Manchester United F.C.: Difference between revisions
boldly removing what no-one has removed before (or something) |
Edited "won Football League" into "won Premier League 15 times" for accuracy |
||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
[[Image:Manutd.gif|right|120px|Club Logo in 70s]] |
[[Image:Manutd.gif|right|120px|Club Logo in 70s]] |
||
<!--The lead section should describe the subject in no more than three paragraphs (see Wikipedia:Lead section). Therefore, anything that goes in it should be both notable and concise. Things such as recent signings and the unpopularity of the nickname 'Man U' should go later on in the article, if they need to be in it at all. User:Cantthinkofagoodname--> |
<!--The lead section should describe the subject in no more than three paragraphs (see Wikipedia:Lead section). Therefore, anything that goes in it should be both notable and concise. Things such as recent signings and the unpopularity of the nickname 'Man U' should go later on in the article, if they need to be in it at all. User:Cantthinkofagoodname--> |
||
'''Manchester United''' is an [[England|English]] [[Football (soccer)|football]] club, based at [[Old Trafford (football)|Old Trafford]] in [[Greater Manchester]]. The club is one of the most successful clubs in England, having won the [[ |
'''Manchester United''' is an [[England|English]] [[Football (soccer)|football]] club, based at [[Old Trafford (football)|Old Trafford]] in [[Greater Manchester]]. The club is one of the most successful clubs in England, having won the [[Premier League]] fifteen times and the [[European Cup]] twice, and has had the highest average attendance in English football for the majority of the past fifty seasons. |
||
The club was formed as '''Newton Heath (L & Y.R.) F.C.''' in [[1878]] as the works team of the [[Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway]] depot at [[Newton Heath]]. After nearing bankuptcy in [[1902]], the club was taken over by [[John Henry Davies|J.H. Davies]] who changed its name to '''Manchester United'''. United appointed [[Matt Busby|Sir Matt Busby]] as manager after the [[Second World War]], and his then-unheard-of policy of producing most of the players through the club's youth team brought great success, with the club winning the [[Football League]] in [[1956]] and [[1957]]. This success was halted by the [[Munich air disaster]] of [[1958]], in which eight of the club's players died. It was thought that the club might fold, but once Busby had recovered from his injuries he built another great team which went on to win the football league in [[1965]] and [[1967]], and became the first English winners of the [[European Cup]] in [[1968]]. |
The club was formed as '''Newton Heath (L & Y.R.) F.C.''' in [[1878]] as the works team of the [[Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway]] depot at [[Newton Heath]]. After nearing bankuptcy in [[1902]], the club was taken over by [[John Henry Davies|J.H. Davies]] who changed its name to '''Manchester United'''. United appointed [[Matt Busby|Sir Matt Busby]] as manager after the [[Second World War]], and his then-unheard-of policy of producing most of the players through the club's youth team brought great success, with the club winning the [[Football League]] in [[1956]] and [[1957]]. This success was halted by the [[Munich air disaster]] of [[1958]], in which eight of the club's players died. It was thought that the club might fold, but once Busby had recovered from his injuries he built another great team which went on to win the football league in [[1965]] and [[1967]], and became the first English winners of the [[European Cup]] in [[1968]]. |
Revision as of 02:36, 5 September 2005
Manchester United's emblem | |||
Full name | Manchester United | ||
---|---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | The Red Devils | ||
Founded | 1878, as Newton Heath LYR F.C. | ||
Ground | Old Trafford, Trafford, Greater Manchester | ||
Capacity | 68,936 (expansion to 76,000 in progress expected completion: 2006) | ||
Manager | Sir Alex Ferguson | ||
League | FA Premier League | ||
2004-05 | Premier League, 3rd | ||
|
Manchester United is an English football club, based at Old Trafford in Greater Manchester. The club is one of the most successful clubs in England, having won the Premier League fifteen times and the European Cup twice, and has had the highest average attendance in English football for the majority of the past fifty seasons.
The club was formed as Newton Heath (L & Y.R.) F.C. in 1878 as the works team of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway depot at Newton Heath. After nearing bankuptcy in 1902, the club was taken over by J.H. Davies who changed its name to Manchester United. United appointed Sir Matt Busby as manager after the Second World War, and his then-unheard-of policy of producing most of the players through the club's youth team brought great success, with the club winning the Football League in 1956 and 1957. This success was halted by the Munich air disaster of 1958, in which eight of the club's players died. It was thought that the club might fold, but once Busby had recovered from his injuries he built another great team which went on to win the football league in 1965 and 1967, and became the first English winners of the European Cup in 1968.
