Encyclopedia:
Southampton F.C.,
The Dell (Southampton F.C.),
Category:Southampton F.C. players,
Category:Southampton F.C. managers,
Category:Southampton F.C.,
Q.K. Southampton F.C.,
Southampton F.C. Academy,
Talk:Southampton F.C.,
Template:Southampton F.C. Squad,
List of Southampton F.C. players
Southampton Football Club (originally
St Mary's YMA) are an
English football team, nicknamed
The Saints. Based in the city of
Southampton in
Hampshire, the team was formed in
November 1885. In
1898 the team moved into
The Dell, the ground which was to be their home for over 100 years. However, as a result of a limited stadium capacity, the team moved to
St Mary's Stadium in
2001. The current stadium is more than double the size of its predecessor, and has staged England internationals. The club's parent company is
Southampton Leisure Holdings PLC.
Their finest hour was their
FA Cup win in
1976, when they beat
Manchester United 1-0. They also were the runners-up in
2003 against
Arsenal and runners-up in the
1979 League Cup final against
Nottingham Forest. Southampton also finished runners-up in the Football League Championship to Liverpool in 1983/84.
Following the departure of manager
Harry Redknapp on
December 7 2005,
George Burley was appointed to the position of Head Coach on
December 22 2005. They have since sold 17-year-old
Theo Walcott, arguably their best home grown player since
Matt Le Tissier, to Arsenal.
Southampton reached their first F.A Cup final in 1900, losing to Bury, but had to wait until 1976 to win the trophy - beating Manchester United 1-0 at Wembley. In 1984 they finished second in the league to claim their highest-ever league finish. They were founder members of the Premier League in 1992 and competed in its first 13 seasons before finally being relegated in 2005.
Significant former managers of the Saints include
Gordon Strachan,
Glenn Hoddle,
Alan Ball,
Graeme Souness,
Lawrie McMenemy and
Ted Bates. Significant former players include
Terry Paine,
Matthew Le Tissier,
Kevin Keegan,
Mick Channon,
Alan Shearer,
Steve Moran,
Wayne Bridge,
Peter Shilton and
Antti Niemi.
History
Early days
In 2001 the move from
The Dell to the new Friends Provident
St Mary's Stadium was something of a spiritual homecoming for Southampton FC.
The team that play in red and white today can trace their roots back to the club formed in 1885 by members of St. Mary’s Church Young Men’s Association who played their football on the banks of the
River Itchen for 13 years before moving on.
Originally called Southampton St. Mary’s, the club joined the
Southern League in 1894 and won the championship for 3 years running between 1897 and 1899 and again in 1901, 1903 and 1904.
That success spanned some major changes for the Saints as they moved to a newly built £10000 stadium called
The Dell, to the North West of the city centre in 1898. Although they would spend the next 103 years there, the future was far from certain in those early days and the club had to rent the premises first before they could stump up the cash to buy the stadium in the early part of the 20th century.
Good omens were quick to arrive though and before the 19th century was out the South Coast was given a taste of things to come as they reached the first of their four
FA Cup Finals in 1900. On that day they went down 4-0 to
Bury and three years later they would suffer a similar fate at the hands of
Sheffield United as they were beaten 2-1 in a replay, but it had given the club a thirst for the big occasion – albeit one that would not be truly satisfied for over 7 decades.
After the
First World War, when many teams were broken up by the call of National Service, Saints joined the newly-formed Football League Division 3 in 1920 which split into South and North sections a year later. The
1920/21 season ended in triumph with promotion and marked the beginning of a 31-year stay in Division 2.
Saints were briefly forced to switch home matches to the ground of their local rivals
Portsmouth F.C. at Fratton Park during the
Second World War when a bomb landed on The Dell pitch, leaving an 18-foot crater which damaged an underground culvert and flooded the pitch.
Promotion was narrowly missed in
1949 by a margin of one point and then on goal average in
1950 as
Charlie Wayman rattled in a total of 56 goals. The relegation in
1953 sent Saints sliding back into Division 3 (South).
