Southampton F.C.
2016–17 season
ChairmanRalph Krueger
ManagerClaude Puel
StadiumSt Mary's Stadium
Premier League8th
FA CupFourth round
EFL CupRunners-up
UEFA Europa LeagueGroup stage
Top goalscorerLeague:
Nathan Redmond (7)

All:
Charlie Austin (9)
Highest home attendance31,891 v West Ham United
(4 February 2017)
Lowest home attendance13,517 v Norwich City
(18 January 2017)
Average home league attendance30,936

The 2016–17 Southampton F.C. season was the club's 18th season in the Premier League and their 40th in the top division of English football.[1] In addition to the 2016–17 Premier League, the club also competed in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and UEFA Europa League. The season was the club's only campaign with manager Claude Puel, who took over from Ronald Koeman on 30 June 2016.[2] The club finished eighth in the Premier League table, having won twelve, drawn ten and lost sixteen of their 38 matches played.[3] They were knocked out of the UEFA Europa League at the group stage, having won two, drawn two and lost two of their matches,[4] and the FA Cup in the fourth round,[5] while they finished as runners-up in the EFL Cup Final losing 3–2 to Manchester United.[6]

Following the end of the 2015–16 season, Southampton released goalkeeper Will Britt, midfielder Gastón Ramírez and defender Josh Debayo, while veteran goalkeeper Kelvin Davis retired.[7][8] The club also sold striker Juanmi to Real Sociedad,[9] midfielder Victor Wanyama to Tottenham Hotspur,[10] winger Sadio Mané to Liverpool,[11] striker Graziano Pellè to Shandong Luneng,[12] defender Bevis Mugabi to Yeovil Town,[13] and defender Jordan Turnbull to Coventry City.[14] Goalkeeper Paulo Gazzaniga and striker Sam Gallagher were sent out on full-season loans to Rayo Vallecano and Blackburn Rovers, respectively,[15][16] while defender Jason McCarthy and midfielder Dominic Gape moved to Walsall and Wycombe Wanderers, respectively, until January.[17][18]

In the summer transfer window, the Saints also made a number of new signings. First, on 1 July, they bought winger Nathan Redmond from Norwich City for a fee in the region of £10 million,[19] before Danish midfielder Pierre-Emile Højbjerg joined from Bayern Munich for a reported fee of £12.8 million ten days later.[20] On 1 August, goalkeeper Alex McCarthy joined from Crystal Palace for an undisclosed fee, while French defender Jérémy Pied joined on a free transfer from OGC Nice on the same day.[21] Shortly before the transfer window closed, the club signed Moroccan midfielder Sofiane Boufal from Lille for a club record fee of £16 million,[22] as well as bringing in former Leeds United goalkeeper Stuart Taylor, who had been a free agent for over a year.[23]

When the transfer window reopened in January 2017, Dominic Gape's loan move to Wycombe Wanderers was made permanent in a free transfer,[24] while Jason McCarthy's loan spell at Walsall was extended until the end of the season.[25] On 20 January, captain José Fonte left Southampton after seven years at the club, joining West Ham United for £8 million.[26] On transfer deadline day, the club signed Tunisian goalkeeper Mouez Hassen on loan from Nice until the end of the season,[27] as well as bringing in Italian international striker Manolo Gabbiadini from Napoli in a £14 million deal.[28] After the window closed, the club also signed Uruguayan centre-back Martín Cáceres, who had been a free agent since leaving Juventus at the end of the previous season.[29]

Charlie Austin finished as Southampton's top scorer for the season with nine goals in all competitions, despite having been injured between December 2016 and May 2017. New signing Nathan Redmond was the club's top scorer in the Premier League, with seven goals (eight in all competitions). Spanish midfielder Oriol Romeu won both Southampton F.C. Player of the Season awards, from the Southern Daily Echo and the club, as well as the club-run Players' Player of the Season accolade.[30][31] The club's highest home attendance of the season was 31,891 against West Ham United in the Premier League on 4 February 2017 (their highest since April 2013), and their lowest attendance of the season was 13,517 against Norwich City in the FA Cup on 18 January 2017.

Pre-season

Southampton began their pre-season preparations against the D.C. United Under-23s on 15 July 2016, winning 2–0 thanks to a first-half goal from James Ward-Prowse and a late penalty by Jay Rodriguez.[32] Commencing a tour of the Netherlands the following week, the Saints beat PEC Zwolle 4–0 on 23 July, with Charlie Austin opening the scoring before new signings Nathan Redmond (twice) and Pierre-Emile Højbjerg (with a penalty) scored their first goals for the club.[33] Four days later, the side won their third game in a row by beating FC Twente 2–1, with defender Virgil van Dijk and striker Sam Gallagher getting on the scoresheet.[34] The club ended their Dutch tour by extending their winning run to four with a win over FC Groningen on 30 July, the only goal scored by Austin.[35] Upon their return to England, the Saints hosted Spanish side Espanyol on 3 August, which they drew 1–1 to end their winning run.[36] Midfielder Oriol Romeu opened the scoring for the hosts in the first half, but Felipe Caicedo equalised for the visitors in the second half through a penalty, which was awarded for a foul in the penalty area by van Dijk on Léo Baptistão.[36] In their final pre-season friendly, Southampton beat Athletic Bilbao 1–0 thanks to a goal from Shane Long just before half-time.[37]

15 July 2016 Friendly United States D.C. United Under-23s 0–2 Southampton Washington, D.C., United States
11:00 EDT Report Ward-Prowse 16'
Rodriguez 89' (pen.)
Stadium: RFK Stadium
23 July 2016 Friendly Netherlands PEC Zwolle 0–4 Southampton Utrecht, Netherlands
19:00 CEST Report Austin 14'
Redmond 44', 45+1'
Højbjerg 88' (pen.)
Stadium: USV Sportpark
27 July 2016 Friendly Netherlands Twente 1–2 Southampton Oldenzaal, Netherlands
19:00 CEST Bijen 74' Report Van Dijk 17'
Gallagher 69'
Stadium: Q20 Stadium
30 July 2016 Friendly Netherlands Groningen 0–1 Southampton Groningen, Netherlands
15:30 CEST Report Austin 75' Stadium: Euroborg
3 August 2016 Friendly Southampton 1–1 Spain Espanyol Southampton
15:00 BST Romeu 31' Report Caicedo 69' (pen.) Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 8,984
Referee: Mike Dean
7 August 2016 Friendly Southampton 1–0 Spain Athletic Bilbao Southampton
15:00 BST Long 43' Report Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 17,758
Referee: Kevin Friend

Premier League

August–October 2016

Claude Puel took over from Ronald Koeman as Southampton manager at the beginning of the 2016–17 season.

