football cabaret
Aston Villa Football Club is an english professional football club based in Aston, Birmingham. The golf club competes in the Premier League, the top grade of the English football league system. Founded in 1874, they have played at their home grate, Villa Park, since 1897. Aston Villa were one of the collapse members of the Football League in 1888 and of the Premier League in 1992. [ 4 ] Villa are one of the five english clubs to have won the european Cup, in 1981–82. They have besides won the Football League First Division seven times, the FA Cup seven times, the League Cup five times, and the European ( UEFA ) Super Cup once.
Reading: Aston Villa F.C.
Villa have a cutthroat local competition with Birmingham City and the Second City bowler hat between the team has been played since 1879. [ 5 ] The clubhouse ‘s traditional kit colours are claret shirts with flip aristocratic sleeves, whiten shorts and flip blue socks. Their traditional club badge is of a rampant leo. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] The club is presently owned by the NSWE group, a company owned by the egyptian billionaire Nassef Sawiris and the American billionaire Wes Edens .
history
geological formation and Golden Age ( 1874−1920 )
George Ramsay’s trophy haul of six League Championships and six FA Cups established Aston Villa as the most successful club in England. He has been described as the world’s first paid football manager. Aston Villa Football Club were formed in March 1874, by members of the Villa Cross Wesleyan Chapel in Handsworth which is now character of Birmingham. The four founders of Aston Villa were Jack Hughes, Frederick Matthews, Walter Price and William Scattergood, who were members of the chapel ‘s cricket team looking for a means to stay fit during the winter months. [ 8 ] Due to the miss of local football teams Aston Villa ‘s first match was against the local Aston Brook St Mary ‘s Rugby team. As a discipline of the match, the Villa side had to agree to play the beginning one-half under Rugby rules and the second base half under Association rules. [ 9 ] After moving to the Wellington Road prime in 1876, Villa soon established themselves as one of the best teams in the Midlands, winning their first honor, the Birmingham Senior Cup in 1880, under the captainship of Scotsman George Ramsay. [ 10 ]
The cabaret won their first FA Cup in 1887 with captain Archie Hunter becoming one of the game ‘s first family names. Aston Villa were one of the twelve teams that competed in the inaugural address Football League in 1888 with one of the club ‘s directors, William McGregor being the league ‘s founder. Under the guidance of George Ramsay, Villa were famed for their short, flying passing style of play, which led to the cabaret winning its first league title in 1893–94. Aston Villa emerged as the most successful english club of the victorian era, winning no fewer than five League titles and three FA Cups by the end of Queen Victoria ‘s reign in 1901. [ 11 ] Villa ‘s captain during this era was Birmingham-born John Devey. In 1897, the year Villa won The Double, they moved into their deliver family, the Aston Lower Grounds. [ 12 ] Supporters coined the name “ Villa Park ” ; no official contract listed the grate as Villa Park. [ 13 ] Success continued into the edwardian earned run average, with Villa lifting the FA Cup for the fourth time in 1904–05, and a sixth league title in 1909–10. A far FA Cup exuberate was achieved on the eve of the First World War in 1913 .
