16 July 1998 – Former
French national coach Gérard Houllier is appointed joint manager of
Liverpool to work alongside
Roy Evans. It is the first time in the club's 106-year history that two managers have been placed in charge of the first team. 19 July 1998 –
Manchester United deny reports that they will be joining a proposed
European Super League of up to 32 clubs. 3 August 1998 –
Newcastle United pay £5.25million for
Germany midfielder
Dietmar Hamann from
Bayern Munich. 9 August 1998 –
Arsenal claim their third trophy of 1998 with a 3–0 win over Manchester United in the
Charity Shield. 12 August 1998 – Newcastle United sign
Nolberto Solano, the
Peruvian midfielder, from
Boca Juniors for £2.48million. 15 August 1998 – The Premier League season begins with champions Arsenal beating newly promoted
Nottingham Forest 2–1 at
Highbury. Chelsea begin with a surprise 2–1 defeat at
Coventry City. Manchester United are held to a 2–2 home draw by
Leicester City.
Wimbledon take the lead of the Premier League on the opening day with a 3–1 home win over
Tottenham Hotspur.
Charlton Athletic mark their return to the elite by drawing 0–0 at Newcastle. 20 August 1998 – Manchester United pay a club record £12.6million for Aston Villa striker
Dwight Yorke. 22 August 1998 – Charlton Athletic demolish
Southampton 5–0 at
The Valley. Tottenham's dismal start continued when they lose 3–0 at home to
Sheffield Wednesday. Manchester United are held to a draw again, this time 0–0 against
West Ham United at
Upton Park. Newcastle United lose 4–1 at home to Liverpool. 27 August 1998 –
Kenny Dalglish is sacked after 19 months as manager of Newcastle United. 31 August 1998 – Newcastle United appoint
Ruud Gullit as their new manager, the day before his 36th birthday. The first month of the league season ends with newly promoted Charlton Athletic top of the Premier League, but the end-of-month table has little significance as only two games have been played so far.
Sunderland head the race for a place in next season's Premier League as Division One leaders, with
Wolverhampton Wanderers in second place. Hopes are high of a successful season for
Midlands clubs as
West Bromwich Albion are third and
Birmingham City stand fourth.
Norwich City, rebuilding under new manager
Bruce Rioch occupy fifth, while the top six is completed by a
Watford side who are searching for a second successive promotion. Just outside the playoff zone are
Bury, whose excellent start to the season has sparked speculation that they might match
Swansea City and Wimbledon's record of three promotions in four seasons. 6 September 1998 –
Christian Gross is sacked after nine months as manager of Tottenham Hotspur. 8 September 1998 – Aston Villa pay Middlesbrough £6.75million for midfielder
Paul Merson. 9 September 1998 – An
inquest records a verdict of suicide on former Norwich City and Nottingham Forest striker
Justin Fashanu, who was found hanged at a lock-up garage in London four months ago. Manchester United record a Premier League win at the fourth attempt by beating Charlton Athletic 4–1 at
Old Trafford. Wimbledon continue their recent resurgence with a 4–3 win at West Ham. Manchester United accepts a £623.4million takeover bid from
BSkyB. 12 September 1998 – Arsenal sign
Swedish midfielder
Freddie Ljungberg from
Halmstad for £3million. Tottenham's dismal start to the season continues as they lose 3–0 at home to newly promoted
Middlesbrough. 19 September 1998 – Newcastle United show signs of a return to their old form with a 5–1 away win over Coventry City. Newly promoted Charlton Athletic hold Liverpool to a 3–3 draw at
Anfield. 20 September 1998 – Arsenal beat Manchester United 3–0 in the league at Highbury – the fourth defeat they have inflicted upon
Alex Ferguson's team in less than a year. 23 September 1998 –
Everton sign 22-year-old goalkeeper
Steve Simonsen from
Tranmere Rovers for £3.3million. 30 September 1998 – September ends with Aston Villa as Premier League leaders 5 points above second-placed
Derby County are putting up a surprise title challenge after being predicted by many to struggle in the battle against relegation. Manchester United, Liverpool and Wimbledon complete the top five. Southampton prop up the top flight with one point from their opening six games, while Coventry City and Blackburn Rovers completing the relegation zone. Sunderland remain top of Division One, level on points with surprise promotion challengers
Huddersfield Town.