Southampton began the 2016–17 Premier League season on 13 August 2016 with a home fixture against Watford, which ended in a 1–1 draw.[38] Watford midfielder Étienne Capoue opened the scoring for the visitors within ten minutes, before winger Nathan Redmond scored on his debut shortly after half-time to seal a point for the hosts.[38] The following week the club travelled to Old Trafford to face Manchester United, losing 2–0 to drop to 13th in the table.[39] Zlatan Ibrahimović opened the scoring for the hosts shortly before half-time, and later scored his second from the penalty spot after the break following a foul by Jordy Clasie on former Southampton defender Luke Shaw.[39] On 27 August, the club drew 1–1 with Sunderland at St Mary's Stadium.[40] The game remained goalless until late in the game, when Jermain Defoe opened the scoring with a penalty for a foul by José Fonte, before Jay Rodriguez equalised five minutes before full-time.[40] The draw saw Southampton drop further down the table to 15th.[40]

Following a break for international fixtures, Southampton faced Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium on 10 September, losing 2–1.[41] The Saints opened the scoring within the first 20 minutes, when a Dušan Tadić free kick deflected off goalkeeper Petr Čech into the goal.[41] Laurent Koscielny equalised for the hosts ten minutes later with an overhead kick, and in added time at the end of the game Santi Cazorla scored a controversial penalty to secure the win.[41] The Saints picked up their first league win of the season the following week when they beat Swansea City by a single goal, scored by Charlie Austin.[42] On 25 September, Southampton travelled to the London Stadium to face West Ham United, winning 3–0 to move up to the top half of the league table.[43] The Saints dominated much of the game, with Austin opening the scoring just before half-time with his fifth goal in four games (in all competitions).[43] Tadić scored in the 62nd minute to double the visitors' lead, before substitute James Ward-Prowse scored in injury time to make it three.[43]

Southampton faced league champions Leicester City on 2 October in a game that ended goalless.[44] Austin came closest to scoring in the first half, hitting the post once and heading on goal twice.[44] The striker was also denied in the second half by Kasper Schmeichel, while Jamie Vardy saw his side's best chance blocked later on.[44] After another international break, Southampton hosted Burnley on 16 October, winning the game 3–1.[45] After a goalless first half, the Saints scored three goals in 15 minutes to take a commanding lead, with Austin opening the scoring after 52 minutes and Redmond scoring on 60 minutes.[45] Austin scored a penalty six minutes later to make it three, before Sam Vokes also converted from the spot for the visitors.[45] The following week, Southampton drew 1–1 with Manchester City.[46] Redmond opened the scoring for the Saints in the 27th minute after a mistake by City defender John Stones, although the visitors did not have many more chances to score in the first half.[46] After the break, the home side equalised quickly through Kelechi Iheanacho, but saw a number of chances to win the game prevented by Fraser Forster in the Southampton goal.[46] The month ended with a 2–0 loss at home to Chelsea, thanks to goals from Eden Hazard and Diego Costa.[47]

November–December 2016

Charlie Austin scored four goals in four games between 17 September and 15 October 2016 to help Southampton move up to the top half of the table.

On 6 November, Southampton lost 2–1 at the struggling Hull City.[48] The Saints went a goal up within six minutes, when Charlie Austin scored a penalty awarded for a foul by Curtis Davies.[48] The visitors continued to dominate throughout the rest of the first half and into the second, although the hosts equalised through Robert Snodgrass in the 61st minute.[48] Within two minutes, Hull went 2–1 through Michael Dawson, holding on for an unlikely win.[48] On 19 November, the club returned from another international break to face Liverpool at St Mary's, which ended in a goalless draw.[49] Former Saints winger Sadio Mané came close to opening the scoring for the visitors twice in the first half, before Philippe Coutinho, Roberto Firmino and Nathaniel Clyne also missed good chances later on, with the home side's defence playing strongly to keep Liverpool out.[49] The following week, Southampton beat Everton (managed by former Saints boss Ronald Koeman) by a single early goal to return to tenth in the league table.[50] Charlie Austin scored in the first minute to put the hosts ahead, converting a cross from debutant Josh Sims.[50] Southampton continued to dominate possession and chances on goal throughout the match, with James Ward-Prowse coming closest to doubling his side's lead in the second half.[50]

The Saints lost 3–0 to struggling Crystal Palace in their first game of December, dropping down a place in the league table as a result.[51] Christian Benteke opened the scoring for the home side in the 33rd minute after a poor clearance from Fraser Forster, before James Tomkins double Palace's lead just a few minutes later from close range.[51] The visitors enjoyed the majority of possession and chances on goal, but Benteke struck again late on to secure the victory.[51] The following week, Southampton picked up a 1–0 win over Middlesbrough at St Mary's Stadium to move up to tenth in the league table.[52] After a first half of relatively few chances, Sofiane Boufal broke the deadlock shortly after the break with his first Premier League goal, striking from around 25 yards out.[52] On 14 December, Southampton and Stoke City drew 0–0 at the bet365 Stadium.[53] The hosts were reduced to ten men early on when Marko Arnautović was sent off for a high-footed challenge, but the visitors failed to take advantage and break the deadlock.[53] Jay Rodriguez came closest to score, but missed from close range, while a shot from James Ward-Prowse was cleared off the line later on.[53]

On 18 December, Southampton travelled to face local rivals Bournemouth, coming from a goal behind to win 3–1 and move up to seventh in the Premier League table.[54] Nathan Aké opened the scoring for the Cherries within six minutes, but Ryan Bertrand scored less than ten minutes later to bring the Saints level.[54] Both sides enjoyed numerous chances to go a goal up, but it was the visitors who scored again shortly after the break, when Jay Rodriguez tapped in a chance set up by substitute Steven Davis.[54] Southampton dominated the rest of the game, and Rodriguez scored his second of the match to seal the win late on.[54] In their first game after Christmas, Southampton lost 4–1 to Tottenham Hotspur on 28 December.[55] The home side opened the scoring quickly in the second minute when Virgil van Dijk headed in a free kick from James Ward-Prowse, but it was the visitors who scored next as Delle Alli scored a header from Moussa Sissoko's deflected cross.[55] After dominating much of the rest of the first half, Spurs went ahead shortly after the break through Harry Kane, who missed a penalty a few minutes later when Alli was fouled by Nathan Redmond, who was sent off.[55] Son Heung-min scored a third for Tottenham late on, before Alli scored his second of the game to make it four.[55] On the final day of the year, Southampton lost at home again to West Bromwich Albion, who won 2–1.[56] After enjoying the majority of possession in the first half, the hosts went one up through Shane Long just before half-time, although the lead was short-lived as Matt Phillips equalised just a minute later.[56] Shortly after the break, Hal Robson-Kanu scored a second for West Brom, which was enough to secure the win as the Saints failed to equalise late on.[56] Virgil van Dijk was sent off late on for a second bookable offence.[56]

January–March 2017

James Ward-Prowse was the first player to score for Southampton in the league in 2017, against Leicester City.

