Liverpool F.C.
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Template:Football club infobox Liverpool Football Club are the most successful English football team. They have won 5 European Cups and 18 Football League titles. Their home ground is the 45,362 capacity Anfield stadium, which is about three miles from the city centre of Liverpool.
The club was founded on March 15 1892 by John Houlding, the owner of Anfield. Houlding decided to form his own team after Everton FC were evicted from Anfield in an argument over rent. The original name was to be Everton FC but was changed to Liverpool FC after The Football Association refused to recognise the team as Everton.
On July 30, 2004, the Liverpool City Council granted the club planning permission to build a new 60,000 seat stadium, nearby at Stanley Park. Despite pressure from Governmental and funding bodies Liverpool have maintained a firm stance against sharing the new ground with local rivals Everton, with "final" talks on a groundshare failing in January 2005. It is envisaged that construction of the new stadium will begin in the summer of 2005 and the new stadium will open in 2007 though the issue of the funding of the stadium has still to be resolved. The old stadium will then become a public plaza surrounded by apartments, offices, bars, restaurants and a hotel and possibly include a memorial garden. The treatment of the old stadium requires some sensitivity as a number of deceased fans have had their ashes officially scattered on the pitch over the years.
The club was especially dominant in the 1970s and 1980s. Great players from this time include Ray Clemence, Mark Lawrenson, Graeme Souness, Ian Callaghan, Phil Neal, Kevin Keegan, Alan Hansen, Kenny Dalglish (102 Caps) and Ian Rush (346 Goals).
The club was also present at two of the biggest tragedies in European football - at Heysel in 1985 and Hillsborough in 1989.
Managers and their eras
The Bill Shankly Era
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Promotion to the First Division was achieved in 1962 when Liverpool won the Second Division championship. In that season, centre forward Roger Hunt scored 41 league goals - a club record which remains unbroken to this day. Liverpool won the First Division Championship in 1964 and regained it two years later, winning their first F.A Cup in the season between their two title triumphs. Roger Hunt, Ian St John, Ron Yeats and Tommy Smith were key Liverpool players in this era. Liverpool won their first European trophy, the UEFA Cup, in 1973 - in that season they also lifted another League Championship. Shankly shocked the football world by announcing his retirement after Liverpool won the 1974 F.A Cup. A local factory even threatened to go on strike in protest against Shankly's decision. But Shankly would not be moved, he watched Liverpool play as a spectator from The Kop until his death from a heart attack in 1981 at the age of 67.
The Bob Paisley Era
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Some of the greatest names in English football turned out for Liverpool under Bob Paisley's management. They included goalkeeper Ray Clemence, captain Emlyn Hughes and striker Kenny Dalglish. Liverpool won six league championships in ten seasons while Paisley was manager, as well as lifting three European Cups, one UEFA Cup, three successive League Cups, one European Super Cup and three Charity Shields - a total of 21 trophies. Paisley's achievement remained unsurprassed in English football until Sir Alex Ferguson won the Premiership title with Manchester United in 2001.
Bob Paisley bowed out of management in May 1983 after guiding Liverpool to their second successive League Championship/League Cup double.
The Joe Fagan Era
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Joe Fagan's second and final seasons as Liverpool manager had a traumatic ending. Liverpool lost out on the league title to neighbours Everton - with four matches to spare. They reached the European Cup final to face Italian champions Juventus at the Heysel Stadium in Brussels, Belgium. But before kick-off, violence between Liverpool and Juventus supporters resulted in the death of 39 (mostly Italian) supporters who were crushed to death, when a wall collapsed as they fled from Liverpool supporters. The sequel to the tragedy was a 5-year ban on English clubs in European competition, with a 6-year ban on Liverpool.
Fagan retired after the Heysel Disaster and handed over the reins to Liverpool striker Kenny Dalglish, who was given the role of player-manager.
The Kenny Dalglish era
Kenny Dalglish began his management career in style with League Championship/FA Cup double success in the 1985-86 season. The club finished top of the First Division ahead of neighbours Everton, and to round it all off Liverpool hammered Everton 3-1 in the FA Cup final. Dalglish was still a top striker despite his advancing years, and his partnership with Ian Rush was the most prolific in the English league. Midfielders Craig Johnston and Ray Houghton were also putting on impressive performances. Liverpool's 1986 double success made history as they were only the fifth team in English football to achieve such a feat, and the first team to win the F.A Cup without fielding a single English player.
