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Sheffield United F.C.

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Sheffield United
Image:Bladeslogo2.png
Full name Sheffield United
Football Club
Nickname(s) The Blades, United,
Red and white wizards
Founded 1889
Ground Bramall Lane
Sheffield
(Capacity 32,609)
Chairman Flag of England Terry Robinson
Manager Flag of England Kevin Blackwell
League The Championship
2006–07 Premier League, 18th
(Relegated)
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Sheffield United Football Club is a professional English football club based in the city of Sheffield, South Yorkshire. They currently play in the English Football League Championship after they were relegated from the Premier League in 2007 on the last day of the season. They play at Bramall Lane, in Sheffield wearing a strip of red and white striped shirts.

Their nickname is The Blades, which can be seen on the team's emblem that is said to have been designed by former player Jimmy Hagan.[1] They have the nickname The Blades due to Sheffield's worldwide reputation of steel production.[2] The emblem was first used for the 1977-78 season, replacing the city's coat of arms that had been used since 1966. Like all clubs, Sheffield United have a great range of songs and chants sung by their fans, including the most notable: their unofficial anthem, The Greasy Chip Butty Song, which is sung before each half[3], and often after the game if the team has performed well.

Sheffield United won the League in 1898 and the FA Cup in 1899, 1902, 1915 and 1925. They were beaten finalists in the FA Cup in 1901 and 1936. Their best performance in the League Cup was reaching the semi finals in 2003.

Contents

History

For more details on this topic, see Sheffield United F.C. seasons.
Image:Facupfinal1901-D.jpg
United conceding the third goal in the 1901 FA Cup Final against Tottenham Hotspur in Bolton

Sheffield United formed in 1889 at the Adelphi Hotel, Sheffield (now the site of the Crucible Theatre) as a way of keeping the Sheffield United Cricket Club together during the winter close season, and generating income revenues from Bramall Lane over the winter. Gradually, as football took off, the football team supplanted the cricket team, such that in 1975, cricket was no longer played at Bramall Lane.

Undoubtedly United's heyday was the 30 year period from 1895-1925, when they were champions of England in 1897-98 and runners up in 1896-97 and 1899-1900, and FA Cup winners in 1899, 1902, 1915 and 1925, finishing runners up in 1901, and also eleven years after their cup final win in 1936. United have not won a trophy since 1925, bar those associated with promotion from lower-leagues, though they did reach both domestic cup semi-finals and the First Division play-off final in the 2002-03 season, ultimately losing all three matches.

Their darkest days were the 1975-76 to 81-82 seasons, where three relegations in six seasons saw The Blades drop from the top-flight to the fourth division, but this was soon followed by United's best period until Neil Warnock took the managerial helm, with Dave Bassett as manager masterminding successive promotions in the 1988-89 and 1989-90 seasons, to put United back in the top flight in time for the beginning of the Premiership's inception in 1992

The Ground

Main article: Bramall Lane

The Blades play at Bramall Lane in Sharrow, a suburb near the centre of Sheffield. Bramall Lane is the oldest major ground anywhere in the world, having hosted its first game in 1862,[4] a match between Hallam F.C. and Sheffield Club. It was originally a cricket ground and the first important match played here was between Yorkshire and Sussex in 1855. A cricket club was formed in 1854 named Sheffield United Cricket Club and Bramall Lane was leased to the club by the Duke of Norfolk. The ground was opened with a cricket match on 30 April, 1855. Yorkshire County Cricket Club also formed here, and played most of their games in Sheffield at Bramall Lane until the last match on 7 August, 1973 against their old rivals, Lancashire. The ground has seen expansion in recent years, and by 2006, on completion of a 2000 seat corner stand,[5] was an all-seater stadium holding 32,609.[6] The first ever floodlit football match took place at Bramall Lane on the 15 October 1878.

Colours and Crest

Sheffield United may be known for their red and white striped kits, but The Blades began playing in white shirts and blue shorts. They briefly flirted with narrow red stripes for the 1890-91 season, before returning to all white the following year. The stripes returned in the 1892-93 season, with black shorts replacing the blue in 1904. The shirts remained largely unchanged until collars were first removed in 1955, replaced by V-necks until the 1966-67 season (when white socks were also used), and from here on the neck style varied hugely.