On 2 January 2017, in their third game in six days, Southampton travelled to Goodison Park to face Everton, losing the match 3–0.[57] After much of the game lacked clear chances on goal, the home side opened the scoring after 73 minutes when Enner Valencia scored his first goal for the club.[57] Leighton Baines scored a penalty following a foul by Maya Yoshida on Valencia less than ten minutes later, before Romelu Lukaku made it three before the end of the match.[57] The loss saw the Saints drop to tenth in the table.[57] Southampton lost their fourth league game in a row on 14 January, after they were beaten 1–0 away to Burnley.[58] The visitors came closest to opening the scoring in the first half through Dušan Tadić, whose shot was cleared off the line, and also enjoyed the majority of chances in the second period.[58] However, it was the hosts who scored the only goal of the game through substitute Joey Barton, who scored a free kick in the 78th minute to send the Saints down to 13th in the league table.[58]

Southampton won their first Premier League game in over a month on 22 January, beating league champions Leicester City 3–0 at home.[59] James Ward-Prowse opened the scoring in the 26th minute with a first-time shot after a Cédric Soares cross from the right wing.[59] The hosts continued to dominate, culminating in a second goal in the first half courtesy of Jay Rodriguez, who converted a free-kick from Ward-Prowse.[59] Leicester enjoyed a number of chances to get back into the game later on, with Wes Morgan coming closest to scoring for the visitors, but Southampton continued to attack as an own goal by Morgan was later disallowed as Maya Yoshida was offside.[59] Morgan was involved again as he brought down Shane Long in the box in the 85th minute, with Dušan Tadić scoring the resulting penalty kick to win the game 3–0.[59] Southampton lost 2–1 to Swansea City the following week, dropping a place in the table as a result.[60] After a relatively slow start, Swansea opened the scoring through Alfie Mawson in the 38th minute, going into half-time with the advantage.[60] The Saints increased the pressure after the break, with Shane Long equalising after 57 minutes against the run of play, although Gylfi Sigurðsson scored a second for the hosts later on.[60]

On 4 February 2017, Southampton hosted West Ham United and lost 3–1 to drop back to 13th in the league table.[61] New signing Manolo Gabbiadini opened the scoring on his debut after 12 minutes, but the visitors equalised just two minutes later through Andy Carroll.[61] Pedro Obiang scored a long-range effort just before the break, and later on Mark Noble made it three for the Hammers.[61] The following week, Southampton picked up their biggest win of the season when they beat bottom-placed Sunderland 4–0.[62] After a relatively even opening to the game, Gabbiadini opened the scoring for the Saints after half an hour with his second goal in his second game, converting a cross from Ryan Bertrand.[62] On the stroke of half-time the recent signing doubled the visitors' lead with his third goal in two games.[62] Shortly before full-time it was 3–0 thanks to an own goal from Jason Denayer, and in injury time Shane Long made it four to take Southampton up to 11th in the table.[62] Wahbi Khazri scored a consolation before the end, but it was disallowed for handball.[62]

In their first game after the 2017 EFL Cup Final, Southampton went ahead of Watford in the table when they beat the side 4–3 at Vicarage Road on 4 March 2017.[63] The hosts went ahead within four minutes through captain Troy Deeney, but the Saints responded and equalised 24 minutes later through Dušan Tadić following some poor defending.[63] Nathan Redmond put the visitors ahead on the stroke of half-time, after Tadić and James Ward-Prowse worked the opportunity.[63] Southampton pushed for a third into the second half, with Manolo Gabbiadini coming closest to scoring, but the Hornets equalised through Stefano Okaka on 79 minutes.[63] Gabbiadini scored his sixth goal for the Saints just four minutes later and Redmond scored a fourth for Southampton, with Abdoulaye Doucouré scoring a third for Watford in stoppage time.[63] On 19 March, Southampton lost 2–1 at Tottenham Hotspur.[64] Christian Eriksen opened the scoring within 15 minutes from the edge of the penalty area, before Dele Alli doubled the home side's lead with a 33rd-minute penalty awarded for a foul by Steven Davis.[64] Dušan Tadić missed a close-range chance on goal before the break, before James Ward-Prowse scored just after half-time to bring the Saints back into the game.[64] Spurs held off further Saints attacks for the 2–1 win.[64]

April–May 2017

Nathan Redmond equalled the injured Charlie Austin's league goal tally in April, later surpassing it in May.

In their first home game in almost two months, Southampton were held to a goalless draw by local rivals Bournemouth.[65] The hosts enjoyed the majority of possession early on, with a goal from Jay Rodriguez being disallowed due to offside.[65] The Cherries responded later in the first half, with former Saints player Andrew Surman seeing an effort cleared off the line by Steven Davis 12 minutes before the break.[65] The second half started off slow, before both sides began pressuring the goals, with Bournemouth coming close to breaking the deadlock multiple times.[65] In the 77th minute the visitors were awarded a penalty, although it was sent high over the crossbar by Harry Arter.[65] Later in the week, the Saints hosted Crystal Palace and won the game 3–1.[66] Both sides created chances on goal early in the game, but it was the visitors who struck first through Christian Benteke in the 31st minute.[66] Nathan Redmond equalised on the stroke of half-time.[66] The hosts enjoyed the majority of the pressure after the break, and after a number of close calls Maya Yoshida scored his first league goal of the season to put the Saints in front.[66] James Ward-Prowse scored just a minute later, as Southampton dominated Palace and saw out the game to move into the top half of the table.[66] Southampton beat West Bromwich Albion three days later, closing the gap between the two sides to four points (with the Saints still having two games in hand).[67] Jordy Clasie scored the only goal of the game in the 25th minute, striking his first Premier League goal from the edge of the penalty area.[67] The Baggies came close to equalising at various points throughout the game, with goalkeeper Fraser Forster making a number of saves to deny the hosts and defend the win.[67]

The following week, the Saints lost 3–0 to Manchester City at home.[68] After a goalless first half, the visitors opened the scoring ten minutes after the half-time break when Vincent Kompany headed in a corner from David Silva.[68] City continued to enjoy the majority of possession and chances on goal, with Leroy Sané doubling their lead in the 77th minute, before Sergio Agüero scored a third three minutes later to secure the win.[68] Southampton managed just one chance on target in the whole game – a Maya Yoshida header in the second half.[68] The club lost again the following week to league leaders Chelsea at Stamford Bridge, who beat the Saints 4–2.[69] Eden Hazard opened the scoring for the hosts within five minutes, before Oriol Romeu scored his first goal of the season to bring Southampton level.[69] Gary Cahill scored on the stroke of half-time, before Diego Costa doubled Chelsea's lead ten minutes after the break.[69] Costa scored again in the penultimate minute of normal time, before Ryan Bertrand scored a second consolation for the visitors just before the end of the game.[69] The club were held to a goalless draw against Hull City later in the week.[70] The game saw very few chances for either side, with only three shots on target in the 90 minutes.[70] Kamil Grosicki almost scored for the visitors early on with a sixth-minute free kick that hit the post, while Southampton's closest effort came in stoppage time at the end of the game, when Dušan Tadić saw a penalty saved by Eldin Jakupović to keep the Tigers fighting for Premier League safety.[70]

