Jump to content

Leeds United F.C.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 158.125.1.112 (talk) at 11:29, 8 May 2006 (Formation of Leeds United). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Leeds United
Leeds United's Badge
Full nameLeeds United Football Club
Nickname(s)The Whites, The Peacocks
Founded1904 (Leeds City F.C.),
1919 (Leeds United A.F.C.)
GroundElland Road, Leeds
Capacity40,242
ChairmanEnglish Ken Bates
ManagerEnglish Kevin Blackwell
LeagueThe Championship
2005-06The Championship, 5th

Leeds United Football Club is the only professional association football club in the city of Leeds. The club was established in 1919, following the demise of Leeds City F.C.. The Club's Nicknames are "Leeds", "United" or "The Whites". You may hear some older fans referring to them as the 'Peacocks', but this nickname is virtually obsolete. They currently play in the Football League Championship and play their home games at the Elland Road stadium. The song of Leeds United is Marching On Together.

History

Leeds City

Leeds United's predecessor club, Leeds City F.C., were formed in 1904 by the committee and supporters before it was disbanded after financial irregularities.

For further information visit The Leeds City years, The Leeds City Scandal and Leeds City expelled from the Football League.

Formation of Leeds United

Shortly after the collapse of Leeds City, a new club, Leeds United, was formed and, shortly afterwards, began playing in the Midland League, taking the place vacated by Leeds City's reserve team. Yorkshire Amateurs AFC, who now occupied Elland Road, offered to make way for the new team under the manager of former player Dick Ray. In 1920, Leeds were acquired by Huddersfield Town's then chairman, Hilton Crowther. Crowther brought in a new manager, Arthur Fairclough, from Barnsley, and in May 1920 the new club was elected to the Football League, along with Cardiff City.

Before Revie

Over the following few years, Leeds consolidated their position in the Second Division and in 1924 won the second division title with 54 points. However, they failed to establish themselves in the first division, and were relegated back in 1927, thereby setting the pattern for yo-yo-ing between the divisions over the next 30 years or so. In 1956, Leeds once again won promotion to the first division, with a team which included the brilliant John Charles and then emerging defender Jack Charlton. However, Charles was sold to Juventus, Leeds once again went into decline and were once more relegated to the second division in 1960. In March 1961 the club's directors appointed former England centre forward Don Revie as player-manager.

The Revie Period: "The Glory Days"

It was under Revie that Leeds enjoyed their most successful period, and during which they became probably the leading English football club. Revie's stewardship started in some difficulty; the club was in some financial difficulty and in the 1961-1962 season only a win in the final game of the season saved the club from relegation to Division 3.

However, Revie developed a new team around the Scottish midfielder Bobby Collins, bringing through a crop of outstanding youngsters, including Norman Hunter, Paul Reaney, Gary Sprake and Billy Bremner, and acquiring winger Johnny Giles from Manchester United. In 1964 this new team won promotion once more to Division 1.

Leeds reputation was built on strong organisation, physical toughness (at a time when football was more physical than it is today) and considerable skill. Most of the team went on to become full internationals; in 1970 the squad contained 17 full internationals (and again, it should be born in mind that this was at a time when players from outside the British Isles were rare in English football, and international players were correspondingly more rare). Further players to emerge included Terry Cooper, Peter Lorimer and Eddie Gray, while key acquisitions included Allan Clarke (at the time for a British record transfer fee) and Mick Jones.

They also developed a reputation for underachievement. During the late 1960s and early 1970s Leeds won the league championship twice, and the FA cup once. Many times the club came within proximity of success only to lose it at the last; their record during this period includes an inordinate number of second placings. However, under Revie Leeds won promotion to Division 1 in the 1963-64 season; two league championships: 1968-69, 1973-1974, League Cup in 1968, Fairs Cup 1968 and 1971, FA Cup in 1972 and FA Charity Shield in 1972.

Marching On Together was recorded by the Leeds United squad of 1972 for the F.A. Cup Final that year. Since then it has become the club's anthem and is known by all true leeds fans

Revie's last season at Elland Road concluded with Leeds' winning the championship. In 1974, Revie, as the leading English manager of his day (comparable figures such as Matt Busby and Bill Shankly were Scottish), left Leeds to take up the role of managing the English national team.