It took until
1960 for Saints to regain Division 2 status with
Derek Reeves plundering 39 of the champions’ 106 league goals. On
27 April 1963 a crowd of 68000 at
Villa Park saw them lose 1-0 to
Manchester United in the FA Cup semi-final.
The dream of Division 1 football at the Dell for the first time was finally realised in
1966 when
Ted Bates’ team were promoted as runners-up. It was a never-to-be-forgotten achievement.
For the following campaign
Ron Davies arrived to score 43 goals in his first season and Saints stayed among the elite for eight years. Twice they qualified for Europe before becoming the first victims of the new 3-down relegation system in
1974.
Cup glory
Although Southampton had made several appearances in the First Division of the English league, they never really grabbed the headlines until the 1975-76 season—when they were a Second Division side. A Southampton side managed by
Lawrie McMenemy reached the
FA Cup Final, playing Manchester United at Wembley Stadium, and surprised all observers by beating United 1-0 thanks to a goal from
Bobby Stokes. Southampton continued to progress well under McMenemy's stewardship, finishing runners-up in the league in 1983-84.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2094-2047029,00.htmlThey finished fifth the following year, but as a result of the
Heysel Disaster all English clubs were banned from European competition - had it not been for this, then Southampton would have qualified for the
UEFA Cup once again.
After McMenemy
Lawrie McMenemy left at the end of the 1984-85 season to be succeeded by
Chris Nicholl, who was sacked after six years in charge despite preserving the club's top flight status. He was replaced by former Southampton player
Ian Branfoot, who until the end of the 1990-91 season had been assistant manager to
Steve Coppell at
Crystal Palace. By this stage a key player in the Southampton lineup was
Guernsey-born striker
Matthew Le Tissier, the best-loved player in Saints' recent history. He was voted
PFA Young Player of the Year in
1990 and later made seven appearances for the England team—he finally retired in
2002 at the age of 33.
Southampton in the Premiership
Southampton were founding members of the Premiership in 1992-93, having played in the top flight of English football since 1978. In May 2005 they were relegated to the 2nd tier of English football for the first time in 27 years.
Ian Branfoot was sacked in January 1994 with Southampton battling relegation. He was replaced by Exeter manager
Alan Ball, who like Branfoot was a former Southampton player. Ball secured the Saints' survival for the 1993-94 season and guided them to a respectable tenth-place finish in the Premiership in 1994-95, with inspirational performances from
Matthew Le Tissier. But Ball was lured to
Manchester City in the summer of 1995 and Southampton turned to long-serving coach
David Merrington to take charge of the team in 1995-96. Southampton finished 17th with 38 league points, avoiding relegation on goal difference. Two important wins during the final weeks of the season did much to ensure that Saints and not Manchester City would achieve Premiership survival. First came a 3-1 home win over eventual double winners Manchester United, then came a 1-0 away win over relegated
Bolton Wanderers. Merrington was dismissed a few days after the end of the season and replaced by former
Liverpool and
Rangers manager
Graeme Souness.
Southampton fared little better in 1996-97 despite the arrival of Souness, whose track record included two Scottish league titles with Rangers and an FA Cup victory with Liverpool. He resigned after just one season in charge, which had seen Southampton finish 16th in the Premiership, and Southampton's directors turned to
Dave Jones—one of the most respected managers outside the Premiership who had won promotion to Division One with
Stockport County as well as reaching the League Cup semi finals.
With such an inexperienced manager, Southampton were tipped by many observers to be relegated from the Premiership in 1997-98. But thanks to the addition of young striker
Kevin Davies, and the acquisition of a few others, Southampton achieved a respectable 11th place finish in the table. Their form dipped in 1998-99 but they avoided relegation on the last day of the season. In 1999 Southampton were given the go-ahead to build a new 32,000-seat stadium in the St Mary's area of the city, a welcome move after playing in the cramped Dell since 1898.
During the 1999-2000 season, Dave Jones quit as Southampton manager to concentrate on a court case after he was accused of abusing children at the children's home where he had worked during the 1980s. The accusations were later proved to be groundless but it was too late to save Jones's career as Southampton manager and he was succeeded by ex-England team manager
Glenn Hoddle.
