2002–03 season | |||
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Chairman | Freddie Shepherd | ||
Manager | Bobby Robson | ||
Stadium | St James' Park | ||
Premier League | 3rd | ||
FA Cup | Third round | ||
League Cup | Third round | ||
UEFA Champions League | Second group stage | ||
Top goalscorer |
League: Alan Shearer (17) All: Alan Shearer (25) |
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Highest home attendance | 52,181 (vs. Sunderland) |
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Lowest home attendance | 34,067 (vs. Željezničar) |
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Average home league attendance | 51,923 | ||
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During the 2002-03 English football season, Newcastle United F.C. participated in the FA Premier League (known as the FA Barclaycard Premiership for sponsorship reasons). Newcastle had mounted a surprise title challenge the previous season following four seasons in midtable, and mounted a similar challenge in the 2002–03 season. The season was also Newcastle's second ever in the Champions League.
After a slow start, the club began putting together the wins and, by the end of March, were in a three-way title race with Manchester United and Arsenal. Consecutive defeats to a resurgent Everton and a 6–2 home thrashing by Alex Ferguson's side killed off Newcastle's title hopes, but Bobby Robson and his team was able to brush off the challenge from Chelsea to finish 3rd in the Premier League, entering the qualification rounds for the Champions League in the 2003–04 season.
The 2002–03 season was a particularly colourful one for Newcastle on the European stage. In the first group stage, Newcastle lost their first three matches in a row, then, in an astonishing reversal, shocked Italian giants Juventus 1–0 at St James' Park. They then controversially beat Dynamo Kyiv 2–1 in Newcastle before winning the crucial last match, away to Feyenoord, 3-2 in injury time, with striker Craig Bellamy scoring the injury time winner. With Dynamo Kyiv losing at home to Juventus, Newcastle progressed to the second round, in a group with Internazionale, Barcelona and Bayer Leverkusen.