Norwich City F.C.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Norwich City
Badge of Norwich City
Full name Norwich City Football Club
Nickname(s) The Canaries
Founded 1902, turned professional in 1905
Ground Carrow Road
Capacity 26,034
Chairman England Roger Munby
Manager Scotland Peter Grant
League The Championship
2005-06 Football League Championship, 9th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Norwich City Football Club are a football club based in Norwich, Norfolk, England, founded in 1902. They are known as "The Canaries". The club plays in The Championship of the Football League and last played in the Premier League in 2004-05.

The traditional club colours are yellow shirts, green shorts and yellow socks. As of June 2006, the away kit is all white. The club badge consists of a canary resting on a football with the City of Norwich arms in the top left corner.

The fans' song On The Ball, City is regarded as being the oldest football song in the world and is in fact older than the club itself having been originally penned for Norwich Teachers and adapted for Norwich City.

Contents

[edit] History

For a list of players of the year, see Barry Butler Trophy winners.
For the history of matches versus local rivals Ipswich Town F.C., see the East Anglian Derby.

[edit] Early years

The club was formed in 1902 and first played at Newmarket Road by a group of friends. They were ousted from the amateur game in 1905 for being a "professional" organisation and later the same year were elected to play in the Southern League.

Canary breeding was a popular hobby in Norwich and Norfolk at that time, (contrary to some suggestions, the canaries were not bred for use in mining, they were bred purely as a hobby). One of the early managers partook in this hobby and often referred to his players as "his canaries". Originally, the club was nicknamed the Citizens, and played in light blue and white halved shirts, but by 1907, the nickname Canaries had come more into vogue, to such an extent that the famous yellow shirts were adopted, to match the nickname.

In 1908, the club moved to a new home, in a converted disused chalk pit in Rosary Road which became known as "The Nest". By the 1930s, the ground capacity was proving insufficient for the growing crowds and in 1935 the club moved to its current home in Carrow Road. The original stadium was terraced on three sides with only one stand (along Carrow Road) having wooden bench seating and a roof.

One of the club's greatest achievements was its run to the semi-final of the 1958–59 FA Cup as a Third Division side, defeating First Division sides Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur on the way. They lost the semi-final only after a replay against another first division side, Luton Town FC.

In 1962 Norwich won their first piece of silverware, defeating Rochdale 4-1 on aggregate in a two-legged final to win the League Cup for the first time.

[edit] 1970s and 1980s

In 1972, under manager Ron Saunders, Norwich City reached the First Division for the first time in their history. They played at Wembley Stadium for the first time in 1973, losing the League Cup final 1-0 to Tottenham Hotspur. They reached the final again in 1975, this time losing 1-0 to Aston Villa.The club won the Milk Cup at Wembley Stadium in 1985 - with Ken Brown as manager - defeating Sunderland 1–0 after a semi-final triumph over its near neighbours and fierce rivals, Ipswich Town.

Norwich were relegated shortly after their Milk Cup triumph in March 1985 and were also denied their first foray into Europe with the ban on English clubs after the Heysel Stadium disaster. They bounced back to the top flight immediately by winning the second division championship in the 1985-86 season. High league placings in the First Division in 1987 and 1989 would have been enough for UEFA Cup qualification, but the ban on English clubs remained. They also had good cup runs during his period, reaching the F.A Cup semi finals in 1989 and again in 1992 - on the second occasion they were surprisingly beaten by unfancied second division side Sunderland.

[edit] 1990s

In 1992–93, the inaugural season of the English Premier League, Norwich City led the league for most of the season, before faltering in the final weeks to finish third behind the champions, Manchester United, and Aston Villa F.C. The following season Norwich played in the UEFA Cup for the first time, defeating Vitesse Arnhem of the Netherlands 3-0 at home and drawing 0-0 away, and Bayern Munich of Germany winning 2-1 away (and are the only English team to beat Bayern Munich in the Olympic Stadium, after Bayern Munich moved to the Allianz Arena at the beginning of the 05/06 season), and drawing 1-1 at home, before going down to Internazionale, 2–0, over two legs (H0-1, A1-0).