Glenn Hoddle helped keep Southampton well clear of the Premiership drop zone but having received an offer from a higher profile club, he moved to
Tottenham Hotspur just before the end of the 2000-01 season. He was replaced by first-team coach
Stuart Gray, who oversaw the relocation to the St Mary's Stadium for the 2001-02 season. At the end of the 2000-01 season, in the last ever competitive match at the Dell, talismanic
Matthew Le Tissier came on late to strike the last ever goal in sublime fashion. Southampton finished the match 3-2 against
Arsenal, providing a fairy-tale ending to the days at The Dell. But Gray was sacked after a disastrous start to the following season, and in came ex-
Coventry manager
Gordon Strachan as his replacement.
Gordon Strachan did much to revitalise Southampton during the 2001-02 season, and they finished in a secure 11th place in the final table. They did even better in 2002-03, finished eighth in the Premiership and coming runners-up in the FA Cup to Arsenal (after losing 1-0 at the Millenium Stadium). Strachan resigned the following March and was replaced by
Paul Sturrock, who was in the process of guiding
Plymouth Argyle to their second promotion in three seasons.
Paul Sturrock suddenly announced his resignation just after the start of the 2004-05 season (eventually becoming the manager at Sheffield Wednesday), and first-team coach
Steve Wigley was put in charge of the first team. But a bad run of form saw Southampton once again battling near the foot of the Premiership table, and the club's directors felt that a more experienced manager was needed. So they turned to former
Portsmouth,
West Ham and
Bournemouth manager
Harry Redknapp.
On 15th May 2005, Southampton were relegated from the Premiership following a 2-1 home defeat to
Manchester United, thus ending 27 successive seasons of top division football.
Saints' managerial merry-go-round: A recent history
The last three years have seen considerable managerial instability at a club once known for rarely changing its bosses. Following the departure of
Gordon Strachan (who had led the Saints to their first FA Cup final since 1976), Plymouth manager
Paul Sturrock was appointed to the job in March
2004. However, rumours of player dissatisfaction and personal problems dogged Sturrock, and he was replaced just five months later by reserve team coach
Steve Wigley.
Wigley's tenure proved disastrous, with Southampton slipping further and further down the Premiership table. Frenchman
Christian Damiano was brought in to assist, but after a run of only one win in 14 games, both men's contracts were terminated. Wigley's short, tumultuous term as manager had parallels with a previous internal promotion,
Stuart Gray, a talented coach who was sacked as manager prior to Strachan's appointment in 2001.
The chairman overseeing this 'revolving-door' policy was
Rupert Lowe, who risked further fan ire when he appointed
Harry Redknapp manager on
December 8 2004. The news shocked much of the football world, as Redknapp had resigned as manager of Saints' arch-rivals
Portsmouth just days previously. Lowe and Southampton continued to make headlines after former England Rugby World Cup-winning coach
Sir Clive Woodward joined the club - eventually being appointed Technical Director.
Redknapp failed to rejuvenate the Saints, and the club were relegated to the
second tier of English football for the first time in 27 years. Saints made a disappointing start to the season, with the emergence of young star
Theo Walcott as a rare cause for optimism. Yet even more shocks were to await the fans.
On
November 24 2005, Portsmouth manager
Alain Perrin, the man who himself replaced Harry Redknapp at Southampton's arch-rivals, was sacked by chairman
Milan Mandaric. Rumours gradually grew apace that Mandaric and Redknapp had resolved the dispute that caused Redknapp to walk out in the first place, and that he was poised rejoin his former club.
With these rumours seemingly reaching breaking point in the media—not to mention the bookmakers—Redknapp walked out on Southampton on
December 3 2005. The two rival clubs found themselves at loggerheads over legal compensation, which threatened to leave Redknapp in limbo, but with the dispute eventually resolved, Redknapp rejoined Portsmouth on
December 7 2005. After three matches under caretaker manager
Dave Bassett and assistant
Dennis Wise,
George Burley was unveiled as the club's new manager on
December 22 to work alongside
Clive Woodward, who was promoted from Performance Director to Director of Football.
