Wimbledon F.C.
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This article refers to the original club from London which existed until 2003. For the relocated and renamed club, see Milton Keynes Dons F.C.. For the football club formed by supporters of Wimbledon F.C. when the owners announced their intent to relocate, see A.F.C. Wimbledon Wimbledon F.C. was the original name of a football club that played in South London, England. Founded in 1911 as Wimbledon Borough (a previous Wimbledon club formed in 1889 as Wimbledon Old Centrals, was disbanded in 1910), the club spent most of its history in non-league football, before a rapid ascent to the top flight of English football in the late 1970s and early 1980s, staying in the old First Division and then the Premiership from 1986 until 2000. In 1988, Wimbledon beat the then-champions Liverpool 1-0 in the FA Cup final, thus becoming the only football club in the country to have won both the professional and amateur versions of the Cup, having won the FA Amateur Cup back in 1963. Following the publication of the Taylor Report, which recommended that all top-flight clubs play in all-seater stadiums, the club's owner, Sam Hammam, decided to move the club from its Plough Lane home in 1991. Wimbledon began to ground-share with local rivals Crystal Palace, an arrangement that ended up lasting over 10 years. In 2003, the club relocated sixty miles north to Milton Keynes in Buckinghamshire. The move cited financial reasons (though this has been contested, and the club has yet to provide certified accounts for this period).[citation needed] The club was relaunched the following year with new club colours and a new badge as Milton Keynes Dons, but agreed in 2007 not to make any claim to be a continuation of Wimbledon FC and has returned all artefacts prior to 2004 to the London Borough of Merton. The move away from south London was deeply unpopular both with the club's established fan base and football supporters more generally. Supporters of Wimbledon F.C. responded to the move by forming a new club, A.F.C. Wimbledon, which they see as the direct continuation of the sporting representation of the people of Wimbledon.
HistoryAmateur beginningsWimbledon Old Centrals F.C. were formed in 1889, taking their name from Old Central School on Wimbledon Common, where players had been pupils. Founded in 1758, the Old Central School eventually closed in the early 1960s when its role was taken over by Bishop Gilpin School, a new school on a different site in Wimbledon. The original octagonal school building from 1758 was still standing in 2006 and in use as part of a private school, The Study. Early matches were played on the Common, and players used the Fox and Grapes public house, which is in the same road as the school, as the team's headquarters and changing room. The Old Centrals' name was changed to Wimbledon Football Club in 1905. The club continued to play on Wimbledon Common and at various other locations in the Wimbledon area until 1912, when they moved to Plough Lane, their home for the next 79 years. They became one of the best known amateur clubs in the country, winning the Isthmian League title eight times, and lifting the FA Amateur Cup in 1963, beating Sutton United F.C. 4-2. Prompted by its patriarch chairman Sydney Black, the club turned professional the following year, entering the Southern League, where they had continued success. The risingIn 1975, the club became nationally famous during a spectacular FA Cup run. They were the first non-league team that century to beat a First Division team at its own ground, when they defeated Burnley F.C. in the third round. In the fourth round they held the reigning First Division Champions, Leeds United F.C., to a draw at Elland Road, with goalkeeper Dickie Guy saving a penalty, before narrowly losing to an own goal in the replay at Selhurst Park, in front of over 40,000 spectators. On the strength of three successive Southern League championships, and also the fame derived from their FA Cup heroics, they were finally elected to the Football League in 1977, after several failed attempts. They were then promoted or relegated every season from 1979 to 1984, before rapidly reaching the First Division in 1986. They finished sixth in their first ever top division season, and early in 1986-87 had topped the league. FA Cup winDubbed "The Crazy Gang" because of the eccentric behaviour of their players and fans (and, indeed, the chairman, Sam Hammam), their greatest moment came in 1988 when, very much against expectation, they won the FA Cup beating the strong favourites Liverpool 1-0, with a goal from Lawrie Sanchez. 