2000–01 Dundalk F.C. season – Wikipedia

before-content-x4

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

after-content-x4

Dundalk 2000–01 football season

Dundalk entered the 2000–01 League of Ireland First Division season having finished fourth the previous season, thus missing out on a promotion/relegation play-off. Manager Martin Murray was entering his first season in charge, having replaced Terry Eviston during the summer. It was Dundalk’s second season in the second tier of Irish football, and their 75th consecutive season in the League of Ireland.

Season summary[edit]

Following the financial difficulties of the mid- and late-1990s, and relegation for the first time at the end of the 1998–99 season, the club had been taken over by the Dundalk F.C. Co-operative in March 2000,[1] returning it to a supporter-owned, membership-based company model. The previous season there had been expectations of an immediate return to the top-flight, but a poor start left them struggling to catch the leaders and, with a play-off spot seemingly secured, the club became embroiled in a losing battle with the league’s hierarchy and Kilkenny City. The row, over Kilkenny playing an improperly registered player, reached the High Court, who sided with Kilkenny thus handing them the play-off spot.[2]

Relegation in 1999 had resulted in a large turnover of players – 31 different players making League appearances in the 1999–2000 season alone. With new ownership, and a new manager, there was more of the same. A number of local players had been retained from the previous season’s squad, but another ten players were signed before and during the season, so that 21 players in total would make league starts. The previous season’s disappointment, and the number of players coming and going, meant that hopes were low going into the new season.[3] The 36-match schedule got under way on 11 August 2000, and Dundalk had a promising start, leading by the end of the month.[4] But a slump in form saw them risk losing touch with fellow pace-setters, Athlone Town, obliging Murray to bring more players in.[5] A victory over Athlone in November, and a five-game winning streak, kept the gap to four points as the other sides fell away.[6]

after-content-x4

The season was nearly derailed, however, when the 2001 United Kingdom foot-and-mouth outbreak lead to an exclusion zone being put in place around County Louth.[7] Many public events were postponed or cancelled, and Dundalk went the whole of March without playing a match. They had beaten Shelbourne in the first round of the Leinster Senior Cup, but the crisis saw the competition ultimately abandoned for the season, and it would be 2010 before it was revived.[8] In the second round of the FAI Cup they had been drawn against non-league Malahide United, and the game had been postponed four times as the crisis wore on. At the fifth attempt, the match was played behind closed doors at a neutral venue, and Dundalk were knocked out in the first match they had played in over five weeks.[9] Two heavy league defeats followed as they struggled to get back up to speed, with home matches having to be played in United Park in Drogheda. But four wins in a row, including a 2–1 victory over Athlone in the first match played in Oriel Park in over two months,[10] meant Dundalk had won the First Division title (their first), and secured promotion back to the Premier Division for 2001–02 with a game to spare.[11]

First-Team Squad (2000–01)[edit]

Sources:[12]

Competitions[edit]

League Cup[edit]

Source:[13]

Group

Did not qualify

Leinster Senior Cup[edit]

Source:[13]

First Round

Competition subsequently abandoned

FAI Cup[edit]

Source:[13]

First Round
Second Round

First Division[edit]

Source:[13]

11 August 2000 Round 1 Limerick 1–1 Dundalk

16 August 2000 Round 2 Dundalk 2–0 St Francis

18 August 2000 Round 3 Drogheda United 0–3 Dundalk

26 August 2000 Round 4 Dundalk 2–0 Monaghan United

31 August 2000 Round 5 Dundalk 1–0 Waterford United

5 September 2000 Round 6 Sligo Rovers 2–1 Dundalk

9 September 2000 Round 7 Dundalk 3–1 Home Farm

17 September 2000 Round 8 Athlone Town 1–1 Dundalk

30 September 2000 Round 9 Dundalk 2–2 Cobh Ramblers

5 October 2000 Round 10 Dundalk 1–1 Limerick

13 October 2000 Round 11 St Francis 2–6 Dundalk

19 October 2000 Round 12 Dundalk 1–0 Drogheda United

29 October 2000 Round 13 Monaghan United 1–1 Dundalk

3 November 2000 Round 14 Waterford United 1–1 Dundalk

9 November 2000 Round 15 Dundalk 3–1 Sligo Rovers

18 November 2000 Round 16 Home Farm 2–1 Dundalk

23 November 2000 Round 17 Dundalk 3–0 Athlone Town

3 December 2000 Round 18 Cobh Ramblers 3–2 Dundalk

14 December 2000 Round 19 Dundalk 7–0 St Francis

22 December 2000 Round 20 Drogheda United 0–3 Dundalk

13 January 2001 Round 21 Dundalk 1–0 Waterford United

20 January 2001 Round 22 Sligo Rovers 1–1 Dundalk

25 January 2001 Round 23 Dundalk 0–1 Home Farm

31 January 2001 Round 24 Dundalk 1–0 Monaghan United

9 February 2001 Round 25 Athlone Town 1–2 Dundalk

15 February 2001 Round 26 Dundalk 0–0 Limerick

18 February 2001 Round 27 Dundalk 3–2 Cobh Ramblers

23 February 2001 Round 28 St Francis 1–1 Dundalk

8 April 2001 Round 29 Monaghan United 0–4 Dundalk

10 April 2001 Round 30 Waterford 1–2 Dundalk

14 April 2001 Round 31 Dundalk 2–5 Sligo Rovers

21 April 2001 Round 32 Home Farm 1–2 Dundalk

24 April 2001 Round 33 Limerick 0–2 Dundalk

28 April 2001 Round 34 Dundalk 2–1 Athlone Town

1 May 2001 Round 35 Dundalk 1–0 Drogheda United

6 May 2001 Round 36 Cobh Ramblers 1–0 Dundalk

League table[edit]

Source:www.rsssf.com

References[edit]

Bibliography
  • Murphy, Jim (2003). The History of Dundalk F.C.: The First 100 Years. Dundalgan Press. ASIN B0042SO3R2.
  • Graham, Alex. Football in the Republic of Ireland a Statistical Record 1921–2005. Soccer Books Limited. ISBN 1-86223-135-4.
Citations



after-content-x4