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Ian Rush returned to Liverpool for the 1988-89 season, after an unsuccessful spell at Juventus, and was crucial in getting the club to their third FA Cup final in four years. They beat neighbours Everton 3-2 but the triumph was overshadowed by tragedy in the FA Cup semi final against Nottingham Forest at Hillsborough.
Before the FA Cup semi final could kick off, 94 Liverpool supporters were crushed to death and around 300 others injured after forcing their way onto terracing through gates which the police had unlocked in fear of their own safety. A 95th fan died a few days after the tragedy, and the death toll became 96 in March 1993 when Tony Bland died after being in a coma for nearly four years.
After the FA Cup final victory, Liverpool played their final league game of the season - a home fixture against their nearest challengers Arsenal, who were three points behind them and had scored two less goals. Liverpool went 1-0 down but still looked set to win the league until the last minute of the game, when a goal from Arsenal midfielder Michael Thomas (who ironically joined Liverpool a few seasons later) deprived Liverpool of the chance to repeat the double for the second season running.
Kenny Dalglish guided Liverpool to their third league title in five seasons in 1989-90. Although the 5-year ban on English clubs in European competition was lifted for the following season, Liverpool had to serve an extra year and were unable to compete in the 1990-91 European Cup.
On February 22nd 1991, with Liverpool halfway through a two-horse race with Arsenal for the league title, Kenny Dalglish dropped a bombshell on the club by handing in his resignation as manager and claimed he could no longer cope with the pressure of managing the club. First-team coach Ronnie Moran took temporary charge of team affairs for several weeks before Graeme Souness was named the club's new manager. But by that stage, Liverpool were slipping behind in the title race and finished runners-up to Arsenal who completed the season with just one defeat from 38 games.
The Graeme Souness Era
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Liverpool finished sixth in the first-ever Premier League and had never looked like title challengers at any stage in the 1992-93 season. The 1993-94 season was no different and Souness was dismissed in January 1994 after Liverpool suffered a shock defeat against Bristol City in the F.A Cup Third Round.
The Roy Evans Era
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In the summer of 1995, Liverpool paid Nottingham Forest a British record fee of £8.5million for striker Stan Collymore. The high fee initially looked to have paid off, but during his second season at the club, Collymore's form dipped (and he appeared to be wasting his talent with incidents off the pitch) and he was sold to Aston Villa for £7million in May 1997. Within four years he had quit the game after brief unsuccessful spells with Fulham, Leicester City, Bradford City and finally Real Oviedo.
Robbie Fowler and Stan Collymore formed an impressive partnership for the 1995-96 season which saw the veteran Ian Rush relegated to the substitute bench for much of the season before his departure on a free transfer to Leeds United. Liverpool finished third in the Premiership and were within shouting distance of the title right up to the final weeks of the season. They reached the F.A Cup final and were defeated by Manchester United. But Liverpool still qualified for the European Cup Winners Cup because United had won the Premiership/F.A Cup double.
Liverpool finished fourth in the 1996-97 season having frequently led the table for much of the early part of the season, and were defeated by Paris St. Germain in the semi finals of the European Cup Winners Cup.
1997-98 saw the emergence of a world class young player at Liverpool: Michael Owen. The 18-year-old Chester-born centre forward was a regular player in the first team almost all season long, relegating high profile German striker Karlheinz Riedle to the bench. He became the youngest-ever full England international in February 1998 and was voted Young Player of the Year by the PFA. Liverpool had an outside chance of winning the Premiership title for much of the 1997-98 season but were unable to catch champions Arsenal and runners-up Manchester United, so their place in Europe for 1998-99 was merely the UEFA Cup rather than the Champions League.
The Gérard Houllier Era
Gérard Houllier, the former French national coach, was drafted into the Liverpool management team for the 1998-99 season to work alongside Roy Evans. But Evans found that the partnership did not suit him and he quit during the 1998-99 season, at the end of which Liverpool finished a disappointing seventh - not even enough for a UEFA Cup place.
