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Manchester City FC
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Manchester City FC Information
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| Address: |
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City
of Manchester Stadium, Rowsley Street, Eastlands, Manchester.
M11 3FF |
| Telephone: |
(0161)
231 3200 |
| Fax: |
(0161)
438 7999 |
| Founded: |
1887 |
| Stadium: |
City
of Manchester Stadium |
| Website: |
www.mcfc.co.uk |
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Manchester City FC History
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Manchester City F.C. is a football
club based in Manchester, United Kingdom. Having been formed in
1880 as West Gorton Saint Marks, it went on to become Ardwick
F.C. in 1887 and moved to Hyde Road, before finally becoming
Manchester City F.C. in 1894.
Winning the Second Division in 1899 gave the club their first
honours. They went on to claim their first 'major' honour in
1904, beating Bolton Wanderers to claim the FA Cup. In 1923 they
moved to Maine Road in Moss Side, Manchester.
They first claimed the First Division title in 1937. The next
time was in 1968 - their "golden era" of football, acquiring
much silverware in the late 60s and early 70s under manager Joe
Mercer with the deadly contingent of Francis Lee, Colin Bell,
Mike Summerbee and Mike Doyle. Their most significant moment in
Europe was capturing the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1970 by
beating Gornik Zabrze 2-1 in Vienna.
One of the highlights of the last season in the old Maine Road
stadium (now demolished) was a 3-1 derby victory over their
Manchester rivals Manchester United to end a run of 13 years
without a win. A goal from Nicolas Anelka and two from Shaun
Goater, gave City full points. In 2003 they moved to The City of
Manchester Stadium, a newly constructed state of the art 48,000
seater stadium situated in East Manchester, which they lease
from the local council. In the 2002-2003 season they came 9th in
the Premiership and qualified for the 2003-2004 UEFA Cup through
the "fair play league".
They opened their new stadium with a 2-1 win over Spanish giants
F.C. Barcelona with goals scored by Nicolas Anelka and Trevor
Sinclair.
Their current squad contains the likes of Robbie Fowler, Steve
McManaman, David James, Shaun Wright-Phillips, Paul Bosvelt,
Trevor Sinclair and Claudio Reyna. Stuart Pearce is the
caretaker manager.
Over the previous two seasons, veteran goalkeepers Peter
Schmeichel and David Seaman have seen out their careers here.
In the pre-season of 2002-2003 they spent £13,500,000 (US$20,000,000)
on Anelka. Their rise was rapid; from being in the third tier of
English football in 1999, to being in European competition,
having a large stadium, with top facilities and having world
class players in their squad. In February 2005, a report by
accountants Deloitte & Touche ranked Manchester City as the 16th
richest club in the world in terms of income.
None of this, however, has diluted their distinguishing
characteristic of comical unpredictability. A brilliantly-headed
own-goal scored from some distance when playing Queens Park
Rangers in 1998 was not only voted by their fans as the goal of
the season, it was also instrumental in Manchester City's
subsequent relegation.
Fortunately, their supporters display great wit and loyalty.
When Arsenal F.C. played some of the best football ever seen at
Maine Road and scored four goals in the first forty-five
minutes, the stoic City fans responded with a chant of "boring,
boring Arsenal". Manchester City will never face that accusation.
2 Years later when they played the same team and found
themselves 5-0 down with a minute to spare, City scored a goal
to make it 5-1. City fans responded with a chant of "You're not
singing anymore" to the buoyant Arsenal fans.
Oasis are known to be huge supporters of Manchester City and
have played at Maine Road.
Stadium information
Since 2002 the club moved from Maine Road to the City of
Manchester Stadium, a newly constructed state of the art 48,000
seater stadium situated in East Manchester, which they purchased
from Manchester City Council after the Commonwealth Games were
held there in 2002.
Since moving to the stadium, Manchester City FC have spent about
GB£35 million on upgrading it and lowering the field of play
from ground level (during the Commonwealth Games) to below
ground level, adding an additional tier of seating around the
entire pitch and also building the new North Stand. |
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Manchester City FC Honours, Trophies & Awards
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Full Members
Challenge Cup
- Finalists
- 1986
First
Division (Old Format)
- Champions
- 1937,1968
- Runners-up
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1904,1921,1977
Division One
(New Format)
- Champions
- 2002
- Runners-up
- 2000
Second
Division (Old Format)
- Champions
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1899,1903,1910,1938,1947,1966
- Runners-up
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1896,1951,1989
Division Two
(New Format)
- Play-off
winners
- 1999
FA Cup
- Winners
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1903,1934,1956,1969
- Finalists
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1926,1933,1955,1981
League Cup
- Winners
- 1970,1976
- Runners-up
- 1974
European Cup
Winners' Cup
- Winners
- 1970
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