In the wake of overwhelming calls for him to stand down, Lowe eventually resigned on
June 30 2006, a few days before an
Extraordinary General Meeting that was predicted to see him removed from the club's board. He was replaced as Chairman by Jersey-based businessman
Michael Wilde who had become the club's major shareholder.
The Saints Trust
http://www.saintstrust.co.uk/index.php The Saints Trust, a
http://www.saintstrust.co.uk/membership.php democratic, not-for-profit organisation, committed to strengthening the voice of supporters in the decision making processes at Southampton Football Club, was officially launched on
3 February 2006. The aims of the trust are to:
- Strengthen the bonds between the Club and the local community.
- Work for the football and financial success of the club.
- Encourage and promote supporter representation on the club's board acting as communication to the supporters.
- Acquire shares in the club, formally creating a supporters' stakeholding.
The trust currently now over 700 members and the proxy control of some 720,000 shares, approximately 3% of the club.
Scummers and Skates: The Southampton-Portsmouth rivalry
See
South Coast DerbyMost league goals
* 185
Mick Channon 1966-1977 & 1979-1982
* 162
Matthew Le Tissier 1986-2002
* 160
Terry Paine 1956-1974
* 156
Bill Rawlings 1920-1927
* 154
George O’Brien 1959-1966
* 145
Derek Reeves 1954-1963
* 145
Eric Day 1945-1957
* 134
Ron Davies 1966-1973
* 97
Martin Chivers 1962-1968
* 90
Tommy Mulgrew 1954-1962
Sponsors
*
Rank Xerox -
1980*
Air Florida -
1983*
Draper Tools -
1984*
Dimplex -
1993*
Sanderson Group PLC -
1995*
Friends Provident -
1999*
Flybe.com -
2006Famous former Saints
For a more complete list see
List of Southampton F.C. players ;England
Alan Ball Ted Bates James Beattie Francis Benali Wayne Bridge Mick Channon Martin Chivers Peter Crouch Jason Dodd C.B. Fry Kevin Keegan Matthew Le Tissier Chris Marsden Steve Moran Peter Osgood Terry Paine Alf Ramsey Alan Shearer Peter Shilton Bobby Stokes Dave Watson Theo Walcott Steve Williams Mark Wright;Denmark
Ronnie Ekelund;Ecuador
Agustín Delgado;Finland
Antti Niemi;Ireland
Austin Hayes Jeff Kenna Andy Townsend Rory Delap;Israel
Eyal Berkovic;Latvia
Marian Pahars;Northern Ireland
*flagicon|Northern
Chris Nicholl;Senegal
Henri Camara Ali Dia;Spain
Lezama ;United States
Kasey Keller;Wales
Ron Davies Mark Hughes Paul Jones Peter Rodrigues;Yugoslavia
Ivan Golac;Zimbabwe
flagicon|South
Bruce GrobbelaarManagers
{|
|valign="top"|
* Cecil Knight (1894-1895)
* Charles Robson (1895-1897)
* Ernest Arnfield (1897-1911)
* George Swift (1911-1912)
*
Ernest Arnfield (1912-1919)
*
James McIntyre (1919-1924)
*
Arthur Chadwick (1924-1931)
*
George Kay (1931-1936)
*
George Cross (1936-1937)
*
Tom Parker (1937-1943)
*
Arthur Dominy (1943-1946)
*
Bill Dodgin Senior (1946-1949)
*
Sid Cann (1949-1951)
*
George Roughton (1952-1955)
|width="80"|
|valign="top"|
*
Ted Bates (1955-1973)
*
Lawrie McMenemy (1973-1985)
*
Chris Nicholl (1985-1991)
*
Ian Branfoot (1991-1994)
*
Alan Ball (1994-1995)
*
Dave Merrington (1995-1996)
*
Graeme Souness (1996-1997)
*
Dave Jones (1997-2000)
*
Glenn Hoddle (2000-2001)
*
Stuart Gray (2001)
*
Gordon Strachan (2001-2004)
*
Paul Sturrock (2004)
*
Steve Wigley (2004)
*
Harry Redknapp (2004-2005)
*
George Burley (2005-present)
|}
Club records
Biggest wins -
* 8-0 against
Northampton Town F.C.,
24 December 1921
* 9-3 against
Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C.,
18 September 1965
* 8-2 against
Coventry City F.C.,
28 April 1984
* 7-1 against
Ipswich Town F.C.,
7 January 1961 (FA Cup)
* 6-0 against
Luton Town F.C.,
8 February 1995 (FA Cup replay)
Biggest losses -
* 0-8 against
Tottenham Hotspur F.C.,
28 March 1936
* 0-8 against
Everton F.C.,
20 November 1971
Most appearances -
Terry Paine - 809 : 1956-1974
Most goals -
Mick Channon - 227 : 1966-1977, 1979-1982
Most goals in one season -
Derek Reeves - 44 : 1959/60
Youngest player -
Theo Walcott - 16 years 143 days. Against
Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C.,
6 August 2005
Most capped player while at Southampton -
Peter Shilton - 49 (125 in total)
Record transfers -
* Spent:
Rory Delap, £4,000,000 from
Derby County F.C.* Received:
Dean Richards, £8,100,000 to
Tottenham Hotspur F.C..
