History of Bradford City A.F.C.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bradford City Association Football Club are an English football club which were founded in Bradford in 1903 in a bid to introduce the sport to the rugby league-orientated county of West Yorkshire. Bradford City were elected to The Football League in 1903 before they had played a game, playing their first season in Division Two in place of Doncaster Rovers. Upon the club's formation, they took over the Valley Parade stadium, which has been the club's permanent home ground since.
They achieved early success by winning the Division Two league title in 1908 and the FA Cup in 1911, before they were relegated from Division One in 1921–22. It would be another 77 years before City would return to the top division of the English football league system, during which time they faced several financial hardships and suffered a fire, in which 56 people died on 5 May 1985. The club played two seasons in the Premiership, but since relegation have twice been in administration, and returned to the bottom tier of The Football League for the 2007–08 season.
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[edit] Early successes (1903–1919)
League football was established in West Yorkshire in 1894 when the West Yorkshire League was formed.[1] A year later the Bradford Schools Football and Athletic Association abandoned its rugby roots to instead adopt the association football code.[2] Several football clubs, including Bradford Park Avenue also adopted the code during the latter years of the 19th century. By 1901, a team of the same name as Bradford City had played in the leagues within the city, playing for two seasons, but disbanded at the end of the 1902–03 season.[3] On 30 January 1903, Scotsman James Whyte, a sub-editor of the Bradford Observer met with Football Association representative John Brunt at Valley Parade, the home of Manningham Football Club, to discuss establishing a Football League club within the city.[3] Manningham FC were a rugby league club and a founding member of the Northern Rugby Football Union in 1880. A series of meetings was held, and on 29 May 1903, at the 23rd annual meeting of Manningham FC, the committee decided to leave the rugby code and switch to association football.[3] The Football League, which saw the invitation as a chance to introduce football to the rugby league-dominated area of West Yorkshire,[4] elected the club, which had been renamed Bradford City, to the league with a total of 30 votes to replace Doncaster Rovers.[5] Bradford City became the first league football team from West Yorkshire even before they had a team or played a game.[6] They and Chelsea, who were elected to the league two years later, share the distinction of being the only clubs to join the league without having played a competitive fixture.[4] A summer archery contest, which had been organised to raise money for the rugby league club, was used to finance the new club,[6] and Manningham's colours of claret and amber were adopted as Bradford City's kit, but with Manningham's hoops changed to stripes.[7]
Robert Campbell was appointed by a 13-man sub-committee to be the club's first secretary-manager from a shortlist of 30 applicants. Secretarial duties were carried out by committee member Whyte, with Campbell's role more on the playing side.[8] The committee assembled a squad at the cost of £917 10s 0d.[9] Their first game was a 2–0 defeat away at Grimsby Town on 1 September 1903,[10] and first home game six days later against Gainsborough Trinity, which was played in front of crowd of 11,000 including the Lord Mayor and Lady Mayoress of Bradford.[11] It was not until the third game against Burton United that the club recorded their first victory, on the way to a 10th place finish in Division Two.[9] The club faced having to apply for re-election in just their second season, until five wins in the final six games lifted the club to eighth position.[9] In November 1905, player Peter O'Rourke was appointed manager, with his last game as player coming the following month.[8] He guided City to finishes of 11th and fifth before winning promotion to Division One in 1907–08. The season had started with an 8–1 victory over Chesterfield and included another six victories with five goals or more,[12] before promotion and then the title were assured with successive victories over Derby County and Burnley in April.[13]
Bradford embarked upon their first continental tour ahead of their first campaign in Division One.[14] Despite victories on tour over German side Aachen and Belgian club Verviers, the club's first league victory in the top flight did not come until the fifth attempt with a 4–1 defeat of Bury.[14] It was their only win in the first 14 games.[15] Results improved in the second half of the season but it was not until a 1–0 win on the final game of the season against Manchester United with a goal from Frank O'Rouke that City prevented an immediate relegation back to Division Two.[14] The following season included a ten-game undefeated spell as Bradford finished seventh, but the 1910–11 season would be even better. Their league finish of fifth remains the club's highest position in their history, and an FA Cup triumph, with a 1–0 win over Newcastle United in the 1911 remains the club's only major honour. The first and third round victories were assured with solitary strikes from Dicky Bond,[16] but he missed the final four games of the run because of club suspension.[17] Burnley were defeated 1–0 in the fourth round in front of 39,146 fans, a crowd which remains Valley Parade's highest attendance.[18] The biggest win of the run came in the semi-finals with a 3–0 victory over Blackburn Rovers. The first game in the final ended in a goalless draw with Newcastle at Crystal Palace, when 11 special trains took Bradford fans to London.[19] The replay took place four days later on 26 April 1911 at Old Trafford, Manchester, when a single goal from Jimmy Speirs in the 15th minute gave Bradford a 1–0 victory. They were the first winners of a new trophy, appropriately made by Bradford jewellers Fattorini's.[20]
