2004–05 Rotherham United F.C. season

Rotherham United
2004–05 season
Chairman Peter Ruchniewicz
Manager England Ronnie Moore (until January)
Wales Alan Knill (caretaker until 7 April)
England Mick Harford (from 7 April)
Stadium Millmoor
Championship 24th (relegated)
FA Cup Third round
League Cup Second round
Top goalscorer Butler (6)
Average home league attendance 5,577

During the 2004–05 English football season, Rotherham United F.C. competed in the Football League Championship.

Season summary

During the 2004–05 season, the club struggled and spent most of the season bottom of the league. The club was bought by the consortium, Millers 05. Ronnie Moore left by mutual consent during the campaign, after his team were rooted to the bottom of the division for the majority of the season.[1]

After relegation to League One in April 2005, Mick Harford took over as Millers manager.[2]

Final league table

PWDLFAGDPts
C1Sunderland46297107641+3594
P2Wigan Athletic46251297935+4487
 3Ipswich Town46241398556+2985
 4Derby County462210147160+1176
 5Preston North End462112136758+975
P6West Ham United462110156656+1073
 7Reading461913145144+770
 8Sheffield United461813155756+167
 9Wolverhampton Wanderers461521107259+1366
 10Millwall461812165145+666
 11Queens Park Rangers461711185458-462
 12Stoke City461710193638-261
 13Burnley461515163839-160
 14Leeds United461418144952-360
 15Leicester City461221134946+357
 16Cardiff City461315184851-354
 17Plymouth Argyle461411215264-1253
 18Watford461216185259-752
 19Coventry City461313206173-1252
 20Brighton & Hove Albion461312214065-2551
 21Crewe Alexandra461214206686-2050
R22Gillingham461214204566-2150
R23Nottingham Forest46917204266-2444
R24Rotherham United46514273569-3429

Results

Rotherham United's score comes first[3]

Legend

Win Draw Loss

Football League Championship

DateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
7 August 2004 Queens Park RangersA1-114,547Shaw
10 August 2004 BurnleyH0-06,243
14 August 2004 Stoke CityH1-15,925Shaw
21 August 2004 ReadingA0-111,404
28 August 2004 Ipswich TownH0-25,504
30 August 2004 Preston North EndA0-211,439
11 September 2004 Leicester CityH0-26,272
14 September 2004 West Ham UnitedA0-126,233
18 September 2004 Coventry CityA0-013,834
25 September 2004 MillwallH1-15,062Sedgwick
28 September 2004 Crewe AlexandraH2-34,498Burchill, Barker
2 October 2004 Wigan AthleticA0-27,937
16 October 2004 Cardiff CityA0-211,004
19 October 2004 Plymouth ArgyleH0-15,088
25 October 2004 SunderlandH0-16,026
30 October 2004 Derby CountyA2-325,096Swailes, Scott
3 November 2004 Nottingham ForestA2-221,619Sedgwick, Júnior
6 November 2004 Cardiff CityH2-25,093McLaren, Proctor
13 November 2004 Wolverhampton WanderersH1-26,693McIntosh
20 November 2004 WatfordA0-017,780
29 November 2004 Leeds UnitedH1-08,860McIntosh
4 December 2004 Brighton & Hove AlbionA0-16,076
11 December 2004 Sheffield UnitedH2-28,195Swailes, McIntosh
18 December 2004 GillinghamA1-38,576Hoskins
26 December 2004 Leicester CityA1-027,014Barker
28 December 2004 West Ham UnitedH2-27,769Butler, McIntosh
1 January 2005 Coventry CityH1-25,742Júnior
3 January 2005 MillwallA2-111,725Butler, Scott
15 January 2005 Wigan AthleticH0-29,050
22 January 2005 Crewe AlexandraA1-16,382Mullin
5 February 2005 Nottingham ForestH0-08,448
12 February 2005 Plymouth ArgyleA1-114,798Monkhouse
19 February 2005 Derby CountyH1-37,937Butler (pen)
22 February 2005 SunderlandA1-422,267Monkhouse
26 February 2005 Sheffield UnitedA0-118,431
5 March 2005 GillinghamH1-34,367Butler
12 March 2005 BurnleyA1-210,539Gilchrist
15 March 2005 ReadingH1-03,804Warne
19 March 2005 Queens Park RangersH0-15,387
2 April 2005 Stoke CityA2-116,552Butler, Noel-Williams (own goal)
5 April 2005 Ipswich TownA3-426,017Thorpe, Butler, McIntosh
9 April 2005 Preston North EndH1-26,312Hoskins
16 April 2005 WatfordH0-15,438
23 April 2005 Wolverhampton WanderersA0-225,177
30 April 2005 Brighton & Hove AlbionH0-16,549
8 May 2005 Leeds UnitedA0-030,900

FA Cup

Main article: 2004–05 FA Cup
RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
R38 January 2005 Yeovil TownH0-35,397

League Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
R124 August 2004 ChesterfieldH2-13,845Proctor, Barker
R222 September 2004 Nottingham ForestA1-211,168Sedgwick

First-team squad

Squad at end of season[4]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 England GK Mike Pollitt
4 England DF Rob Scott
5 England MF Darren Garner
6 England DF Phil Gilchrist
7 England FW Michael Proctor
8 England DF Chris Swailes
9 England FW Martin Butler
10 England FW Paul Warne
11 England MF Nick Daws
12 England FW Marc Newsham
14 England FW Will Hoskins
15 Scotland DF Martin McIntosh
No. Position Player
16 England DF Paul Hurst
17 England MF John Mullin
18 England DF Scott Minto
19 England MF Paulo Vernazza
20 England FW Andy Monkhouse
21 Jamaica MF Jamal Campbell-Ryce[5]
22 England DF Shaun Barker
23 England MF Paul McLaren
24 England MF Ben Bradford
25 Republic of Ireland MF Michael Keane
29 England MF Sam Duncum
30 England GK Gary Montgomery

Left club during season

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
2 Scotland DF Robbie Stockdale[6] (to Hull City)
21 England FW Paul Shaw (on loan from Sheffield United)
24 England MF Chris Sedgwick (to Preston North End)
24 France MF Léandre Griffit (on loan from Southampton)
No. Position Player
27 Scotland FW Mark Burchill (on loan from Portsmouth)
27 Brazil FW José Júnior (on loan from Derby County)
28 England FW Tony Thorpe (on loan from Queens Park Rangers)
29 England FW Richard Barker (to Mansfield Town)

References

  1. "Moore parts company with Millers". BBC Sport. 31 January 2005. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  2. "Harford named as Rotherham boss". BBC Sport. 7 April 2005. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  3. http://www.statto.com/football/teams/rotherham-united/2004-2005
  4. http://www.footballsquads.co.uk/eng/2004-2005/flcham/rother.htm
  5. Campbell-Ryce was born in Lambeth, England, but also qualified to represent Jamaica internationally through his parents and made his international debut for Jamaica in 2003.
  6. Stockdale was born in Redcar, England, but also qualified to represent Scotland internationally and made his international debut for Scotland in 2002.
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