On 7 May, Southampton faced Liverpool at Anfield in a game which ended as a goalless draw.[71] The game featured very few chances on goal for either side, with the Saints failing to manage a shot on target the entire 90 minutes.[71] The best chance of the game came for the home side in the second half, when a handball by Jack Stephens resulted in a penalty; however, James Milner's spot kick was saved by Fraser Forster and the scores remained level.[71] Marko Grujić almost scored with a header late on, but it remained goalless.[71] Three days later the club hosted Arsenal and lost 2–0 to the Gunners.[72] After a first half with very few chances for either side, the visitors opened the scoring after 60 minutes when Alexis Sánchez beat two defenders to score his 20th league goal of the season.[72] 23 minutes later, after being on as a substitute for just three minutes, Olivier Giroud headed in the second, securing Arsenal's ascent to fifth in the table.[72] On 13 May, Southampton played their final away game of the season against relegated Middlesbrough, winning 2–1 to move up to ninth in the table.[73] With a markedly changed lineup (including the debut of centre-back Martín Cáceres), the Saints started the game slowly, but opened the scoring through Jay Rodriguez shortly before half-time.[73] After coming on at the start of the second half, Nathan Redmond doubled the lead for the visitors in the 57th minute.[73] Shane Long missed a penalty less than ten minutes later, before Patrick Bamford scored a consolation for Boro later on.[73] On 17 May, the club drew 0–0 with Manchester United and moved up to eighth in the table.[74] The Saints were awarded a penalty within the opening five minutes for a handball by Eric Bailly; the penalty was taken by Manolo Gabbiadini but saved by Sergio Romero.[74] Bailly forced a save out of Fraser Forster later in the half, and in the second half Anthony Martial hit the post.[74]

On the final day of the season, Southampton hosted Stoke City who beat the Saints by a single goal.[75] Nathan Redmond gave the hosts their best chance of the game when he hit the bar at the end of the first half, before former Southampton striker Peter Crouch scored the only goal of the game on the hour mark.[75] The home side had a number of chances to equalise in the second half through Steven Davis, James Ward-Prowse and Sofiane Boufal, but goalkeeper Jack Butland made a number of saves to deny them.[75] Due to Bournemouth losing and West Bromwich Albion drawing, Southampton remained eighth in the Premier League table.

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
6 Manchester United 38 18 15 5 54 29 +25 69 Qualification for the Champions League group stage[lower-alpha 1]
7 Everton 38 17 10 11 62 44 +18 61 Qualification for the Europa League third qualifying round[lower-alpha 2]
8 Southampton 38 12 10 16 41 48 7 46
9 Bournemouth 38 12 10 16 55 67 12 46
10 West Bromwich Albion 38 12 9 17 43 51 8 45
Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Play-offs (only if needed to decide champion, teams for relegation or teams for UEFA competitions).[76][77]
Notes:
  1. Manchester United qualified for the Champions League group stage by winning the 2016–17 UEFA Europa League. Based on their league position (6th), they would have received the spot above to enter the Europa League group stage. This spot was vacated without replacement as per UEFA regulations.
  2. Manchester United, winners of the 2016–17 EFL Cup, initially attained a spot in the Europa League third qualifying round. That was passed to the next-highest ranked team in the league not already qualified for UEFA competitions (7th-placed Everton).

Results by matchday

Matchday1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738
GroundHAHAHAAHAHAHHAHAAHHAAHAHAAAHHAHAHAHAHH
ResultDLDLWWDWDLLDWLWDWLLLLWLLWWLDWWLLDDLWDL
Position71315181491088910101011109789101311121311101010999991010988
Updated to match(es) played on 21 May 2017. Source: BBC Match Reports
A = Away; H = Home; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Loss

