Portal:English football

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The English Football Portal

Football is the most popular sport in England, where the first modern set of rules for the code were established in 1863, which were a major influence on the development of the modern Laws of the Game. With over 40,000 association football clubs, England has more clubs involved in the code than any other country. England hosts the world's first club, Sheffield F.C.; the world's oldest professional association football club, Notts County; the oldest national governing body, the Football Association; the joint-oldest national team; the oldest national knockout competition, the FA Cup; and the oldest national league, the English Football League. Today England's top domestic league, the Premier League, is one of the most popular and richest sports leagues in the world, with five of the ten richest football clubs in the world as of 2022.

The England national football team is one of only eight teams to win the FIFA World Cup, having done so once, in 1966. A total of six English club teams have won the UEFA Champions League, formerly known as the European Cup. (Full article...)

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West Bromwich Albion memorabilia from the 1954 FA Cup
West Bromwich Albion Football Club are an English professional football club based in West Bromwich, West Midlands. They have competed in England's top-flight for a total of over 70 seasons overall, but as of this current season, the team plays in the Football League Championship, the second tier of English football. The club was formed in 1878 by workers from Salter's Spring Works in West Bromwich, and have played their home games at The Hawthorns since 1900.

Albion were one of the founding members of The Football League in 1888 but have won the league title only once, in 1919–20. They have had more success in the FA Cup, with five wins. The first came in 1888, the year the league was founded, and the most recent in 1968, their last major trophy. They also won the Football League Cup at the first attempt in 1966. Since the early 1980s the club has been less successful and they spent their longest ever period out of the top division from 1986 to 2002. During their exile from the top tier, in 1991, the Baggies fell to the third tier for the first time. However, Albion won promotion over their Black Country Neighbours, Wolves, in 2002, despite being 10 points ahead of them. For most of the 2000s, Albion yo-yoed between the Premiership and the second tier, before they were a mainstay in the top flight for the majority of the following decade. After relegation in 2018, Albion returned to the Premiership two years later, but went down the following year.

Did you know...

Comic version of the first international game
Comic version of the first international game
  • ...that in 1916, footballer Bob Benson volunteered to replace an absent Arsenal team-mate just before a game, only to collapse and die during the match?

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2000 champions Chester City's stadium
The Conference League Cup is the generic name of an English football competition, open to clubs playing in levels 5 or 6 of the English football league system, (steps 1 and 2 of the National League System), which covers the three Football Conference divisions.

The Conference League Cup was formed for the inaugural season of the Football Conference, in 1979–80 and existed for twenty-two seasons before being axed at the end of the 2000–01 season. It was briefly re-formed for the 2004–05 season, but it was again agreed not to renew the competition for the next season. With the transfer of sponsorship of the Conference to Blue Square for the start of the 2007–08 season two seasons later, the re-introduction of the competition was announced, scheduled to commence that very year.

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Ryan Valentine scores a penalty for Wrexham to keep them in the Football League
Ryan Valentine scores a penalty for Wrexham to keep them in the Football League
Credit: Mark Barnes

Ryan Valentine scores a penalty for Wrexham F.C. in the final game of the 2006-07 season against Boston United. The losers of this game would be relegated to the Football Conference league. Wrexham won 3-1 to keep their place in Football League Two.

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