The club did not see great success again until the 1990s and early 2000s, when Sir Alex Ferguson guided them to eight league championships in eleven years. In 1999, Manchester United became the first team to win the Football League, the F.A. Cup and the European Cup in the same season — a record that has still not been equalled. The club had been run as a Public Limited Company since 1991, and a takeover was a real possiblility. An attempted takeover by Rupert Murdoch had been blocked by the British Government in 1999, but in 2005 Malcolm Glazer completed a hostile takeover of the club, despite considerable protests from many of United's supporters.
History
Early years (1878-1945)
The club were formed as Newton Heath (Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway) (Newton Heath (L&YR) for short) by a group of Manchester railway workers in 1878. The name was soon shortened to Newton Heath. They were founder members of the Football Alliance in 1889 and joined the Football League in 1892 when it merged with the Football Alliance.
The earliest known film of Manchester United is the 2–0 victory at Burnley on 6 December 1902, filmed by Mitchell and Kenyon.
The club faced bankruptcy in 1902 and was rescued by J.H. Davies who paid off the club's debts and changed the name to Manchester United, and changed the team's colours from gold and green to red and white. They won the league in 1908 and, with financial assistance from Davies, moved to a new stadium at Old Trafford in 1909.
The team struggled between the first and second world wars, and by time the second world war began they were £70,000 in debt.
The Busby years (1945-1969)
Matt Busby was appointed manager in 1945 and took a then-unheard of approach to his job, joining the players for training as well as performing administrative tasks. He was immediately successful, with the club finishing second in the league in 1947 and winning the F.A. Cup in 1948.
He adopted a policy of bringing in players from the youth team whenever possible, and the team won the league in 1956 with an average age of only 22. The following season, they won the league again and reached the F.A. Cup final, losing to Aston Villa. They also became the first English team to compete in the European Cup, and reached the semi-final.
Tragedy struck the following season, when the plane carrying the team home from a European Cup match crashed on take off at a refuelling stop in Munich. The Munich air disaster of 6 February, 1958 claimed the lives of eight players and another fifteen passengers. There was talk of the club folding but, with Jimmy Murphy taking over as manager while Matt Busby recovered from his injuries, the club continued playing with a makeshift side. They somehow reached the F.A. Cup final again, where they lost to Bolton.
Busby rebuilt the team throughout the early 1960s, signing players such as Denis Law and Pat Crerand. The team won the F.A. Cup in 1963, then won the league in 1965 and 1967 and the European Cup in 1968. This team was notable for containing three European Footballers of the Year: Bobby Charlton, Denis Law and George Best. Busby resigned as manager in 1969 and was replaced by the reserve-team coach and former United player Wilf McGuinness.
1969-1986
United struggled to replace Busby, and the team struggled under Wilf McGuinness and Frank O'Farrell before Tommy Docherty became manager at the end of 1972. Docherty, or 'the Doc', saved United from relegation that season but United were relegated in 1974. The team won promotion at the first attempt and reached the F.A. Cup final in 1976, but were beaten by Southampton. They reached the final again in 1977, beating Liverpool and preventing their opponents from completing the first ever treble, which United would go on to win in 1999. In spite of this success, and his popularity with the supporters, Docherty was sacked soon after the final when he was found to have had an affair with a colleague's wife.
Dave Sexton replaced Docherty as manager in the summer of 1977, and made the team play in a more defensive formation. This style was unpopular with supporters, who were used to the attacking football preferred by Docherty and Busby, and after failing to win a trophy Sexton was sacked in 1981.
He was replaced by the flamboyant Ron Atkinson who immediately broke the British record transfer fee to sign Bryan Robson from West Brom. Atkinson's team featured new signings such as Jesper Olsen and Gordon Strachan playing alongside the former youth-team players Norman Whiteside and Mark Hughes. United won the F.A. Cup in 1983 and 1985 and were overwhelming favourites to win the league in the 1985-86 season after winning their first ten league games, opening a ten-point gap over their rivals as early as October. The team's form collapsed, however, and United finished the season in fourth place. The poor form continued into the following season, and with United on the edge of the First Division's relegation zone, Atkinson was sacked.
The Alex Ferguson era (1986-1999)
Alex Ferguson replaced Atkinson and guided the club to an 11th place finish. The following season (1987-88), United finished second, with Brian McClair becoming the first United player since George Best to score twenty league goals in a season.
However, United struggled badly throughout 1989, with many of Ferguson's signings not reaching the expectations of the fans. There was speculation that Ferguson would be sacked at the beginning of 1990 but a win in the third round of the F.A. Cup kept the season alive and United went on to win the competition.