The following season, Bradford's defence of the FA Cup was ended by Barnsley, who went on to succeed Bradford as the holders, in a fourth round second replay played at Bramall Lane, Sheffield. The 3–2 defeat brought an end to 11 consecutive clean sheets in the FA Cup.[21] The cup run had also included the first Bradford derby between City and cross-city rivals Bradford Park Avenue.[22] It was also the first of four consecutive seasons that Bradford finished in mid-table before league football was suspended because of the First World War. City's FA Cup hero Speirs, who had joined Leeds City, was one of many footballers to lose his live during the war. City players who died included Bob Torrance, another FA Cup winner, and Evelyn Lintott, as well as several reserve team players. Frank Buckley and Jock Ewart were seriously wounded, and Dicky Bond was taken prisoner-of-war.[23] In 1921, Bond laid a commemorative wreath on the Cenotaph in memory of his fallen colleagues prior to a league game at Arsenal.[23]
[edit] Inter-war years (1919–1946)
With several retirements during the war, it was a new look side that took to the field for the 1919–20 season, when league football resumed.[24] The 15th place finish in the league was City's lowest since their first season in Division One, and a fourth round FA Cup exit away at Bristol City was blamed on a pre-game trip to Fry's chocolate works.[24] It was a position replicated the following season, before in 1921–22 City lost their top flight status after ten seasons, when five defeats at the end of the season brought about relegation back to Division Two.[25] It would be 77 years until Bradford City again competed in the top division of English football.[26]
Having lost their manager O'Rourke in 1921, after he had struggled to cope with the death of his son two years earlier,[27] Bradford continued to struggle for form back in Division Two. Both Bradford City and cross-city rivals Bradford Park Avenue had been relegated in 1922, and with the rise of fellow West Yorkshire side Huddersfield Town, attendances in Bradford dropped. City's average attendance dropped from a record high of 22,585 in 1920–21 to between 12,000 and 14,000 in Division Two.[28] Five consecutive bottom half finishes culminated in relegation to Division Three (North) in 1926–27,[25] when they finished bottom of the table following a then record 8–0 defeat to Manchester City on the final day of the season.[28] New manager Colin Veitch missed out on an immediate promotion when he finished sixth, before O'Rourke returned at the start of the following season.[29] The club had only been able to start the season because of donations by fans.[30] The 1928–29 season started with a record 11–1 victory over Rotherham United,[18] as the side scored a club record 128 goals[18] to earn promotion by just one point.[29] City's successful team had also brought the fans back and the average attendance of 18,551 is still the highest official average recorded by the club.[31]
O'Rourke left for a second time in May 1930,[27] after he resigned because he was not allowed to sign a player he wanted.[28] City spent eight seasons back in Division Two but the nearest they came to promotion back to the top flight was in 1933–34 when at one point they topped the division.[32][28] Relegation back to Division Three (North) came in 1936–37.[33] City were runners-up in the Division Three North Challenge Cup a year later before they went one step further in the last year before league football was again suspended because of a world war.[34][35]
[edit] Lower divisions (1946–1981)
New manager Jack Barker lasted just eight months until he was replaced by former Leeds United player Jack Milburn upon the resumption of league football.[36] Milburn finished fifth in his first season but only lasted another season himself.[33] City remained in Division Three (North) until they were placed in Division Three in 1958–59 after a league re-organisation, following a 20-year high position of third the previous season.[37] In 1960, eight years after the ground's Midland Road stand had been half-closed following examinations of the foundations ordered as a result of the 1946 Burnden Park disaster,[38] the entire stand was closed, leaving the ground with just three stands.[39] However, after just three years at the new level, City were relegated to Division Four in 1960–61,[37] although that season they did shock Manchester United in their first ever League Cup tie.[40] United would not enter the competition again until six years later.[40] Despite a club record 9–1 defeat to Colchester United on 30 December 1961, City narrowly missed out on immediate promotion in 1961–62, thanks to David Layne's 34 league goals—his total remains a club record for a season to this day.[37][18] Layne left for Sheffield Wednesday and City finished 23rd the following season, forcing them to apply for re-election.[37] In 1966, the club directors moved the pitch 2.74 metres (3.00 yd) closer to the main stand enabling them to open all four stands for the first time since 1960.[39] However, attendances continued to drop and a new record low of 1,353 was set on 12 May 1966 against Wrexham. It prompted chairman Stafford Heginbotham to hold a crisis meeting in the city's St George's Hall to raise new funds and safeguard the future of the club.[41] The club's indifferent form on the field continued, with another re-election and two narrow promotion failures, before promotion was gained in 1968–69.[42] Only the previous season, City had had three managers, when Grenville Hair, who had replaced Willie Watson, died just two months into his reign, after he collapsed at the end of a training session.[43]