Mike Walker quit as Norwich City manager in January 1994, to take charge of Everton where he would be sacked after less than a year. He was replaced by 36-year-old first team coach John Deehan, who in his new role would be assisted by 34-year-old midfielder Gary Megson. Norwich City finished the 1993-94 season 12th in the Premier League and during the 1994 close season sold 21-year-old striker Chris Sutton to Blackburn Rovers for a then British record fee of £5 million.

By Christmas 1994, Norwich City were seventh in the Premiership and looked good bets for a UEFA Cup place. But the club went into freefall and won just one of their final 20 Premiership fixtures, plummeting to 20th place and relegation in the final table. Just before relegation was confirmed, Deehan resigned as manager and his assistant Megson took over until the end of the season.

Martin O'Neill, who had taken Wycombe Wanderers from the Conference to Division Two with successive promotions, was appointed as Norwich City manager in the summer of 1995. He lasted just six months in the job before resigning to take charge of and bring great success to Leicester City, following a dispute with unpopular chairman Robert Chase over money to strengthen the squad. Gary Megson was appointed Norwich manager for the second time in eight months, on a temporary basis. Megson remained in charge until the end of the season before leaving the club, while chairman Robert Chase also stepped down after protests from supporters who complained that he kept selling the club's best players and was to blame for their relegation. Indeed, between 1992 and 1996 Norwich offloaded key players including Robert Fleck, Jeremy Goss, Chris Sutton, Tim Sherwood, Efan Ekoku, Ruel Fox, Mark Robins, and Mark Bowen. Just four seasons after finishing third in the Premiership and beating Bayern Munich in the UEFA Cup, Norwich had finished 16th in Division One.

[edit] The new millennium

TV cook Delia Smith and husband Michael Wynn-Jones took over the majority of Norwich City's shares, and Mike Walker was re-appointed as the club's manager. But he was unable to repeat the success achieved during his first spell, and quit two seasons later with Norwich languishing around the middle of Division One. His successor Bruce Rioch lasted two seasons and departed in the summer of 2000, with promotion still yet to be achieved. Rioch's successor Bryan Hamilton lasted in the job for six months before making way for assistant manager Nigel Worthington. When Worthington took over as Norwich City manager in December 2000, the club was 20th in Division One and in real danger of sliding into the bottom half of the Football League for the first time since the 1960s. Worthington avoided the threat of relegation and, the following season, led City to a remarkable playoff final at the Millennium Stadium, which Norwich lost on penalties.

The 2001-02 season started with Norwich investing in players such as Mark Rivers, Marc Libbra and Neil Emblen, however the season started poorly when they lost 4-0 at Millwall on the first day of the season. Norwich had finished 15th in the previous season and this result suggested that the coming season would not be any different. Norwich then went on a 5-game run without conceding a goal and by the end of the calendar year were in contention for an automatic promotion place. Norwich were very poor in the first months of 2002 and looked to have dropped out of the playoff race entirely. However a good run at the end of the season meant that Norwich needed to achieve a better result at home to already relegated Stockport than Burnley did at home to Coventry to get into the playoffs.

Norwich made the playoffs following a 2-0 win over Stockport (with Burnley only beating Coventry 1-0) and played Wolverhampton Wanderers in the First Division playoff semi final. Following a 3-2 aggregate win (3-1 at home, 0-1 away) Norwich reached the playoff final in Cardiff against Birmingham City. Norwich eventually lost on penalties to Birmingham following a 1-1 draw with Daryl Sutch and Phil Mulryne missing their penalties.

The 2003-04 campaign was a successful one for all those associated with Norwich City, as the club won The Championship title, finishing 8 points clear of second-placed West Brom F.C. and 15 points ahead of third-placed Sunderland A.F.C. and the club celebrated regaining its status in the promised land of the Premiership for the first time since 1995.

