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Crystal Palace
File:Crystal Palace FC logo.svg
Full nameCrystal Palace Football Club
Nickname(s)The Eagles, The Glaziers
Short nameCPFC
Founded10 September 1905; 119 years ago (1905-09-10)
GroundSelhurst Park
Capacity25,456[1]
OwnersSteve Parish
Joshua Harris
David S. Blitzer[2]
ChairmanSteve Parish
ManagerSam Allardyce
LeaguePremier League
2023–24Premier League, 10th of 20
Websitehttp://www.cpfc.co.uk/
Current season

Crystal Palace Football Club is a professional football club based in South Norwood, London, that plays in the Premier League, the top tier of English football.

The club was founded in 1905 at the famous Crystal Palace Exhibition building by the owners of the FA Cup Final stadium which was situated inside the historic Palace grounds. The club played their home games at the Cup Final venue until 1915, but then the First World War forced them to move out and play at Herne Hill Velodrome and the Nest. In 1924, the club moved to their current home at Selhurst Park.

Palace have been FA Cup finalists twice, in 1990 and 2016, losing to Manchester United on both occasions. Palace enjoyed their best ever top flight season in 1990–91 when the club challenged for the English league title, eventually finishing in third place in the top tier, their highest league position to date. The club were denied a place in Europe at the end of that season due to the partial UEFA ban on English clubs caused by the Heysel Stadium disaster. Palace were one of the original founding members of the Premier League. The club were winners of the Full Members Cup in 1991 when they beat Everton in the Wembley final. Palace have been second tier champions twice and hold the record for the most play-off wins for promotion to the top flight, winning the final four times.

In 1973, the club changed its original nickname from "The Glaziers" to "The Eagles" and introduced the red-and-blue vertical stripes now associated with the club. The club had previously played in claret and blue colours. Palace have rivalries with Brighton & Hove Albion, with whom they contest the M23 derby, and fellow South London clubs Millwall and Charlton Athletic.

Palace's mascot is a dancing Serb called Sasa Curcic.

History

Front cover of a year book.
The Crystal Palace F.C. Year Book for 1912–13

In 1895, the Football Association had found a new permanent home for the FA Cup Final at the site of the famous Crystal Palace Exhibition building. Some years later the owners of the attraction, who were reliant on tourist activity for their income, sought fresh attractions for the venue, and decided to form their own football team to play at the Palace stadium. There had been an amateur Crystal Palace team as early as 1861, but they had disappeared from historical records around 1876. The owners of the venue wanted a professional club to play there and tap into the vast crowd potential of the area.

Crystal Palace Football Club, originally nicknamed "The Glaziers", was formed on 10 September 1905 under the guidance of Aston Villa assistant secretary Edmund Goodman.[3] The club applied to enter the Football League alongside Chelsea and Southampton, but was the only unsuccessful team of the three. The club instead found itself in the Southern League Second Division for the 1905–06 season. The club was successful in its inaugural season and was promoted to the First Division, crowned as champions.[3] In their first season Crystal Palace also played in the mid-week United Counties League, finishing runner-up to Watford, and it was in this competition that the club played their first match, winning 3–0 away to New Brompton.[3][4]

Palace remained in the Southern League up until 1914, their one highlight the 1907 shock First Round victory over Newcastle United in the FA Cup.[5][6] The outbreak of the First World War led to the Admiralty requisitioning the Crystal Palace and the club was forced to move to the home of West Norwood F.C. at Herne Hill Velodrome.[3] Three years later the club moved again to the Nest due to the folding of Croydon Common F.C. The club joined the Football League Third Division in the 1920–21 season, finishing as champions and gaining promotion to the Second Division. During this period, Palace also won the London Challenge Cup three times in 1913, 1914, and 1921. Palace moved to the purpose-built stadium Selhurst Park in 1924, the ground the club plays at today.[3][7]

The opening fixture at Selhurst Park was against Sheffield Wednesday, Palace losing 0–1 in front of a crowd of 25,000. Finishing in twenty-first position, the club was relegated to the Third Division South. Before the Second World War Palace made good efforts at promotion, never finishing outside the top half of the table and finishing second on three occasions. During the war years, the Football League was suspended, and the club won two Wartime Leagues, the South Regional League and the South 'D' League. After the war, the club were less successful in the league, their highest position being seventh, and conversely on three occasions the club had to apply for re-election. The club remained in Division Three South until 1957–58. A league reorganisation would see clubs in the bottom half of the table merge with those in the bottom half of Division Three North to form a new Fourth Division. Palace finished fourteenth – just below the cut – and found itself in the basement of English football. Their stay proved brief. New chairman Arthur Wait appointed Arthur Rowe as manager, and the 1960–61 season saw Palace gain promotion. Palace also achieved distinction in 1962 when they played the great Real Madrid team of that era in a friendly match. This was the first time that the Spanish giants had played a match in London. Although Rowe then stepped down for health reasons towards the end of 1962, the promotion proved a turning point in the club's history. Dick Graham and then Bert Head guided the club to successive promotions in 1963–64 and 1968–69, taking the club through the Second Division and into the heights of the First Division.[8]

