1994–95 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season explained

League Topscorer:Bright (11)
Season Topscorer:Bright (13)
Highest Attendance:34,051 vs Tottenham Hotspur
(20 Aug 1994, Premier League)
Lowest Attendance:15,705 vs Bradford City
(21 Sep 1994, League Cup)
Average Attendance:26,572 (league only)
Nextseason:1995–96

The 1994–95 season was Sheffield Wednesday F.C.'s 128th season. They competed in the twenty-two team Premiership, the top tier of English football, finishing thirteenth.

Season summary

Sheffield Wednesday were among the pre-season favourites for a UEFA Cup places, having finished seventh in the first two Premiership seasons, third in the last First Division season in 1992 and winning the League Cup in 1991, with many fine players still on the club's payroll. But they were still without striker David Hirst for much of the season due to injury, and this played at least some part in the Owls enduring their worst league form since relegation in 1990.

Right up till early May, the Owls were in real danger of relegation and this was enough for the club's board, who wielded the axe on manager Trevor Francis after four years in charge.[1] His successor was the former Luton Town and Tottenham Hotspur manager David Pleat, who looked to the continent in hope of returning the Owls to their winning ways and brought in Belgian forward Marc Degryse.

Final league table

See main article: 1994–95 FA Premier League.

Results summary
Results by round

Results

Sheffield Wednesday's score comes first[2]

Legend

WinDrawLoss

FA Premier League

DateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
20 August 1994 Tottenham HotspurH3–434,051Hirst, Calderwood (own goal), Petrescu
24 August 1994 Queens Park RangersA2–312,788Sheridan, Hyde
27 August 1994 WimbledonA1–07,453Watson
31 August 1994 Norwich CityH0–025,072
10 September 1994 Nottingham ForestA1–422,022Hyde
17 September 1994 Manchester CityH1–126,776Watson
26 September 1994 Leeds UnitedH1–123,227Bright
1 October 1994 LiverpoolA1–431,493Nolan
8 October 1994 Manchester UnitedH1–033,441Hirst
16 October 1994 Ipswich TownA2–113,073Bright, Hirst
22 October 1994 Newcastle UnitedA1–234,408Taylor
29 October 1994 ChelseaH1–125,450Bright
2 November 1994 Blackburn RoversH0–124,207
6 November 1994 ArsenalA0–033,705
19 November 1994 West Ham UnitedH1–025,300Petrescu
27 November 1994 Aston VillaA1–125,082Atherton
3 December 1994 Crystal PalaceH1–021,930Bart-Williams
10 December 1994 Tottenham HotspurA1–325,912Nolan
17 December 1994 Queens Park RangersH0–222,766
26 December 1994 EvertonA4–137,080Bright, Whittingham (2), Ingesson
28 December 1994 Coventry CityH5–126,056Bright (2), Waddle, Whittingham (2)
31 December 1994 Leicester CityA1–020,624Hyde
2 January 1995 SouthamptonH1–128,424Hyde
14 January 1995 ChelseaA1–117,285Nolan
21 January 1995 Newcastle UnitedH0–031,215
23 January 1995 West Ham UnitedA2–014,554Waddle, Bright
4 February 1995 ArsenalH3–123,468Petrescu, Ingesson, Bright
12 February 1995 Blackburn RoversA1–322,223Waddle
18 February 1995 Aston VillaH1–224,063Bright
25 February 1995 LiverpoolH1–231,964Bart-Williams
4 March 1995 Leeds UnitedA1–033,750Waddle
8 March 1995 Norwich CityA0–013,530
11 March 1995 WimbledonH0–120,395
14 March 1995 Crystal PalaceA1–210,422Whittingham
18 March 1995 Manchester CityA2–323,355Hyde, Whittingham
1 April 1995 Nottingham ForestH1–730,060Bright (pen)
8 April 1995 Leicester CityH1–022,551Whittingham
15 April 1995 Coventry CityA0–215,710
17 April 1995 EvertonH0–027,880
29 April 1995 SouthamptonA0–015,189
7 May 1995 Manchester UnitedA0–143,868
14 May 1995 Ipswich TownH4–130,213Whittingham (2), Bart-Williams, Bright

FA Cup

See main article: 1994–95 FA Cup.

!Round!!Date!!Opponent!!Venue!!Result!!Attendance!!Goalscorers
R37 January 1995 GillinghamA2–110,425Waddle, Bright
R430 January 1995 Wolverhampton WanderersH0–021,757
R4R8 February 1995 Wolverhampton WanderersA1–1 (lost 3–4 on pens)28,544Bright

League Cup

See main article: 1994–95 Football League Cup.

!Round!!Date!!Opponent!!Venue!!Result!!Attendance!!Goalscorers
R2 1st Leg 21 September 1994 Bradford CityH2–115,705Taylor, Hyde
R2 2nd Leg 4 October 1994 Bradford CityA1–1 (won 3–2 on agg)13,092Bart-Williams
R326 October 1994 SouthamptonH1–016,715Bart-Williams
R430 November 1994 ArsenalA0–227,390

Players

First-team squad

Squad at end of season[3]

Reserve squad

Transfers

In

DatePosNameFromFee
1 June 1994DFPeter AthertonCoventry City£800,000
12 July 1994MFIan TaylorPort Vale£1,000,000
6 August 1994DFDan PetrescuGenoa£1,300,000
17 August 1994DFIan NolanTranmere Rovers£1,500,000
1 September 1994MFKlas IngessonPSV Eindhoven£800,000
21 December 1994FWGuy WhittinghamAston Villa£700,000
9 January 1995FWO'Neill DonaldsonMansfield Town£50,000

Out

DatePosNameToFee
30 June 1994MFCarlton PalmerLeeds United£2,600,000
4 July 1994DFNigel WorthingtonLeeds United£325,000
19 July 1994DFNigel PearsonMiddlesbrough£500,000
1 August 1994DFPhil KingAston Villa£200,000
12 August 1994FWLeroy ChambersChester CityFree transfer
8 September 1994FWNigel JemsonNotts County£300,000
5 October 1994DFSimon ColemanBolton Wanderers£350,000
21 December 1994MFIan TaylorAston Villa£1,000,000
17 March 1995FWGordon WatsonSouthampton£1,200,000

Transfers in: £6,150,000

Transfers out: £6,475,000

Total spending: £325,000

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Metcalf. Rupert. Francis the latest victim. https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220501/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/francis-the-latest-victim-1620405.html . 1 May 2022 . subscription . live. The Independent. 21 May 1995. 16 November 2013.
  2. Web site: Sheffield Wednesday 1994-1995 Results - statto.com . 25 January 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130326004522/http://www.statto.com/football/teams/sheffield-wednesday/1994-1995/results . 26 March 2013 . dead . dmy-all .
  3. Web site: FootballSquads - Sheffield Wednesday - 1994/95. www.footballsquads.co.uk.