The Post Revie period: Slow Decline

Don Revie had recommended Johnny Giles as his replacement, and the thoughtful Giles went on to become a successful manager elsewhere. However, the club's board made the major error (which its successors would later repeat several times) of appointing the biggest, rather than the most appropriate, name. Brian Clough was at the time one of the most successful and outspoken English managers, having recently resigned his post at Derby County, where he had won the league championship in 1972. Unfortunately he openly despised Revie, his team and his players. The team (and its supporters) returned the compliment, and after only 44 days (Which still stands as the shortest period of time an english league club has been managed by an individual) of deadlock Clough was dismissed with (not for the last time for a departing Leeds manager) a significant payoff. He was replaced by former England captain Jimmy Armfield, who took Revie's team to the final of the European Cup, where they were defeated by Bayern Munich. Armfield (with noted coach Don Howe) rebuilt Revie's team, and though it no longer dominated English football, it remained in the top six for subsequent seasons. However, the board was impatient for success and dismissed Armfield, replacing him with another managerial legend, Jock Stein.

Many Leeds United fans feel disgruntled due to refereeing decisions made during the European Cup 1974-75 final. Peter Lorimer had an effort disallowed due to a dubious offside decision given against captain Billy Bremner. The referee also turned down two Leeds claims for a penalty firstly when Franz Beckenbauer looked to have handled the ball inside the penalty area and then when the Bayern Munich captain tripped Alan Clarke. In respose to these Leeds fans ripped out seats at the Parc des Princes. This resulted in Leeds receiving a three-year European ban. This match is the reason Leeds fans still sing "We are the Champions, Champions of Europe" as they feel they were "robbed" of the title that season, and along with not having the opportunity to defend the title the following season they would have remained as "Champions of Europe"

Unfortunately, once again Stein remained in the role for only a short period of time, leaving (on far better terms than Clough) to take up an invitation to manage the Scottish national team. The board turned to Jimmy Adamson, a long-time manager at Burnley but not from the "top tier" of management. At this point the decline shifted a gear. In 1980 Adamson was in turn fired, and replaced by former Leeds and England star Allan Clarke. Clarke, despite spending freely on players, was unable to stem the tide and the club was relegated at the end of the 1981-1982 season. Clarke was in his turn replaced by former team-mate Eddie Gray.

Gray's concentration on youth development turned round Leeds' precarious financial situation, without winning them promotion from the second division. Most Leeds supporters would give Gray the benefit of the doubt during this period as he had no money to spend on team building, and those players he developed were often sold off as well. However the board again became impatient and sacked him in 1985, replacing him with another former Revie star, former Leeds and Scotland captain Billy Bremner. Bremner carried on where Gray had left off, but found it just as difficult to achieve promotion, though he did bring the club close to success. Under Bremner, the club were defeated 2-1 in the 1987 play-off final, after extra time, against Charlton Athletic, and in the same year, were beaten 3-2, after extra-time, in the FA Cup semi-final losing to Coventry City. In October 1988, with the team standing at 21st position in Division 2, Bremner was fired to make way for Howard Wilkinson.

The Wilkinson Period: Re-emergence

Wilkinson, with extra money to spend, set about building a team capable of promotion, one which combined youth and experience, and toughness with guile. Key acquisitions included winger Gordon Strachan from Manchester United, well-known "hard man", Vinnie Jones, right back Mel Sterland, striker Lee Chapman and centre half Chris Fairclough. He also began to bring players through from the youth team, including David Batty (actually a product of the Bremner era) and Gary Speed. The following season Leeds finally won promotion back to the first division, after an absence of eight years.

Wilkinson continued to rebuild the team, discarding players such as Jones who had been brought in specifically to deal with the physicality of second division football, and bringing in goalkeeper John Lukic (the club's first £1m signing), defender Chris Whyte and promising midfielder Gary McAllister. The club finished its first season back in the first division in fourth place, and the board continued to make money available to Wilkinson, allowing the purchases of England left back Tony Dorigo, England midfielder Steve Hodge and striker Rod Wallace. In 1992 Leeds once again won the league championship and looked set to re-emerge as a dominant force.