Palace stayed in the top flight from 1969 until 1973, but then experienced great disappointment. Under the management of Malcolm Allison the club was relegated in consecutive seasons, finding itself back in Division Three for the 1974–75 season. It was under Allison that the club became nicknamed "The Eagles" and they enjoyed a run to the semi-final of the 1975-76 FA Cup, beating Leeds and Chelsea along the way. Allison was sacked at the end of the 1975–76 campaign, and it was under Terry Venables' management that Palace were promoted in 1976–77 and again in 1978–79, the latter saw the club crowned as Division Two champions. That team from 1979 was dubbed " The team of the Eighties" and were briefly top of the whole Football League in the early part of the 1979–80 season, before financial difficulties suffered by the club caused the break up of that talented side, and this ultimately led to the club being unable to maintain their position in the top tier. They were relegated from the First Division in 1980–81, coinciding with Ron Noades takeover of the club. Steve Coppell arrived as manager on 4 June 1984, and under his stewardship and rebuilding the club achieved promotion via the play-offs back to the First Division in 1988–89. The club followed this up by reaching the 1990 FA Cup Final, drawing 3–3 with Manchester United in the first match but losing the replay 1–0. The club built on the success of the previous season in 1990–91 by achieving its highest league finish of third place in the top tier. Palace were denied a European place at the end of that season due to the partial UEFA ban on English clubs caused by the Heysel Stadium disaster. The club had also returned to Wembley to win the Full Members Cup. The club beat Everton 4–1 (after extra time) in the final.[3] The following season saw star striker Ian Wright leave the club for Arsenal. Palace finished tenth, allowing the club to become a founding member of the FA Premier League in 1992–93.[9]

Photograph of a stand adjacent to a road.
Holmesdale Road stand at Selhurst Park, constructed in 1994–95.

The club sold Mark Bright to Sheffield Wednesday the following season, but failed to rebuild the squad adequately, and Palace struggled to score throughout the season. The club found itself relegated with a total of 49 points, which is still a Premier League record for a relegated club. Steve Coppell resigned and Alan Smith, his assistant at the club, took over. His first season saw the club win the First Division title and gain promotion to the Premier League.[10] Their stay on this occasion proved eventful. On 25 January 1995, Palace played Manchester United at Selhurst Park in which Eric Cantona was sent off. He was taunted by Palace fan Matthew Simmons,[11] and retaliated with a flying kick.[12] Cantona was sentenced to two weeks in jail,[13] reduced to 120 hours community service on appeal. Simmons was immediately banned from Selhurst Park,[14] and found guilty on two charges of threatening Cantona.[15] More was to follow in March, when Chris Armstrong was suspended by the FA for failing a drugs test.[16] On the field, Alan Smith guided the club to the semi finals of both the FA Cup and the League Cup, but League form was a concern and Palace once again found itself relegated, finishing fourth from bottom as the Premier League reduced from 22 to 20 clubs.[17]

Smith left the club and Steve Coppell returned as technical director in the summer of 1995, and through a combination of the first-team coaching of Ray Lewington and latterly Dave Bassett's managership Palace reached the play-offs. Palace lost the 1996 play off final in dramatic fashion, Steve Claridge scoring a last minute goal for Leicester City to win the tie 2–1. The following season saw Coppell take charge as first-team manager when Dave Bassett departed for Nottingham Forest in early 1997[18] The club was successful in the play-offs at the second time of asking when the club defeated Sheffield United in the final at Wembley.[19]

This stay in the Premier League was no more successful than the previous two, and in true yo-yo club fashion the club was relegated back to the First Division for the 1998–99 season. The club competed in European competition during the summer when they played in the UEFA Intertoto Cup. Palace then went into administration in 1999, when owner Mark Goldberg was unable to sustain his financial backing of the club.[20] The club emerged from administration under the ownership of Simon Jordan, and Steve Coppell left the club, replaced by Alan Smith for a second time. The club were almost relegated in Jordan's first season, in 2000–01. Smith was sacked in April and Steve Kember managed to win the two remaining fixtures that would guarantee survival, Dougie Freedman scoring the winner in a 1–0 victory over Stockport County in the 87th minute on the final day of the season. Steve Bruce was appointed manager for the 2001–02 season.[21] A good start to the season gave Palace hope for a promotion challenge, but Bruce attempted to walk out on the club after just four months at the helm to take charge of Birmingham City.[22][23] After a short spell on 'gardening leave',[24] Bruce was eventually allowed to join Birmingham,[25] succeeded by Trevor Francis, who had ironically been his predecessor at the Midlands club.[26]

Under Francis, Palace finished mid-table for two successive seasons, and Francis left[27] to be replaced by long-serving coach Steve Kember.[28] Kember guided Palace to victories in their opening three games of the 2003–04 First Division campaign, which put Palace at the top of the table, but he was sacked in November after a terrible loss of form saw the team slip towards the relegation zone.[29] Iain Dowie was appointed manager and guided the club to the play-offs, securing promotion with a 1–0 victory over West Ham. Again Palace could not maintain their footing in the top tier and were relegated on the last day of the season after drawing at local rivals Charlton Athletic.