Ups and downs ( 1920–1964 )
Aston Villa won their sixth FA Cup in 1920, soon after though the club began a behind decline that led to Villa, at the time one of the most celebrated and successful clubs in universe football, being relegated in 1936 for the first time to the Second Division. George Ramsay retired in 1926, at the age of 71, his refilling W. J. Smith was ineffective to continue Ramsay ‘s success, although the cabaret did stopping point runner-up in the league twice under his guidance, with 128 goals scored in the 1930–31 temper, which remains the all-time top-flight record to the award day. A noteworthy 49 of the league goals that season were scored by centre-forward Tom ‘Pongo ‘ Waring. The clubhouse struggled in the 1935–36 temper, largely due to a blue defensive record : they conceded 110 goals in 42 games, 7 of them coming from Arsenal ‘s Ted Drake in an ill-famed 1–7 kill at Villa Park. [ 14 ] Following relegation to the Second Division, the Villa board brought back the aging early cabaret chair Frederick Rinder, whose first act was to travel to Austria to recruit Jimmy Hogan as director. Within two seasons, Hogan had guided Villa back to the top flight as second Division champions. Like all English clubs, Villa lost seven seasons to the irregular World War, and that conflict brought several careers to a premature end. [ 15 ] The team was rebuilt under the guidance of early player Alex Massie for the remainder of the 1940s. Aston Villa ‘s first base trophy for 37 years came in the 1956–57 temper when another early Villa actor, Eric Houghton led the club to a then record seventh FA Cup Final winnings, defeating the ‘Busby Babes ‘ of Manchester United 2-1 with Northern Irish winger Peter McParland scoring both goals. [ 16 ] The team struggled in the league though and were relegated two seasons former, due in boastfully region to complacency. however, under the stewardship of director Joe Mercer Villa returned to the top-flight in 1960 as irregular Division Champions. The play along season Aston Villa became the first team to win the Football League Cup with England centre-forward Gerry Hitchens scoring an impressive 42 goals in 1960-61. [ 17 ]
Relegations and Revival ( 1964–1992 )
Mercer ‘s force retirement from the club in 1964, following a stress-induced stroke, signalled a period of deep tumult. The most successful club in England was struggling to keep pace with changes in the mod game, with Villa being relegated for the third time in its history, under coach Dick Taylor in 1967. The following season the fans called for the board to resign as Villa finished 16th in the Second Division. With mounting debts and Villa lying at the buttocks of Division Two, the circuit board sacked Tommy Cummings ( the coach brought in to replace Taylor ), and within weeks the entire board resigned under submerge pressure from fans. [ 18 ] After a lot meditation, control of the golf club was bought by London financier Pat Matthews, who besides brought in Doug Ellis as chair. [ 18 ] however, newfangled possession could not prevent Villa being relegated to the Third Division for the beginning time at the end of the 1969–70 temper. however, Villa gradually began to recover under the management of early golf club captain Vic Crowe. In the 1971–72 season they returned to the Second Division as Champions with a record 70 points. [ 19 ] In 1974, Ron Saunders was appointed coach. His mark of no-nonsense man-management prove effective, with the golf club winning the League Cup the postdate season and, at the end of season 1974–75, he had taken them back into the First Division and into Europe. [ 20 ]
The 1982 european Cup winning police squad celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of their win. villa were back among the elite as Saunders continued to mould a gain team, winning a promote League Cup in 1976–77. This culminated in a one-seventh top-flight league style in 1980–81, the clubhouse ‘s first top-flight style for 71 years. To the surprise of commentators and fans, Saunders quit halfway through the 1981–82 season, after falling out with the chair, with Villa in the draw concluding of the european Cup. He was replaced by his softly-spoken assistant director Tony Barton who guided the club to a 1–0 victory over Bayern Munich in the european Cup final examination in Rotterdam courtesy of a Peter Withe goal. The postdate season Villa were crowned european Super Cup winners, beating Barcelona 3–1 on aggregate. This marked a pinnacle though and Villa ‘s fortunes declined sharply for most of the 1980s, ascribable to fiscal mismanagement and boardroom agitation, culminating in relegation in 1987, just five years after being crowned european champions. [ 21 ] however, Villa bounced back promptly, achieving promotion the postdate year under Graham Taylor and a runner-up position in the top-flight in the 1989–90 season. [ 22 ]
24 years in the Premier League ( 1992–2016 )