Matches

13 August 2016 1 Southampton 1–1 Watford Southampton
15:00 BST Redmond 58' Report Capoue 9' Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,488
Referee: Roger East
19 August 2016 2 Manchester United 2–0 Southampton Manchester
20:00 BST Ibrahimović 36', 52' (pen.) Report Stadium: Old Trafford
Attendance: 75,326
Referee: Anthony Taylor
27 August 2016 3 Southampton 1–1 Sunderland Southampton
15:00 BST Rodriguez 85' Report Defoe 80' (pen.) Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 30,152
Referee: Lee Mason
10 September 2016 4 Arsenal 2–1 Southampton London
15:00 BST Koscielny 29'
Cazorla 90+4' (pen.)
Report Čech 18' (o.g.) Stadium: Emirates Stadium
Attendance: 59,962
Referee: Bobby Madley
17 September 2016 5 Southampton 1–0 Swansea City Southampton
15:00 BST Austin 64' Report Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 29,087
Referee: Mike Jones
25 September 2016 6 West Ham United 0–3 Southampton London
16:00 BST Report Austin 40'
Tadić 62'
Ward-Prowse 90+2'
Stadium: London Stadium
Attendance: 56,864
Referee: Jonathan Moss
2 October 2016 7 Leicester City 0–0 Southampton Leicester
14:15 BST Report Stadium: King Power Stadium
Attendance: 31,563
Referee: Martin Atkinson
16 October 2016 8 Southampton 3–1 Burnley Southampton
16:00 BST Austin 52', 66' (pen.)
Redmond 60'
Report Vokes 72' (pen.) Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 29,040
Referee: Mike Dean
23 October 2016 9 Manchester City 1–1 Southampton Manchester
13:30 BST Iheanacho 55' Report Redmond 27' Stadium: City of Manchester Stadium
Attendance: 53,731
Referee: Mark Clattenburg
30 October 2016 10 Southampton 0–2 Chelsea Southampton
16:00 GMT Report Hazard 6'
Costa 55'
Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,827
Referee: Mike Jones
6 November 2016 11 Hull City 2–1 Southampton Kingston upon Hull
14:15 GMT Snodgrass 61'
Dawson 63'
Report Austin 6' (pen.) Stadium: KCOM Stadium
Attendance: 17,768
Referee: Graham Scott
19 November 2016 12 Southampton 0–0 Liverpool Southampton
15:00 GMT Report Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,848
Referee: Mark Clattenburg
27 November 2016 13 Southampton 1–0 Everton Southampton
16:30 GMT Austin 1' Report Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,132
Referee: Craig Pawson
3 December 2016 14 Crystal Palace 3–0 Southampton London
15:00 GMT Benteke 33', 85'
Tomkins 36'
Report Stadium: Selhurst Park
Attendance: 25,393
Referee: Neil Swarbrick
10 December 2016 15 Southampton 1–0 Middlesbrough Southampton
15:00 GMT Boufal 53' Report Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 28,976
Referee: Stuart Attwell
14 December 2016 16 Stoke City 0–0 Southampton Stoke-on-Trent
20:00 GMT Report Stadium: bet365 Stadium
Attendance: 27,002
Referee: Anthony Taylor
18 December 2016 17 Bournemouth 1–3 Southampton Bournemouth
13:30 GMT Aké 6' Report Bertrand 14'
Rodriguez 48', 85'
Stadium: Dean Court
Attendance: 11,113
Referee: Mark Clattenburg
28 December 2016 18 Southampton 1–4 Tottenham Hotspur Southampton
19:45 GMT van Dijk 2' Report Alli 19', 87'
Kane 52'
Son 85'
Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,853
Referee: Mike Dean
31 December 2016 19 Southampton 1–2 West Bromwich Albion Southampton
15:00 GMT Long 41' Report Phillips 43'
Robson-Kanu 50'
Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 30,975
Referee: Mike Jones
2 January 2017 20 Everton 3–0 Southampton Liverpool
15:00 GMT Valencia 73'
Baines 81' (pen.)
Lukaku 89'
Report Stadium: Goodison Park
Attendance: 38,891
Referee: Kevin Friend
14 January 2017 21 Burnley 1–0 Southampton Burnley
15:00 GMT Barton 78' Report Stadium: Turf Moor
Attendance: 20,254
Referee: Paul Tierney
22 January 2017 22 Southampton 3–0 Leicester City Southampton
12:00 GMT Ward-Prowse 26'
Rodriguez 39'
Tadić 85' (pen.)
Report Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 30,548
Referee: Michael Oliver
31 January 2017 23 Swansea City 2–1 Southampton Swansea
19:45 GMT Mawson 38'
Sigurðsson 70'
Report Long 57' Stadium: Liberty Stadium
Attendance: 20,359
Referee: Roger East
4 February 2017 24 Southampton 1–3 West Ham United Southampton
15:00 GMT Gabbiadini 12' Report Carroll 14'
Obiang 44'
Noble 52'
Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,891
Referee: Graham Scott
11 February 2017 25 Sunderland 0–4 Southampton Sunderland
15:00 GMT Report Gabbiadini 30', 45'
Denayer 89' (o.g.)
Long 90+2'
Stadium: Stadium of Light
Attendance: 39,931
Referee: Paul Tierney
4 March 2017 26 Watford 3–4 Southampton Watford
15:00 GMT Deeney 4'
Okaka 79'
Doucouré 90+4'
Report Tadić 28'
Redmond 45+2', 86'
Gabbiadini 83'
Stadium: Vicarage Road
Attendance: 20,670
Referee: Jonathan Moss
19 March 2017 27 Tottenham Hotspur 2–1 Southampton London
14:15 GMT Eriksen 14'
Alli 33' (pen.)
Report Ward-Prowse 52' Stadium: White Hart Lane
Attendance: 31,697
Referee: Andre Marriner
1 April 2017 28 Southampton 0–0 Bournemouth Southampton
17:30 BST Report Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,847
Referee: Jonathan Moss
5 April 2017 29 Southampton 3–1 Crystal Palace Southampton
19:45 BST Redmond 45'
Yoshida 84'
Ward-Prowse 85'
Report Benteke 31' Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 29,968
Referee: Roger East
8 April 2017 30 West Bromwich Albion 0–1 Southampton West Bromwich
15:00 BST Report Clasie 25' Stadium: The Hawthorns
Attendance: 24,697
Referee: Chris Kavanagh
15 April 2017 31 Southampton 0–3 Manchester City Southampton
17:30 BST Report Kompany 55'
Sané 77'
Agüero 80'
Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,850
Referee: Neil Swarbrick
25 April 2017 32 Chelsea 4–2 Southampton London
19:45 BST Hazard 5'
Cahill 45+1'
Costa 53', 89'
Report Romeu 24'
Bertrand 90+4'
Stadium: Stamford Bridge
Attendance: 41,168
Referee: Lee Mason
29 April 2017 33 Southampton 0–0 Hull City Southampton
15:00 BST Report Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,120
Referee: Mike Dean
7 May 2017 34 Liverpool 0–0 Southampton Liverpool
13:30 BST Report Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,159
Referee: Bobby Madley
10 May 2017 35 Southampton 0–2 Arsenal Southampton
19:45 BST Report Sánchez 60'
Giroud 83'
Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,474
Referee: Jonathan Moss
13 May 2017 36 Middlesbrough 1–2 Southampton Middlesbrough
15:00 BST Bamford 72' Report Rodriguez 42'
Redmond 57'
Stadium: Riverside Stadium
Attendance: 28,203
Referee: Anthony Taylor
17 May 2017 37 Southampton 0–0 Manchester United Southampton
19:45 BST Romeu Yellow card 10'
Cédric Yellow card 37'
Report Jones Yellow card 51' Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,425
Referee: Mike Dean
21 May 2017 38 Southampton 0–1 Stoke City Southampton
15:00 BST Report Crouch 60' Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,286
Referee: Lee Probert

FA Cup

Shane Long scored the only goal of the game in the third round replay against Norwich City on 18 January 2017.
Norwich City (7 January 2017)

Southampton entered the 2016–17 FA Cup in the third round, facing Championship side Norwich City on 7 January 2017 in a match which ended in a 2–2 draw.[78] The Premier League side went one up after 37 minutes, when defender Virgil van Dijk converted a cross from winger Dušan Tadić.[78] After the break, however, the hosts equalised through a Steven Whittaker penalty, following a foul by young goalkeeper Harry Lewis on striker Cameron Jerome.[78] In the 67th minute, Maya Yoshida scored his first goal of the season when he headed in a cross from Pierre-Emile Højbjerg, but in stoppage time at the end of the match Steven Naismith headed in to equalise and force a replay.[78]

Norwich City (replay) (18 January 2017)

In the replay at St Mary's Stadium, Southampton beat Norwich City by a single late goal to advance to the fourth round of the FA Cup.[79] The game featured very few chances for either side until late in the game, with Norwich having no shots on target and only three shots overall in the full 90 minutes, with the hosts enjoying the majority of possession.[79] Shane Long, James Ward-Prowse and Nathan Redmond came close to breaking the deadlock later on, and it was Long who on his 100th appearance for the club eventually scored the only goal of the game in stoppage time, when he bundled in a cross from winger Sam McQueen after his header was saved by Michael McGovern.[79]

Arsenal (28 January 2017)

In the fourth round of the tournament, Southampton were knocked out by Arsenal at home.[80] Danny Welbeck, in his first start since May 2016, opened the scoring after 15 minutes and doubled the visitors' lead just seven minutes later, the second set up by former Southampton player Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain.[80] Ten minutes before half-time Theo Walcott, another former Saint, scored a third for Arsenal.[80] The Gunners continued to dominate in the second half, with Walcott scoring two more to complete his hat-trick and give the visitors a 5–0 win.[80] The result was Southampton's heaviest home defeat in the FA Cup since February 1910, as well as their joint-heaviest defeat at St Mary's Stadium.[80]