A crowd of people and a police van outside a building.
Crystal Palace fans protest – and await anxiously for news – outside the Lloyds HQ in London on 1 June 2010

Following that relegation, Simon Jordan was unable to put the club on a sound financial footing in the next few years, and in January 2010 the club was once again placed in administration, this time by a creditor.[30] The Football League's regulations saw the Eagles deducted ten points,[31] and the administrators was forced to sell key players including Victor Moses and José Fonte. Neil Warnock had also departed as manager in the early part of 2010. He had taken over as manager in 2007, replacing Peter Taylor who had a brief spell as manager. Paul Hart took over as caretaker manager for the final weeks of the season. Survival in the Championship was only secured on the final day of the season after a memorable 2–2 draw at Sheffield Wednesday, which was itself relegated as a result.[32]

During the close season CPFC 2010, a consortium consisting of several wealthy fans successfully negotiated the purchase of the club. Led by Steve Parish, the vocal representative for a consortium of four that also included Stephen Browett, Jeremy Hosking and Martin Long. Crucially, CPFC 2010 also secured the freehold of the ground, the consortium paying tribute to a fans' campaign which helped pressure Lloyds Bank into selling the ground back to the club. The consortium swiftly installed George Burley as the Eagles' new manager.[33] However a poor start to the season saw the club hovering around the bottom of the table by December. On 1 January 2011, after a 3–0 defeat to Millwall, Burley was sacked and his assistant Dougie Freedman named caretaker manager. Freedman was appointed manager on a full-time basis on 11 January 2011.[34] Palace moved up the table and by securing a 1–1 draw at Hull City on 30 April, the club was safe from relegation with one game of the season left. After another year and a half as manager, Freedman departed to manage Bolton Wanderers on 23 October 2012.[35]

In November 2012, Ian Holloway became the club's manager. He guided Palace back to the Premier League after an 8-year absence by defeating Watford 1–0 in the Championship Play-Off Final at the new Wembley.[36] On 23 October 2013, Holloway left his post as manager on mutual consent terms.[37] This came after only managing one win in the first nine games of the 2013–14 season. Assistant manager Keith Millen was named caretaker manager while Palace searched for a new manager. On 23 November 2013, former Stoke City boss Tony Pulis was confirmed as the new manager of Crystal Palace.[38] On 19 April 2014, Crystal Palace ensured they were mathematically safe from relegation from the Premier League for the first time in five attempts. Pulis resigned on 14 August 2014, just two days before the start of the 2014–15 season and was replaced by Neil Warnock who returned to the club for a second spell as manager. However, Warnock was sacked by the club at Christmas after a poor run of results. On 2 January 2015, former Palace player Alan Pardew was confirmed as the new manager, signing a three-and-a-half-year contract with the club after a compensation package of £3.5 million was agreed with Newcastle United.[39] Two days later, in his first match in charge, Palace won 4–0 away to Conference club Dover Athletic in the third round of the FA Cup.[40] Pardew then guided the club to comfortable mid-table safety and a third consecutive season in the Premier League. During the following season, Pardew led Palace to their first FA Cup Final for twenty-six years. Their opponents would be Manchester United again, who they lost to back in the 1990 final. But Palace would suffer disappointment again when they lost 2–1 after extra time. On 22 December 2016, Pardew was sacked by the club for its poor run of results in the start of the 2016–17 campaign. On 23 December 2016, Sam Allardyce was appointed as the new manager of the club under a two and a half year contract with immediate effect. On 26 December 2016, Allardyce took charge of his first match as manager of Crystal Palace against Watford, in which the result was a 1–1 draw.

Colours and crest

When Crystal Palace were founded in 1905, they turned to one of the biggest clubs in the country at the time, Aston Villa, to seek advice. Villa helped the club in a number of ways, not least by donating their kit.[41][42] As a result, Palace's colours were originally claret and blue shirts paired with white shorts, socks tending to be claret. They kept to this formula fairly consistently until 1938. The 1937–38 strip saw them try vertical stripes of claret and blue on the jersey rather than the claret body and blue sleeves, but in 1938 they decided to abandon the claret and blue and adopt white shirts and black shorts with matching socks. Although they returned to claret and blue from 1949 to 1954, the 1955 season saw them return to white and black, now using claret and blue as trim.[43]

Mono photograph of the front of the Palace and some of its surrounding grounds.
The Crystal Palace, the façade of which appears on the club crest.

There were variations on this theme until 1963 when the club adopted the away strip of yellow jersey as the home colours. In 1964 the club adopted an all-white strip modelled on Real Madrid whom the club had played recently in a friendly, before they returned to claret and blue jerseys with white shorts in 1966. The club continued with variations on this theme up until Malcolm Allison's arrival as manager in 1973.[43] Allison overhauled the club's image, adopting red and blue vertical stripes for colours and kit, inspired by Barcelona and Levante.[41] The club have played in variations of red and blue ever since, bar the centenary season of 2005 which saw them deploy a version of their 1971–72 claret, blue and white kit.[43]

