Northampton Town F.C.

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Northampton Town
Northampton Town logo
Full name Northampton Town Football Club
Nickname(s) The Cobblers
Founded 1897
Ground Sixfields Stadium
Northampton
(Capacity 7,653)
Chairman Flag of England David Cardoza
Manager Flag of England Stuart Gray (since 2007)
League League One
2007-08 League One, 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

Northampton Town Football Club is a football club based in Northampton. The nickname of the club is The Cobblers. For the 2007-2008 season, Northampton Town continue to play Football in Football League One after promotion in 2005-2006.

The team play their home fixtures at the Sixfields Stadium since moving from the County Ground in October 1994. Their current sponsor is local Estate agents, Jackson Grundy. They usually play in claret and white, and their main local rivals are Peterborough United, a rivalry which has endured since the 1960s. [1]

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Early days

Northampton Town was founded in 1897 after meetings between the town’s schoolteachers and local solicitor A.J. Darnell. At the time schoolboy football was strong in the county due in part to the enthusiasm of the local teachers. They were however dissatisfied with the current arrangement of arranged friendlies between schools preferring to teach the boys through practical examples and they felt this could be done by forming a town team. At the same time A.J. Darnell travelled to Leicester with the local Rugby team and whilst there witnessed an exhibition football match between Leicester Fosse and Notts County. This gave him the desire to start his own club in Northampton. Mr Darnell and the local schoolteachers came together through their shared aims and on March 6 1897, at the Princess Royal Inn on the Wellingborough Road, Northampton Football Club was formed. [2] Following objections from the town’s rugby club the team were forced to adopt the name of Northampton Town to avoid trouble.[3] The club gained permission to play home matches at the county ground, home of Northamptonshire County Cricket Club, providing that no games were scheduled between May and September, and this was to remain their home for the next 97 years.

Northampton Town joined the Northants League and spent two seasons there before moving on to the Midland League. Only two seasons later they joined the Southern League in the 1901-02 season. In the 1908-09 season manager Herbert Chapman helped the Cobblers to be crowned champions of the Southern League, and they later faced Newcastle United in the Charity Shield at Stamford Bridge where they lost 2-0 .[4] Herbert Chapman left to manage Leeds City in 1912, and went on to win the league championship four times: twice at Huddersfield Town, and twice at Arsenal. [5]

[edit] 20th century

In 1910, Northampton Town bought Walter Tull from Tottenham Hotspur. Tull was the second professional black footballer in English football, and stayed with Northampton Town until the outbreak of the First World War, when he volunteered for the British Army. Tull was killed in action in 1918 and the road which leads to Northampton's Sixfields Stadium is called "Walter Tull Way", in his honour.[6]

From the 1930s to the 1950s Northampton Town had attempted to rise from the regional Third Division South, but rose only twice and were immediately relegated. The creation of the Fourth Division spurred a brief substantial rise that culminated in the only season (1965-66) of their existence in the top division of English football. In 1970, they lost 8-2 to Manchester United in the FA Cup fifth round. Six of the goals conceded were scored by George Best, who received the match ball (signed by Northampton players) as a reward for his performance.

A financial crisis at the club lead to the foundation of Britain's first Supporters' Trust.[7]

The club finished bottom of the Football League's new Division Three in 1993-94, only avoiding relegation to the Conference because Kidderminster Harriers did not have a satisfactory stadium to join the Football League. Manager John Barnwell was sacked soon afterwards to make way for Ian Atkins, and the club began to move forward. In 1996-97 they won promotion to Division Two, thanks to a playoff final victory at Wembley over Swansea City, and almost made it two successive promotions the following season - but were beaten 1-0 by Grimsby Town in the Division Two playoff final. The club went down a year later and Atkins resigned, but promotion was earned at the first attempt under new manager Kevin Wilson.

[edit] Since 2001

Kevin Wilson was sacked in November 2001 to make way for his assistant Kevan Broadhurst, who steered the Cobblers to Division Two survival. But Broadhurst was sacked in January 2003 with Northampton struggling at the foot of the division, and was briefly replaced by Terry Fenwick, who in turn left after just seven weeks to make way for Martin Wilkinson. Wilkinson lasted little longer, being dismissed in October 2003 in favour of former Scotland and Tottenham Hotspur defender Colin Calderwood.