However, the following season was a poor one, with Leeds finishing 17th in the League (three places above relegation). The club had set its sights on winning the UEFA Champions League but progress was halted by Rangers F.C. who beat the English champions in both legs of a pulsating clash labelled the "Battle of Britain". The defeat to Rangers proved the last straw for Eric Cantona, the talented and charismatic - but highly disruptive - French star, who moved at what by this time was recognised as a low fee of £1.2m to Manchester United, Leeds' principal rival since the late 1960s. While Cantona proved to be the essential final jigsaw piece in Manchester's emerging team, Wilkinson's subsequent teams failed to gel, despite inspired signings such as Nigel Martyn, Lucas Radebe and Lee Bowyer. Additionally, other key players, such as Speed and Batty, left to fuel Wilkinson's transfer strategy. Wilkinson's position with the board had become more precarious with the sale of the club in 1992 to a new consortium, and wasn't helped by a chronic, negative display in the 1996 League Cup final which saw star striker Tomas Brolin, a notably poor buy, left on the bench and Aston Villa win 3-0. Leeds only finished 13th in 1995-96, and early in the 1996-1997 season, after a particularly painful Cantona-inspired 4-0 home defeat by Manchester United, Wilkinson was fired.

George Graham: Rejuvenation

Leeds controversially appointed George Graham, rescuing him from the football scrap heap; Graham had been out of a job since being accused of accepting illegal payments at his former club Arsenal. When Graham arrived, he stepped into a club where the players' morale was low; he started work immediately by sorting out the team's defence and he became the "bore draw" specialist. At the start of the season, Graham brought in some bargain buys, notably Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink for £2 million (GBP). Graham introduced Australian youngster Harry Kewell from the youth team and he quickly became a fan favourite with his pace, skill, enthusiasm and eye for goal. At the end of the season Leeds booked its place in the UEFA Cup for the next season. The 1998-99 season saw Leeds scrape past CS Maritimo in the UEFA Cup; however, stories were circulating that George Graham had accepted an offer from Tottenham Hotspur. Graham denied this, but a week later he was indeed manager of the north London club.

The O'Leary Period: Nearly Men

Leeds searched for a new manager for weeks with Martin O'Neill seeming certain to take the job; however pressure from Leicester City fans meant O'Neill stayed on as their manager and subsequently snubbed Leeds United. Leeds opted for David O'Leary, George Graham's assistant manager.

Under O'Leary the glory days seemed likely to return. On the pitch he let his team do the talking. He introduced promising youngsters like Jonathan Woodgate, Alan Smith and Stephen McPhail to complement the likes of Harry Kewell and Ian Harte, who were already established first teamers. The fans and pundits saw a new vigorous and dynamic Leeds United side. A young and inexperienced Leeds side narrowly lost in Rome against Italian giants A.S. Roma and Leeds were unable to break the deadlock a week later at Elland Road.

With David O'Leary in charge the 1999-2000 season approached and was looking good for Leeds. O'Leary put himself across to the media as "naïve" and his squad were just "babies". But those "babies" played fast-paced, attacking football under the coaching of Eddie Gray. Leeds were again paired with A.S. Roma in the UEFA Cup and they were beaten this time over two legs, via a long range effort from Harry Kewell. The superb run in the UEFA Cup was complemented by good form in the league, with a win at Watford sending Leeds top of the league. Leeds secured 3rd place in the league that season sending the club into the UEFA Champions League for the first time. The Champions League campaign was marked by victories over Anderlecht and Deportive La Corunua on a run to the Semi-Finals.

However, if there ever was a point in Leeds United's history that would change the club it occurred during January 2000. Jonathan Woodgate and Lee Bowyer were involved in an incident in Leeds city centre outside the Majestyk nightclub, which left an Asian student in hospital with severe injuries. The fact that the victim of the attack was Asian meant the players, fans and the club were under the spotlight as the tabloid press among others were suspicious that the attack was racially motivated, even to the point of assuming this was the case unless it was proven otherwise. Leeds ever since have been labelled "racist" and "dirty" in certain tabloid newspapers, a large percentage of supporters boycott the Daily Mirror because they strongly deny this and find the accusation offensive. It took nearly two years to resolve as the start-stop court case came to a close. Bowyer was cleared and Woodgate convicted of affray and sentenced to community service. Bowyer played some of the finest football of his career during the trial and would often drive straight from court to play for Leeds; however, Woodgate’s form deteriorated and he had to sit out games due to pressure.