For much of the 2004-05 season, the club seemed doomed to relegation. However, a frenetic relegation battle erupted, as Nigel Worthington's Norwich City made a remarkable comeback in the final games of the season, beating Manchester United 2-0 and Newcastle United 2-1. On the last day of the season, a win would have kept Norwich in top flight football, but it was not to be. A 6-0 away defeat to Fulham condemned them to relegation.

The club was widely tipped for a quick return to the Premiership in the 2005/2006 season, but a terrible first four months to the campaign saw City fall as low as 18th in The Championship and cries of 'Worthy out!!' bellowing from Carrow Road stadium. The club soon stablised towards a comfortable mid table finish. The sale of Dean Ashton was a controversial one; though it brought the club a generous return on investment: £7 million plus bonuses, for a player they'd bought for roughly half that amount just one year earlier; though some saw it as indicating a lack of ambition.

£2.75 million of the Ashton money was reinvested on the prolific Welsh striker Robert Earnshaw. With 8 goals in 15 appearances, Earnshaw helped the Canaries to a ninth place finish. His impact led many City fans to wonder what could have been achieved had he joined earlier in the season. First Team Coach Steve Foley was sacked in early May 2006, after 10 years of service to the club and subsequently joined east anglian rivals Ipswich Town as 1st team coach.

[edit] 2006/7 season

Following a quiet off-season (Lee Croft the only notable addition to the squad) Norwich City made a bright start to the 2006 season. With the good form of erstwhile substitute goalkeeper Paul Gallacher, the sale of England squad goalkeeper Robert Green to West Ham United for a reported fee of "up to" £2 million looked set to be less damaging than feared during transfer speculation in the 2005-6 season. On the transfer deadline day (31st August 2006) striker Leon McKenzie was sold to Coventry City for a deal worth £1 million although this transfer received criticism from some Norwich fans. This was due to the fact that Norwich did not buy a striker, whether a direct replacement for McKenzie or a tall target-man to complement existing strikers at the club; thus if star striker Robert Earnshaw were to be injured or suspended then there would be no suitable replacement. However, Worthington was able to make three signings; Lee Camp arrived on loan from Derby, Patrick Boyle arrived on loan from Everton, while the Canaries also signed free agent Dion Dublin until the end of the season. Despite these arrivals, early results turned against City and the pressure mounted on the manager.

On October 1 Manager Nigel Worthington was sacked directly after a 4-1 defeat at the hands of championship rivals Burnley. Chairman Roger Munby commented: "The Board would like to place on record its sincere thanks to Nigel for all that he has done for the Club in his time as manager".

First team coach Martin Hunter was made caretaker manager with Doug Livermore as his assistant, taking charge against QPR, which culminated in an exciting 3-3 draw. Monday October 16 Norwich held a press conference to reveal that Peter Grant had joined Norwich from West Ham United as the new manager taking over from Nigel Worthington. Initially the firey Scot identified that the existing coaching staff would remain in place and that for his first game against Birmingham he would be taking considerable advice from them.

[edit] A New Era

On Friday 13 October 2006 Peter Grant agreed to leave his job as assistant manager of West Ham United to take over as manager at Norwich City.

On Saturday 14 October he was in the stands to see his new side draw 3-3 with Queens Park Rangers at Loftus Road, with caretaker boss Martin Hunter in charge for his one and only game.

To-date (13th November 2006), Grant's initial matches in charge have seen City secured 13 points from a maximum of 21, a run which has lifted the club from 19th place to midtable in the league table. However, the run has included a 5-0 defeat at the hands of Stoke City F.C., a disappointing 3-1 defeat in the East Anglian Derby and an exit from the Carling (League) Cup at the hands of Stoke's local rival, Port Vale F.C. from Football League One (the third tier of English football).

[edit] Honours

[edit] Official honours

[edit] Unofficial honours

[edit] Pride of Anglia

Unofficially, a number of clubs located in East Anglia vie for being the Pride of Anglia.