United won the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1990-91, beating that season's Spanish champions Barcelona in the final, but the following season was a disaster for United, though, as a late season slump saw them miss out on the league to rivals Leeds United. Meanwhile in 1991 the club had floated on the London Stock Exchange with a valuation of £18 million, thus bringing its finances into the public eye as never before.
The arrival of Eric Cantona in November 1992 provided the crucial spark for United, and they finished the 1992-93 season as Champions for the first time since 1967. They won the double (the league and the F.A. Cup) for the first time the following season, but legendary manager and club president Matt Busby died that year, on 20 January, 1994.
In 1994-95, Cantona received an eight month suspension for jumping into the crowd and assulting a Crystal Palace supporter. Losing their last two matches left United as runners-up in both the league and F.A. Cup. Ferguson then outraged the supporters by selling key players and replacing them with players from the club's youth team, but the new players, several of whom quickly became regular internationals, did surprisingly well and United won the double again in 1995-96.
They won the league in 1997, and Eric Cantona announced his retirement from football at the age of 30, several years earlier than most players. They started the following season (1997-98) well but their results were affected by a series of injuries and they finished the season in second place, well behind the double winning champions Arsenal.
1998-99 was the most successful season in the club's history as United became the first English team to win the Treble - the league, the F.A. Cup and the Champions League in the same season. The final was especially exciting as United were trailing 1-0 with one minute to go, but two goals in stoppage time, including a flick from Ole Gunnar Solskjær, gave them a win over Bayern Munich. Ferguson was knighted for his contributions to British football as a result.
After the treble (1999-present)
United won the league by significant margins in 2000 and 2001 but the press saw these seasons as failures as they failed to regain the European Cup. Ferguson adopted more defensive tactics to make United harder to beat in Europe but it was not a success and United finished the season in third place in 2002. They regained the league the following season (2002-03) and started the following season well, but their form dropped significantly when Rio Ferdinand received an eight month suspension for missing a drugs test.
The 2004-05 season was characterised by a failure to score goals, and United finished the season in third place. Off the pitch, the main story was the possibility of the club being taken over and at the end of the season, Malcolm Glazer acquired a controlling interest in the club.
The Malcolm Glazer takeover
On May 12, 2005, the United States businessman Malcolm Glazer acquired a controlling interest in the club in a takeover valuing it at approximately £800 million ($1.47 billion). On May 16, he increased his share to the 75% necessary to delist the club from the Stock Exchange, taking it private again, and announced his intention to do so within 20 days. On 7 June he appointed his sons Joel, Avram, and Bryan as non-executive directors, at the same time that Sir Roy Gardner resigned the chairmanship, and two other non-executive directors resigned.
On 14 June, 2005, Glazer successfully increased his share in the club to 97.3%, sufficient enough for full control, as well as de-listing it from public stock market.
On June 22, 2005, he formally delisted the club from public stock market exchange.
Some United fans have expressed concern that in the fallout from the Glazer takeover, which left the club £265 million in debt, Manchester United will no longer have the money to compete in the transfer market. The Glazers have promised that Sir Alex Ferguson would still be able to purchase "big-name" players; however, Ferguson's signings have been uncharacteristically restrained since the takeover.
Support
Before the Second World War, few English football supporters travelled to away games because of the time and cost. As United and City played home matches on alternate Saturdays, many Mancunians would watch United one week and City the next. After the war, a stronger rivalry developed and it became more common for a supporter to choose one team to follow exclusively.
When United won the league in 1956, they had the highest average home attendance in the league, a record that had been held by Newcastle for the previous few years. Following the Munich air disaster in 1958, more people from outside Manchester began to support United and, as travel became quicker and cheaper, many started to go to matches. This swelled United’s support and is one reason why United have had the highest league attendances in English football for almost every season since then, even as a second division side in 1974-75.
Although it is often claimed that few Mancunians support United (similar claims are made about Juventus and Bayern Munich), the Manchester Evening News has conducted several surveys asking Mancunians which team they support and United have topped each poll, on one occasion getting 66% of the vote. The club estimates they have 75 million fans around the world, with 40 million fans in Asia alone. In the late 1990s and early part of the 2000s, an increasing source of concern for many United supporters was the possibility of the club being taken over. The supporters’ group IMUSA (Independent Manchester United Supporters' Association) were extremely active in opposing a proposed takeover by Rupert Murdoch in 1999. Another pressure group, Shareholders United Against Murdoch (now Shareholders United) was formed at around this time to encourage supporters to buy shares in the club, partly to enable supporters to have a greater say in the issues that concern them, such as ticket prices and allocation, and partly to reduce the risk of an unwanted party buying enough shares to take over the club. However, this scheme failed to prevent Malcolm Glazer from becoming the majority shareholder in the club. Many supporters were outraged, and some formed a new club called FC United of Manchester. The new club plays in the North West Counties League Second Division, and attracts attendances of approximately 2000.