Leeds’ UEFA Cup run continued, beating Slavia Praha (Prague) in the quarter finals, Leeds reached their first European semi-final in 25 years and were paired against Turkish champions Galatasaray, notorious for their fanatical support. Another dark moment in Leeds’ history was around the corner when two Leeds United fans, Christopher Loftus and Kevin Speight were brutally stabbed to death before the game in Istanbul. The Turkish FA allowed the game to go ahead that night, Leeds lost 2-0. The return leg in Leeds had the most charged, emotional yet poisonous atmosphere. Outside the ground saw running battles between police and fans and there were attacks on Turkish TV crews, the game saw Harry Kewell sent off and a 2-2[Eirik Bakke with two goals] score was not enough for Leeds, as they went out of the competition. A Minute's silence is held every year at the match closest to the aniversary of the incident to remember Christopher Loftus and Kevin Speight. It had been planned to name the two roads leading to a proposed new ground after Christopher and Kevin in memory of them.

Following their appearance in the UEFA Champions League semi-final against Valencia Leeds' fortunes started to change. Although the general public were unaware, the club under the leadership of Peter Ridsdale had taken out loans worth extremely large sums of money. In reflection this was not a smart move at all. Leeds started the 2001-2002 season needing to qualify for the Champions League after missing out by one spot to Liverpool the previous season.

However this was not to be, Leeds started well and on New Year's Day 2002 were on top of the Premiership. From here on things went downhill and eventually Leeds finished fifth, missing out on the much coveted Champions League spot again. Many fans blame this failure on a harsh offside flag in a March 3rd match against Manchester United which resulted in a potentially match winning goal being disallowed. Had Leeds won the match they would have made the Champions League.

Following Rio Ferdinand's strong performances at the World Cup there was rumours circulating that he would be sold. Eventually in July 2002 he was sold to Leeds' hated rivals Manchester United for a sum of approximately £30,000,000 . David O'Leary was also sacked and replaced by former England manager Terry Venables.

Another Decline

Under Venables, Robbie Keane was sold to Spurs; this was only the start of the fire sale due to increasing debts and an unsustainable wage bill. In the January 2003 transfer window Robbie Fowler (to Manchester City), Olivier Dacourt (to AS Roma), Lee Bowyer (to West Ham United) and Jonathan Woodgate (to Newcastle United) left the club in a bid to ease the financial burden. The sale of Woodgate particularly upset Venables, who had been promised by Ridsdale that Woodgate would not be sold. Tensions mounted between the pair, eventually resulting in the sacking of Venables, who was replaced by Peter Reid. With his no-nonsense style of management, Reid arguably helped Leeds retain its top-flight status; although the team's form was not particularly good, Leeds did record a 6-1 win over Charlton with Mark Viduka thrillingly scoring a Hat-trick, and a 3-2 win away to Arsenal in the penultimate game of the season which saw the Gunners surrender their championship crown, to Manchester United. During this time the now hated Peter Ridsdale resigned from the Leeds board and was replaced by Prof. John McKenzie.

During the 2003 summer Harry Kewell controversially left Leeds for Liverpool for a paltry sum; what exactly happened is still unknown, but many Leeds fans feel Kewell and his agent Bernie Mandic acted immorally, and robbed the club millions of pounds.

An unsuccessful start to the 2003/04 season (Leeds collecting just 8 points from the club's first 12 Premiership fixtures) saw Peter Reid dismissed, following a 1-6 defeat at Portsmouth in early November with fans' hero and former manager, Eddie Gray, taking over as caretaker manager - appointed until the end of the season.

Gray continued the trend of recent years in rebuilding with young players, including midfielders James Milner (born 1986), who broke Wayne Rooney's record for youngest player to score in the Premier League, and Aaron Lennon (born 1987), the youngest player ever to play in the league. Leeds continue to have a strong youth setup, with players such as Simon Walton and Matthew Kilgallon regularly seen in the first team.

A period of serious financial difficulty ended in early 2004 with a takeover by a consortium, led by new chairman Gerald Krasner. Nevertheless, the team continued to struggle on the field and were relegated as the team failed to win at The Reebok, to Bolton Wonderers, loosing a dissapointing 4-1. So they were then relagated to the Football League Championship at the end of the 2003/2004 season, ending a fourteen-year run at the highest level of the English football league system that included the first twelve seasons of the Premiership.