Bolton Wanderers, Watford, Birmingham City and Norwich City occupy the playoff places, while surprise promotion contenders Bury are keeping up the pressure on the top six. 1 October 1998 –
George Graham quits
Leeds United after two years as manager to take over at Tottenham Hotspur. 3 October 1998 – Middlesbrough's return to the top flight continues with a 4–0 home win over Sheffield Wednesday. 9 October 1998 – Everton sign Ivorian striker
Ibrahima Bakayoko from
Montpellier for £4.5million. 15 October 1998 –
Steve Watson, Newcastle United's longest serving player (who joined the club on leaving school in 1990), is sold to Aston Villa for £4.5million. 25 October 1998 – Leicester City confirm that manager
Martin O'Neill will not be moving to Leeds United. Caretaker
David O'Leary, formerly assistant manager at
Elland Road, gets the manager's job on a permanent basis. 28 October 1998 – Chelsea player-manager
Gianluca Vialli scores a hat-trick in the 4–1 League Cup third round win over Aston Villa. Making his debut as a late substitute is 17-year-old defender
John Terry. On the same day, striker
Brian Laudrup's departure from Chelsea is announced after just four months at the club. 31 October 1998 – Ron Reeves, a 55-year-old steward, is killed outside
Highfield Road stadium after being crushed by the Arsenal team coach just before a game with Coventry City. The month ends with Aston Villa still top, a point ahead of second placed Manchester United, while Arsenal are close behind in third place. A wide gap is beginning to open up between the top three and the rest of the division, with Liverpool, Middlesbrough, Chelsea, Leicester City and West Ham United putting up the nearest competition. Southampton, still only with one win to their name, occupy bottom place and are joined in the relegation zone by Coventry City and Nottingham Forest. Sunderland and Huddersfield Town continue to head the race for Premier League football, with the top six being completed by Birmingham City,
Ipswich Town, Watford and Norwich City.
Grimsby Town (eighth) have emerged as surprise contenders for a second successive promotion, but Bury's challenge is falling away and they now occupy 15th place. Wolverhampton Wanderers fare little better after their dismal start to the season, now occupying 12th place. 5 November 1998: Wolverhampton Wanderers sack manager
Mark McGhee after three years at the helm. 12 November 1998 –
Peter Schmeichel, goalkeeper of Manchester United since 1991, announces his intention to leave the club at the end of this season. Roy Evans resigns as joint manager of Liverpool after nearly five years in charge and more than 30 years on the club's payroll, leaving Gérard Houllier in sole charge. 14 November 1998 –
Colchester United fall victim to arguably the biggest upset of the FA Cup fourth round when they are defeated 4–1 by non-league
Bedlington Terriers. Other
Football League clubs to be eliminated by non-league counterparts include
Barnet,
Southend United and
Shrewsbury Town. 21 November 1998 – Blackburn Rovers lose 2–0 at home to Southampton, leaving them bottom of the Premier League with a mere nine points from their opening 14 games. Manager
Roy Hodgson resigns within hours of the defeat. Long-serving coach