Strikers Bobby Ham and Bruce Bannister, who had fired City into Division Three, continued their partnership for two years, until they both left,[44][45] and City were relegated back into the bottom division in 1971–72.[46] The spell in Division Three had also been notable for the debut of Ces Podd, who went on to play a record 502 league games during 14 seasons with the club.[47] City spent five seasons back in Division Four. In 1975–76 they had their best FA Cup run since in more than 50 years after defeating Norwich City,[48] before they were knocked out in the quarter-finals to eventual winners Southampton 1–0.[49][50] A year later they were promoted again in fourth position—partly because of more than 40 goals from the trio of Dominican striker Joe Cooke, Terry Dolan and Don Hutchins.[51] The club's board failed to strengthen the squad the following season,[52] resulting in an instant relegation back to Division Four. Under new manager George Mulhall, City spent three seasons in mid-table, although a late spell of form nearly earned promotion in 1979–80.[52]
[edit] Bantam progressivism (1981–1990)
In May 1981, City appointed former England international defender Roy McFarland as new manager.[53] After starting the 1981–82 season with a defeat and a draw, City won their next nine league games, equalling a 30-year club record.[54] The run came to an end against Sheffield United in front of 13,711 fans at Valley Parade, producing then club record gate receipts of £17,938.[54] Arctic conditions across Britain meant City played only once during December, but they went back to the top of the Division Four table in January. City finished the season second and were promoted back to Division Three, five points behind Sheffield United.[55] But only three months into the new campaign, McFarland and his assistant Mick Jones handed in their resignation and left for Derby County. Derby eventually had to pay a large fine and compensation to City for poaching the pair.[53] Chairman Bob Martin turned to another England centre back and appointed Trevor Cherry as McFarland's replacement from West Yorkshire rivals Leeds United.[53] Cherry and assistant Terry Yorath continued to build on McFarland's start to the period which would later be called "Bantam Progressivism" by fanzine The City Gent.[56] Despite not recording their first win for more than two months, the pair guided City to 12th position.[57]
However the club were again in financial difficulties, and in June 1983, Martin called in the receivers and the club was put up for sale.[57] A Save Bradford City Fund was launched on 24 July,[57] and former chairman Stafford Heginbotham and former board member Jack Tordoff bought the club, forming a new company, and enabling the team to start the new league campaign. Centre forward Bobby Campbell was sold to Derby County to balance the books and John Hawley brought in as his replacement.[57] City struggled on the pitch and won just one of their first 15 games leaving them in the relegation zone.[57] However, Campbell's own fortunes at Derby were unsuccessful and he returned initially on loan. His return coincided with a club record ten successive league victories.[18][57] Campbell finished the season with nine goals, Hawley with 22, but City finished seventh and missed out on promotion.[58][57] The good form continued the following season, and from October to mid-December 1984, City embarked on a 13-match unbeaten run, during which time Campbell became the club's leading goalscorer, beating Frank O'Rourke's 70-year old record.[59] City went top of the division and held onto their lead opening an 11-point cushion by February.[60] Promotion was secured in April and the club's first championship title since 1929 after a 2–0 win over Bolton Wanderers.[59] But the success was overshadowed when fire ripped through Valley Parade's main stand 40 minutes into the final game of the season on 11 May 1985 against Lincoln City. A total of 56 people died and the club did not play another game at Valley Parade for nearly 20 months.[61]
City instead played home games at Elland Road, Leeds Road and Odsal during the 1985–86 season, when they came 13th, and for the early part of the 1986–87 campaign.[57] They returned to Valley Parade, which had undergone a £2.6m redevelopment on Boxing Day 1986 against Derby County.[62] But after managing the side during its most turbulent time, Cherry was dismissed ten days after the return.[62] Club coach Terry Dolan was promoted to manager and he led the side away from relegation and to a finish of 10th place. By September 1987, Dolan's side topped Division Two for the first time in 54 years.[63] They finished fourth after a final day defeat to Ipswich Town and missed out on promotion after they lost to Middlesbrough in the play-offs.[63] Leading players Stuart McCall and John Hendrie, who had both stayed for another season in a bid to take City into Division One,[64] both left, and within two seasons City were relegated.