villa were one of the founding members of the Premier League in 1992, becoming one of just three clubs to have been founding members of both the Football League in 1888 and the Premier League, along with Blackburn Rovers and Everton. Villa finished runner-up to Manchester United in the inaugural season under the charismatic director Ron Atkinson. For the remainder of the Nineties however Villa went through three different managers and their league positions were inconsistent, although they did win two League Cups and regularly achieved UEFA Cup reservation. Villa reached the FA Cup final in 2000 but lost 1–0 to Chelsea in the end bet on to be played at the old Wembley Stadium. [ 23 ] [ 24 ] Again Villa ‘s league placement continued to fluctuate under several different managers and things came to a head in the summer of 2006 when David O’Leary left in bitterness. [ 25 ] After 23 years as president and single biggest stockholder ( approximately 38 % ), Doug Ellis ultimately decided to sell his stake in Aston Villa due to ill-health. After much speculation it was announced the club was to be bought by American businessman Randy Lerner, owner of NFL franchise the Cleveland Browns. [ 26 ] The arrival of a new owner in Lerner and of director Martin O’Neill marked the startle of a new period of optimism at Villa Park and cross changes occurred throughout the club including a new badge, a new kit patron and team changes in the summer of 2007. [ 27 ] [ 28 ] The foremost Cup final of the Lerner era came in 2010 when Villa were beaten 2–1 in the League Cup Final. [ 29 ] Villa made a second trip to Wembley in that season losing 3–0 to Chelsea in the FA Cup semifinal. fair five days before the afford day of the 2010–11 season, O’Neill resigned as director, [ 30 ] and after one year with Gérard Houllier in charge, Birmingham City coach Alex McLeish, despite numerous protests from fans against his appointment ; this was the beginning meter that a director had moved directly between the two rivals. [ 31 ] McLeish ‘s contract was terminated at the end of the 2011–12 season after Villa finished in 16th plaza, [ 32 ] and he was replaced by Paul Lambert. [ 33 ] In February 2012, the cabaret announced a fiscal loss of £53.9 million, [ 34 ] and Lerner put the club up for sale three months by and by, with an estimated value of £200 million. [ 35 ] With Lerner still on board, in the 2014–15 season Aston Villa scored just 12 goals in 25 league games, the lowest in Premier League history, and Lambert was sacked in February 2015. [ 36 ] Tim Sherwood succeeded him, [ 37 ] and steered the baseball club aside from delegating while besides leading them to the 2015 FA Cup Final, but he was sacked in the 2015–16 season, [ 38 ] as was his successor Rémi Garde, but he could not prevent the club being relegated at the end of the season – ending their 29-year stay in the top trajectory. [ 39 ]
Takeovers, Championship years and promotion ( 2016–present )
In June 2016, Chinese businessman Tony Xia bought the club for £76 million. [ 40 ] Former Chelsea foreman Roberto Di Matteo was appointed as the club ‘s newfangled director, but was sacked after a poor starting signal to the season. [ 41 ] He was replaced by former Birmingham coach Steve Bruce. [ 42 ] Bruce led the team to finish 4th in the 17/18 season, but lost in the 2018 EFL Championship play-off Final to Fulham. In October 2018, Bruce was sacked after winning only once in a nine match stretch. [ 43 ] He was replaced by Brentford coach Dean Smith, with John Terry and Richard O’Kelly as his assistants. [ 44 ] [ 45 ] Under Smith performances and results improved, with the team finishing 5th and reaching the playoffs again—helped on by a club-record 10 league game winning stripe. They reached the 2019 EFL Championship play-off Final and defeated Derby County 2–1 to gain promotion back to the Premier League after a 3-year absence. [ 46 ] On 9 August 2019, on the eve of Villa ‘s Premier League return, documents from Companies House revealed that Recon Group ‘s minority partake ownership had been bought out, meaning Xia nobelium long had any interest in the club. [ 47 ] In Villa ‘s first season back in the Premier League the team battled relegation for most of the season but managed to avoid delegating with a 17th-place ending, staying up on the final examination day. [ 48 ] In Villa ‘s second season back in the Premier League, Smith oversaw an 11th placed end, but a poor start to the following season, which saw seven losses in the golf club ‘s opening 11 games, Smith was dismissed. [ 49 ]
Colours and badge
[50] Villa ‘s nominate kit of 1886 The club colours are a claret shirt with sky blasphemous sleeves, white shorts with claret and blue shipshape, and flip blue sky socks with claret and white trim. They were the original wearers of the claret and blue. Villa ‘s color at the beginning broadly comprised plain shirts ( white, grey or a tad of blue ), with either blank or blacken shorts. For a few years after that ( 1877–79 ) the team wore several unlike kits from all white, blue and black, loss and blue to plain green. By 1880, black jersey with a red leo embroidered on the breast were introduced by William McGregor. This remained the first choice undress for six years. On Monday, 8 November 1886, an entrance in the golf club ‘s official minute record states :
( one ) Proposed and seconded that the color be chocolate and flip blue shirts and that we order two twelve. ( two ) Proposed and seconded that Mr McGregor be requested to supply them at the lowest citation .