Tony Parkes is put in charge of the first team on a temporary basis. On the same day, Manchester United suffer a shock 3–1 defeat at Sheffield Wednesday. 30 November 1998 – November draws to a close with Aston Villa still leading Manchester United by a single point, but a surprise title challenge is creeping upon them from a West Ham United side with no previous top division titles to their name, and who have not finished in the top five for more than a decade. Arsenal and Chelsea complete the top five. Blackburn Rovers now prop up the top flight, having started the season among the teams tipped by many to challenge for the title. Southampton and Nottingham Forest remain in the drop zone. Sunderland continue to lead Division One, their nearest threat coming from Ipswich Town. Watford, Birmingham City, Bolton Wanderers and Sheffield United complete the top six, with Wolverhampton Wanderers providing the closest competition for the top six after a rejuvenation under new manager
Colin Lee. 4 December 1998 –
Brian Kidd steps down as Manchester United assistant manager to succeed Roy Hodgson as manager of Blackburn Rovers. 5 December 1998 – Blackburn beat Charlton 1–0 in their first game under Brian Kidd at
Ewood Park. 8 December 1998 – Five years after leaving them from Blackburn Rovers,
David Batty returns to Leeds United in a £4.4 million move from Newcastle United. 16 December 1998 –
Brian McClair, who was among the names linked with succeeding Brian Kidd as assistant manager at Manchester United, is appointed as Kidd's assistant at Blackburn. 19 December 1998 – Manchester United lost 3–2 at home to Middlesbrough – their first home defeat for nine months. United are managed by coach
Jimmy Ryan, as Alex Ferguson misses the game on compassionate grounds following the death of his sister-in-law, and United have yet to find a permanent successor to Brian Kidd as assistant manager. 23 December 1998 –
The Independent reports that up to ten
Premier League clubs could break away to join a European Super League if the Premier League loses its forthcoming
High Court case with the
Office of Fair Trading. The case will see the Office of Fair Trading bring a case against the Football League, BSkyB and the
BBC in the hope of ending collective bargaining for television deals by Premier League clubs. 26 December 1998 – The key drama on
Boxing Day sees defender
Ronny Johnsen score twice in Manchester United's 3–0 home win over Nottingham Forest, 30 December 1998 – French defender
Didier Domi joins Newcastle United in a £4 million move from
Paris Saint-Germain. 31 December 1998 – 1998 draws to a close with Aston Villa still leading the Premier League, but with Chelsea, Manchester United, Arsenal, Leeds United and West Ham United all posing a fairly close threat. Nottingham Forest, Southampton and Charlton Athletic occupy the bottom three places. Sunderland and Ipswich Town continue to lead the way in the race for a Premier League place, with the playoff zone being occupied by Birmingham City, Bolton Wanderers, Watford and an ever-improving
Bradford City. 2 January 1999 – Last year's FA Cup runners-up Newcastle United win 2–1 at home to
Crystal Palace in the third round. Leeds United are held to a goalless draw at Conference side
Rushden & Diamonds. 3 January 1999 – Manchester United beat Middlesbrough 3–1 in the FA Cup third round at Old Trafford. 4 January 1999 – Arsenal begin their defence of the FA Cup by beating
Preston North End 2–0 in the third round at
Deepdale. 5 January 1999 – Nottingham Forest, bottom of the Premier League and winless for 17 games, sack manager
Dave Bassett after less than two years in charge.
