How did Swansea fare over the course of the season? An impromptu bout of insomnia gave me the opportunity to run my eye over the season's results
With 2013/14 now officially done and dusted, I thought it'd be interesting to relive things pretty much one game at a time, as there always moments that have slipped from memory - some which you wouldn't mind forgetting but others that at the time were brilliant, emotionally-charged moments, which have been lost amongst a fifty-four game season full of thrills, spills and more.
Starting way back on the first of August, our season got underway with a 4-0 win over Malmo in the Europa League qualifying campaign, and at this point in time I remember thinking that the early European fixtures could well serve as an ideal way to relax into things. Getting off to a great start, a goal from Michu, a brace from Bony and a great strike from another debutant in Alejandro Pozuelo meant that fans left the match feeling enthused - easy this European lark, right?
A draw away in Sweden followed and we were into the Europa League proper, before our league campaign got under way at home against Manchester United, who were buoyed by having a new man in the dugout for the first time in around twenty-eight years. United ran out 4-1 winners, but Bony gave a sign of things to come by grabbing himself a consolation with a tidy finish. Next up were little-known Romanian team Petrolul Ploiesti and they were dispatched 5-1 at home, before the Swans started to show the inconsistency which would come to define their season.
Losses away at Spurs (1-0) and in the away fixture at Petrolul (2-1 - which was enough to see us through to the group stages in Europe) preceded a fine 2-0 win away at WBA which featured a fine, fine goal by Ben Davies on the volley. That was a fine way to start September, and given our only losses to that point had been an away game in Europe and in games against Man Utd & Spurs, fans could have been forgiven for feeling confident.
Next up was the Jonjo Shelvey-fuelled encounter with Liverpool at home which ended 2-2, and again it reinforced beliefs that perhaps we were in for a special season. When you consider that we followed that up with that 3-0 win away at Valencia, before demolishing Holloway's Crystal Palace 2-0 on their patch, it really was our best spell of the season looking back. I remember writing at the time that this could well have been the finest week in the history of Swansea City, and if I'm honest I'd subscribe to that way of thinking more now than I did then.
We finished September by being dumped out of the League Cup by Birmingham (3-1 at St Andrew's) and losing at the Emirates (2-1), and our form really started to suffer around this point. October saw us beat St Gallen 1-0 (although we played fairly awfully if memory serves correctly), before a 2-0 loss at Southampton came before a 4-0 home win over Sunderland in Poyet's first game in charge. I remember thinking that result was very flattering, and we did benefit from two own goals, and with our next result the 1-1 draw at home to Russians Kuban Krasnodar I was starting to get concerned about the level of performance we were seeing from the Swans.
Ok, there were lots of games going on and we didn't/don't have the biggest squad in the world, but some of the performances we saw around this period, and in the latter stages of the Europa League group stage, can now be seen as indicative of the kind of results which saw Laudrup sacked later in the season. We finished October by drawing 0-0 at home to West Ham, before November started in just about the worst way possible - losing 1-0 away to the old enemy.
The loss to Cardiff really stung, and mostly because of the manner of the defeat. For some reason Vazquez was preferred to Bony, but what's more the players didn't seem to appreciate the importance of the game. Frustration levels were rising, and they weren't really helped by a meek performance away at Kuban (1-1) or the 3-3 home draw against Stoke where we went 2-0 down, fought back to 3-2 up before seeing Stoke equalise late on through a debatable penalty decision. Bloody Charlie Adam.
Before anyone opened the first window on their advent calendars though, there was still time for a 2-1 away win at Fulham - thanks to a great strike from Jonjo (a recurring theme of the season?) - and another lacklustre performance in Europe which saw us go down 1-0 to Valencia who we'd so thoroughly beaten a few weeks prior.
December saw us at our busiest. Eight games in one month - a month that includes Christmas - is a tall order and given January and February both featured seven games each it's no wonder we looked tired by the end of the season. December started predictably - losing 3-0 at Man City, before what I'd say was our best league performance of the season under Laudrup, winning 3-0 over Newcastle. Next up was a 1-1 draw at home to Hull (Danny Graham, of course) before we once again surrendered in Europe, 1-1 away at St Gallen - though somehow that was enough to see us through to the knockout phase of the competition.