Although the full effects of Glazer's takeover on the club's support are not yet known, the club was compelled to put tickets on general sale for the club's Premiership home opener against Aston Villa - the first time in years the club has had to do that for a league match. It should be noted that several other Premiership clubs have also reported reduced attendance and/or trouble selling out their grounds.
Current squad
As of 1 September, 2005:
Note: For players who came from the academy of the club, Year Joined Club column represents first appearance for senior team.
Players out on loan
- 12 David Bellion (on loan to West Ham United) (S)
- 29 Jonathan Spector (on loan to Charlton Athletic) (D)
- 31 David Jones (on loan to Preston North End) (M)
- 33 Chris Eagles (on loan to Sheffield Wednesday) (M)
- 34 Paul McShane (on loan to Brighton & Hove Albion) (D)
- Eddie Johnson (on loan to Crewe Alexandra) (S)
- Ben Foster (on loan to Watford) (GK)
- 38 Tom Heaton (on loan to Swindon Town) (GK)
- Colin Heath (on loan to Swindon Town) (S)
- Phil Picken (on loan to Chesterfield) (D)
- Mads Timm (on loan to FC Lyn Oslo)
- 43 Dong Fangzhuo (on loan to Royal Antwerp FC) (S)
- Souleymane Mamam (on loan to Royal Antwerp FC) (M)
- Arthur Gomez (on loan to KFC Dessel Sport) (S)
Reserve team players
- 37 Kenny Cooper (S)
- Adam Eckersley(D)
- Tommy Lee (GK)
- Markus Neumayr (M)
- 40 Sylvan Ebanks-Blake (S)
Academy team players
Noted players
Pre-Busby
1950s-60s
- John Aston (son)
- George Best
- Shay Brennan
- Roger Byrne
- Johnny Carey
- Bobby Charlton
- Pat Crerand
- Tony Dunne
- Duncan Edwards
- Bill Foulkes
- Denis Law
- Charlie Mitten
- Stan Pearson
- Jack Rowley
- Nobby Stiles
- Tommy Taylor
- Dennis Viollet
- David Herd
1970s-80s
- Arthur Albiston
- Gary Bailey
- Martin Buchan
- Steve Coppell
- Sammy McIlroy
- Gordon McQueen
- Lou Macari
- Alex Stepney
- Gordon Strachan
- Norman Whiteside
- Ray Wilkins
1990s
- David Beckham
- Steve Bruce
- Eric Cantona
- Andrew Cole
- Ryan Giggs
- Mark Hughes
- Paul Ince
- Denis Irwin
- Andrei Kanchelskis
- Roy Keane
- Brian McClair
- Gary Neville
- Gary Pallister
- Bryan Robson
- Peter Schmeichel
- Paul Scholes
- Ole Gunnar Solskjær
- Jaap Stam
- Dwight Yorke
2000s
- Fabien Barthez
- Ruud van Nistelrooy
- Juan Sebastián Verón
- Rio Ferdinand
- Diego Forlán
- Gabriel Iván Heinze
- Cristiano Ronaldo
- Wayne Rooney
- Edwin van der Sar
See Also: List of Manchester United players and Category:Manchester United F.C. players
Managerial history
- A.H. Albut: 1892 - July 1900
- James West: July 1900 - 28 September 1903
- J. Ernest Mangnall: 30 September 1903 – 19 August 1912
- John J Bentley: August 1912 – December 1914
- John 'Jack' R. Robson: 21 December 1914 – October 1921
- John Chapman: 1 November 1921 – 7 October 1926 (suspended by the FA for undisclosed reason)
- Clarence 'Lal' George Hilditch: October 1926 - April 1927 (United’s only ever player-manger)
- Herbert Bamlett: April 1927 – April 1931
- Walter Crickmer: April 1931 – July 1932
- (Adam) Scott Matthewson Duncan: 1 August 1932 – November 1937
- Walter Crickmer: Nov 1937 – 1945
- Matt Busby: 19 February 1945 – June 1969
- Jimmy Murphy: February – August 1958 (caretaker manager while Busby recovered from the Munich air disaster)
- Wilfred McGuinness: June 1969 – 29 December 1970
- Matt Busby: 29 December 1970 – June 1971
- Frank O’Farrell: 9 June 1971 – 19 December 1972
- Tommy Docherty: 30 December 1972 – 4 July 1977
- Dave Sexton: 14 July 1977 – 30 April 1981
- Ron Atkinson: June 1981 – 6 November 1986
- Alex Ferguson: 6 November 1986 - to present
Achievements
- League Championships: 15
- 1908, 1911, 1952, 1956, 1957, 1965, 1967, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003
- Football League Second Division: 2
- 1936, 1975
- FA Cups: 11
- 1909, 1948, 1963, 1977, 1983, 1985, 1990, 1994, 1996, 1999, 2004
- League Cup: 1
- 1992
- UEFA Champions League Championships: 2
- 1967-68, 4-1 vs Benfica
- 1998-99, 2-1 vs FC Bayern M.