Fans of Norwich City, Ipswich Town and Southend United are the most likely to be heard chanting "Who's the Pride of Anglia?" (and the corollary, which is scatological) although other professional clubs in the region include Colchester United, Peterborough United, Northampton Town and Cambridge United.

Football fans being fans, and the honour being entirely imaginary, the title is regularly claimed for a variety of more or less logical reasons, including recent victories, current league position, club history, or no reason in particular.

The most successful East Anglian teams are Norwich and Ipswich and the winners of the East Anglian Derby, (jocularly referred to as the "Old Farm" derby) may claim to be the Pride of Anglia. Ipswich won the most recent encounter, 3-1 on November 19th at Portman Road.

Another commonly employed measure, and one that encompasses all of the East Anglian teams is to dub the side finishing as the highest placed East Anglian team in the Football League as the Pride of Anglia. Norwich City has finished highest in each of the past three seasons.

[edit] Friendship Trophy

Each time they meet, Norwich and Sunderland contest the Friendship Trophy, an honour dating back to a comaraderie forged between fans of the two club during the 1980s and early 90s, particularly from the League Cup final that they contested. Sunderland are the current holders, having defeated Norwich 1-0 on 2nd December 2006.

[edit] 2006/07 Squad

No. Position Player
2 France DF Matthieu Louis-Jean
3 England DF Adam Drury (captain)
4 England DF Jason Shackell
5 England DF Craig Fleming
6 England FW Darren Huckerby
7 England MF Lee Croft
8 England FW Peter Thorne
9 England FW Dion Dublin
10 Wales FW Robert Earnshaw
11 England MF Luke Chadwick (on loan from Stoke City)
12 England GK Lee Camp (on loan from Derby County)
15 Morocco MF Youssef Safri
17 England MF Andrew Hughes
18 Northern Ireland FW Paul McVeigh
20 Nigeria MF Dickson Etuhu
No. Position Player
21 Scotland GK Paul Gallacher
22 England FW Ian Henderson
23 England FW Ryan Jarvis
24 Netherlands DF Jurgen Colin
25 England DF Rossi Jarvis
26 England MF Robert Eagle
27 Republic of Ireland DF Gary Doherty
28 Republic of Ireland MF Michael Spillane
29 England DF Matthew Halliday
30 England GK Joe Lewis
31 Scotland MF Andrew Cave-Brown
32 England MF Andrew Fisk
33 Wales MF Carl Robinson
34 England GK Steven Arnold
35 England MF Chris Martin

[edit] Current staff

[edit] Board members

Position Name Nation
Chairman Roger Munby England
Vice Chairman Barry Skipper England
Joint Majority Shareholder Delia Smith England
Joint Majority Shareholder Michael Wynn Jones Wales
Director Michael Foulger England
Chief Executive Neil Doncaster England

[edit] Coaching staff

Position Name Nation
Manager Peter Grant Scotland
Assistant manager Doug Livermore England
First team coach Martin Hunter England
Reserve team manager Keith Webb England
Chief Scout Alan Wood England
Physiotherapist Neal Reynolds England
Physiotherapist Assistant Peter Shaw England
Club Sports Scientist Dave Carolan Northern Ireland
Club Doctor Peter Harvey England
Assistant Kit Manager Danny Young England

[edit] Notable former players

A fuller list of past (and present) players who are the subjects of Wikipedia articles can be found at Category:Norwich City F.C. players.

During the club's centenary season, a Hall of Fame was created, honouring 100 former players through a fan vote. A further 10 players were inducted in 2006. Detailed profiles of former Norwich players since 1980 can be found on the fansite Flown from the Nest

(International players shown with country flag) Hall of Fame players shown with H

[edit] Managers

  • England Ron Saunders (1972-1974)
  • England John Bond (1974-1980)
  • England Ken Brown (1980-1987) Led City to the Milk Cup win in 1985 and the division two championship the following year
  • England Dave Stringer (1987-1992) Took Norwich to two F.A Cup semi finals as well as a top-five league finish in 1989
  • Wales Mike Walker (1st stint) (1992-1994) Took City to a club record third place finish in the league and brought European football to the club for the first time
  • England John Deehan (1994-1995) Spent just over a year in charge before quitting
  • England Gary Megson (1995-1996) Had two spells as temporary manager in the mid-1990s

[edit] Famous fans

[edit] Fan clubs

Norwich City's fans can be found all over the world. A number of supporters groups have arisen around the globe, providing support for the Club and giving like-minded people the opportunity to meet.