Micky Adams, former Swansea City and
Brentford manager, is placed in temporary charge of Forest. 8 January 1999 – 15-year-old
Notts County schoolboy forward
Jermaine Pennant signs for Arsenal's academy in a £2 million deal. 9 January 1999 – The first Premier League games of 1999 include Coventry City's 4–0 home win over Nottingham Forest – the 18th successive league game that the visitors have failed to win. Southampton beat fellow relegation strugglers Charlton Athletic 3–1 at
The Dell. 11 January 1999 –
Ron Atkinson is appointed manager of Nottingham Forest until the end of the season. 13 January 1999 – Leeds United avoid what would have been one of the biggest FA Cup upsets of modern times and beat Rushden and Diamonds 3–1 in the third round replay at Elland Road. 14 January 1999 – Wimbledon pay a club record £7.5 million for West Ham United striker
John Hartson, who six months ago was a transfer target for Manchester United. 16 January 1999 – Two high scoring games in the Premier League sees Dwight Yorke and Robbie Fowler score hat tricks for their respective clubs as Manchester United thrash Leicester City 6–2 at
Filbert Street, while Liverpool crush Southampton 7–1 at Anfield. 18 January 1999 – Bryan Kidd boosts his Blackburn Rovers side in their battle against relegation by signing Crystal Palace striker
Matt Jansen for £4.1 million. 23 January 1999 – Aston Villa suffer a shock FA Cup exit at home to Division Two leaders Fulham in the fourth round. 24 January 1999 – Two late goals see Manchester United overturn Liverpool's 1–0 lead and win 2–1 in the fourth round tie at Old Trafford. 25 January 1999 – Cash-strapped Division One strugglers
Oxford United hold Chelsea to an impressive 1–1 draw at the
Manor Ground. 27 January 1999 – Two midfielders change clubs for £4 million –
Marc-Vivien Foé from
Lens to West Ham United and
Jason McAteer from Liverpool to Blackburn Rovers. 28 January 1999 –
Steve McManaman agrees to sign for
Real Madrid from Liverpool at the end of the season. 30 January 1999 –
Glenn Hoddle appears in an interview in
The Sunday Times in which he suggests that disabled people are paying for their sins in a previous life. Nottingham Forest end their 19-match winless run in the league with a 1–0 away win over Everton. 31 January 1999 – January ends with Manchester United now top of the Premier League, but former leaders Aston Villa still only a point behind bracketed on points with Chelsea. Arsenal, meanwhile, have crept into the title frame and now stand fourth – just two points off the top. West Ham United's challenge has crumbled and they now stand ninth, with 11 points separating them from top spot. Nottingham Forest, meanwhile, have gone from bad to worse and now prop up the table. They are joined in the drop zone by Southampton and Charlton Athletic after Brian Kidd guided Blackburn Rovers out of the bottom three. Sunderland and Bradford City lead the way in Division One, with Bolton Wanderers, Ipswich Town, Watford and Birmingham City completing the top six. Grimsby Town are back in form and giving the top six a serious run for their money. 2 February 1999 – Glenn Hoddle is sacked as England manager two days after his controversial remarks. 3 February 1999 – Oxford United's luck in the FA Cup runs out: 17-year-old
Mikael Forssell bags a brace on his first start for 4–2 victors Chelsea in the fourth round replay at
Stamford Bridge. 4 February 1999 -
Tim Sherwood signs for Tottenham Hotspur from Blackburn Rovers for £4 million, and
Silvio Marić joins Newcastle United from
Croatia Zagreb for $5.8 million. 5 February 1999 - Derby County assistant manager
Steve McClaren is named as Manchester United's new assistant manager. 6 February 1999 – Manchester United record the highest ever away win in the Premier League by beating Nottingham Forest
8–1 at the
City Ground. Substitute
Ole Gunnar Solskjær scores four times. 28 February 1999 – February draws to a close with Manchester United now top of the Premier League four points, although nearest rivals Chelsea have a game in hand. Arsenal, Aston Villa and Leeds United complete the top five. Nottingham Forest remain bottom and are now ten points adrift of safety, while Southampton remain in the bottom three but Charlton Athletic have jumped clear at the expense of Blackburn Rovers. Sunderland are still top of Division One, their nearest competition coming from Bradford City and Ipswich Town who are level on points. Bolton Wanderers, Birmingham City and Watford complete the top six. Wolverhampton Wanderers, Grimsby Town and West Bromwich Albion continue to keep up the pressure in the push for a playoff place. 5 March 1999 – Former