Following confirmation of the club's relegation, Gray's reign as caretaker manager was terminated. His former assistant, Kevin Blackwell, was appointed caretaker manager for the final match of the season, and afterward permanent manager.

Goalkeeper Paul Robinson was sold to Spurs at season's end. Alan Smith went to Manchester United. Dominic Matteo was allowed to go to Blackburn Rovers, Mark Viduka was sold to Middlesbrough, and even Milner, who Leeds had been intent on keeping, had to be sold to Newcastle United. In their place Leeds began signing players prepared to accept lower wages.

Another Revival ?

On January 21, 2005, Krasner announced the sale of a 50% stake to Ken Bates for a reported £10,000,000 and Bates became the club's new Chairman, replacing Krasner. This investment effectively saved Leeds United. All now associated with the club appear to have cautiously welcomed the takeover as there was little other option. Bates has headed three other league football clubs but most famously, Chelsea F.C.

With Ken Bates as the new chairman of Leeds United, the club's finances have been secured and bankruptcy is no longer likely. However, Aaron Lennon became the latest young talent to be sold on during the close season of 2005. Leeds ended the 2004-05 Coca-Cola championship campaign with a midtable finish.

With six new players brought in over the summer, the club's goal this season is promotion. At Christmas 2005, halfway through the season, Leeds had achieved the best record since they were relegated (four wins in a row) and lay in 3rd place in the Championship. February 2, 2006 saw the announcement of a new sponsorship with Bet24 to start from the start of the 2006/2007 season. Bet24 replaces Whyte & Mackay as the clubs shirt sponsor. At the beginning of March, Kevin Blackwell was rewarded for his hard work rebuilding the club as he signed an extension to his existing contract, keeping him at Leeds United for another three years.

Blackwell's shrewd tactics away from Elland Road and attacking style at home (where 9 out of 10 matches were won) proved very effective and by the end of February Blackwell had guided Leeds to 3rd spot and almost guaranteed a play off spot, with automatic promotion remaining a distinct possibility. However, the Leeds team then produced some distinctly average performances and settled for their play-off place gaining only 4 points from a possible 18 with four games left to play. Leeds lost 2-0 to Preston North End on Sunday April 30th to seal a meeting with Preston in the first round of the playoffs, after a 1-1 draw at Elland Road they will play the second leg on May 8th at Deepdale. Leeds will have to win or draw if their promotion dream is to stay alive. If Leeds do win promotion, the aim of the first season will likely be consolidation and ensuring survival.

Notable players

The Revie Era

Others

First Team Squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Scotland SCO Neil Sullivan
2 DF Ireland EIR Gary Kelly
3 DF Scotland SCO Stephen Crainey
6 DF Ireland EIR Paul Butler
7 MF England ENG Jermaine Wright
8 DF England ENG Sean Gregan
9 FW Northern Ireland NIR David Healy
10 FW England ENG Rob Hulse
11 MF United States USA Eddie Lewis
12 DF England ENG Danny Pugh
13 GK England ENG Ian Bennett
14 MF England ENG Steve Stone
15 DF England ENG Frazer Richardson
16 MF Iceland ISL Gylfi Einarsson
17 MF Ireland EIR Liam Miller
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 DF England ENG Simon Walton
19 MF Norway NOR Eirik Bakke
20 MF Ireland EIR Jonathan Douglas
21 MF England ENG Shaun Derry
22 FW England ENG Ian Moore
23 DF England ENG Dan Harding
24 DF Angola ANG Rui Manuel Marques
25 FW England ENG Richard Cresswell
26 DF England ENG Matthew Kilgallon
27 MF Australia AUS Joel Griffiths
28 MF England ENG Benjamin John Atkin
28 FW England ENG Robbie Blake
30 FW England ENG Michael Ricketts
32 FW England ENG Jermaine Beckford
33 MF England ENG Nick Gray
36 GK England ENG Mark Wilberforce
37 GK England ENG Peter Wright