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By now, Liverpool's side contained a new set of players including goalkeeper Jerzy Dudek, defender and captain Sami Hyypiä, young midfielder Steven Gerrard and Michael Owen's strike partner Emile Heskey. The new generation of players was so impressive that even Robbie Fowler had left the club, joining Leeds United in an £11 million deal in November 2001.
2001-02 saw Liverpool progress even further. They ended the season without a major trophy, but finished league runners-up for the first time since 1991 - ironically ending Manchester United's 10-year run of top-two finishes which had begun when Liverpool's 10-year run had ended.
Liverpool won another League Cup in 2003 but Houllier had failed to deliver the league title which had eluded Anfield since 1990, although they did qualify for the Champions League three times during his tenure. Fans saw Houllier's ultra-conservative and defensive tactics as sacrificing too much attacking impetus to challenge Arsenal and Manchester United for the top prize. During this period Liverpool had their longest streak of not winning any games in a first-division league. Houllier was eventually sacked at the end of the 2003-04 season and replaced by the Spaniard Rafael Benítez, who had just guided Valencia to the Spanish league title. Benítez's hopes of re-establishing Liverpool as a top club were dented when star striker Michael Owen moved to Real Madrid in an £8 million deal.
The Rafael Benítez Era
Rafael Benítez has so far guided Liverpool to a League Cup final—losing to Chelsea in extra time—and a Champions League Final in his first season as manager. The club played Chelsea, 2004-05 Premiership winners, in the Champions League semifinal. In the first leg on 27 April 2005 at Stamford Bridge, the clubs drew 0-0, setting up a winner-take-all return leg at Anfield on 3 May. Liverpool won the second leg and the tie 1-0. That set up Liverpool's Champions League final with AC Milan in Istanbul on 25 May, which they won 3-2 on penalties after regulation and extra time ended drawn 3-3. This result made Benítez the third manager (after Bob Paisley and José Mourinho) to win the UEFA Cup and Champions League in consecutive years, but the first to do it for two different clubs.
The Champions League Final 2004-05
Due to the undying underdog spirit displayed, the UEFA Champions League Final against AC Milan in is regarded as the greatest footballing comeback of all time. Diego Maradona later stated that the great Brazil team of 1970 would not have been able to achieve the same feat. Only 52 seconds into the match, Paolo Maldini scored for Milan, both scoring the fastest goal and becoming the oldest player to score in a Champions League final. Liverpool's play in the first half both in attack and defence was remarkably poor. In the 39th minute, Alessandro Nesta seemed to have his hand touch the ball in the penalty box but the referee refused a penalty. Within a minute, a Milan counter-attack found Shevchenko with space on the right wing who crossed the ball in for Hernán Crespo to finish first time. 2-0 Milan. 5 minutes later, Gerrard was turned in midfield and a wonderful through-ball from Kaka found Crespo clear on goal who provided an exquisite finish and Milan's third goal. At half-time the score was 3-0, and even the most optimistic Liverpool supporter probably thought the match was over. At 3-0 down, bookmaker odds were available at 100-1.
A half-time substitution of Dietmar Hamann for Steve Finnan brought solidity to Liverpool's midfield, and provided added protection for the back four.
A string of quick passing allowed John Arne Riise two chances to cross the ball into the box. At the second attempt he succeeded, and his quality ball found Steven Gerrard, who brilliantly headed the ball into the far corner of the net. That goal gave Liverpool much needed confidence and hope.
Two minutes later, Hamann slipped the ball across to Vladimir Smicer, twenty yards from goal. Smicer struck the ball with power and precision to bury it past Dida, who will be disappointed to have not done better. 3-2 to Milan.
The Liverpool fans' powerful singing turned Istanbul into Liverpool's back yard, providing another player at the Ataturk Olympic Stadium.
Liverpool continued to dominate the game and pressure Milan, and more quick passing found Steven Gerrard running through on goal in the penalty box, but Gennaro Iván Gattuso tripped him from behind leaving the referee with no choice but to give a penalty. Xabi Alonso stepped up to take it and struck it hard into the bottom left corner. Dida pulled off a brilliant save, however the rebound from it allowed Alonso to hammer the ball into the roof of the net with his left foot, and brought Liverpool level at 3-3.