Doncaster Rovers chairman Ken Richardson is sentenced to four years in prison for paying a friend to start a fire at the club's
Belle Vue ground in 1995. The arsonist, 41-year-old Alan Kristiansen, receives a one-year prison sentence, while two other men receive suspended sentences for their part in the fire, which caused £100,000 worth of damage. 7 March 1999 – Manchester United draw 0–0 with Chelsea in the FA Cup quarter-final at Old Trafford, with
Paul Scholes being sent off for United and
Roberto Di Matteo for Chelsea in a game which kicked off just hours after the death was announced of legendary former United striker
Dennis Viollet from cancer at age 65. 10 March 1999 –
Dwight Yorke keeps Manchester United in line for the treble as he scores both their goals in the 2–0 quarter-final replay win at Chelsea. 11 March 1999 – Aston Villa sign midfielder
Steve Stone from Nottingham Forest for £5.5 million. 13 March 1999 – Nottingham Forest keep their faint survival hopes alive with a 3–1 away win over Wimbledon, only their third league win of the season. 16 March 1999 – Barnsley, the only non-Premier League team to reach the FA Cup quarter-finals, bow out at
Oakwell when
David Ginola scores the only goal of the game for Tottenham Hotspur, who remain in contention for a
cup double. 17 March 1999 – The
Monopolies and Mergers Commission vetoes BSkyB's takeover of Manchester United. 21 March 1999 – Tottenham Hotspur end their eight-year wait for a major trophy (and European qualification) thanks to a 1–0 win over Leicester City in the
League Cup final. 22 March 1999 – Blackburn Rovers pay Derby County £3.4 million for midfielder
Lee Carsley. 31 March 1999 – March ends with Manchester United still top of the Premier League by a four-point margin, with Arsenal and Chelsea as their nearest contenders. Leeds United, occupying fourth place, are still within a shout of the league title. West Ham United complete the top five, competing with most of the rest of the "safe" Premier League teams for a UEFA Cup place. Nottingham Forest's dreadful run of form has continued and they now need a miracle to escape relegation. Charlton Athletic and Southampton complete the bottom three. Sunderland are now 12 points ahead of their nearest rivals Ipswich Town at the top of Division One. Bradford City, Birmingham City and Bolton Wanderers remain in the playoff zone, where they are joined by a Wolverhampton Wanderers side whose form is continuing to improve. 3 April 1999 – Both league-leaders Manchester United and second-placed Arsenal drop points as they are both held, by Wimbledon and Southampton respectively. Elsewhere, Liverpool win the
Merseyside derby 3–2, and Leeds United rack up their seventh win on the bounce–a club record–by beating Nottingham Forest. 11 April 1999 – Manchester United and Arsenal, competing head to head for both the Premier League title and the FA Cup, draw 0–0 at
Villa Park in the
FA Cup semi-final. In other semi-final, at
Old Trafford, two goals in extra time from
Alan Shearer send Newcastle United through to the final for the second year running and spell an end to Tottenham's hopes of a cup double. 14 April 1999 – One of the most thrilling games so far this season sees Manchester United beat Arsenal 2–1 in extra time in the FA Cup semi-final replay. United had taken the lead after 17th minutes thanks to
David Beckham, only for
Dennis Bergkamp to equalise after 69 minutes. Bergkamp could have won the game for Arsenal with just a minute remaining, but
Peter Schmeichel saved his penalty shot and forced extra time, in which
Ryan Giggs won it for United with a spectacular 109th-minute goal. 21 April 1999 – Manchester United reach their first
European Cup final for 31 years – and only their second of all time – by recording a 4–3 aggregate win over
Juventus. They won 3–2 in tonight's clash in
Turin, having been 2–0 down at half-time. They drew 1–1 in the first leg at Old Trafford on 7 April. 23 April 1999 –
UEFA rejects calls from English clubs for four, rather than three, Champions League qualification places to be available for