The club were relatively late in establishing a crest. Although the initials were embroidered onto the shirt from the 1935–36 season, a crest featuring the façade of The Crystal Palace did not appear until 1955. This crest disappeared from the shirt in 1964, and the team's name appeared embroidered on shirts in 1967–72. 1972 saw a round badge adopted with the club's initials and nickname "the Glaziers" before Allison changed this too.[43] The nickname became "the Eagles", inspired by Portuguese club Benfica, and the badge adopted an eagle holding a ball.[43] This emblem remained until 1987 when the club married the eagle with the Crystal Palace façade,[44] and although updated in 1996 and again in 2013 the crest retains these features.[43] Since mid-2010, the club has made use of an American bald eagle, called Kayla, as the club mascot, with the bird flying from one end of the stadium to the other at every home game.[45][46]

Kit manufacturers and sponsors

Since 2014 Crystal Palace's kit has been manufactured by Macron. Previous manufacturers include Umbro (1975–77), Admiral (1977–80, 1987–88, 2003–04), Adidas (1980–83, 1996–99), Hummel (1984–87), Bukta (1988–92), Ribero (1992–94) Nutmeg (1994–96), TFG Sports (1999–2001) Le Coq Sportif (2001–03), Diadora (2004–07), Errea (2007–09), Nike (2009–12), and Avec (2012–14). The club's shirts are currently sponsored by Mansion.com, and have previously been sponsored by Red Rose (1983–84), Top Score (1985–86), AVR (1986–87), Andrew Copeland (1987–88), Fly Virgin (1988–91), Tulip Computers (1991–93), TDK (1993–99), Churchill Insurance (2000–06), GAC Logistics (2006–14), and Neteller (2014–15). Mansion.com (2015–)[43]

Stadium

In 1905, the Crystal Palace Company who owned the FA Cup Final venue situated inside the grounds of the The Crystal Palace, wanted a professional club to play there and tap into the crowd potential of the area. They formed a new club called Crystal Palace F.C., to play at the stadium.[47] When the First World War broke out the Palace and grounds were seized by the armed forces, and in 1915 the club were forced to move by the Admiralty. They found a temporary base at the Herne Hill Velodrome. Although other clubs had offered the use of their ground to Palace, the club felt it best to remain as close to their natural catchment area as possible.[48] When Croydon Common F.C. were wound up in 1917, the club took over their old stadium at the Nest,[49] but in 1919 they began the purchase of the land on which they would eventually build Selhurst Park, their current home.[50]

The renowned stadium architect, Archibald Leitch, was employed to draw up plans, and the club constructed and completed the ground in time for the 1924–25 season.[50] It remained relatively unchanged, with only the introduction of floodlights and maintenance and updating until 1969 when the Arthur Wait stand was constructed. The Main Stand became all-seater in 1979 and more work followed in the 1980s when the Whitehorse Lane End was redeveloped to allow for a Sainsbury's supermarket, club offices and a club shop. The Arthur Wait stand became all seater in 1990, and in 1994 the Holmesdale Terrace was redeveloped, replaced with a two tier Stand. Selhurst's attendance record was set in 1979, with an official total of 51,482.[51] After all the redevelopments to the ground and safety requirements due to the Taylor Report, the ground's current capacity is 26,309.[52] Proposals were put forward to move the club back to the Crystal Palace National Stadium in 2010,[53] but after the club gained promotion to the Premier League in 2013 there has been a renewed focus on redeveloping their current home into a 40,000 seater stadium.[52][54]

See caption
A panorama of Selhurst Park from the Upper Holmesdale, showing from left to right the Main Stand, the Whitehorse Lane End and the Arthur Wait Stand

Support base

Holmsdale Fanatics celebrate Crystal Palace's 3-0 win over Arsenal F.C.

Crystal Palace have a fan base drawn predominantly from the local area which draws on South London, Kent and Surrey. The club's original home, at The Crystal Palace, was on the boundary with Kent, while Selhurst Park was within Surrey's borders until the London Government Act 1963 saw Greater London encompass Croydon. The club's passionate support at home games emanates from the Holmesdale Road Stand, in which the ultras group the Holmesdale Fanatics have been based since 2005 .

The fans have established at least two other supporters groups. The Palace Independent Supporters' Association was set up to raise supporter concerns with the club,[55] while the Crystal Palace Supporters' Trust was originally established to enable fans to purchase the club during the administration of 2000. The Trust remained in existence, and now lists one of its aims as building "a new state-of-the-art training ground to lease to the Club".[56]

A number of fanzines have been produced by the fans over the years. Eagle Eye launched in 1987 and ran until 1994, with a number of contributors launching the replacement Palace Echo in 1995, running until 2007.[57] The Eastern Eagles, So Glad You're Mine and One More Point were also published by fans in the 1990s.[58] When One More Point ceased publication, Five Year Plan launched in its place,[59] and maintains an online presence.[60] Supporters also congregate on two internet forums, The BBS and Holmesdale.net which the club use as channels to communicate with fans.[61]

Photo of 7 cheerleaders performing on a football pitch in front of a packed stand with many on the lower tier waving red and blue flags.
Crystal Palace fans express support for the club during the administration of 2010.