37,000 Dons fans witnessed Wimbledon captain Dave Beasant become the first goalkeeper to save a penalty in an FA Cup final, stopping a controversial spot-kick (Clive Goodyear had clearly played the ball from John Aldridge). The only downside of this triumph was the fact that they would not be able to compete in the European Cup Winners Cup, as the ban on English teams in European competitions - arising from the Heysel disaster - was still in operation at this time. Move to Selhurst ParkJust days after winning the FA Cup, the club's directors announced plans to build a new all-seater stadium in its home borough of Merton. But, ultimately, nothing came of these plans and at the end of the 1990–91 season Wimbledon decided that its cramped Plough Lane ground was beyond redevelopment to meet the (then) new FA rule requiring "all seater" stadiums.[1] Consequently, the club moved into Selhurst Park stadium (in the London Borough of Croydon), ground-sharing with Crystal Palace, where it remained for the next twelve years. 1990s: the 'Crazy Gang' in the PremiershipBobby Gould, manager of the FA Cup-winning side, remained in charge until the summer of 1990 when he was replaced by Ray Harford, who in 1988 had guided Luton Town to victory in the League Cup. In 1990–91, Wimbledon finished an impressive seventh in the First Division, and with the ban on English clubs in European competition now lifted, Wimbledon fans hoped that Harford could guide the club to a European place for the first time ever. Harford resigned in the autumn of 1991 to be replaced by Peter Withe, who remained in charge until the end of the season but was dismissed having proved highly unpopular with both players and fans. Wimbledon finished high enough in 1991–92 to become founder members of the new Premier League, and Joe Kinnear was appointed manager at the start of 1992–93. Wimbledon continued their strong form under Kinnear – the club's best seasons were 1993–94, 1994–95 and 1996–97, when Kinnear guided the club to respective sixth, ninth and eighth place finishes - during these seasons they often finished above bigger clubs like Arsenal, Tottenham, Everton and Liverpool. There were many quality players in the side, such as Robbie Earle, Lawrie Sanchez, Vinnie Jones, Dean Holdsworth, Warren Barton, Ben Thatcher and Oyvind Leonhardsen. Wimbledon came close to domestic trophy success in 1996–97, when they reached the semi finals of the FA Cup and League Cup, knocking out the holders of each Cup on the way and losing to the eventual winners in both competitions. At the end of the 1998-99 season, following a heart attack, Joe Kinnear resigned for personal reasons after seven years as Wimbledon manager. In the previous two seasons Wimbledon had finished just above the Premiership relegation zone, and the recent club record £7.5million signing of West Ham United striker John Hartson had done little to address matters. Wimbledon had by now been taken over by a Norwegian consortium led by Kjell Inge Røkke, who appointed Egil Olsen as manager. Olsen had taken the Norwegian national team to the World Cup tournaments of 1994 and 1998, and his new employers were hopeful that he could be a success at Wimbledon too. However, the transition proved to be the beginning of the end for the club. Relegation from the PremiershipOn the last day of the 1999-2000 season, Wimbledon lost to Southampton whilst their nearest league rivals Bradford achieved a surprise win over Liverpool, meaning that the club were finally relegated from the top division of English football after 14 years. Olsen had been dismissed two games earlier, to be replaced by team coach Terry Burton. Burton remained manager of Wimbledon for two seasons in Division One until he was controversially sacked at the end of 2001–2002 after the club had narrowly missed out on the promotion playoffs two seasons in a row. Notable players on the club's books during these years included Ireland captain Kenny Cunningham, Nigel Reo-Coker and Damien Francis and defender Ben Thatcher. After Burton's dismissal, goalkeeping coach Stuart Murdoch took over as manager. Move to Milton Keynes
Wimbledon's success in the top-flight of English football was founded on shrewd financial management and judicious dealings in the transfer market.[2] The club's average attendances were generally amongst the lowest in the Premiership, and comparable to a good Championship side, but sound management and an outstanding football academy meant that the club had remained highly competitive, and had enjoyed a long period of stability and relative success at the top level of English football. However, with inflation in costs, the club began to lose money heavily.[2] The club's original owners felt that they could restore the club to profitability if they could be allowed to move it away from London entirely to a more profitable location.