7 January 2017 Round 3 Norwich City 2–2 Southampton Norwich
15:00 GMT Whittaker 52' (pen.)
Naismith 90+3'
Report van Dijk 38'
Yoshida 67'
Stadium: Carrow Road
Attendance: 12,479
Referee: Chris Kavanagh
18 January 2017 Round 3 replay Southampton 1–0 Norwich City Southampton
19:45 GMT Long 90+2' Report Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 13,517
Referee: Jonathan Moss
28 January 2017 Round 4 Southampton 0–5 Arsenal Southampton
17:30 GMT Report Welbeck 15', 22'
Walcott 35', 69', 84'
Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,288
Referee: Kevin Friend

EFL Cup

Midfielder Jordy Clasie scored his first goal for the club in their 2–0 win over Arsenal on 30 November 2016.
Crystal Palace (21 September 2016)

As a club competing in both the Premier League and the UEFA Europa League, Southampton entered the 2016–17 EFL Cup in the third round.[81] On 21 September 2016 the club hosted Crystal Palace, beating the fellow Premier League side 2–0 to advance to the fourth round.[82] Charlie Austin scored his fourth goal in three games in all competitions from the penalty spot in the 33rd minute to open the scoring, following a foul by Martin Kelly on Shane Long.[82] After the break, young midfielder Jake Hesketh scored his first goal for the club (in his first senior appearance since December 2014) to double Southampton's lead, which they held until the end to ensure their place in the fourth round of the tournament.[82]

Sunderland (26 October 2016)

In the fourth round of the EFL Cup, Southampton were drawn at home against Sunderland.[83] The Saints beat the visitors on 26 October by a solitary goal to advance to the fifth round of the tournament.[84] The only goal of the game was scored by Moroccan winger Sofiane Boufal's long-range strike into the top corner, on his first start for the home side since his move in the summer.[84] Very few chances were enjoyed by either side throughout the 90 minutes (Southampton had only one shot on target, while Sunderland had two), and Sunderland manager David Moyes was dismissed by the referee late on in the game as he and his side appealed for a penalty following a tackle by Maya Yoshida on Victor Anichebe.[84]

Arsenal (30 November 2016)

On 30 November 2016, Southampton faced Arsenal in the fifth round of the EFL Cup, winning 2–0 to advance to the semi-finals of the tournament for the first time since 1987.[85] Jordy Clasie opened the scoring within the first 15 minutes of the game with his first goal for the club, striking from the edge of the penalty area after Sofiane Boufal's initial effort was blocked.[85] The home side increased the pressure in search of an equaliser, but the Saints struck again through Ryan Bertrand shortly before half time to double their lead going into the break.[85] The Gunners began the second half the stronger side, but the Saints later responded and came close to scoring a third goal, with Boufal and Pierre-Emile Højbjerg coming close late on.[85]

Liverpool (first leg) (11 January 2017)

In the first leg of the EFL Cup semi-final, Southampton beat Liverpool 1–0 at St Mary's.[86] Liverpool enjoyed the majority of possession early in the match, but Nathan Redmond opened the scoring for the hosts within 20 minutes with his first goal in the competition, after being set up by Jay Rodriguez.[86] Redmond almost made it two for the Saints on two separate occasions before the break, but was denied both times by Liverpool goalkeeper Loris Karius.[86] In the second half, the home side again came closing to doubling their lead when Cédric Soares shot wide, before Shane Long set up another scoring opportunity for Redmond, who hit the crossbar with a chipped shot.[86]

Manolo Gabbiadini scored both of Southampton's goals in the 2017 EFL Cup Final.
Liverpool (second leg) (25 January 2017)

In the second leg, Southampton beat Liverpool 1–0 to secure a 2–0 aggregate win and advance to the 2017 EFL Cup Final.[87] Liverpool dominated possession throughout the majority of the game, but the Saints enjoyed more clear-cut chances to score in the first half, with Dušan Tadić and Steven Davis coming closest to breaking the deadlock.[87] The hosts increased the pressure after the break, but Daniel Sturridge missed multiple chances on goal to leave the Saints with the advantage.[87] Emre Can came closest for Liverpool in the 53rd minute, when goalkeeper Fraser Forster failed to hold his shot before saving it off the line to keep his clean sheet.[87] Shane Long finally scored the only goal of the game in stoppage time, securing Southampton's first cup final since 2003 and their first EFL Cup final since 1979.[87] The result made Southampton the first team to advance to the final of the tournament without conceding a single goal.[87]

Manchester United (26 February 2017)

In the 2017 EFL Cup Final on 26 February 2017, Southampton lost 3–2 to Manchester United to finish as runners-up.[6] Manolo Gabbiadini scored early on in the game, but the goal was controversially disallowed for offside.[6] Zlatan Ibrahimović opened the scoring in the 19th minute, with a free-kick awarded following a foul by Oriol Romeu on Ander Herrera.[6] Despite the Saints enjoying a spell of pressure on the United goal, Jesse Lingard doubled the lead in the 38th minute.[6] Gabbiadini brought Southampton back into the game on the stroke of half-time, converting James Ward-Prowse's cross.[6]

After the break, Gabbiadini equalised for the Saints with his fifth goal in his first three games, as the Saints continued to dominate possession and chances on goal.[6] The Saints continued having chances to take the lead throughout the second half, as Dušan Tadić and Ward-Prowse saw efforts saved by United goalkeeper David de Gea, and Oriol Romeu hit the post with a header from a corner, but it was Ibrahimović who scored his second and United's third to win the cup for the Red Devils.[6]

21 September 2016 Round 3 Southampton 2–0 Crystal Palace Southampton
19:45 BST Austin 33' (pen.)
Hesketh 63'
Report Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 14,080
Referee: James Adcock
26 October 2016 Round 4 Southampton 1–0 Sunderland Southampton
19:45 BST Boufal 66' Report Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 21,460
Referee: Chris Kavanagh
30 November 2016 Round 5 Arsenal 0–2 Southampton London
19:45 GMT Report Clasie 13'
Bertrand 38'
Stadium: Emirates Stadium
Attendance: 59,013
Referee: Kevin Friend
11 January 2017 Semi-Final Leg 1 Southampton 1–0 Liverpool Southampton
19:45 GMT Redmond 20' Report Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,480
Referee: Neil Swarbrick
25 January 2017 Semi-Final Leg 2 Liverpool 0–1 Southampton Liverpool
20:00 GMT Report Long 90+1' Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 52,238
Referee: Ben Atkinson
26 February 2017 Final Manchester United 3–2 Southampton London
16:30 GMT Ibrahimović 19', 87'
Lingard 38'
Report Gabbiadini 45+1', 49' Stadium: Wembley Stadium
Attendance: 85,264
Referee: Andre Marriner