Being a London club means they compete against a number of other local clubs for the attention of supporters but the club does have a recognisably large catchment area of 900,000.[54][62] When the new owners took control of the club in 2010, they sought the fans' input into future decisions. They consulted on a new badge design, and when their chosen designs were rejected the club instead opted for a design based on a fans' idea from an internet forum.[63] The club are also strengthening their ties with the local community, and through the Crystal Palace F.C. Foundation they work with local London boroughs of Croydon, Bromley and Sutton to provide sports and educational programmes. Through this work the club hope to develop their supporter base and geographical base. The Foundation's work was recognised by the Football League in August 2009 with their Silver Standard Community Scheme Award.[64]

The club also maintains a sizeable celebrity support. The Rolling Stones guitarist Bill Wyman has been an avid supporter of the club all his life. Kevin Day and Jo Brand host an annual comedy night for Comic Relief and the Palace Academy,[65] and the club also count fellow comedians Eddie Izzard, Harry Enfield, Sean Hughes, Mark Steel, Jim Piddock and Roy Hudd amongst their fans. Film director Paul Greengrass is a self-confessed fan. The late Ronnie Corbett had also been a lifelong supporter of the club. The actor Neil Morrissey developed Palace Ale, a beer on sale in the ground,[66] while actor Bill Nighy is patron of the CPSCC, a Crystal Palace-based charity.[67] Two of the stars of The Inbetweeners, James Buckley and Simon Bird are also Palace fans.[68] Radio DJ David Jensen is chairman of the Crystal Palace Vice Presidents Club[69] and acted as spokesman for the CPFC 2010 consortium during their takeover bid for the club. Also, the heavy metal journalist Dave Ling is a passionate follower.[70] Actor, writer and producer John Salthouse was on the books of Crystal Palace from 1968 to 1970,[71] and was also a mascot for the club as a child.[72] He incorporated the club into his role as Tony in Abigail's Party he was under the name of John Lewis at Palace.[73] Susanna Reid revealed her love of Palace while taking part in Strictly Come Dancing, visiting Selhurst Park for inspiration.[74] Rebecca Lowe, currently the host of Premier League coverage for NBC Sports, is also a supporter.[75]

Rivalries

Due to their location in the capital, Crystal Palace are involved in a number of local derbies, mostly across South London. They enjoy rivalries with both Millwall and former tenants Charlton Athletic. They have a fierce rivalry with Brighton & Hove Albion which did not develop until Palace's relegation to the Third Division in 1974, reaching its height when the two teams were drawn together in the first round of the 1976–77 FA Cup. The game went to two replays, but the controversy was based on referee Ron Challis ordering a successful Brighton penalty be retaken because of Palace player encroachment. The retake was saved, Palace won the game 1–0 and a fierce rivalry was born.[76]

Ownership

Low resolution monochrome photo of two men.
First chairman Sydney Bourne with Edmund Goodman, 1906.

Due to the Football League not wishing the owners of the FA Cup Final to also own a team, a separate company was established to found and own the team. The first chairman, Sydney Bourne, was found by club secretary Edmund Goodman after he had examined records of FA Cup Final ticket purchasers. Goodman noted his name as one that had bought a number of tickets every year, and so he met with Bourne and found him very agreeable to the idea of the new club. Bourne was invited onto the board of directors and elected chairman at the club's first ever meeting. Bourne remained chairman until his death in 1930.[77]

Arthur Wait established a consortium of seven businessmen to purchase the club in 1949, and initially they rotated the chairmanship.[78][79] In 1958 Wait became the Chairman, before being replaced by Raymond Bloye in 1972.[80] Bloye's ownership lasted until 26 January 1981, when property developer Ron Noades and his small consortium took control of the club. Noades eventually sold the club to Mark Goldberg on 5 June 1998, becoming the second longest serving chairman behind Sydney Bourne. Goldberg's tenure of the club was not a success and the club entered administration in March 1999. Although the fans established a group, the Crystal Palace Supporters' Trust in a bid to gain control of the club, millionaire Simon Jordan negotiated a deal with creditors and the administrator, and a new company, CPFC 2000 took control. This company entered administration in January 2010, leaving administration in June of that year after a takeover by a consortium of four wealthy fans, CPFC 2010.[81]

CPFC 2010 was established by a consortium of four businessmen, Steve Parish, Martin Long, Stephen Browett and Jeremy Hosking in 2010, with each owning a 25% share of the company.[82][83] The four successfully negotiated a take-over with the administrator Brendan Guilfoyle and a company voluntary arrangement was formally accepted by company creditors on 20 August 2010.[84] CPFC 2010 also purchased the ground from Lloyds Bank after a demonstration by fans put pressure on the bank to agree terms.[85][86]

On 18 December 2015, it was announced that a new deal had been signed with American investors Josh Harris and David Blitzer.[87] The club stated that Steve Parish would continue as chairman alongside Harris and Blitzer as general partners in a new structure, and that Browett, Long and Hosking would also retain a substantial investment.[88]

Later company accounts showed that the ownership figures were: Steve Parish 18%, Steve Browett 5%, Jeremy Hosking 5% and Martin Long 2.5% with the remainder being owned by Palace Holdco LP (a limited partnership registered in Delaware) 67.5% and Palace Parallel LLC (a company also registered in Delaware) 1.5%. Both Palace Holdco and Palace Parallel have 180 preference shares each. As the Delaware companies do not have to reveal their owners the exact ownership of the club is therefore unknown but Steve Parish confirmed that each of Harris and Blitzer had an 18% share to match his own.