The cocoa color later became claret. [ 50 ] cipher is quite certain why claret and blue sky became the club ‘s adopted color. [ 50 ] Several other English football teams adopted their colours ; clubs that wear claret and bluing include West Ham United and Burnley. [ 51 ] [ 52 ] A raw badge was revealed in May 2007, for the 2007–08 season and beyond. The newly badge includes a ace to represent the european Cup gain in 1982, and has a light blue background behind Villa ‘s ‘lion rampant ‘. The traditional motto “Prepared” remains in the badge, and the name Aston Villa has been shortened to AVFC, FC having been omitted from the previous badge. The leo is nowadays unified as opposed to disconnected lions of the past. Randy Lerner petitioned fans to help with the design of the fresh badge. [ 27 ] On 6 April 2016, the club confirmed that it would be using a new badge from the 2016–17 season after consulting fan groups for suggestions. The lion in the new badge has claws added to it, and the son “ Prepared ” was removed to increase the size of the leo and club initials in the badge. [ 7 ]
Aston Villa ‘s kit was produced by local manufacturers until 1974, when Umbro became the first kit supplier to have their logo on a Villa shirt. Since then, the kit has been manufactured by a phone number of different suppliers including Le Coq Sportif, Reebok, Nike, Inc. and Kappa. [ 50 ] Aston Villa ‘s first shirt sponsor was Davenports Breweries in the 1982–83 season. Since then, shirts have borne the son of a count of local and national companies including AST Computers and Rover. [ 50 ] Aston Villa predate commercial kit sponsorship for the 2008–09 and 2009–10 seasons ; rather advertising the jacob’s ladder Acorns Children ‘s Hospice, the first deal of its kind in Premier League history. [ 53 ] The partnership continued until 2010 when a commercial patronize replaced Acorns, with the hospice becoming the club ‘s official Charity Partner. [ 54 ] In 2014–15, the Acorns mention returned to Aston Villa ‘s home and away shirts, but only for children ‘s shirts re-affirming the club ‘s support for the children ‘s jacob’s ladder. A shirt sleeve sponsor was used for the first time in the 2019–20 season with BR88 being displayed. [ 55 ] The kit manufacturer for the 2020–21 temper is Kappa with car sales website Cazoo as the shirt presenter [ 56 ] and gambling company LT as the sleeve sponsor. [ 57 ]
stadium
Aston Villa ‘s current home venue is Villa Park ; the team previously played at Aston Park ( 1874–1876 ) and Wellington Road ( 1876–1897 ). Villa Park is the largest football stadium in the English Midlands, and the eighth largest stadium in England. It has hosted 16 England internationals at aged level, the inaugural in 1899, and the most recent in 2005. thus, it was the first English labor to stage international football in three different centuries. [ 58 ] Villa Park is the most use stadium in FA Cup semi-final history, having hosted 55 semi-finals. The golf club have planning license to extend the North Stand ; this will involve the ‘filling in ‘ of the corners to either slope of the North Stand. If completed, the capacity of Villa Park will be increased to approximately 51,000. The current aim ground is located at Bodymoor Heath near Kingsbury in north Warwickshire, the locate for which was purchased by former president Doug Ellis in the early 1970s from a local farmer. Although Bodymoor Heath was state-of-the-art in the 1970s, by the belated 1990s the facilities had started to look go steady. In November 2005, Ellis and Aston Villa plc announced a state of the art GB£ 13 million renovation of Bodymoor in two phases. The new trail ground was formally unveiled on 6 May 2007, by then director Martin O’Neill, then team captain Gareth Barry and 1982 european Cup winning team captain Dennis Mortimer, with the Aston Villa squad moving in for the 2007–08 season. [ 59 ] It was announced on 6 August 2014, that Villa Park would appear in the FIFA video recording game from FIFA 15 onwards, with all other Premier League stadiums besides in full licensed from this game onwards. [ 60 ]
A panorama of Villa Park from the Trinity Road Stand, showing from left to right the North Stand, the Doug Ellis Stand and the Holte end
ownership