UEFA Europa League

Defender Virgil van Dijk scored two goals in Southampton's six UEFA Europa League group stage matches.
Sparta Prague (15 September 2016)

Southampton entered the 2016–17 UEFA Europa League at the group stage, when they were drawn in Group K with Internazionale, Sparta Prague and Hapoel Be'er Sheva.[88] In the opening match against Sparta Prague on 15 September 2016, the Saints picked up their first win of the season when they beat the Czech side 3–0.[89] Charlie Austin opened the scoring with a fifth-minute penalty, before doubling his side's lead 20 minutes later with a header.[89] Jay Rodriguez scored a third in added time at the end of the match to send Southampton to the top of the group.[89]

Hapoel Be'er Sheva (29 September 2016)

In their second match of the tournament, the Saints were held to a goalless draw at Israeli champions Hapoel Be'er Sheva.[90] The game did not feature many goalscoring opportunities for either side in the first half, which Hapoel largely dominated, although James Ward-Prowse had a number of chances on goal after the break.[90] The home side came closest to winning the game in the second half through Maor Melikson and Ben Sahar chances, however the deadlock stayed unbroken and both sides remained on level points at the top of the group table.[90]

Internazionale (20 October 2016)

On 20 October 2016 the Saints travelled to the San Siro to face Internazionale, losing 1–0 to the Italian side.[91] The visitors almost scored on a number of occasions in the first half, notably when Ward-Prowse's shot went over the crossbar and Cuco Martina's went wide of the post.[91] Antonio Candreva scored the only goal of the game in the 67th minute, before Marcelo Brozović received a second booking and was sent off ten minutes later.[91] However, Southampton could not take advantage of the extra player and succumbed to their first defeat in the tournament.[91]

Internazionale (3 November 2016)

Southampton hosted Internazionale on 3 November 2016, winning 2–1 to secure second in the group K table.[92] After Inter captain Mauro Icardi opened the scoring in the 33rd minute, the Saints were awarded a controversial penalty for a handball by Ivan Perišić just before half time, while Antonio Candreva was booked for an off-the-ball incident involving Sam McQueen.[92] Dušan Tadić's penalty was saved by Samir Handanović, before the half ended with more drama between the players of both sides.[92] The hosts increased the pressure in the second half, leading to defender Virgil van Dijk equalising in the 64th minute with a shot in the box following a corner.[92] Less than five minutes later, Southampton went ahead as Yuto Nagatomo turned Tadić's cross into the Internazionale goal.[92] Southampton held on and almost scored a third for an historic win.[92]

Sparta Prague (24 November 2016)

On 24 November, Southampton lost at Sparta Prague by a single goal to remain second in the group.[93] Despite dominating possession for most of the match, the Saints enjoyed few clear chances and went behind early on when defender Costa Nhamoinesu scored a volley from close range following a free kick, which was poorly defended by the Premier League club.[93] Goalkeeper Fraser Forster made a number of saves to deny further goals, which Prague threatened to score later on in the game.[93] The result left Southampton needing a goalless draw or win over Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the final group stage game in order to proceed to the knockout stages.[93]

Hapoel Be'er Sheva (8 December 2016)

Southampton were knocked out of the UEFA Europa League on 8 December 2016 when they drew 1–1 with Hapoel Be'er Sheva at St Mary's Stadium.[94] Despite the home side dominating much of the possession and having many more chances on goal, it was the visitors who took the advantage in the 78th minute when Maor Buzaglo scored the Israeli side's only shot on target after poor defending from the Saints, who were left needing two goals in just over ten minutes in order to advance to the knockout stages.[94] Defender Virgil van Dijk pulled one back in stoppage time, and Maya Yoshida came close to winning the game with a last-minute header, but the game ended level and Hapoel finished the group in second place.[94]

Group table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification SPP HBS SOU INT
1 Czech Republic Sparta Prague 6 4 0 2 8 6 +2 12 Advance to knockout phase 2–0 1–0 3–1
2 Israel Hapoel Be'er Sheva 6 2 2 2 6 6 0 8 0–1 0–0 3–2
3 England Southampton 6 2 2 2 6 4 +2 8 3–0 1–1 2–1
4 Italy Internazionale 6 2 0 4 7 11 4 6 2–1 0–2 1–0
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers

Matches

15 September 2016 Group Stage Southampton 3–0 Sparta Prague Southampton
20:05 BST Austin 5' (pen.), 27'
Rodriguez 90+2'
Report Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 25,125
Referee: Manuel Gräfe
29 September 2016 Group Stage Hapoel Be'er Sheva 0–0 Southampton Be'er Sheva, Israel
18:00 BST Report Stadium: Turner Stadium
Attendance: 16,138
Referee: Stefan Johannesson
20 October 2016 Group Stage Internazionale 1–0 Southampton Milan, Italy
19:00 BST Candreva 67' Report Stadium: San Siro
Attendance: 26,719
Referee: Gediminas Mažeika
3 November 2016 Group Stage Southampton 2–1 Internazionale Southampton
20:05 GMT van Dijk 64'
Nagatomo 69' (o.g.)
Report Icardi 33' Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 30,389
Referee: Paweł Gil
24 November 2016 Group Stage Sparta Prague 1–0 Southampton Prague, Czech Republic
18:00 GMT Nhamoinesu 11' Report Stadium: Generali Arena
Attendance: 17,429
Referee: Jesús Gil Manzano
8 December 2016 Group Stage Southampton 1–1 Hapoel Be'er Sheva Southampton
20:05 GMT van Dijk 90+1' Report Buzaglo 78' Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 30,416
Referee: Paolo Tagliavento

