1999–2000 season | |||
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Chairman | Rikki Hunt (until January 2000) Clive Puffett (from January 2000) |
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Manager |
Jimmy Quinn (until May 2000) Colin Todd (from May 2000) |
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Stadium | The County Ground | ||
First Division | 24th (relegated) | ||
FA Cup | Third round | ||
League Cup | First round | ||
Top goalscorer | Hay (10) | ||
Highest home attendance | 12,397 vs. Manchester City (1 April 2000) | ||
Lowest home attendance | 4,701 vs. Huddersfield Town (7 March 2000) | ||
Average home league attendance | 6,977 | ||
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During the 1999–2000 English football season, Swindon Town F.C. competed in the Football League First Division.
Swindon's financial problems came to a head during the 1999–2000 season when in January 2000 Swindon—£4m in debt and losing £25,000 a week—went into administration for the first time. Chairman Rikki Hunt was forced to resign and 15 members of staff were made redundant. At one point manager Jimmy Quinn was told not to pick midfielder Robin Hulbert because one more appearance would trigger a £25,000 payment to Everton under the terms of his 1996 transfer. Swindon's future was safeguarded when a consortium headed by business tycoon Terry Brady took over the club and they came out of administration towards the end of the season. But it was too late to save Swindon's place in Division One — they had already been relegated in bottom place. The club's new owner sacked manager Jimmy Quinn and appointed Colin Todd — who had won promotion to the Premiership with Bolton in 1997 — as manager, in hope of getting the club's fortunes back on track.
P = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; F = Goals for; A = Goals against; Pts = Points
Source: Soccerbase: 1999-2000 Football League First Division table
Source: 11v11.com: 1999-2000 Swindon Town results
Ground: A = Away; H = Home. Result: D = Draw; L = Loss; W = Win; P = Postponed.
Swindon Town's score comes first
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.