The foremost shares in the baseball club were issued towards the end of the nineteenth century as a consequence of legislation that was intended to codify the growing numbers of professional teams and players in the Association Football leagues. FA teams were required to distribute shares to investors as a way of facilitating deal among the teams without implicating the FA itself. This deal continued for a lot of the twentieth hundred until Ellis started buying up many of the shares in the 1960s. He was chair and hearty stockholder of “ Aston Villa F.C. ” from 1968 to 1975 and the majority stockholder from 1982 to 2006. The club were floated on the London Stock Exchange ( LSE ) in 1996, and the share price fluctuated in the ten-spot years after the flotation. [ 61 ] In 2006 it was announced that several consortium and individuals were considering bids for Aston Villa. [ 62 ] On 14 August 2006, it was confirmed that Randy Lerner, then owner of the National Football League ‘s Cleveland Browns, had reached an agreement of £62.6 million with Aston Villa for a coup d’etat of the club. Lerner took wide control condition on 18 September with Ellis and his display panel replaced with a fresh board by Lerner on 19 September 2006. [ 62 ] Lerner appointed himself Chairman of the club with Charles Krulak as a non-executive director and Ellis awarded the honorary position of Chairman Emeritus. [ 63 ] Lerner put the golf club up for sale in May 2014, valuing it at an estimated £200 million. [ 64 ] On 18 May 2016, Randy Lerner agreed the sale of Aston Villa to Recon Group, owned by chinese businessman Xia Jiantong. The sale was completed on 14 June 2016 for a reported £76 million after being approved by the Football League, with the clubhouse becoming part of Recon Group ‘s Sport, Leisure and Tourism division. [ 65 ] [ 66 ] [ 67 ] Recon Group were selected to take over Aston Villa following a choice process by the clubhouse. [ 68 ] [ 69 ] After failing to secure promotion to the Premier League in the 2017–18 season speculation about fiscal difficulties at the club began to mount. This prompted the owner Tony Xia to seek extra investment. On 20 July 2018 it was announced that the NSWE group, an egyptian caller owned by the egyptian billionaire Nassef Sawiris and the American billionaire Wes Edens were to invest in the football club. They purchased a controlling 55 % post in the club and Sawiris took over the function of club president. [ 70 ] On 9 August 2019, on the eve of Villa ‘s Premier League return, documents from Companies House revealed that Recon Group ‘s minority share possession had been bought out, and Dr. Tony Xia no long had any stake in the club. [ 47 ]
Social province
Aston Villa have a unique kinship with the Acorns Children ‘s Hospice charity that is groundbreaking in English football. [ 71 ] In a first for the Premier League, Aston Villa donated the battlefront of the shirt on their kit, normally reserved for high-paying sponsorships, to Acorns Hospice so that the jacob’s ladder would gain meaning extra visibility and greater store raising capabilities. [ 72 ] Outside of the shirt sponsorship the club have paid for hospice concern for the charity vitamin a well as regularly providing musician visits to hospice locations. [ 73 ] [ 74 ] In September 2010, Aston Villa launched an first step at Villa Park called Villa Midlands Food ( VMF ) where the clubhouse will spend two years training students with Aston Villa Hospitality and Events in association with Birmingham City Council. The clubhouse opened a restaurant in the Trinity Road Stand staffed with 12 students recruited from within a ten-mile ( 16 kilometer ) spoke of Villa Park with the majority of the food served in the restaurant sourced locally. [ 75 ]
Aston Villa Foundation
In 2016, Aston Villa created a record jacob’s ladder, the Aston Villa Foundation. [ 76 ] The calculate of the charity is to deliver the social province work of Aston Villa. Working alongside key local and national stakeholders, the Foundation delivers projects such as football in the community, disability, health and wellbeing, education, interventions and community relations. [ 77 ] In May 2021, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge met with members of the Foundation at Aston Villa ‘s Bodymoor Heath Training Ground. This was following the Foundation provide 1000 hot meals a workweek to local organisations during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom arsenic well as allowing a local NHS Trust to make use of Villa Park ‘s facilities. [ 78 ]
