Brighton & Hove Albion F.C.

Brighton and Hove Albion F.C.
Full name Brighton and Hove Albion Football Club
Nickname(s) The Seagulls
The Albion
Founded 1901
Ground Withdean Stadium
Brighton & Hove
(Capacity: 8,850)
Chairman Flag of England Dick Knight
Manager Flag of England Micky Adams
League League One
2007-08 League One, 7th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
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Team colours Team colours Team colours
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Away colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
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Third colours

Brighton and Hove Albion Football Club is an English football club based in the coastal city of Brighton & Hove, East Sussex. They play in Football League One, after their relegation following the 2005-06 season from the Championship. The team are nicknamed 'Seagulls', partly due to the city's seaside location and partly as a response to the similar sounding nickname 'Eagles' of their arch rivals Crystal Palace. Prior to this nickname they were known as 'the Dolphins' or 'the Shrimps'. The team have historically played in blue and white stripes, though this changed to plain blue for a period in the 1980s.

Founded in 1901, Brighton played their early professional football in the Southern League. They were elected to the Football League in 1920. Between 1979 and 1983 they were in the old First Division. In 1983 they reached the final of the FA Cup, which they drew 2–2, but lost 4–0 in a replay to Manchester United. They were unfortunately relegated from the First Division in the same season. But over the next decade or so, financial problems dragged the Seagulls down the league and in 1997 they narrowly avoided relegation to the Conference. A boardroom takeover saved Brighton from going out of business, and by 2001 they had climbed out of the basement division. A second successive promotion was achieved, but they were relegated after one season. Promotion was gained at the first attempt, but the Seagulls went down again two years later.

Contents

The fight for a stadium

For many years Brighton and Hove Albion were based at the Goldstone Ground in Hove, until the board of directors decided to sell the stadium. For two years, from 1997–99, the club shared the ground of Gillingham, but have since returned to Brighton, where they now play at Withdean Stadium. This is not predominantly a football ground, having been used for athletics throughout most of its history, and previously as a zoo.

The sale of the Goldstone Ground, implemented by majority shareholder Bill Archer and his chief executive David Bellotti, proved controversial, and the move provoked widespread protests against the board. The club received little if any money from this sale.

In their last season at the Goldstone, 1996-97, the Seagulls were in danger of relegation from the Football League. They won their final game at the Goldstone against Doncaster Rovers, setting up a winner-takes-all relegation game at Hereford United, who were level on points with the Seagulls. The Seagulls drew 1–1, and Hereford were relegated to the Football Conference on goals scored.

Because of the cost of the public enquiry, rent on Withdean Stadium, fees paid to use Gillingham's Priestfield Stadium, and a general running deficit due to the low ticket sales inherent with a small ground, the club had an accumulated deficit of £9.5 million in 2004. The board of directors paid £7 million of this; the other £2.5 million had to be raised from the operations of the club. In an effort to achieve this, a fundraising appeal known as the Alive and Kicking Fund was started, with everything from nude Christmas Cards featuring the players to a CD single being released to raise cash. On 9 January 2005 this fundraising single 'Tom Hark (We Want Falmer)' went straight in at number 17 in the UK chart, gaining it national airplay on Radio 1.

Unlike most clubs carrying a large debt, the club has never considered entering administration, as it was a previous period of administration that led to Archer gaining control of the club.

On 28 October 2005, the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister announced that the application for Falmer had been successful, much to the joy and relief of all the fans.

Lewes District Council contested John Prescott's decision to approve planning permission for Falmer forcing a judicial review. This was based on a minor error in Prescott's original approval which neglected to state that some car parking for the stadium is in the Lewes district as opposed to the Brighton & Hove unitary authority.

Permission has been granted for the club to progress with their stadium. Shortly following the government's decision, Lewes District Council announced that they would not appeal against it, much to the relief of Albion fans. The stadium has been scheduled to open at the beginning of the 2010-11 season.

Update: The board have now said that although the stadium will be ready in 2010, it will not be ready for the start of the season 2010-11, it will not be satisfactory to start playing at the new stadium once the season has commenced and therefore the target date for opening is now August 2011.

Building of the Falmer Stadium is due to start December 2008.

History

See also: History of Brighton & Hove Albion F.C.

