treble of trophies (the Premier League, FA Cup and UEFA Champions League), the first side in English football to achieve such a feat. During the campaign United lost only five times, including a one-off Charity Shield fixture, in the League Cup against eventual winners Tottenham Hotspur and their only home defeat, a league match against Middlesbrough in December 1998. A run of 33 games unbeaten in all competitions began on 26 December at home to Nottingham Forest.
dcterms:subject
NextSeason
  • 1999(xsd:integer)
League
  • 7(xsd:integer)
Division
  • Premier League
PrevSeason
  • 1997(xsd:integer)
Manager
  • Roy Evans and Gerard Houllier
Average
  • 39427(xsd:integer)
overalltop
facuptop
leaguetop
leaguecuptop
facup
  • 4(xsd:integer)
europetop
dbkwik:liverpoolfc...iPageUsesTemplate
Europe
  • UEFA Cup: 3rd round
leaguecup
  • 4(xsd:integer)
Captain
abstract
  • The 1998–99 season was the most successful in the history of Manchester United Football Club. After finishing the previous season without winning any titles, United won a treble of trophies (the Premier League, FA Cup and UEFA Champions League), the first side in English football to achieve such a feat. During the campaign United lost only five times, including a one-off Charity Shield fixture, in the League Cup against eventual winners Tottenham Hotspur and their only home defeat, a league match against Middlesbrough in December 1998. A run of 33 games unbeaten in all competitions began on 26 December at home to Nottingham Forest. Veteran players Brian McClair and Gary Pallister, along with a host of younger and less experienced players such as goalkeeper Kevin Pilkington and striker Graeme Tomlinson, had left the club before the season began. The big news of the pre-season was the arrival of Dutch defender Jaap Stam for a club record fee of £10.75 million. Other additions included striker Dwight Yorke and Swedish winger Jesper Blomqvist. Goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel announced his intention to leave the club after eight years at Old Trafford, joining Sporting Clube de Portugal at the end of the season. The team's never-say-die attitude, instilled in previous seasons, was key to their success as the players often thrived in difficult situations. The highlight was United's dramatic comeback in the Champions League final, when Teddy Sheringham and Ole Gunnar Solskjær each scored in injury time to overturn Bayern Munich's first-half lead. David Beckham was runner up to Rivaldo for 1999's European Footballer of the Year and FIFA World Player of the Year awards. Fans and writers regard the treble haul as manager Alex Ferguson's finest hour, although he dismissed that assertion in later years. Tens of thousands of fans lined the streets of Manchester to welcome the team as the season drew to a close. In recognition of his achievements Ferguson was awarded a knighthood, and handed the Freedom of the City of Glasgow in November 1999. By the end of the season Manchester United had become the world’s richest football club, and the most valuable sporting brand worldwide. The club was also at the centre of a takeover bid by BSkyB, which was blocked by the Monopolies and Mergers Commission in March 1999. In Out Premier League FA Cup League Cup UEFA Champions League Qualifying Road Group Stage Knockout Stage Squad statistics
  • The 1998-99 season was Liverpool's 107th season of football since they were established. This season saw the start of the joint management between Roy Evans and Gerard Houllier, until Evans left in November to leave Houllier as the sole manager. The season was largely mediocre, as Liverpool achieved a seventh place finish, and were knocked out of all cup competitions relatively early. Michael Owen and Robbie Fowler were in hot scoring form, tallying 41 goals between them.
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