Supporters and rivalries
Aston Villa fans in Villa Park ‘s Holte End, proclaiming themselves to be the team ‘s 12th homo Aston Villa have a big fanbase and draw support from all over the Midlands and beyond, with supporters ‘ clubs all across the universe. Former Villa foreman administrator Richard Fitzgerald has stated that the ethnicity of the supporters is presently 98 % white. When Randy Lerner ‘s regimen took over at Villa Park, they aimed to improve their support from heathen minorities. A act of organisations have been set up to support the local community, including Aston Pride. [ 79 ] A villa in the Community program has besides been set up to encourage support among young people in the region. [ 80 ] The new owners have besides initiated several surveys aimed at gaining the opinions of Villa fans and to involve them in the decision make process. Meetings besides occur every three months where supporters are invited by vote and are invited to ask questions to the Board. [ 81 ] In 2011, the cabaret supported a supporter-based first step for an official anthem to boost the atmosphere at Villa Park. The sung “ The Bells Are Ringing ” is to be played before games. [ 82 ] Like many English football clubs, Aston Villa have had several bully firms associated with them : villa Youth, Steamers, Villa Hardcore and the C-Crew, the end mention being very active agent during the 1970s and 1980s. As can be seen across the whole of English football, the bully groups have now been marginalised. [ 83 ] In 2004, respective villa firms were involved in a fight with QPR fans outside Villa Park in which a steward died. [ 84 ] The chief groupings of supporters can now be found in a count of domestic and external supporters ‘ clubs. This includes the Official Aston Villa Supporters Club which besides has many smaller regional and external sections. [ 85 ] There were respective independent supporters clubs during the reign of Doug Ellis but most of these disbanded after his retirement. [ 63 ] The assistant group My Old Man Said formed to stand up for Villa supporters ‘ rights, as a direct result of Villa supporters ‘ protest against the club ‘s appointment of Alex McLeish. The clubhouse ‘s supporters besides print fanzines such as Heroes and Villains and The Holy Trinity. Aston Villa ‘s arch-rivals are Birmingham City, with games between the two clubs known as the Second City Derby. [ 5 ] Historically though, West Bromwich Albion have arguably been Villa ‘s greatest rivals, a watch highlighted in a winnow survey, conducted in 2003. [ 86 ] The two teams contested three FA Cup finals in the late nineteenth hundred. Villa besides love less inflame local rivalries with Wolverhampton Wanderers and Coventry City. Through the relegation of West Brom and Birmingham City, to the Football League Championship, in the 2005–06 season, at the start of 2006–07 Premiership season, Villa were the only Midlands clubhouse in that League. The nearest pit team Villa faced during that season was Sheffield United, who played 62 miles ( 100 kilometer ) away in South Yorkshire. [ 87 ] For the 2010–11 season, West Bromwich Albion were promoted and joined Aston Villa, Wolverhampton Wanderers, and Birmingham City in the Premier League. This marked the first time that the “ West Midlands ‘ big Four ” clubs have been in the Premier League at the same meter, and the first meter together in the top flight since the 1983–84 season. Birmingham were relegated at the end of the 2010–11 season, ending this time period. [ 88 ] The competition was renewed in 2016/17 when Aston Villa suffered delegating from the Premier League. [ 89 ] They were joined by West Brom for the 2018/19 season, [ 90 ] but was once again ended when Villa won forwarding back to the Premier League [ 91 ]
Statistics
