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ASTON VILLA HOME JERSEY |
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Aston Villa
Football Club play at Villa Park in Birmingham, England.
They currently play in the Premier League. Aston Villa were
founding members of the Football League in 1888 and of the
Premier League in 1992. It is one of the oldest and most
successful clubs in England.
Aston Villa Football Club was formed in March 1874 by
members of the Villa Cross Wesleyan Chapel in Aston,
Birmingham. Members of the Aston Villa cricket team were
looking for a way to stay fit during the winter months and
decided to adopt the new sport of football. The 'Four
Founding Fathers' were Jack Hughes, Frederick Matthews,
Walter Price and William Scattergood. Little did they know
that the team they formed would go on to become the most
famous and admired football club in the world by the end of
Queen Victoria's reign.
Aston Villa's first match was against the local Aston Brook
St Mary's Rugby team and as a condition of the match, the
Villa side had to agree to play the first half under rugby
rules and the second half under football rules! Amazingly
Villa managed to hold St Mary's to a pointless draw up to
half time and in the second half won the historic affair by
one goal, scored by Jack Hughes. Villa won their first
honour, the Birmingham Challenge Cup in 1880, under the
captaincy of Scotsman George Ramsay. The club won its first
FA Cup in 1887, by which time football had become
professional. However, the Scottish draper and director of
Aston Villa, William McGregor had become frustrated with one-sided
friendly matches and low attendances for all games but FA
Cup ties. He saw that in order to keep interest in the game
alive the top teams needed to play each other in a league
much like American baseball teams did. So he wrote to the 12
leading clubs in England proposing the formation of a league.
The reason the Football League was never called the English
League is because McGregor intended Scottish and Welsh teams
to join eventually. Naturally, Aston Villa were one of the
dozen teams that competed in the inaugural Football League
in 1888 finishing runners-up.
It didn't take long for Villa to lift their first League
Championship trophy, and this was achieved in 1893/94. This
would signal the start of Aston Villa's 'Golden Age' and by
the start of the First World War the club had won the League
Championship six times and the FA Cup five times, including
in 1896/97, a League and Cup Double, a feat which would not
be repeated for more than 60 years.
Although they remained a major force after the war, winning
their sixth FA Cup in 1920, the club began a slow decline.
This can be attributed in large part to a complacency which
culminated in the unthinkable, the most famous and
successful football club in world being relegated to the
Second Division in 1936. However, throughout the 1920's and
into the 1930's the club had many fine international players
(in 1933/34 Villa had no fewer than 14 full internationals)
and continued to challenge for honours, Villa were FA Cup
runners-up in 1924 and second in the League in 1931 and
1933. Throughout this period the Villa Park crowds were
entertained with attacking football and goals galore, in
season 1930/31 Tom 'Pongo' Waring scored 49 of Aston Villa's
128 league goals, however Villa were denied the title by the
sensational Arsenal team of the 30's.
The club's decision to appoint their first manager coincided
with relegated for the first time in 1935/36. This was
largely due a dismal defensive record, they conceded 110
goals, 7 of them coming from Arsenal's Ted Drake in the
infamous defeat at Highbury. However 'The Grand Old Man' of
football was crowned Second Division Champions in 1937/38
under the guidance of Jimmy Hogan, Aston Villa were back
where they belonged by the outbreak of The Second World War.
Seven seasons were lost and many careers were finished due
to the conflict and Aston Villa went about rebuilding the
team under the guidance of former player, Alex Massie. The
remainder of the 1940's and the 1950's saw Villa try to re-establish
themselves as a top team. However, Villa could only be
described as mediocre during this period, although they had
some good players and attendances were high. Season 1956/57
saw Villa go on an unexpected FA Cup run that would
culminate in them defeating the 'Busby Babes' of Manchester
United in the final. It was Aston Villa's first trophy for
37 years.
However this success proved to be a false dawn with the team
finishing 14th in the league the following season. Eric
Houghton was sacked (after refusing to resign) when
relegation loomed in 1958/59. His successor Joe Mercer was
unable to prevent the club being relegated for the second
time in 1959. Again a complacency had set in at the club,
the famous Aston Villa had won the FA Cup for a record
seventh time, this only served to fuel the belief that Villa
were too good to go down. A return to the top flight was
assured however in 1960 when Villa were crowned Second
Division Champions. Season 1960/61 saw Villa win the
inaugural League Cup and finish repectably in the league,
this was achieved with an exciting nucleus of youth players
who became known as 'Mercer's Minors'.
The slow decline continued throughout the 1960's due to a
deep seated malaise, the club had failed to adapt to the new
football reality, they had a non-existent scouting network,
coaching was conducted in the same way as it had been 40
years earlier and the 5 man board contained 3 members over
the age of 70. It was the board who decided that they
couldn't refuse offers for their two most reliable
goalscorers, Phil Woosnam and Tony Hateley. Without their
goals Villa were in real trouble and were relegated for the
third time, under manager Dick Taylor in 1967. The fans
calls for the board to resign became more and more urgent
when Villa finished 16th in the Second Division in 1968. In
a desperate attempt to avert total disaster, relegation to
the Third Division, the manager, Tommy Cummings was given
£200,000 to spend on new players, and with supporters
boycotting Villa's home games in protest at the board, debts
mounted. Events on the pitch came to a head in November
1968, with Villa lying at the bottom of Division Two, the
board sacked Cummings and within weeks the entire board
resigned due to overwhelming pressure from fans. After much
speculation, control of the club was bought by London
financier Pat Matthews, he also brought in Doug Ellis as
chairman and Tommy Docherty as manager.
However, despite breathing new life into the club and
initial success, Docherty was unable to lift the team out of
the danger zone and he was sacked after just a year in
charge. His successor Vic Crowe, was unable to prevent Aston
Villa from being relegated to the Third Division for the
first time its history. Amazingly the following season Villa
reached the League Cup final after beating Manchester United
in the semi-final. They were eventually defeated in the
final by two late Tottenham goals. The only way was up for
Villa and in 1971/72 they finished top of the league with a
team that was simply too good for Division Three. The team
narrowly missed out on successive promotions when they
finished third on their return to Second Division football
in 1972/73. However the following season Villa struggled and
Doug Ellis sacked Crowe replacing him with Ron Saunders.
Aston Villa's centenary season provided the double success
of a League Cup final victory over Norwich and promotion to
the First Division after an absence of eight seasons in
1974/75. Villa were back and due to their League Cup success
were in Europe for the first time. Although Villa were
knocked out in the first round by Antwerp, Saunders was
assembling a team that would go on to win the European Cup
seven years later. Villa won the League Cup again in 1977 by
beating Everton after two final replays. The following
season saw Villa reach the quarter-final of the UEFA Cup
where they held their own against Spanish giants, Barcelona.
That night at the Nou Camp finally laid to rest the
nightmare of the previous 10 years, Aston Villa were finally
back amongst the footballing elite.
By 1981 Villa's supporters were celebrating a first league
championship in 71 years, and this was followed by the
European Cup in 1982. The European Super Cup was added to
Villa's trophy cabinet in 1983 when they defeated Barcelona
3-1 over two legs. In more recent times, Aston Villa have
won the League Cup twice in the 1990s (1994 and 1996) and as
well as runners-up in the old First Division/new Premier
League (1989-1990 and 1992-1993 seasons). The club reached
its first FA Cup final for 43 years in 2000, narrowly losing
1-0 to Chelsea F.C. in the last Cup Final to be played at
old Wembley. |
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