Statistics and records

Jim Cannon holds the record for Crystal Palace appearances, having played 660 first-team matches between 1973 and 1988.[89] He also holds the record for most League appearances, making 571.[90] Cannon joined the club as a trainee, and of his appearances only four of them were made as a substitute. His first appearance was made aged 19, scoring in a home win against Chelsea on 31 March 1973. Cannon's last game was on 7 May 1988, a home win against Manchester City.[91] Peter Simpson holds the record for the most goals scored in a season, 54 in the 1930–31 season in Division Three (South). Simpson, who signed for the club from Kettering Town, is also the top scorer over a career – 165 between 1929 and 1935.[89] Mile Jedinak holds the club record for most international caps, with 37 appearances for Australia while at Palace.[90][92][93]

Chart showing Crystal Palace's table positions since joining the Football League.

Crystal Palace hold a number of records and achievements. They are one of only a small group of clubs to have been inaugural champions of a Football League Division, winning the newly formed Third Division in 1920–21. Their average league attendance of 19,092 achieved in the 1960–61 season and the attendance of 37,774 for the Good Friday game at Selhurst Park between Palace and Millwall the same season are Fourth Division attendance records.[94] The club's widest victory margin in the league was their 9–0 win against Barrow in the Fourth Division in 1959, while their heaviest defeat in the league was by the same scoreline, 9–0, against Liverpool in 1989 in Division One.[95]

Palace's record home attendance is 51,482 for a Division Two match against Burnley, achieved on 11 May 1979.[95] With the introduction of regulations enforcing all-seater stadiums, it is unlikely that this record will be beaten in the foreseeable future. The highest transfer fee received for a Palace player is £28million, from Everton for Yannick Bolasie in August 2016, while the highest transfer fee paid by the club to date was for Christian Benteke from Liverpool also in August 2016, for £32 million. The club's highest ever league finish so far is third place in the Football League First Division which is now called the Premier League achieved in 1990–91, under the management of Steve Coppell. The club have been FA Cup finalists twice in 1990 and 2016, finishing runners-up on both occasions and have also reached the semi-finals on two other occasions. Palace have reached the semi-finals of the League Cup four times, most recently in 2012. The club were winners of the Full Members Cup in 1991.

Palace were relegated in the 1992–93 season on 49 points which is still a Premier League record number of points for a relegated club. Palace also remain the only team ever to be relegated from the Premier League even though they finished fourth from bottom in the 1994–95 season. This was because it had been decided that the following season would see the Premier League reduced from 22 teams down to the current standard of 20. Palace hold the record for relegations from the Premier League with a total of 4, (1992–93, 1994–95, 1997–98, 2004–05), but conversely they also hold the record for most Play off wins resulting in promotion to the top flight amassing 4 Play off victories, and they hold the record (in any division) for winning promotion via the Play offs at 4 different locations, (Selhurst Park 1989, Old Wembley 1997, Millennium Stadium 2004 and New Wembley 2013).

Players

First-team squad

As of 31 January 2017.[96]

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 Argentina ARG Julián Speroni
2 DF England ENG Joel Ward
3 DF Netherlands NED Patrick van Aanholt
4 MF France FRA Mathieu Flamini
5 DF England ENG James Tomkins
6 DF England ENG Scott Dann (captain)
7 MF France FRA Yohan Cabaye
8 FW France FRA Loïc Rémy (on loan from Chelsea)
9 FW England ENG Fraizer Campbell
10 MF England ENG Andros Townsend
11 MF Ivory Coast CIV Wilfried Zaha
12 DF France FRA Mamadou Sakho (on loan from Liverpool)
13 GK Wales WAL Wayne Hennessey
14 MF South Korea KOR Lee Chung-yong
15 FW Belgium BEL Jonathan Benteke
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 MF Wales WAL Joe Ledley
17 FW Belgium BEL Christian Benteke
18 MF Scotland SCO James McArthur
19 DF England ENG Zeki Fryers
21 FW England ENG Connor Wickham
23 DF Senegal SEN Pape Souaré
25 MF England ENG Sullay Kaikai
26 MF Mali MLI Bakary Sako
27 DF Ireland EIR Damien Delaney
28 MF Serbia SRB Luka Milivojević
30 GK France FRA Steve Mandanda
31 DF Ghana GHA Jeffrey Schlupp
34 DF England ENG Martin Kelly
42 MF England ENG Jason Puncheon

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
20 MF Wales WAL Jonny Williams (on loan to Ipswich Town)
22 MF England ENG Jordon Mutch (on loan to Reading)
24 FW England ENG Keshi Anderson (on loan to Northampton Town)
32 FW Ghana GHA Kwesi Appiah (on loan to Viking)
36 FW England ENG Freddie Ladapo (on loan to Shrewsbury Town)
No. Pos. Nation Player
38 MF England ENG Hiram Boateng (on loan to Northampton Town)
43 MF Afghanistan AFG Noor Husin (on loan to Accrington Stanley)
DF England ENG Luke Croll (on loan to Exeter City)
DF England ENG Ryan Inniss (on loan to Southend United)