The traditional red and white striped remained while the 1974-75 season, when elements of black were added, until the 1979-81 kit. This was essentially white with a red breast, and with thin stripes down either side, and was created to accommodate the Cantor's logo, the club's principal sponsor. This was to be replaced by a striped kit, with the sponsor Bentley's (1981-82) and Renault (1982-83) written vertically down a white stripe over the left-hand side. Stripes continued while the 1995-96 season, albeit with various aids to accommodate the sponsors, including a yellow square for Laver from 1988-92 (the 1990-92 shirt also featured narrow black stripes through each white stripe) and a black hoop, also for Laver in the 1994-95 season. Then came the diamond kit, which was so badly received that the club reverted to stripes rather hastily the following season. Since then, red and white stripes and black socks with varying trim have been the order of the day, with black shorts for all but the 2002-05 seasons, when white and then red were tried.[7] Sheffield United's home colours have been the inspiration for the kit of Irish club, Derry City. In 1934, Derry City adopted the stripes, while Billy Gillespie was manager of the club, in recognition of Gillespie's achievements at Sheffield United.[8]

The first time a crest appeared on the shirt was actually in the 1891-92 season, when a red crest appeared on the white shirt, but this disappeared the following season. United used the city of Sheffield's coat of arms from 1965-77, when a new crest was used, introduced by former manager Jimmy Sirrel, but designed apparently over 20 years previously by former player Jimmy Hagan. This consisted of two white crossed swords, or blades, the club's nickname, with a Yorkshire Rose (white) above, on a black background. This is surrounded by a red ring with "Sheffield United F.C." written around the top and "1889", the year the club was founded, underneath. This had been altered very slightly a few times, with a simple black embroidered crest appearing on shirts from 1987-90, and an all-white crest on a red-edged black shield for the 1992-99 seasons, when shields were in fashion with English football clubs, but from 2000-present it has reverted to its original form.

Sheffield United's shirt sponsor was Hfs Loans for the 2004-05 and 2005-06 seasons. Following the takeover of Hfs Loans by Capital One, the shirt sponsor is now Capital One.[9]

Players

As of 12 March 2008.[10]

Current squad

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Ireland GK Paddy Kenny
3 Flag of Scotland DF Gary Naysmith
5 Flag of England DF Chris Morgan (captain)
6 Flag of England FW James Beattie
7 Flag of Jamaica FW Luton Shelton
8 Flag of England FW Jon Stead
9 Flag of England FW Rob Hulse
10 Flag of England FW Danny Webber
12 Flag of Wales MF David Cotterill (on loan from Wigan Athletic)
13 Flag of England GK Ian Bennett
14 Flag of Australia MF David Carney
15 Flag of Wales MF Gary Speed (on loan from Bolton Wanderers)
16 Flag of England DF Matthew Kilgallon
17 Flag of Scotland MF Nick Montgomery
18 Flag of England MF Michael Tonge
No. Position Player
19 Image:Ulster banner.svg MF Keith Gillespie
20 Flag of Scotland DF Chris Armstrong
22 Flag of England DF Chris Lucketti
23 Flag of England MF Lee Martin (on loan from Manchester United)
24 Flag of England FW Billy Sharp
26 Flag of Ireland DF Derek Geary
28 Flag of Ireland MF Stephen Quinn
30 Flag of the People's Republic of China MF Li Tie
31 Flag of England MF Nicky Law
33 Flag of England DF Ugo Ehiogu
–– Flag of England FW Dean Oliver
–– Flag of England FW Jordan Robertson
–– Flag of Poland MF Zeyn Alabidyn S-Latef
–– Flag of Sweden FW Goran Slavkovski (on loan from Inter Milan)
–– Flag of England FW Nicky Travis

On loan

No. Position Player
11 Flag of England MF Lee Hendrie (on loan at Leicester City)
25 Flag of England GK Paul Gerrard (on loan at Blackpool)
29 Flag of England FW Geoff Horsfield (on loan at Scunthorpe United)
35 Flag of England MF James Ashmore (on loan at Macclesfield Town)
–– Flag of England GK Jamie Annerson (on loan at Chesterfield)
No. Position Player
–– Flag of England DF Ryan Cresswell (on loan at Macclesfield Town)
–– Flag of England MF Lloyd Kerry (on loan at Chesterfield)
–– Flag of England DF Kyle Naughton (on loan at Gretna)
–– Flag of Senegal DF Mamadou Seck (on loan at Scunthorpe United)
–– Flag of Poland DF Ben Starosta (on loan at Bradford City)

Notable former players

For more details on this topic, see List of Sheffield United F.C. former players.

Reserve and Academy teams

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