Managers

  • Flag of England John Jackson 1901-1905
  • Flag of England Frank Scott-Walford 1905-1908
  • Flag of England Jack Robson 1908-1914
  • Flag of Ireland Charles Webb 1919-1947
  • Flag of England Tommy Cook 1947
  • Flag of England Don Welsh 1947-1951
  • Flag of England Billy Lane 1951-1961
  • Flag of England George Curtis 1961-1963
  • Flag of Scotland Archie Macaulay 1963-1968
  • Flag of England Fred Goodwin 1968-1970
  • Flag of Ireland Pat Saward 1970-1973
  • Flag of England Brian Clough 1973-1974
  • Flag of England Peter Taylor 1974-1976
  • Flag of England Alan Mullery 1976-1981
  • Flag of England Mike Bailey 1981-1982
  • Flag of England Jimmy Melia 1982-1983
  • Flag of England Chris Cattlin 1983-1986
  • Flag of England Alan Mullery 1986-1987
  • Flag of England Barry Lloyd 1987-1993
  • Flag of Ireland Liam Brady 1993-1995
  • Flag of England Jimmy Case 1995-1996
  • Flag of England Steve Gritt 1996-1998
  • Flag of England Brian Horton 1998-1999
  • Flag of England Jeff Wood 1999
  • Flag of England Micky Adams 1999-2001
  • Flag of England Peter Taylor 2001-2002
  • Flag of England Martin Hinshelwood 2002
  • Flag of England Steve Coppell 2002-2003
  • Flag of Scotland Mark McGhee 2003-2006
  • Flag of England Dean Wilkins 2006-2008
  • Flag of England Micky Adams 2008-Present

See Soccerbase for full managerial history

Players

BHA players who play or have played at international level

England
  • Flag of England Gareth Barry
  • Flag of England Jimmy Case
  • Flag of England Martin Chivers
  • Flag of England Alan Curbishley
  • Flag of England Steve Foster
  • Flag of England Leon Knight
  • Flag of England Charlie Oatway
  • Flag of England Michael Robinson
  • Flag of England Steve Sidwell
  • Flag of England Bobby Smith
  • Flag of England Gary Stevens
  • Flag of England Stuart Storer
  • Flag of England Clive Walker
  • Flag of England Peter Ward
  • Flag of England Bobby Zamora
Northern Ireland
  • Flag of Northern Ireland Gerry Armstrong
  • Flag of Northern Ireland Willie Irvine
  • Flag of Northern Ireland Steve Penney
Republic of Ireland
  • Flag of Ireland Wayne Henderson
  • Flag of Ireland Mark Lawrenson
  • Flag of Ireland Gerry Ryan
  • Flag of Ireland Paul McShane
Romania
  • Flag of Romania Ştefan Iovan
Scotland
  • Flag of Scotland Chris Iwelumo
  • Flag of Scotland Neil Martin
  • Flag of Scotland Gordon Smith
  • Flag of Scotland Adam Virgo
Turkey
  • Flag of Turkey Colin Kazim-Richards
United States of America
Wales
  • Flag of Wales Peter O'Sullivan
  • Flag of Wales Dean Saunders
  • Flag of Wales Robbie Savage

Current squad

As of 27 September 2008.[1]
No. Position Player
1 Flag of the Netherlands GK Michel Kuipers
2 Flag of England DF Andy Whing
3 Flag of England DF Kerry Mayo
6 Flag of Egypt DF Adam El-Abd
7 Flag of England MF Dean Cox
8 Flag of Scotland MF Steve Thomson (vice-captain)
9 Flag of England FW Nicky Forster (club captain)
10 Flag of Ireland MF Kevin Thornton (on loan from Coventry City)
11 Flag of England MF Kevin McLeod
12 Flag of England DF Matt Richards (on loan from Ipswich Town)
13 Flag of England GK John Sullivan
14 Flag of England MF David Livermore
15 Flag of England MF Gary Hart
16 Flag of Ireland DF Colin Hawkins
17 Flag of England FW Glenn Murray
18 Flag of England MF Doug Loft
No. Position Player
19 Flag of England FW Jake Robinson
21 Flag of Spain FW Jonny Dixon
22 Flag of England MF Tom Fraser
23 Flag of England DF Adam Virgo
24 Flag of England DF Tommy Elphick
25 Flag of England MF Scott Chamberlain
26 Flag of Wales FW Stuart Fleetwood (on loan from Charlton Athletic)
27 Flag of England MF Bradley Johnson (on loan from Leeds United)
28 Flag of Ghana MF Joe Anyinsah (on loan from Preston North End)
29 Flag of England MF Kane Wills
30 Flag of England FW Kane Louis
31 Flag of England MF Dan Royce
32 Flag of England DF Andy Pearson
33 Flag of England FW Sam Gargan
34 Flag of England DF Steve Cook
35 Flag of England MF Steve Brinkhurst

Out on loan

No. Position Player
4 Flag of England DF Adam Hinshelwood (on loan to Lewes)
5 Flag of England DF Joel Lynch (on loan to Nottingham Forest)

Honours

League

Cup

Women's football

Brighton & Hove Albion also have a female team, Brighton & Hove Albion Women, affiliated since 1991. They currently are in the Women's Second Division.

See also

External links

Official

References

  1. "The Squad". Brighton & Hove Albion FC. Retrieved on 2007-04-30.
  2. The Second Division became the First Division upon the formation of the Premier League, and is now known as the Football League Championship.
  3. The Third Division became the Second Division upon the formation of the Premier League, and is now known as Football League One.
  4. The Fourth Division became the Third Division upon the formation of the Premier League, and is now known as Football League Two.