Record home attendance -
32,104 against
Liverpool F.C.,
18 January 2003 (1-0 to Liverpool)
Current playing squad
football squad
fs player| no=1 | nat=England | pos=GK | name=
Kelvin Davis fs player| no=2 | nat=Sweden | pos=DF | name=
Alexander Östlund fs player| no=3 | nat=Cape Verde | pos=DF | name=
Pelé fs player| no=4 | nat=Argentina | pos=MF | name=
Marcelo Sarmiento | other=on loan from
Racing de
fs player| no=5 | nat=Norway | pos=DF | name=Claus Lundekvam fs player| no=6 | nat=England | pos=DF | name=
Darren Powell fs player| no=7 | nat=Czech Republic | pos=MF | name=
Rudi Skácel fs player| no=8 | nat=England | pos=FW | name=
Bradley Wright-Phillips fs player| no=9 | nat=Poland | pos=FW | name=
Grzegorz Rasiak fs player| no=10 | nat=England | pos=MF | name=
Jermaine Wright fs player| no=11 | nat=Sweden | pos=DF | name=
Michael Svensson fs player| no=12 | nat=Czech Republic | pos=MF | name=
Mario Lička fs player| no=14 | nat=Spain| pos=MF | name=
Iñigo Idiakez football squad
fs player| no=15 | nat=Trinidad and Tobago | pos=FW | name=
Kenwyne Jones fs player| no=17 | nat=Algeria | pos=MF | name=
Djamel Belmadi fs player| no=18 | nat=England | pos=MF | name=
Nathan Dyer fs player| no=19 | nat=England | pos=DF | name=
Chris Makin fs player| no=20 | nat=England | pos=MF | name=
David Prutton fs player| no=21 | nat=Northern Ireland | pos=DF | name=
Chris Baird fs player| no=22 | nat=Wales | pos=DF | name=
Gareth Bale fs player| no=23 | nat=Colombia| pos=MF | name=
Jhon Viáfara fs player| no=26 | nat=England | pos=GK | name=
Kevin Miller fs player| no=28 | nat=Poland | pos=GK | name=
Bartosz Białkowski fs player| no=29 | nat=South Africa | pos=MF | name=
Andrew Surman fs player| no=35 | nat=England | pos=FW | name=
David McGoldrick fs player| no=38 | nat=Finland | pos=MF | name=
Tim Sparv fs player| no=41 | nat=England | pos=MF | name=
Adam Lallana football squad
Out on loan
football squad
fs player| no=16 | nat=England | pos=DF | name=
Martin Cranie | other=on loan to
Yeovil
fs player| no=25 | nat=England | pos=GK | name=Michael Poke | other=on loan to
fs player| no=27 | nat=England | pos=FW | name=
Leon Best | other=on loan to
Yeovil
fs player| no=36 | nat=England | pos=MF | name=Simon Gillett | other=on loan to
fs player| no=-- | nat=Wales | pos=DF | name=
Kyle Critchell | other=on loan to
Torquay
football squad
No squad numbers
football squad
fs player| no=-- | nat=England | pos=DF | name=Craig Richards fs player| no=-- | nat=England | pos=DF | name=
Sean Rudd fs player| no=-- | nat=Portugal | pos=MF | name=
Feliciano Condesso fs player| no=-- | nat=Wales | pos=MF | name=
Lloyd James fs player| no=-- | nat=England | pos=MF | name=
Josh Dutton-Black fs player| no=-- | nat=England | pos=MF | name=
Joseph Mills football squad
U18s
football squad
fs player| no=-- | nat=Slovakia | pos=GK | name=