Europe:

Australasia:

Americas:

Asia:

Norwich City Football Club Official Site:

[edit] Norwich City songs

Although the first use of the tune and song is disputed, by 1905 On the Ball, City was the fans song and it remains in use today in part if not the whole. It has claims to be the oldest football song anywhere in the World still in use today.

On the days to call, which we have left behind,
Our boyhood’s glorious game,
And our youthful vigour has declined
With its mirth and its lonesome end;
You will think of the time, the happy time,
Its memories fond recall
When in the bloom of your youthful prime
We’ve kept upon the ball
Kick off, throw it in, have a little scrimmage,
Keep it low, a splendid rush, bravo, win or die;
On the ball, City, never mind the danger,
Steady on, now’s your chance,
Hurrah! We’ve scored a goal.
Let all tonight then drink with me
To the football game we love,
And wish it may successful be
And in one grand united toast
Join player, game and song
And fondly pledge your pride and toast
Success to the City club.
Kick off, throw it in, have a little scrimmage,
Keep it low, a splendid rush, bravo, win or die;
On the ball, City, never mind the danger,
Steady on, now’s your chance,
Hurrah! We’ve scored a goal.

By comparison this simple chant has been popular at the grounds:

City (clap, clap, clap)
City (clap, clap, clap)

There are also other popular chants to be heard on coming from the Barclay End, such as:

Follow, follow, follow,
Follow the boys in yellow,
We're the yellow and green and the world's best team, and its off to the Premier we go

As well as:

E I E I E I O
Up the football league we go, when we win the title
This is what we'll sing
We are Norwich super Norwich, Norwich Manager is our king!

There are also chants for particular players, such as this, based on the song 'Can't Take My Eyes Off You' by Frankie Valli & the Four Seasons:

We love you Paul McVeigh, and if its quite alright,
We love you Paul McVeigh, despite your lack of height,
We love you Paul McVeigh
Cross the ball and then score...

And this, for Youssef Safri, based on Status Quo's 'Rockin' All Over The World'

Here we go, here we go, here we go,
Youssef's better than Juniniho-o,
Here we go-oooo,
Morrocan All Over The World

The club also issued a single entitled The Canaries.

[edit] References

  • Canary Citizens by Mark Davage, John Eastwood, Kevin Platt, published by Jarrold Publishing, (2001), ISBN 0-7117-2020-7
  • Norfolk 'n' Good by Kevin Baldwin, published by Goldstone Books, (1993), ISBN 0-9522074-0-0

[edit] External links

Football League Championship, 2006-2007

Barnsley | Birmingham City | Burnley | Cardiff City | Colchester United | Coventry City | Crystal Palace | Derby County | Hull City | Ipswich Town | Leeds United | Leicester City | Luton Town | Norwich City | Plymouth Argyle | Preston North End | Queens Park Rangers | Sheffield Wednesday | Southampton | Southend United | Stoke City | Sunderland | West Bromwich Albion | Wolverhampton Wanderers     edit

Football in England England
v  d  e
League competitions The FA Cup competitions
FA Premier League England FA Cup
The Football League (Champ, 1, 2) (U-21) (B) Carling Cup
Football Conference (Nat, N, S) List of clubs Community Shield
Northern Premier League (Prem, 1) List of venues Johnstone's Paint Trophy
Southern League (Prem, Mid, S&W) (by capacity) FA Trophy
Isthmian League (Prem, 1N, 1S) List of leagues FA Vase
English football league system Records FA NLS Cup