[edit] Richmond era and administration (1990 onwards)
For three seasons, City finished in mid-table in Division Three and the new Division Two, when the leagues were renamed following the formation of the Premiership. In January 1994, Geoffrey Richmond took over as chairman.[65] He cleared the debts, loaned the club £2.3 million,[65] and promised the fans he would take the club to the Premiership by 1999 in his five-year plan.[66] The club finished his first season in seventh place under Frank Stapleton, before he was replaced by Lennie Lawrence. Lawrence could only finish 14th in his first season, before he left for Luton Town in November 1995 to be replaced by former player and his assistant Chris Kamara.[67] Kamara secured a play-off spot with a final day victory over Hull City, before City defeated Blackpool in the play-off semi-finals.[67] The final against Notts County was City's first game at Wembley. Goals from Des Hamilton and Mark Stallard gave them a 2–0 win, which secured promotion to Division One.[67] Kamara used 42 players in 1996–97 when City avoided relegation with a 3–0 victory in the final game against Queens Park Rangers.[68][67] Kamara was sacked in January 1998 after an FA Cup defeat to Manchester City, when Richmond claimed the manager had taken the club as far as he could.[69] Richmond again promoted from within and Paul Jewell, who had been at the club since 1988, was installed as manager, originally on a caretaker basis.[70] He was appointed full-time in May 1998 and Richmond backed his new appointment with a multi-million transfer budget.[70] Jewell signed strikers Lee Mills, from Port Vale and Isaiah Rankin, from Arsenal, for £1 million and £1.3 million respectively,[71] and signed former captain Stuart McCall from Rangers on a free transfer to lead the side.[72] Despite a poor start,[70] the club secured promotion to the top flight for the first time in 77 years and a 3–2 victory over Wolverhampton Wanderers in the final game of the 1998–99 season.[26]
City's promotion meant Dean Windass, who had signed from Oxford United in March, became the club's third £1 million signing of the season because of a clause in the transfer deal.[73] Jewell broke the club's transfer record to add a fourth seven-figure signing when he paid £1.4 million to Leeds United for David Wetherall.[74] Jewell added other senior players including Neil Redfearn and Dean Saunders, prompting the media to call his team "Dad's Army".[75] When City defeated Middlesbrough 1–0 with a late goal from Saunders, his goal celebration mocked the critics' comments.[76] City failed to win another game until their eighth game of the season, and Sky Sports pundit Rodney Marsh said they would be relegated and promised to shave off his hair at a home game if they avoided relegation.[77] A run of nine home games without defeat and consecutive victories in April gave City hope of avoiding relegation on the final day of the season. A final day 1–0 victory over Liverpool, with a goal from Wetherall, who had played every minute of the season,[78] and Wimbledon's defeat, meant City survived with a record low of 36 points.[79][80] Less than two months after City stayed up, Jewell left to join Sheffield Wednesday. He was replaced as manager by his assistant Chris Hutchings.[81] The club entered the Intertoto Cup, in which they were defeated by FC Zenit Saint Petersburg in the semi-finals,[82] and paid a club record £2.5 million for David Hopkin[83] and £1.5 million for Ashley Ward,[84] as well as paid Italian striker Benito Carbone £40,000 per week.[65] Richmond also continued to re-develop the ground, which increased the capacity to 25,136.[85] Hutchings was sacked after a start to the season in which he recorded just one victory from 12 league games.[86] The club continued to struggle under new manager Jim Jefferies, and relegation was confirmed with a 2–1 defeat at Everton, when they missed two penalties,[87] before finishing the season with just 26 points.
Jefferies was sacked in December 2001 following a training ground bust-up with captain McCall.[88][89] Nicky Law was appointed his successor,[90] and the club finished the season in 15th spot. During the summer, with debts of nearly £13 million—as a result of the collapse of ITV Digital and the fall-out from Richmond's self-proclaimed six weeks of madness—the club were forced into administration.[91][92] The players were all released,[93] but Carbone waived much of the money owed to him,[94][95] to help the club survive under new owners Julian Rhodes and Gordon Gibb.[65] City fulfilled their fixtures during the 2002–03 season but finished 19th. Former England captain Bryan Robson took over as new manager during the following season,[96] but he won only seven games from 28 and the club was relegated in 23rd place.[97] Robson left and was replaced by his assistant Colin Todd.[98] The club went into administration for a second time,[99] but Todd led them to 11th in each of the following two seasons. Following fan pressure and a poor run of results, Rhodes sacked Todd on 12 February 2007, with City just three points above the relegation zone.[100] Wetherall was appointed player-manager on a temporary basis and then for the rest of the season, but City were relegated following a 3–0 defeat to Chesterfield.[101] During the summer of 2007, former midfielder Stuart McCall returned as manager with City in the bottom tier for the first time in 25 years.[102][101] He set himself a target of earning promotion back to League One in his first season,[103] but could only finish 10th.
[edit] References
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