After another mid-table finish after a poor start, Chris
Nicholl was sacked and replaced with Ian Branfoot in June
1991.
Branfoot's tenure in charge is generally accepted to be some
of the most dismal Saints football in living memory. Branfoot
managed to take a mid table side with plenty of potential
into relegation contenders in his first season. The situation
deteriorated over the next two seasons, despite he club making
the final of the Zenith Data Cup.
A finish of sixteenth was followed by one of eighteenth.
With the club in the relegation zone in January 1994, Branfoot
resigned.
The new team of Alan Ball with Lawrie McMenemy returned and
salvaged the season. Saints survived on the last day of the
season with a draw against West Ham. The duo managed to turn
Saints around and took the club to tenth the following year
much to the delight of supporters.
Ball left to manage Manchester City and he was replaced by
Dave Merrington, who had been responsible for bringing through
so many of Saints young talents.
Merrington's reign proved to be a short and unhappy one,
only lasting the 95/96 season. Once again, Saints managed
to stay up on the last day of the season. A goalless draw
at home to Wimbledon being enough to send Alan Ball's Manchester
City down a division on goal difference.
Graeme Souness was the new man in charge, along with McMenemy.
In came Lundekvam, Ostenstad, Berkovic and Saints managed
to hold on to their Premiership status for another year.
The squad, by this time was threadbare and full of second
stringers. Souness' dismantling of the youth set up meant
that talent would have to be bought in, which was a problem
for the cash strapped side.
The club is floated on the stock exchange.
In order to speed up the flotation Southampton FC is involved
in a reverse take-over with Secure Retirements plc. The new
plc is called Southampton Leisure Holdings.
Souness resigns along with Lawrie McMenemy
at the end of the season. They cannot work with the new board
led by Rupert Lowe.
Lowe appoints Dave Jones, whose Stockport side put Saints
out of the cup the previous season. Jones soon shows he can
bring in a bargain and Saints finish a commendable twelfth
in '97/98.
The good form and the good transfer dealings don't continue.
The signings of Ripley, Beresford and Hughes prove to be expensive
wastes although Jones did bring in Kachloul and Pahars.
The club have their worst ever start
to a top flight season in 98/99 resulting in the certainty
of a relegation dogfight as early as October. Saints survive
their "Great Escape" courtesy of a tense penultimate
fixture win against Wimbledon away and were safe when they
added a win over Everton.
As another season of struggle looked
likely in 99/00, Dave Jones had to face off the field allegations
(later shown to be baseless). The club felt it best to replace
Jones in January 2000 with Glenn Hoddle. Saints finish 15th
under Hoddle and Gorman and many feel that despite the lowly
position a corner has been turned.
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