At this point the game began to settle, and both teams had chances to score and took it in turns of controlling the play. There was nothing to separate the teams as regular time finished and the game went to extra time. Milan were probably the better team in extra time, as Liverpool's players tired and were visibly drained, Vladimir Smicer and Jamie Carragher having to receive treatment for cramp.
In the 119th minute, Milan's Andriy Shevchenko had a good header saved and then the rebounded first time volley brilliantly stopped by Jerzy Dudek's lightning reflexes. The score remained level and the two sides entered the penalty shootout. Both sides won the last time they were involved in a penalty shootout in the European Cup/Champions League final. For Milan, it was the 2002-2003 Champions League final against Juventus and for Liverpool, it was the 1983-1984 season when they beat AS Roma to claim the cup.
The shoot-out:
- Serginho took the first penalty for Milan but the ball ballooned way over the cross bar. Dietmar Hamann scored despite a broken foot to give Liverpool a bright head start.
- The second round of the shootout begins. Andrea Pirlo's shot was saved by Liverpool's goalkeeper Jerzy Dudek while Djibril Cissé finished his shot perfectly. A 2-0 lead for Liverpool.
- At the third round, Milan finally shortened the distance. Jon Dahl Tomasson scored for Milan, while Milan goalkeeper Dida saved the shot of Liverpool's John Arne Riise. The scores were Milan 1 - Liverpool 2.
- At the fourth round, both sides scored, courtesy of Kaká (Milan) and Smicer (Liverpool). The scores were 2-3 with Liverpool taking the lead and only one more round to go.
- AC Milan's Andriy Shevchenko moved forward. He had to score to give Milan a hope of victory but again, the shot was saved by Jerzy Dudek. The final scores were AC Milan 2 - Liverpool 3 which ended Liverpool's 21 years wait for an European title. Ironically, Shevchenko is the man who scored the winning penalty in the 2002-2003 final against Juventus. In that penalty shootout, Milan also won by 3-2.
By winning the European Cup/Champions League a fifth time, Liverpool earned the privilege of permanently keeping the actual trophy. Under the competition rules, the winning club gets to keep the trophy for only 10 months, as they must deliver it to UEFA two months before the next year's final, and permanently receives a scaled-down replica. However, the rules also specify that the actual trophy becomes the permanent possession of a club that wins the competition three consecutive years or five times in all. The 2005-06 participants will compete for a new trophy.
As another ironic footnote, Liverpool will be able to keep the 2005 Champions League trophy permanently, but faced the situation that they might not have been able to defend their crown in the following season. England can only send four clubs into the next Champions League season, and Liverpool finished fifth in the Premier League. In order to avoid the strange situation of starting the next season without the title defender, UEFA introduced a special regulation, and rewrote the rules to give all future winners automatic qualification. Liverpool though was entered into the Champions League having to play in the first qualifying round and without any country protection, meaning they could meet another English side in the 2005/06 competition prior to the quarter-finals. Because Everton have a much lower seed, Liverpool could face their city rivals in the third qualifying round.
Facts and figures
Honours
- Football League First Division Champions 18*
- 1900/01, 1905/06, 1921/22, 1922/23, 1946/47, 1963/64, 1965/66, 1972/73, 1975/76, 1976/77, 1978/79, 1979/80, 1981/82, 1982/83, 1983/84, 1985/86, 1987/88, 1989/90
- Football League Second Division Champions 4
- 1893/94, 1895/96, 1904/05, 1961/62
- Lancashire League Champions 1
- 1892-93
- UEFA Champions League 5*
- 1976/77 3-1 vs. Borussia Mönchengladbach
- 1977/78 1-0 vs. Club Brugge
- 1980/81 1-0 vs. Real Madrid
- 1983/84 1-1 (4-2 in penalty shootout) vs. AS Roma
- 2004/05 3-3 (3-2 in penalty shootout) vs. AC Milan
- UEFA Cup Winners 3*
- 1972/73, 1975/76, 2000/01
- FA Cup Winners 6
- 1964/65, 1973/74, 1985/86, 1988/89, 1991/92, 2000/2001
- FA Youth Cup Winners 1
- 1995/96
- League Cup Winners 7*
- 1980/81, 1981/82, 1982/83, 1983/84, 1994/95, 2000/01, 2002/03
- Charity Shield Winners 14
- 1963/64+, 1964/65+, 1965/66, 1973/74, 1975/76, 1976/77+, 1978/79, 1979/80, 1981/82, 1985/86*, 1987/88, 1988/89, 1989/90, 2000/01,
- European Super Cup Winners 2*
- 1977, 2001
- Super Cup Winners 1
- 1985/86
- Reserves Division One Winners 16
- 1956/57, 1968/69, 1969/70, 1970/71, 1972/73, 1973/74, 1974/75, 1975/76, 1976/77, 1978/79, 1980/81, 1981/82, 1983/84, 1984/85, 1989/90, 1999/2000
* More than any other English club + Title shared
Interesting facts
Match statistics
- Only 14 first team players were used in the 1965/66 season, when Liverpool won the League.