Development squad

As of 9 February 2017.[97]

Crystal Palace Reserves joined the London League in the year 1906–07. Crystal Palace has gained a reputation for their academy which produced players such as Wilfried Zaha, Nathaniel Clyne, Victor Moses, Wayne Routledge, Ben Watson, Clinton Morrison, Gareth Southgate etc.[98][99]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
35 MF England ENG Luke Dreher
40 GK Albania ALB Kleton Perntreou
44 DF England ENG Ben Wynter
45 MF England ENG Michael Phillips
46 MF England ENG Aaron Wan-Bissaka
49 FW Belgium BEL Jason Lokilo
DF England ENG Oliver O'Dwyer
DF England ENG Ryan King-Elliott
DF Croatia CRO Nikola Tavares
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF England ENG Callum Sturgess
MF England ENG Jacob Berkeley-Agyepong
MF England ENG Randell Williams
MF England ENG Andre Coker
MF Ireland EIR Kian Flanagan
MF England ENG Giovanni McGregor
MF England ENG Nya Kirby
FW England ENG Corie Andrews
FW England ENG Victor Fundi

Notable former players

Players with over 100 appearances for Crystal Palace can be found here
All past (and present) players who are the subjects of Wikipedia articles can be found here

Crystal Palace "Centenary XI"

To celebrate Crystal Palace's centenary in 2005, the club asked Palace fans to vote for a "Centenary XI" from a shortlist of ten players per position, provided by the club.[100]

Player of the Year

Year Winner
1972 Scotland John McCormick
1973 Scotland Tony Taylor
1974 England Peter Taylor
1975 England Derek Jeffries
1976 England Peter Taylor
1977 England Kenny Sansom
1978 Scotland Jim Cannon
1979 England Kenny Sansom
1980 England Paul Hinshelwood
 
Year Winner
1981 England Paul Hinshelwood
1982 England Paul Barron
1983 Republic of Ireland Jerry Murphy
1984 England Billy Gilbert
1985 Scotland Jim Cannon
1986 Scotland George Wood
1987 Scotland Jim Cannon
1988 England Geoff Thomas
1989 England Ian Wright
 
Year Winner
1990 England Mark Bright
1991 England Geoff Thomas
1992 Republic of Ireland Eddie McGoldrick
1993 England Andy Thorn
1994 Wales Chris Coleman
1995 England Richard Shaw
1996 England Andy Roberts
1997 Scotland David Hopkin
1998 England Marc Edworthy
 
Year Winner
1999 England Hayden Mullins
2000 England Andy Linighan
2001 China Fan Zhiyi
2002 Scotland Dougie Freedman
2003 England Hayden Mullins
2004 England Andrew Johnson
2005 England Andrew Johnson
2006 Barbados Emmerson Boyce
2007 Guyana Leon Cort
 
Year Winner
2008 Argentina Julián Speroni
2009 Argentina Julián Speroni
2010 Argentina Julián Speroni
2011 England Nathaniel Clyne
2012 Norway Jonathan Parr
2013 Australia Mile Jedinak
2014 Argentina Julián Speroni
2015 England Scott Dann
2016 Ivory Coast Wilfried Zaha

Club staff

Position Name
Chairman Steve Parish
Chief Executive Phil Alexander
Manager Sam Allardyce
Assistant Manager Sammy Lee
First Team Coach Kevin Keen
Goalkeeping Coach Martyn Margetson
Fitness Coach Scott Guyett