Honours

  • Football League Division 1/Premier League

Champions 1968/69, 1973/74, 1991/92

Runners-up 1964-65, 1965-66, 1969-70, 1970-71, 1971-72


  • Football League Division Two/Championship

Champions 1923-24, 1963-64, 1989-90

Runners-up 1927-28, 1931-32, 1955-56


  • F.A. Cup

Winners 1972

Finalists 1965, 1970, 1973


  • League Cup

Winners 1968

Finalists 1996


  • F.A. Charity Shield

Winners 1969, 1992


  • F.A. Youth Challenge Cup

Winners 1992-93, 1996-97


  • European Cup/European Champions League

Finalists 1975

Semi-finalists 1970, 2001


  • European Cup Winners Cup

Finalists 1973


  • UEFA Cup/ Inter Cities Fairs Cup

Winners 1968, 1971

Finalists 1967

Semi-finalists 2000

Records

  • Record Attendance

57,892 v Sunderland FA Cup Rd 5 replay, 15 March 1967


  • Record Receipts

£1,006,000 Everton v Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup semi-final 9th April 1995


  • Record Victories

League: 8-0 v Leicester City, Div.One, April 1934

FA Cup: 8-1 v Crystal Palace, Rd.3, Jan 1930

League Cup: 5-1 v Mansfield Town, Rd.2, Sept 1963

Europe: 10-0 v Lyn Oslo, European Cup Rd.1, leg 1, Sept 1969


  • Record Defeats

League: 1-8 v Stoke City, Div.One, Aug 1934

FA Cup: 2-7 v Middlesbrough, Rd.3, leg 2, Jan 1946

League Cup: 0-7 v Arsenal, Rd.2, Sept 1979 &, 0-7 v West Ham Utd., Rd.3, Nov 1966

Europe: 0-4 v SK Lierse, UEFA Cup, Rd.1, leg 2, Sept. 1971


Sequence Records


  • Most League Goals

98 Div. Two 1927-28

  • Most League goals in a season

John Charles (42) Div. Two 1953-54

  • Best undefeated start to a season

(29) 25th Aug. 1973 - 23rd Feb. 1974

  • Most matches undefeated

(34) 19th Oct. 1968 - 30th Aug. 1969

  • Most home matches undefeated

(39) 4th May 1968 - 28th Mar. 1970

  • Most away matches undefeated

(17) 19th Oct. 1968 - 30th Aug. 1969

  • Longest run without a home win

(10) 16th Jan. 1982 - 15th May 1982

  • Longest run without an away win

(26) 18th Mar. 1939 - 30th Aug. 1947

  • Most League wins (dates inclusive)

(9) 26th Sept. 1931 - 21st Nov 1931

  • Most League defeats (dates inclusive)

(6) 26th Apr. 1947 - 26th May 1947

  • Most League matches without a win

(17) 18th Jan. 1947 - 23rd Aug. 1947

  • Most home wins

(13) 9th Nov. 1968 - 13th Aug. 1969

  • Most away wins

(8) 21st Sept. 1963 - 28th Dec. 1963

  • Most League goals in a career

Peter Lorimer 168 (1965-79 & 1983-86)

  • Most goals in a match

Gordon Hodgson: 5 v Leicester City, Division One October 1938


  • Record Appearances
  • 1. Jack Charlton 773
  • 2. Billy Bremner 773
  • 3. Paul Reaney 748
  • 4. Norman Hunter 726
  • 5. Paul Madeley 725
  • 6. Peter Lorimer 703
  • 7. Eddie Gray 577
  • 8. John Giles 527
  • 9. Gary Kelly 511
  • 10. Gary Sprake 507


  • Most Capped Players

Lucas Radebe (South Africa, 61)

Johnny Giles (Eire, 60)

Billy Bremner (Scotland, 54)


  • Record Transfer Fee Received

£33,100,000 from Manchester United for Rio Ferdinand, July 2002 only £22.4m received due to Manchester United not winning premiereship twice in four tear period which was a contract clause


  • Record Transfer Fee Paid

£18,000,000 to West Ham for Rio Ferdinand, November 2000


  • Oldest Player

Eddie Burbanks (41 years, 23 days v Hull City, April 1954)


  • Youngest Player

Peter Lorimer (15 years, 289 days v Southampton, September 1962)

Player of the Year

 

Managers

See also

Template:English Division One