next season's competition – this will only happen in the unlikely event of Manchester United winning the European Cup next month and finishing outside the top three of the Premier League. 24 April 1999 – Nottingham Forest's Premier League relegation is confirmed with a 2–0 defeat to Aston Villa, after which manager Ron Atkinson announces that he will retire at the end of this season. 30 April 1999 – April draws to a close with Arsenal now leading the Premier League, but Manchester United are a point behind with a game in hand. Chelsea and Leeds United remain in distant contention, while the final European place is being contested by Aston Villa, West Ham United, Middlesbrough, Derby County, Liverpool and Leicester City. Nottingham Forest's inevitable relegation has now been confirmed, with Southampton, Charlton Athletic, Blackburn Rovers, Coventry City, Everton and Sheffield Wednesday all in the battle of avoid going down as well. Sunderland are definitely in the Premier League next season, as champions of Division One. Bradford City and Ipswich Town are level on points in the race for second place, with Birmingham City now the only team who can catch either of them. Bolton Wanderers and Wolverhampton Wanderers complete the top six, but Watford are pushing hard for a playoff place. 6 May 1999 – Blackburn Rovers are relegated to
Division One just four years after being Premier League champions. 8 May 1999 – On-
loan goalkeeper
Jimmy Glass scored an injury-time winner for
Carlisle United on the final day of the season to save their
Football League status, and relegate
Scarborough to the
Conference. 9 May 1999 – Sunderland's 2–1 win over Birmingham City on the final day of the Division One season has given them an English league record of 105 points this season. They will be joined in the elite next season by Bradford City, whose second-place finish has given them top flight football for the first time since 1922. Ipswich Town, Birmingham City, Watford and Bolton Wanderers will contest the playoffs. Meanwhile, Manchester United go back on top of the Premier League with a 1–0 win at Middlesbrough. 11 May 1999 – Arsenal lose their penultimate league game of the season 1–0 at Leeds United, losing their chance to go top of the Premier League – meaning that a win for Manchester United against Blackburn Rovers on Thursday will make it almost certain (regardless of final day results) that the league title will return to Old Trafford. 13 May 1999 – Manchester United are held to a goalless draw by former assistant manager Brian Kidd's Blackburn at Ewood Park – a result which confirms Blackburn's relegation (just four years after being champions) and allows the title destiny to remain firmly in United's hands. 16 May 1999 – Manchester United clinch their fifth Premier League title in seven seasons after beating Tottenham 2–1 at home on the final day of the season, rendering Arsenal's 1–0 home win over Aston Villa useless. Third placed Chelsea beat Derby County 2–1, while Leeds United end David O'Leary's first season in management in fourth place with a 2–2 draw at Coventry. West Ham's 4–0 home win over Middlesbrough secures them a fifth-place finish and a place in the
1999–2000 UEFA Cup, their highest finish for 13 years and their
first European campaign in 19 years. The last relegation place goes to Charlton Athletic, who lose 1–0 at home to 12th placed Sheffield Wednesday, while Southampton confirm their survival with a 2–0 win over Everton. 18 May 1999 – Liverpool sign Finnish defender
Sami Hyypiä from Dutch side
Willem II for £3 million. 22 May 1999 – Manchester United complete a unique third 'double' of the league title and FA Cup with a 2–0 win over Newcastle United at Wembley.
Teddy Sheringham opens the scoring in the 11th minute and
Paul Scholes adds to United's tally in the 53rd minute. In four days' time, they will be competing in the European Cup final to challenge for a unique treble. 26 May 1999 – Two late goals (the equaliser from Teddy Sheringham and the winner from Ole Gunnar Solskjær) save Manchester United from the jaws of defeat and they beat
Bayern Munich 2–1 in the
Champions League final at the
Camp Nou to complete a unique treble. 30 May 1999 – Two late goals save
Manchester City from the jaws of defeat as they pull
Gillingham back to 2–2 in the Division Two Play-off Final at
Wembley. They go on to win 3–1 on penalties to attain their first promotion in ten years. 31 May 1999 – Watford seal promotion to the Premier League with a 2–0 win over Bolton Wanderers in the Division One playoff final at Wembley. They are first team since Notts County in 1991 to reach the top flight with two successive promotions. 12 June 1999 – Alex Ferguson receives a knighthood just over two weeks after guiding Manchester United to the treble.