- UEFA Cup Winners' Cup: 1
- 1991
- Intercontinental Cup: 1
- 1999
- European Super Cup: 1
- 1991
- FA Charity Shield/Community Shields: 15
- 1908, 1911, 1952, 1956, 1957, 1965*, 1967*, 1977*, 1983, 1990*, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 2003 (*as joint holders)
- BBC Sports Personality of the Year Team Award
- 1968 & 1999
Records
- Record League Victory: 10-1 v Wolves, Division 1, 15 October 1892
- Record Premiership Victory: 9-0 Ipswich Town March 1995
- Record Cup Victory: 10-0 v Anderlecht, Champions Cup, Preliminary Round, 26 September 1956
- Record away win: 8-1 v Nottingham Forest February 1999
- Record League Defeat: 0-7 v Blackburn Rovers, Division 1, 10 April 1926
- Record Cup Defeat: 1-7 v Burnley, FA Cup, 1st Round, 13 February 1901
- Most Appearances : Bobby Charlton 754
- Most Goals scored : 247 Bobby Charlton
- Most League Goals: 199 Bobby Charlton, 1956-73
- Most League Goals in a Season: 32 Dennis Viollet, Division 1, 1959-60
- Most Goals scored in a Match: 6 George Best v Northampton Town, 1970
- Most Capped Player: Bobby Charlton, 106 England
- Most League Appearances: 606 Bobby Charlton, 1956-73
- Record League Attendance: Old Trafford 70,504 v Aston Villa, Division 1, 27 December 1920
- Record 'home' League Attendance: Maine Road 83,250 v Arsenal, Division 1, 7 January 1948
- Record Attendance Old Trafford: 76,962, Wolves v Grimsby Town, FA Cup, semi-final, 25 March 1939
- Longest unbeaten Run : (All competitions) 45, 24-12-1998 to 10-3-99
- Most League Goals in a season; 103 1956/57, 1958/59
- Most points in a season: 92 1993/94
Performance in the top division
Manchester United have spent 79 seasons in the national top flight (only Everton, Aston Villa, Liverpool, and Arsenal have more seasons at top level), finishing in these positions:
1st: | 15 | 12th: | 2 |
2nd: | 12 | 13th: | 4 |
3rd: | 6 | 14th: | 2 |
4th: | 7 | 15th: | 2 |
5th: | 2 | 16th: | 2 |
6th: | 2 | 17th: | 1 |
7th: | 2 | 18th: | 3 |
8th: | 6 | 19th: | 1 |
9th: | 3 | 20th: | - |
10th: | 1 | 21st: | 2 |
11th: | 3 | 22nd: | 2 |
United are one of three clubs (the others being Liverpool and Arsenal) that have finished first more often than in any other one table spot in the top division.
Fans' organizations
Fanzines
- Red Issue
- United We Stand
- A fanzine run by the two authors of the Man Utd Rough Guide 2003/2004.
- Red News
External links
- Manchester United Official website
- Manchester United Disabled Supporters Association
- Map of Top Tier English Football Stadiums
- Red Sky - Manchester United Gallery
- History of United's kit 1892-Present
- Forever Man Utd
- Manchester United Central
- FootyMania.com => Manchester United Latest News
- Redcafe(Manchester United forum)
- Red Issue
- 4thegame.com's Manchester United Section
- Soccernet's Manchester United
- Totally Red
- the Manchester United Guide
- Manchester united supporters club of canada
- Manchester United Autographs
- History of Manchester United
- Latest Manchester United News from the Manchester Evening News
- Manchester United News (Poland)
- BBC SPORT | Football | My Club | Man Utd