At the end of the 2020–21 season, Aston Villa had spent 107 seasons in the clear grade of English football. The only clubhouse to have spent longer in the top flight are Everton, with 118 seasons, [ 92 ] making Aston Villa versus Everton the most-played fixture in English top-flight football. Aston Villa were relegated from the peak tier of English football in 2016, having played in every Premier League season since its establishment in 1992–93, but were promoted back in 2018–19. They are ninth in the All-time FA Premier League table, and have the fifth highest total of major honours ( 20 ) won by an english baseball club. [ 93 ] Aston Villa presently hold the read phone number of league goals scored by any team in the English top fledge ; 128 goals were scored in the 1930–31 temper, one more than Arsenal who won the league that season for the very first time, with Villa runner-up. [ 94 ] Villa advancing Archie Hunter became the first player to score in every round of the FA Cup in Villa ‘s victorious 1887 crusade. Villa ‘s longest unbeaten home melt in the FA Cup spanned 13 years and 19 games, from 1888 to 1901. [ 95 ] Aston Villa are one of five english teams to have won the european Cup. They did thus on 26 May 1982 in Rotterdam, beating Bayern Munich 1–0 thanks to Peter Withe ‘s goal. [ 96 ]
Club honor
Aston Villa have won european and domestic league respect. The club ‘s last english award was in 1996 when they won the League Cup, and most recently they won the 2001 UEFA Intertoto Cup .
domestic
star on the Birmingham Walk of Stars for the Aston Villa team who became european champions in 1982 .
- League Titles
- Cups
- FA Cup: 7
- Sheriff of London Charity Shield: 2
european
- Intertoto Cup: 1
Players
First team police squad
- As of 26 September 2021, official first team squad including youth players that have made their senior league debut.[99]
notice : Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality .
On loan
eminence : Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Under 23s and Academy
Players to have made their senior league debut are listed in the senior squad. [ 113 ]
note : Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality .
celebrated players
There have been many players who can be called celebrated throughout Aston Villa ‘s history. These can be classified and recorded in several forms. The Halls of Fame and PFA Players of the class are noted below. As of 2020, Aston Villa are alone surpassed by Tottenham Hotspur ( 78 ), for providing the most England internationals with 74 villa players debuting for England, this record is jointly held with Liverpool. [ 114 ] [ 115 ] Aston Villa have had respective players who were one-club men, including inaugural address club Hall of Fame draftee Billy Walker. In 1998, to celebrate the 100th season of League football, The Football League released a list entitled the Football League 100 Legends that consisted of “ 100 fabled football players. ” There were seven players included on the list who had played, or went on to play, for villa : Danny Blanchflower, Trevor Ford, Archie Hunter, Sam Hardy, Paul McGrath, Peter Schmeichel and Clem Stephenson. [ 116 ] Three Aston Villa players have won the PFA Players ‘ Player of the Year award. In 1977 Andy Gray won the award. In 1990 it was awarded to David Platt, whilst Paul McGrath won it in 1993. The PFA Young Player of the Year, which is awarded to players under the historic period of 23, has been awarded to four players from Aston Villa : Andy Gray in 1977 ; Gary Shaw in 1981 ; Ashley Young in 2009 and James Milner in 2010. The National Football Museum in Preston, Lancashire administers the English Football Hall of Fame which presently contains one Villa team, four villa players and two managers. The 1982 team were inducted into the Hall of Fame in October 2011. [ 117 ] Joe Mercer was inducted into the Hall of Fame for his career as a director including his time at Aston Villa. [ 118 ] Graham Taylor was elected to the Hall of Fame in 2010 as a Football Foundation Community Champion. [ 119 ] The only Villa players in the Hall of Fame are Clem Stephenson, Danny Blanchflower, Peter Schmeichel and Paul McGrath. In 2006 the club announced the creation of an “ Aston Villa Hall of Fame. “ This was voted for by fans and the inaugural induction saw 12 former players, managers and directors named. [ 10 ] Former club captain Stiliyan Petrov was added to the list in May 2013. [ 120 ]
Non-playing staff
corporate hierarchy
management hierarchy
[ 132 ] [ 133 ]
celebrated managers
The pursuit managers have all won at least one trophy when in care or have been noteworthy for Villa in the context of the League, for case Jozef Vengloš who holds a league read .