- Liverpool played against Blackburn Rovers F.C. on the 5th of September 1896. Rovers won 1-0, but six goals were disallowed during this game.
- Liverpool's first ever competitive game was in the Lancashire League against Higher Walton. They won 8-0. Their side did not have one English player.
- League debut: 2-0 v Middlesbrough Ironopolis on September 2 1893 (Division 2)
- FA Cup debut: September 1892 4-0 v Nantwich
- Biggest win: 11-0 v Strømsgodset on the 17th of September 1974.
- Biggest league win: 9-0 v Crystal Palace F.C. on 12th September 1989.
- Biggest defeat: 0-8 v Huddersfield in 1935.
- First Honour: in the 1893/94 season they became the Second Division champions.
- First European match: on the 17th of August 1964 they played against KR Reykjavik, Iceland, for the European Cup, and won 5-0.
- Ian Rush holds the record in Liverpool FC for most goals in all competitions for one season - he scored 47 goals in the 1983/84 season.
- On the other side, Roger Hunt has the most league goals for one season - in the 1961/62 season he scored 41 goals.
- Only four people have scored 5 goals in one match. These are:
- Andy McGuigan, 1901/02
- John Evans, 1954/55
- Ian Rush, 1983/84
- Robbie Fowler, 1993/94
Club culture
- The song "You'll Never Walk Alone", originally from the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical Carousel and famously performed by Liverpool musicians Gerry & the Pacemakers, is the anthem of Liverpool FC, and has become almost synonymous with the club.
- Celebrity fans of the club include the late DJ John Peel, Elvis Costello, Cherie Blair and also the late Pope John Paul II who played as goalkeeper in Poland like current keeper Jerzy Dudek.
Reserve squad
- Liverpool's reserve team plays its home games at the Racecourse Ground, the home stadium of Wrexham A.F.C..
Other
- First broadcast of BBC TV's Match of the Day: on the 22nd August 1964, playing against Arsenal F.C.; the BBC 2 broadcast was presented by Kenneth Wolstenholme [1] (http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/match_of_the_day/3135723.stm).