Matej Rondoš fs player| no=-- | nat=England | pos=DF | name=
Michael Byrne fs player| no=-- | nat=England | pos=DF | name=
Oliver Lancashire fs player| no=22 | nat=Wales | pos=DF | name=
Gareth Bale (Now in first team squad)
fs player| no=-- | nat=England | pos=MF | name=
Jake Thomson fs player| no=-- | nat=England | pos=MF | name=
Jamie Hatch fs player| no=-- | nat=England | pos=MF | name=
Joseph Mills fs player| no=-- | nat=England | pos=FW | name=
Jamie White fs player| no=-- | nat=France | pos=FW | name=
Cedric Baseya fs player| no=-- | nat=Portugal | pos=FW | name=
Totti fs player| no=-- | nat=Scotland | pos=FW | name=
Matthew Patterson football squad
Non-playing staff
President John MortimoreChairman Michael WildeExecutive Directors Jim Hone (chief executive), Lee Hoos (operations director), David Jones (company secretary), Andy Oldknow (commercial director)
Non-executive Directors Leon Crouch, Mary Corbett,
Lawrie McMenemy MBE
Football Manager George BurleyCoaches Glynn Snodin (first team), Simon Hunt (chief scout), Malcolm Webster (goalkeeping), Stewart Henderson (reserve team)
Sports Scientists Paul Balsom (head of sports science), Scott McLachlan (performance analysis), Andy Barr (head of sports medicine)
External links
*
http://www.saintsfc.co.uk/index.asp Southampton F.C. official website*
http://www.saintsfcpics.co.uk/ Official Picture Website*
http://itsallsouthampton.wordpress.com/ Southampton FC Fixtures, Results, U18's, Reserves & General Information Website*
http://www.saintstrust.co.uk/ The Saints Trust - Supporters' Trust for Southampton Football Club *
http://www.Saintsforever.com/ Saintsforever - Unofficial Southampton F.C. FansiteReferences
*cite book |
author=Duncan Holley & Gary Chalk |
title=In That Number - A post-war chronicle of Southampton FC |
publisher=
Hagiology |
year=2003|
id=ISBN
*cite book |
author=Duncan Holley & Gary Chalk |
title=The Alphabet of the Saints|
publisher= ACL & Polar Publishing |
year=1992|
id=ISBN
*cite book |
author=Gary Chalk & Duncan Holley |
title=Saints - A complete record|
publisher= Breedon Books|
year=1987|
id=ISBN
*cite book |
author=David Bull & Bob Brunskell |
title=Match of the Millennium|
publisher=
Hagiology |
year=2000|
id=ISBN
*cite book |
author=Jeremy Wilson |
title=Southampton’s Cult Heroes|
publisher=Know The Score Books |
year=2006|
id=ISBN
Southampton
English Division
*Category:English football clubsCategory:Football (soccer) clubs established in 1885Category:Sport in HampshireCategory:FA Premier League clubsbg:Саутхемптън (отбор)cs:Southampton FCde:FC Southamptones:Southampton Football Clubfr:Southampton Football Clubit:Southampton F.C.he:מועדון הכדורגל סאות'המפטוןnl:Southampton FCja:サウスハンプトンFCno:Southampton FCpl:Southampton F.C.pt:Southampton FCsimple:Southampton F.C.sv:Southampton FCzh:南安普顿足球俱乐部