The 1997-1998 season was the 118th season of competitive football in England.
All three newly promoted teams - Bolton Wanderers, Barnsley and Crystal Palace - were relegated after just one season in the Premiership.
Everton endured their most difficult season for some 50 years. They finished 17th in the Premiership and only avoided relegation because they had a stronger goal difference than 18th-placed Bolton. Manager Howard Kendall's third reign at the helm came to an end soon afterwards and he was replaced by Walter Smith.
Leeds United and Blackburn Rovers made good progress in the Premiership and achieved UEFA Cup qualification.
Reading were relegated in bottom place. They were joined on the last day of the season by Manchester City and Stoke City. The blue half of Manchester endured relegation to the third tier of the English league for the first time in its history, despite beating also doomed Stoke 5-2 away on the last day of the season - as QPR, Portsmouth and Port Vale all won their games to avoid the drop.
Going down to Division Three were Brentford, Plymouth Argyle, Carlisle United and Southend United.
Doncaster Rovers suffered an English league record of 34 defeats and won just four games to lose their league status. They were replaced by Conference champions Halifax Town, who regained their league status five years after losing it.
Liverpool's 18-year-old striker Michael Owen scored 18 Premiership goals and became the youngest England player of the 20th century, for which he was voted PFA Young Player of the Year.
Coventry City striker Dion Dublin became the target of the country's biggest clubs after his 18 Premiership goals kept the Sky Blues well clear of relegation.
Blackburn Rovers striker Chris Sutton regained his full form and helped his side qualify for the UEFA Cup by scoring 18 Premiership goals.
Italian midfielder Attilo Lombardo established himself as one of the Premiership's most competent midfielders but couldn't do enough to save his club from relegation and was soon on his way back to Italy.
Gianluca Vialli, 33, kicked off his management career by winning the League Cup and Cup Winners' Cup with Chelsea.
Alan Curbishley finally succeeded in getting Charlton promoted to the Premiership after seven seasons of trying on limited resources.
Bryan Robson returned Middlesbrough to the Premiership as Division One runners-up, as well as taking them to runners-up spot in the |League Cup.
Graham Taylor began his second spell as Watford manager by winning the Division Two championship and giving his club their first successful season since they were league runners-up back in 1983.
Sammy McIlroy achieved a second successive promotion for Macclesfield Town in their first season of league football. Alan Buckley achieved promotion for Grimsby Town after their relegation from division one. Also took the team to Wembley for the first time in its history to win the Auto Windscreens Shield against Bournemouth.
Sam Allardyce took Notts County to the Division Three title with 99 points - the highest tally in any division this season.
Shane Westley won promotion to Division Two just weeks after taking over as manager of Lincoln City.
George Mulhall, 62, returned Halifax Town to the Football League as Conference champions five years after they had been demoted.
Arsenal equalled Manchester United's record of two league championship and F.A Cup doubles when they overhauled Alex Ferguson's men in the Premiership title race and beat Kenny Dalglish's Newcastle United in the F.A Cup final, giving Arsène Wenger a brilliant first season at the Highbury helm.
Chelsea completed the other half of the London double by beating Middlesbrough in the League Cup final and VFB Stuttgart in the Cup Winners Cup final, within three months of 33-year-old striker Gianluca Vialli taking over as player-manager after Ruud Gullit was sacked for arguing about transfer funds with chairman Ken Bates.
Justin Fashanu, the first English footballer to admit being homosexual, was found dead on the morning of 3rd May in a lock-up garage in East London. He was 37. Fashanu, who is believed to have committed suicide, had fled the USA after being arrested in Maryland on suspicion of sexually assaulting a 17-year-old boy.
Fashanu, older brother of former Wimbledon striker John, began his career as an exciting young striker with Norwich City and in 1981 became Britain's first £1million black footballer when he joined Nottingham Forest. But he was not successful at the City Ground and later turned out for clubs including Edmonton (a Canadian team), Manchester City, West Ham United, Newcastle United, Torquay United and Hearts. In 1992 he applied for the Torquay United manager's job but his application was rejected and he briefly stayed on an assistant manager before quitting the club completely.
Billy Bremner, the controversial but brilliant midfielder who starred for Leeds United in Don Revie glory era, died on 6th December after suffering a heart attack at the age of 54. He collected three championship medals as well as League Cup, F.A Cup, Cup Winners Cup and UEFA Cup winner's medals before finishing his career with Hull City. Bremner returned to Leeds as manager in 1985 and came within a whisker of reaching the F.A Cup final and winning promotion to the First Division in his second season as manager. He was sacked in 1988 and finished his time in football as manager of Doncaster Rovers, where he was in charge from August 1989 until November 1991.
While the red half of Manchester reeled in disappointment at being beaten to the Premiership title by Arsenal, the blue half of Manchester had to come to terms with the agony of relegation to Division Two for the first time in their history. City had started the Division One campaign badly and manager Frank Clark was fired in March, with former Everton manager Joe Royle being appointed as his successor.
City went into their final game of the season at Stoke, with both sides knowing that the had to win to stand any chance of avoiding relegation. In the end City won 5-2, but both teams were relegated because the three teams above the drop zone all won their games.
Relegation to Division Two meant that Manchester City (who had won the Cup Winners Cup in 1970) were the first former winners of a European trophy to be relegated to the third tier of their domestic league.
England took on Argentina in the Second Round of the World Cup in France, with a classic goal by 18-year-old striker Michael Owen giving them an early lead. The score was 2-2 with 90 minutes played, and in extra time Diego Simone fouled David Beckham and sent the 23-year-old midfielder falling to the ground. Beckham, still lying on the ground, reacted by kicking Simone in the shins and was sent off. England lost the penalty shoot-out after David Batty and Paul Ince's shots were saved. The trophy was finally won by hosts France.
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"1997-98 in English football".
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