Current Squad
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Staff
Manager | Rafael Benítez |
Assistant manager | Pako Ayesteran |
First team coaches | Alex Miller, Paco Herrera |
Reserve team manager | Hughie McAuley |
Goalkeeping coach | Jose Ochotorena |
Chief scout | Ron Yeats |
Academy director | Steve Heighway |
Physiotherapist | Dave Galley |
Assistant Physiotherapist | Mark Browes |
Club Masseur | John Wright |
Masseur | Paul Small,Stuart Welsh |
Club Doctor | Mark Waller |
Kit Manager | Graham Carter |
Stars
1892 to 1959:
- Alan A'Court - Matt Busby - Sam Hardy - Gordon Hodgson - Billy Liddell - Jimmy Melia - Bob Paisley - Elisha Scott - Cyril Sidlow - Albert Stubbins
1960 to 1990
- Gary Ablett - John Aldridge - John Barnes - Peter Beardsley - Jim Beglin - David Burrows - Gerry Byrne - Ian Callaghan - Jimmy Case - Ray Clemence - Peter Cormack - Kenny Dalglish - Alun Evans - Roy Evans - David Fairclough - Howard Gayle - Gary Gillespie - Bruce Grobbelaar - Brian Hall - Alan Hansen - Steve Heighway - David Hodgson - Mike Hooper - Ray Houghton - Emlyn Hughes - Roger Hunt - Glenn Hysen - David Johnson - Craig Johnston - Joey Jones - Kevin Keegan - Alan Kennedy - Ray Kennedy - Chris Lawler - Tommy Lawrence - Mark Lawrenson - Sammy Lee - Alec Lindsay - Larry Lloyd - Terry McDermott - Kevin MacDonald - Steve McMahon - Mike Marsh - Jan Molby - Ronnie Moran - Phil Neal - Steve Nicol - Michael Robinson - Ronnie Rosenthal - Ian Rush - Ian St. John - Tommy Smith - Graeme Souness - Nigel Spackman - Steve Staunton - Peter Thompson - Phil Thompson - John Toshack - Barry Venison - Paul Walsh - John Wark - Ronnie Whelan - Ron Yeats
1990 to present
- Nicolas Anelka - Nick Barmby - Patrik Berger - Jamie Carragher - Stan Collymore - Robbie Fowler - Brad Friedel - Steven Gerrard - Paul Ince - Rob Jones - David James - Jari Litmanen - Gary McAllister - Steve McManaman - Danny Murphy - Michael Owen - Jamie Redknapp - Ronnie Rosenthal - Neil Ruddock - Dean Saunders - Michael Thomas - Sander Westerveld - Mark Wright - John Arne Riise - Djibril Cisse - Fernando Morientes - Steve Finnan - Jerzy Dudek - Xabi Alonso - Jamie Carragher - Sami Hyypia.
Managers
W. E. Barclay | 1892 - 1896 |
Tom Watson | 1896 - 1915 |
David Ashworth | 1920 - 1923 |
Matt McQueen | 1923 - 1928 |
George Patterson | 1928 - 1936 |
George Kay | 1936 - 1951 |
Don Welsh | 1951 - 1956 |
Phil Taylor | 1956 - 1959 |
Bill Shankly | 1959 - 1974 |
Bob Paisley | 1974 - 1983 |
Joe Fagan | 1983 - 1985 |
Kenny Dalglish | 1985 - 1991 |
Graeme Souness | 1991 - 1994 |
Roy Evans | 1994 - 1998 |
Gerard Houllier | 1998 - 2004 |
Rafael Benítez | 2004 - date |
Statistics
Main article: Liverpool F.C. - Statistics
See also
External links
- Liverpool F.C. Official Site (http://www.liverpoolfc.tv)
Unofficial
- Through The Wind And Rain (http://www.ttwar.net)
- Liverpool Way (http://www.liverpoolway.co.uk)
- Liverweb (http://www.liverweb.org.uk)
- Red and White Kop (http://www.redandwhitekop.com)
- Shankly Gates (http://www.shanklygates.co.uk)
- You'll Never Walk Alone.tv (http://www.ynwa.tv)
- LFC Online (http://www.lfconline.com)
- Anfield Online (http://www.anfield-online.co.uk)
- Anfield Road (http://www.anfieldroad.com)
- The Kop's Last Stand (http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/liverpoollife/exhibitions/thekopslaststand)
- This Is Anfield (http://www.thisisanfield.com)
- Liverpool.no (http://www.liverpool.no) (in Norwegian)
- TalkLFC (http://www.talklfc.com)
- LFCHistory.net (http://www.lfchistory.net)
- lfc-news (http://www.lfc-news.co.uk)
- Red All Over The Land (http://www.raotl.co.uk)
- The Road End (http://www.theroadend.co.uk)
FA Premier League seasons | ||
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1992-93 |
1993-94 |
1994-95 |
1995-96 |
1996-97 |
1997-98 |
1998-99 | ||
League competitions |
Cup competitions | |
FA Premier League | FA Cup | |
The Football League (Champ, 1, 2) | England (men) | League Cup |
Football Conference (Nat, N, S) | FA Community Shield | |
Northern Premier League (Prem, 1) | (women) | Football League Trophy |
Southern League (Prem, 1W, 1E) | List of clubs | FA Trophy |
Isthmian League (Prem, 1, 2) | FA Vase | |
English football league system | Records | FA NLS Cup |
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