You'd think with four games remaining in a calendar month there'd be something to write home about, but in all honesty we were pretty poor around the turn of the year. A 1-1 draw away at Norwich (although, granted, we would have won had it not been for a Gary Hooper wonder goal) and a 2-1 home loss to Everton came before a 1-0 away loss to Chelsea and a 1-1 draw away at Villa Park, so with three games against the Manchester clubs lined up in the New Year fans could have been forgiven some trepidation, but thankfully the beginning of 2014 wasn't too painful, and we'd have something to write home about after all.
January saw Wilfried Bony arrive in the Premier League. First up were Manchester City at the Liberty, and despite losing 3-2 there was one obvious reason to be cheerful - our big Ivorian centre-forward. Scorer of two goals, what was more impressive was the way he bullied a usually-imperious back line (indeed, one which would go on to win the league) and held off defenders for fun. This would become a hallmark of Bony's game, and if he's mocking defenders in this manner the chances are he'll be on the scoresheet soon enough.
I was actually in Thailand for Christmas and New Year, and watched all the games around this time in my father's bar there. What's more, the next game against Manchester United actually fell on my birthday (January 6th), thanks to the wonders of international time difference (the game was on the 5th of January GMT). A tense ninety minutes was finished superbly by a thumping Wilfried Bony header, giving us a 2-1 away win in the FA Cup which we sadly couldn't match in our next outing - again at Old Trafford though this time in the league.
We went down 2-0 on the latter occasion, and next up were Spurs who promptly rolled into Swansea dispatching us 3-1, leaving us feeling like the win over Man Utd would have been a lot handier had it been in the league! Points win prizes and all that. Our FA Cup win over United gave us a chance to exercise our Birmingham-based cup demons which we promptly took, winning 2-1, but by now there was lots of talk of discontent in the Swansea camp and despite winning 2-0 over Fulham next time out, the manner of the 2-0 reverse to West Ham in the subsequent match saw Michael Laudrup removed from his post as Swansea manager.
Reading back through this it does seem like the move was perhaps harsh given the teams we'd lost against, but it was the level of performance that was really worrying. We were definitely performing worse than in our first two seasons in the Premiership, and given this season's squad is a lot more technically gifted than the one which Brendan had, for example, there's no reason we shouldn't have been able to at least match the high watermark we set in our first season amongst the elite.
The loss to West Ham was the first game of February, and once new boss Garry Monk had seen his charges dismiss a doomed Cardiff 3-0 at home it was another ten games before he tasted victory again. He had some bloody tough matches though, and the performance levels for the first seven or eight games of his tenure really were excellent.
First up was a credible 1-1 draw away at Stoke, before we went to Martinez's Everton in the FA Cup and lost 3-1 - though we did have an almost entirely changed team out on that day. We then put in three top performances in the space of a week (Napoli 0-0, Liverpool 4-3 and Napoli away 3-1), where we sadly didn't get a single win for our troubles.
That added to the pressure on fledgling manager Monk, but he never sounded unduly ruffled and despite only getting one point out of two home games against WBA & Crystal Palace at the beginning of March (from which I'd earmarked a maximum of six points!), and losing away at Everton again (3-2 in the league this time) I was still confident Monk was the man to be taking us forward. The Everton result was followed by a point at the Emirates, which in turn was proceeded by (finally) another win in the league - 3-0 over a Norwich side who might as well have not bothered turning up to any game after Christmas, given how badly they played both against us and in general from the turn of the year.
The three points against Norwich allayed most of our relegation fears, but as April got underway we still needed some more points before we could truly relax. We'd have to wait though - first of all we tamely went down 1-0 away at Hull before a Chico Flores-inspired defeat to Chelsea (also 1-0) at the Liberty left us gasping for points as we headed back to the North East to face Alan Pardew's renegade band of French Graham Carr signings.
Thankfully, Wilfried Bony continued his hot streak (he'd go on to score 13 goals in his last 19 games of the campaign) and grabbed himself a brilliantly taken brace to help the Swans to a 2-1 win, and Swansea had the points they needed in order to avoid relegation. This was followed by a thumping 4-1 win over Villa which was perhaps flattering, but you can only beat what's put in front of you and that's exactly what we did.