Squad statistics

No. Pos. Nat. Name League FA Cup EFL Cup Europe Total Discipline
Apps. Goals Apps. Goals Apps. Goals Apps. Goals Apps. Goals
1 GK England Fraser Forster 380 00 40 60 480 30
2 DF Portugal Cédric Soares 300 00 30 10 340 70
3 DF Japan Maya Yoshida 231 21 60 60 372 30
4 MF Netherlands Jordy Clasie 12(4)1 20 3(1)1 20 19(5)2 30
5 DF Romania Florin Gardoș 00 10 00 00 10 00
7 FW Republic of Ireland Shane Long 10(22)3 31 2(3)1 4(1)0 19(26)5 20
8 MF Northern Ireland Steven Davis 29(3)0 00 40 1(3)0 34(6)0 30
9 FW England Jay Rodriguez 9(15)5 1(1)0 3(1)0 3(1)1 16(18)6 10
10 FW England Charlie Austin 11(4)6 00 11 2(3)2 14(7)9 10
11 MF Serbia Dušan Tadić 30(3)3 1(1)0 3(1)0 3(2)0 37(7)3 50
12 DF Uruguay Martín Cáceres 10 00 00 00 10 00
13 GK England Alex McCarthy 00 00 20 00 20 00
14 MF Spain Oriol Romeu 351 0(2)0 30 5(1)0 43(3)1 130
15 DF Curaçao Cuco Martina 6(3)0 20 20 50 15(3)0 00
16 MF England James Ward-Prowse 22(8)4 20 4(1)0 5(1)0 33(10)4 50
17 DF Netherlands Virgil van Dijk 211 11 20 62 304 41
18 MF England Harrison Reed 1(2)0 30 30 00 7(2)0 00
19 MF Morocco Sofiane Boufal 12(12)1 00 2(1)1 0(2)0 14(15)2 50
20 FW Italy Manolo Gabbiadini 10(1)4 00 12 00 11(1)6 10
21 DF England Ryan Bertrand 282 10 41 10 343 40
22 FW England Nathan Redmond 32(5)7 0(3)0 3(2)1 4(1)0 39(11)8 31
23 MF Denmark Pierre-Emile Højbjerg 14(8)0 20 1(4)0 5(1)0 22(13)0 30
24 DF England Jack Stephens 15(2)0 30 30 00 21(2)0 20
26 DF France Jérémy Pied 1(3)0 00 00 00 1(3)0 00
27 MF Wales Lloyd Isgrove 00 10 10 00 20 00
28 GK England Stuart Taylor 00 00 00 00 00 00
32 FW England Olufela Olomola 00 00 0(1)0 00 0(1)0 10
33 DF England Matt Targett 50 00 10 20 80 10
35 DF England Alfie Jones 00 00 00 00 00 00
38 DF England Sam McQueen 5(8)0 20 20 30 12(8)0 00
39 MF England Josh Sims 1(6)0 30 0(2)0 10 5(8)0 10
40 GK Tunisia Mouez Hassen 00 00 00 00 00 00
41 GK England Harry Lewis 00 30 00 00 30 00
42 MF England Jake Hesketh 00 00 11 10 21 00
43 DF France Yan Valery 00 00 00 00 00 00
Players with appearances who left before the end of the season
6 DF Portugal José Fonte 170 00 20 00 190 20

Most appearances

# Pos. Nat. Name League FA Cup EFL Cup Europe Total
Starts Subs Starts Subs Starts Subs Starts Subs Starts Subs Total
1 FW England Nathan Redmond 324 03 32 41 391150
2 GK England Fraser Forster 380 00 40 60 48048
3 MF Spain Oriol Romeu 350 02 30 51 43346
4 FW Republic of Ireland Shane Long 1022 30 23 41 192645
5 MF Serbia Dušan Tadić 303 11 31 32 37744
6 MF England James Ward-Prowse 228 20 41 51 331043
7 MF Northern Ireland Steven Davis 293 00 40 13 34640
8 DF Japan Maya Yoshida 230 20 60 60 37037
9 MF Denmark Pierre-Emile Højbjerg 148 20 14 41 221335
10 DF Portugal Cédric Soares 300 00 30 10 34034
DF England Ryan Bertrand 280 10 40 10 34034
FW England Jay Rodriguez 915 11 31 31 161834

Top goalscorers

# Pos. Nat. Name League FA Cup EFL Cup Europe Total
Goals Apps. Goals Apps. Goals Apps. Goals Apps. Goals Apps. GPG
1 FW England Charlie Austin 615 00 11 25 9210.42
2 FW England Nathan Redmond 736 03 15 05 8500.16
3 FW Italy Manolo Gabbiadini 411 00 21 00 6120.50
FW England Jay Rodriguez 524 02 04 14 6340.17
5 FW Republic of Ireland Shane Long 333 12 15 05 5460.10
6 DF Netherlands Virgil van Dijk 121 11 02 26 4300.13
MF England James Ward-Prowse 430 02 05 06 4430.09
8 DF England Ryan Bertrand 228 01 14 01 3340.08
MF Serbia Dušan Tadić 333 02 04 05 3440.06
10 MF Netherlands Jordy Clasie 116 02 14 02 2240.08
MF Morocco Sofiane Boufal 124 00 13 02 2290.06
DF Japan Maya Yoshida 123 12 06 06 2370.05

Transfers

Pierre-Emile Højbjerg was signed for a fee of around £12.8 million in July 2016.
Sadio Mané was sold to Liverpool for a club record fee on 1 July 2016.
After seven years with the club, José Fonte left the Saints in January 2017.
Players transferred in
Date Pos. Name Club Fee Ref.
1 July 2016 FW England Nathan Redmond England Norwich City Undisclosed [19]
11 July 2016 MF Denmark Pierre-Emile Højbjerg Germany Bayern Munich Undisclosed [20]
1 August 2016 GK England Alex McCarthy England Crystal Palace Undisclosed [21]
1 August 2016 DF France Jérémy Pied France Nice Free [21]
26 August 2016 GK England Stuart Taylor None (free agent) [23]
29 August 2016 MF Morocco Sofiane Boufal France Lille £16 million [22]
31 January 2017 FW Italy Manolo Gabbiadini Italy Napoli £14 million [28]
16 February 2017 DF Uruguay Martín Cáceres None (free agent) [29]
Players loaned in
Start date Pos. Name Club End date Ref.
31 January 2017 GK France Mouez Hassen France Nice End of season [27]
Players transferred out
Date Pos. Name Club Fee Ref.
1 July 2016 FW Spain Juanmi Spain Real Sociedad Undisclosed [9]
1 July 2016 MF Senegal Sadio Mané England Liverpool Undisclosed [11]
1 July 2016 MF Kenya Victor Wanyama England Tottenham Hotspur £11,000,000 [10]
11 July 2016 FW Italy Graziano Pellè China Shandong Luneng Undisclosed [12]
5 August 2016 DF England Bevis Mugabi England Yeovil Town Free [13]
15 August 2016 DF England Jordan Turnbull England Coventry City Undisclosed [14]
7 January 2017 MF England Dominic Gape England Wycombe Wanderers Free [24]
20 January 2017 DF Portugal José Fonte England West Ham United £8 million [26]
Players loaned out
Start date Pos. Name Club End date Ref.
1 July 2016 DF England Jason McCarthy England Walsall End of season [17][25]
29 July 2016 GK Argentina Paulo Gazzaniga Spain Rayo Vallecano End of season [15]
11 August 2016 FW England Sam Gallagher England Blackburn Rovers End of season [16]
31 August 2016 MF England Dominic Gape England Wycombe Wanderers 3 January 2017 [18]
Players released
Date Pos. Name Subsequent club Join date Ref.
30 June 2016 MF Uruguay Gastón Ramírez England Middlesbrough 18 July 2016 [7][95]
30 June 2016 GK Gibraltar Will Britt England Salisbury 5 August 2016 [7][96]
30 June 2016 DF Nigeria Josh Debayo England Leicester City 30 September 2016 [8][97]
30 June 2016 GK England Kelvin Davis None (retired) [7]

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