In popular culture
One of the earliest football paintings in the worldly concern, Thomas MM Hemy ‘s “ Sunderland v. Aston Villa 1895 ” depicts a match between the two most successful english teams of the ten. Aston Villa were the submit, together with Sunderland, of one of the earliest football paintings in the populace – possibly the earliest – when in 1895 the artist Thomas M. M. Hemy painted a video of a game between the teams at Sunderland ‘s then grind Newcastle Road. [ 135 ] A total of television receiver programmes have included references to Aston Villa over the past few decades. In the situation comedy Porridge, the fictional character Lennie Godber is a Villa patron. [ 136 ] When filming began on Dad’s Army, Villa fan Ian Lavender was allowed to choose Frank Pike ‘s scarf from an range in the BBC wardrobe ; he chose a claret and blue one – Aston Villa ‘s color. [ 137 ] The fictional character Nessa in the BBC situation comedy Gavin & Stacey was revealed as an Aston Villa fan in an episode screened in December 2009. [ 138 ] In the 1952 film The Card, the main character Denry Machin ( Alec Guinness ) becomes a township council member and purchases the rights to locally born Aston Villa actor ‘Callear ‘, the “ greatest centre-forward in England ”, for the failing local football club. villa have besides featured on several occasions in prose. Stanley Woolley, a character in Derek Robinson ‘s Booker shortlisted novel Goshawk Squadron is an Aston Villa fan and names a pre-war starting football team Villa side. together with The Oval, Villa Park is referenced by the poet Philip Larkin in his poem about the foremost World War, MCMXIV. [ 139 ] Aston Villa are besides mentioned in Harold Pinter ‘s play The Dumb Waiter. [ 140 ] luminary supporters of Aston Villa include Prince William, [ 141 ] former Prime Minister David Cameron, musician Ozzy Osbourne, actor Tom Hanks, and golfer Justin Rose. [ 142 ]
Aston Villa Women
Aston Villa have a women ‘s football slope that compete in the Women ‘s Super League having been promoted as champions of the 2019-20 FA Women ‘s Championship. They were founded as Solihull F.C. in 1973 and affiliated to Aston Villa in 1989. [ 143 ]
References
Specific
Works cited
- Brown, Danny; Milo Brittle (2006). Villains: The Inside Story of Aston Villa’s Hooligan Gangs. Milo Books. ISBN 978-1-903854-59-4.
- Goodyear, David; Matthews, Tony (1988). Aston Villa—A Complete Record 1874–1988. Breedon Books. ISBN 0-907969-37-2.
- Hayes, Dean (1997). The Villa Park Encyclopedia: A-Z of Aston Villa. Mainstream Publishing (2 October 1997). ISBN 978-1-85158-959-3.
- Ward, Adam; Griffin, Jeremy. The essential history of Aston Villa. Headline book publishing (2002). ISBN 0-7553-1140-X.
- When Saturday Comes: The Half Decent Football Book. Penguin UK. 2006. ISBN 978-0-14-192703-9.
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