Southampton were our penultimate opponents this season, and in truth it was probably our flattest performance of the Monk era. A distinctly end of season feel saw us lose 1-0 to a complete fluke goal, so while our performance wasn't great it says something that, with the 4-4-2 diamond in place, we restricted Southampton without actually playing particularly well. If you're an optimist, that bodes well for the future.
Finally, the most recent result and our last match of the season came away at Sunderland. Once more Wilfried Bony stole the show in my opinion (despite Jonjo and Emnes impressing), and he bagged his 16th league goal of the season, and his 25th in all competitions. An impressive haul given his stop-start beginning to his league campaign, and you can't help but wonder how many more he'd have scored had he been included more often that not earlier in the season - fitness issues aside I find it hard to believe that he wouldn't have scored a couple more at least.
As I've typed this it made me think that perhaps the Laudrup sacking was even harsher than I previously thought, given the games we actually lost, but I still think it was more than justified. Our form had suffered for a full calendar year by the time he was removed, and when you consider the increase in performance level when Monk came in (even if it tailed off by the end of the season) it makes me think that Monk, or whoever had been appointed, would have been able to get a bit more out of this group of players than Laudrup was able to by the end of his tenure.
We can only hope that next season, our league form is far more consistent and we benefit from not having the extra games European competition always throws at you. With this squad, and far less football to be played, I'll be amazed if we don't finish next season with a significantly higher points total.
Especially if we hang onto Wilfried Bony, as is looking increasingly likely. Please stay, Wilf!!!
That added to the pressure on fledgling manager Monk, but he never sounded unduly ruffled and despite only getting one point out of two home games against WBA & Crystal Palace at the beginning of March (from which I'd earmarked a maximum of six points!), and losing away at Everton again (3-2 in the league this time) I was still confident Monk was the man to be taking us forward. The Everton result was followed by a point at the Emirates, which in turn was proceeded by (finally) another win in the league - 3-0 over a Norwich side who might as well have not bothered turning up to any game after Christmas, given how badly they played both against us and in general from the turn of the year.
The three points against Norwich allayed most of our relegation fears, but as April got underway we still needed some more points before we could truly relax. We'd have to wait though - first of all we tamely went down 1-0 away at Hull before a Chico Flores-inspired defeat to Chelsea (also 1-0) at the Liberty left us gasping for points as we headed back to the North East to face Alan Pardew's renegade band of French Graham Carr signings.
Thankfully, Wilfried Bony continued his hot streak (he'd go on to score 13 goals in his last 19 games of the campaign) and grabbed himself a brilliantly taken brace to help the Swans to a 2-1 win, and Swansea had the points they needed in order to avoid relegation. This was followed by a thumping 4-1 win over Villa which was perhaps flattering, but you can only beat what's put in front of you and that's exactly what we did.
Southampton were our penultimate opponents this season, and in truth it was probably our flattest performance of the Monk era. A distinctly end of season feel saw us lose 1-0 to a complete fluke goal, so while our performance wasn't great it says something that, with the 4-4-2 diamond in place, we restricted Southampton without actually playing particularly well. If you're an optimist, that bodes well for the future.
Finally, the most recent result and our last match of the season came away at Sunderland. Once more Wilfried Bony stole the show in my opinion (despite Jonjo and Emnes impressing), and he bagged his 16th league goal of the season, and his 25th in all competitions. An impressive haul given his stop-start beginning to his league campaign, and you can't help but wonder how many more he'd have scored had he been included more often that not earlier in the season - fitness issues aside I find it hard to believe that he wouldn't have scored a couple more at least.
As I've typed this it made me think that perhaps the Laudrup sacking was even harsher than I previously thought, given the games we actually lost, but I still think it was more than justified. Our form had suffered for a full calendar year by the time he was removed, and when you consider the increase in performance level when Monk came in (even if it tailed off by the end of the season) it makes me think that Monk, or whoever had been appointed, would have been able to get a bit more out of this group of players than Laudrup was able to by the end of his tenure.
We can only hope that next season, our league form is far more consistent and we benefit from not having the extra games European competition always throws at you. With this squad, and far less football to be played, I'll be amazed if we don't finish next season with a significantly higher points total.
Especially if we hang onto Wilfried Bony, as is looking increasingly likely. Please stay, Wilf!!!