Managers

As of matches played 10 April 2017. Not including caretaker managers. All competitive matches are counted.
Monochrome photograph.
Longest serving manager Edmund Goodman
Name From To G W D L %W
John 'Jack' Robson July 1905 30 April 1907 77 35 18 24 045.45
Edmund Goodman 1 May 1907 24 November 1925 613 242 166 205 039.48
Alex Maley 24 November 1925 12 October 1927 83 36 16 31 043.37
Fred Mavin 21 November 1927 18 October 1930 132 63 33 36 047.73
Jack Tresadern 27 October 1930 June 1935 213 98 44 71 046.01
Tom Bromilow July 1935
1 January 1937
July 1936
July 1939
162 71 40 51 043.83
R. S. Moyes July 1936 8 December 1936 23 6 6 11 026.09
George Irwin July 1939 July 1947 45 15 11 19 033.33
Jack Butler July 1947 June 1949 88 23 24 41 026.14
Ronnie Rooke June 1949 29 November 1950 62 19 15 28 030.65
Fred Dawes/Charlie Slade 29 November 1950 11 October 1951 40 8 10 22 020.00
Laurie Scott 11 October 1951 October 1954 145 43 41 61 029.66
Cyril Spiers October 1954 June 1958 181 52 53 76 028.73
George Smith July 1958 12 April 1960 100 42 27 31 042.00
Arthur Rowe 15 April 1960 30 November 1962 132 52 32 48 039.39
Dick Graham 30 November 1962 3 January 1966 150 68 41 41 045.33
Bert Head 18 April 1966 30 March 1973 328 101 96 131 030.79
Malcolm Allison 30 March 1973
1 December 1980
May 1976
26 January 1981
155 53 48 54 034.19
Terry Venables 1 June 1976
9 June 1998
14 October 1980
15 January 1999
220 80 76 64 036.36
Dario Gradi 26 January 1981 10 November 1981 30 7 3 20 023.33
Steve Kember 10 November 1981
18 April 2003
June 1982
3 November 2003
53 15 14 24 028.30
Alan Mullery July 1982 June 1984 98 31 27 40 031.63
Steve Coppell July 1984
July 1995
28 February 1997
15 January 1999
21 May 1993
8 February 1996
13 March 1998
1 August 2000
565 221 146 198 039.12
Alan Smith 3 June 1993
1 August 2000
15 May 1995
29 April 2001
163 62 43 58 038.04
Dave Bassett 8 February 1996 27 February 1997 60 29 15 16 048.33
Attilio Lombardo[A] 13 March 1998 29 April 1998 7 2 0 5 028.57
Steve Bruce 30 May 2001 31 October 2001 18 11 2 5 061.11
Trevor Francis 30 November 2001 18 April 2003 78 28 22 28 035.90
Iain Dowie 22 December 2003 22 May 2006 123 50 29 44 040.65
Peter Taylor 13 June 2006 8 October 2007 60 21 16 23 035.00
Neil Warnock 11 October 2007
27 August 2014
2 March 2010
27 December 2014
146 50 45 51 034.25
Paul Hart 2 March 2010 3 May 2010 14 3 6 5 021.43
George Burley 17 June 2010 1 January 2011 25 7 5 13 028.00
Dougie Freedman 11 January 2011 23 October 2012 90 32 27 31 035.56
Ian Holloway 3 November 2012 23 October 2013 46 14 14 18 030.43
Tony Pulis 23 November 2013 14 August 2014 28 12 5 11 042.86
Alan Pardew 2 January 2015 22 December 2016 87 35 13 39 040.23
Sam Allardyce 23 December 2016 Present 17 7 2 8 041.18

Honours

Crystal Palace's honours and achievements include the following;

League

Cup

Wartime

Regional

In the 1999 Michael Winterbottom film Wonderland the scenes of the character Dan and his son at a football match were filmed at Selhurst Park, the ground of Crystal Palace, in a 1–1 draw against Birmingham City on 6 February 1999.[103] In the Mike Leigh play Abigail's Party, the character Tony mentions that he used to play professionally for Crystal Palace but it "didn't work out", something actor John Salthouse brought to the character in rehearsals based on his own life.[73] Salthouse also incorporated the club into the children's television series he wrote, Hero to Zero, in which the father of the main character once played for Palace reserves.[104] In the first series of Only Fools and Horses a Crystal Palace scarf could be seen on the coat rack, placed there by producer Ray Butt, even though Rodney's middle name was Charlton, as Del revealed on Rodney’s wedding day: their mother was a fan of “Athletic” not “Heston”.[105] Headmaster Keith Blackwell, who played Crystal Palace mascot "Pete the Eagle" in the late nineties, fronted a series of Coca-Cola advertisements in 1996. Blackwell spoke about his role and the embarrassment it brought to his family, and clips of him in costume were used in the campaign.[106][107]

Crystal Palace Ladies

Crystal Palace Ladies is the women's football club affiliated to Crystal Palace, founded in 1992. They are managed by Dean Davenport. Crystal Palace Ladies FA Women's Premier League South, in the third tier of English women's football.[108] They play their home games at the Hayes Lane, Bromley, London.[108]

Notes

  1. ^ Player-Manager
  2. ^ This was an association football cup competition held from 1985 to 1992. It was also known under its sponsored names of the Simod Cup from 1987 to 1989 and the Zenith Data Systems Cup from 1989 to 1992. The competition was created after the Heysel Stadium disaster, when English clubs were banned from European competition, as an additional competition for clubs in the top two divisions
  3. ^ This was a football tournament organised by the London FA. The London Challenge Cup was first contested in 1908, and other than during the World Wars, was contested every season until 1974, when the tournament was disbanded.

References

Bibliography
  • King, Ian (2012). Crystal Palace: The Complete Record 1905–2011. Derby Books Publishing Company Limited. ISBN 978-1-78091-221-9.
  • Matthews, Tony (editor). We All Follow The Palace. Juma, 1998. ISBN 1-872204-55-4
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Further reading

  • The Crystal Palace Story by Roy Peskett, published by Roy Peskett Publishing Ltd (1969).
  • 100 Years of Crystal Palace Football Club by Rev. Nigel Sands, published by The History Press Ltd, (2005), ISBN 978-0-7524-3608-1.
  • Crystal Palace Football Club by Rev. Nigel Sands, published by NPI Media Group, (1999), ISBN 978-0-7524-1544-4.
  • Classic Matches: Crystal Palace FC by Rev. Nigel Sands, published by The History Press Ltd, (2002), ISBN 978-0-7524-2733-1.
  • Crystal Palace Miscellany by Neil McSteen, published by Legends Publishing, (2009), ISBN 978-1-905411-55-9.