[2] Such a proposal was against league rules,[3]and news of the scheme aroused much anger from supporters. Dublin, Belfast and Cardiff were considered as potential new locations, but none of these proposals got off the ground. Such a move (over 60 miles[4]) was unprecedented in English football (and although there was arguably a precedent in Scottish football, the Scots system does not have an open pyramid structure). The club's fans saw the move as akin to the American sports "franchise" system, a concept unknown in English football; the traditional view of a football club is that it is an important part of the community and local fabric, rather than simply a business. The proposed move was vehemently opposed in all quarters - not merely by the club's fans and fans of many other clubs who held sympathetic views, but by both the Football League (whose committee voted unanimously to reject the move) and the Football Association. Following the Football League vote, the owners of the club appealed against the decision to the The Football Association, who established a three-man commission to consider the request[5]. The commission ruled in favour of the move, and consequently on May 28, 2002 the FA reluctantly gave permission for the club to relocate to Milton Keynes. The then-Chief Executive of the FA, Adam Crozier, said that although the FA had to abide by the decision of the three-man commission, they did not believe the move was a good thing for the game. Crozier publically stated that he personally felt it was an "appalling decision"[6]. The affair caused Wimbledon F.C to be nick-named pejoratively as "Franchise F.C." Many of the club's fans, angered at the move and the removal of their team, founded their own club AFC Wimbledon, in 2002. Despite having to start at the 8th level of the football pyramid, AFC Wimbledon enjoys very sizeable support from former Wimbledon F.C. fans. The club currently plays in the Isthmian League Premier Division, having already achieved two successive promotions in its short history (the same number of relegations achieved by the Milton Keynes Dons in the same period). 2002-03 was Wimbledon F.C.'s last full season at Selhurst Park. With most fans having by now deserted the club in protest, the average attendance at Selhurst Park fell to around the 1500 mark - the majority of these being away fans. The team finished in 10th place in Division One. They began playing in Milton Keynes early in the following season. However, before the move itself took place (nearly a year after the FA Commission's decision to approve the move on the 28 May 2002), Wimbledon F.C. went into financial administration with debts of more than £20 million. Part of the reason for the increasing debts was that football supporters were boycotting games following the unpopular decision to allow the move to Milton Keynes. 2003-04 was a disastrous season for Wimbledon FC at its Milton Keynes base. After the move to Milton Keynes, attendances improved only marginally. But, with the administrators selling off any players that could command a transfer fee, the club's abysmal league performance saw them relegated in bottom place after 33 defeats - the joint second-worst record for the most league defeats in English football history. Only Doncaster (34 defeats) have lost more games in a league season (when they were relegated to the Conference in 1998). After the end of the season, the new owner of the business, Mr Peter Winkelman, cut all existing ties to the team's original home town, by abandoning the club's historic badge and colours, and renaming the club "Milton Keynes Dons F.C.". This name change, which was not popular with the few original Wimbledon fans who had followed the club so far from south London, marked the end of Wimbledon F.C. Winkelman had registered the domain name "mkdons.com" four years earlier, suggesting that he had intended to rename the club since before the move to Milton Keynes had taken place. Honours
Grounds
League history
Managers in the Football League
Notable Former Players
Wimbledon Old Players AssociationCurrently 87 former Wimbledon FC players and managers have joined the Wimbledon Old Players Association[7], an organisation set up by the Wimbledon Independent Supporters Association to enable ex-players and managers of Wimbledon (both Wimbledon F.C. and AFC Wimbledon) to get in touch with one another, and keep them in touch with events happening throughout the community. WOPA members include Neal Ardley, Dave Beasant, Efan Ekoku, John Fashanu, Marcus Gayle, Dickie Guy, Roger Joseph, John Scales, Hans Segers, Neil Sullivan and Dennis Wise, among others. WOPA organises the Wimbledon team for the annual Masters football tournament. See also
References
Further reading
External links
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