Calderwood led Northampton to the play-offs in his first season, where they were knocked out in the semi-finals by Mansfield Town after a penalty shoot-out. In the 2004-05 season, Northampton finished 7th, again in the play-offs, where they were defeated by Southend United. Following this, the manager made substantial changes to the squad, and they enjoyed a successful 2005-06 league season. On April 29, the Cobblers clinched promotion to Football League One for 2006-07, with a 1-0 win at home to Chester City. On May 30 2006, Northampton announced that Calderwood was leaving to join Nottingham Forest as their new manager, and was replaced by John Gorman on June 5.

On December 20, Gorman resigned due to "personal issues" with the side 18th in the table, with Ian Sampson and Jim Barron briefly taking care of first team affairs. He was replaced by former Southampton boss Stuart Gray on January 2, 2007.

Gray is enjoying a successful spell at Northampton, making encouraging signings in his first few weeks. The club looks to be going from strength to strength, finishing 14th at the end of the 2006/07 season, 12 points clear from the relegation zone. Gray made radical changes selling Bradley Johnson and allowing Andy Kirk to leave on a free transfer to Yeovil. It appears the clubs finances are also going from strength to strength, with the club and the local council now firm allies things are looking bright for the club and the area with the new Sixfields drawing ever closer. [8]

2007-08 brought Northampton's highest finish in a decade, as they finished ninth with 66 points. [9]

[edit] Managers

[edit] Current squad

No. Position Player
1 Flag of England GK Mark Bunn
2 Flag of England DF Jason Crowe
3 Flag of England DF Danny Jackman
4 Flag of England DF Mark Hughes
5 Flag of Hungary DF Gábor Gyepes
6 Flag of Scotland DF Chris Doig
7 Flag of England MF Giles Coke
9 Flag of Ireland FW Colin Larkin
10 Flag of England FW Adebayo Akinfenwa
No. Position Player
11 Flag of England DF Andy Holt
12 Flag of England FW Ian Henderson
13 Flag of England GK Chris Dunn
18 Flag of England MF Ryan Gilligan
19 Flag of England DF Liam Dolman
20 Flag of England MF Alex Dyer
24 Flag of England MF Greg Taylor
Flag of England DF Ritchie Jones
Flag of England MF Liam Davis


[edit] Club Records

  • Most League goals in a Season - 36 - Cliff Holton - 1961-62
  • Most Cup goals in a Season - 26 - Andy Kirk - 2005-06
  • Most League goals in Total - 135 - Jack English - 1947-60
  • Most League Appearances - 521 - Tommy Fowler - 1946-61
  • Most Clean Sheets in a Season - 25 - Lee Harper and Mark Bunn - 2005-06
  • Most Capped Player - Edwin Lloyd-Davies (Wales) 12
  • Oldest Player - Edwin Lloyd-Davies 42
  • Youngest Player - Adrian Mann 16 years and 297 days v Bury 5 May 1984
  • Record Transfer Fee Received - £265,000 from Watford for Richard Hill in 1987
  • Record Transfer Fee Paid - £165,000 to Oldham Athletic for Josh Low in 2003
  • Record Attendance at County Ground - 24,523 vs. Fulham 1965-66 Division One
  • Record Attendance at Sixfields 7,557 vs. Manchester City 1998-99 Division Two

[edit] Club Honours

[edit] References

  1. ^ Club rivalries uncovered (PDF) Football Fans Census. Retrieved 15 May 2008
  2. ^ Foundation of Northampton Town ntfc.co.uk. Retrieved 15 May 2008
  3. ^ History of Northampton Town ntfc.co.uk. Retrieved 15 May 2008
  4. ^ 1908/09 F.A. Charity Shield footballsite.co.uk Retrieved 15 May 2008
  5. ^ Herbert Chapman (1912-19) Part 1 www.mightyleeds.co.uk. Retrieved 15 May 2008
  6. ^ The Walter Tull Sports & Arts Development Association www.waltertull.com/ Retrieved 15 May 2008
  7. ^ The Origins of Northampton Town Supporters' Trust www.ntfctrust.co.uk. Retrieved 20 May 2008
  8. ^ Chairman Happy With Council Relationship ntfc.co.uk. Retrieved 15 May 2008
  9. ^ Coca-Cola Football League One : Table bbc.co.uk/sport. Retrieved 03 May 2008

[edit] External links

Official
News and Statistics
Supporters Trust