Arsenal F.C.
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2 New stadium 3 Crest 4 Famous players 5 Achievements 6 Top Scorers 7 External links |
Arsenal were originally called Dial Square. The club later changed its name to Woolwich Arsenal, since the original founders were arms makers at the Woolwich armaments factory in south London. From 1893 to 1904, Arsenal (the Woolwich was dropped sometime after 1891), played in the 2nd division professional of the Football League. They were promoted to the first division in 1904.
Arsenal wear a mostly red home kit, due to the charitable support of Nottingham Forest when the team donated their used kits at the end of a season. The kit of Forest stuck with Arsenal.
Arsenal were relegated in 1913, the same year they moved from their south London home to Arsenal Stadium (often referred to as Highbury) in north London. Arsenal rejoined the first division in 1919 and have remained in the top division since that time, a record which no other English club can come close to matching.
This unbroken stretch of top-flight football has come much to the chagrin and longstanding enmity of Tottenham Hotspur (or 'Spurs', for short) and their supporters, who arguably lost their first division place thanks to Arsenal. The first division was to be expanded and the decision to promote Arsenal, (who came fifth in the final league season before the war) rather than Barnsley or Wolves (who finished third and fourth), or to not relegate Spurs (who finished bottom of the first division), has been linked to dubious back room deals.
In 1925, Huddersfield Town manager Herbert Chapman took over at Arsenal. Under his leadership, a successful drive to rename the local tube station, Gillespie Road station, to Arsenal took place (the old name can still be seen picked out in tiles on the wall of the station). Chapman's Arsenal won the FA Cup in 1930 and the League in 1931. It can be said that Arsenal dominated the league during the decade of the 1930s. During the postwar era, Arsenal won several more trophies, but headed towards a decline in the late 1950s through the 1960s.
Arsenal's performance in the 1970s was characterized by a few moments of brilliance, separated by long spells of disappointment. The highlight during this period was their first "Double win in 1970/71. One need only read Nick Hornby's Fever Pitch for a taste of the life of an Arsenal fan, or Gooner (after the team's nickname The Gunners), during the late 1960s through the mid-1980s.
Under the management of George Graham, Arsenal once again rose to a regular spot at the top of the table, winning six major trophies in eight years. Arsenal's offside trap was known throughout the world (and provided a joke in The Full Monty), as was the paucity of their scoring rate and propensity for winning games by a single goal. This led to a standing joke amongst English football fans about the terrace chant "1-nil to the Arsenal" (to the tune of the Village People song "Go West") being a song consisting of a single verse. It is little known that the song originally came from French side Paris St. Germain, who sang "Allez Paris St. Germain" to this tune until Arsenal scored in their Cup Winners Cup match, spurring the Gooners to sing "One Nil to the Arsenal" in retort.
The rise of Manchester United under Sir Alex Ferguson provided a constant threat to Arsenal and, in fact to any team aiming at gathering silverware. Graham left Arsenal in 1994-1995 after being embroiled in a kickbacks for transfer contracts scandal. With his departure, Arsenal struggled under the management of Bruce Rioch and Stuart Houston, although Houston did lead the Gunners to the Cup Winners' Cup final. With the advent in 1996 of ArsÃÂène Wenger as manager, Arsenal began a rebuilding program with a crop of French players. The team has improved consistently under Wenger's management.
The agonising manner in which Arsenal lost the FA cup final in 2001 was a bitter blow to the clubs ambitions but Arsenal hit back in the 2001-2002 season as the club won "the Double for the second time under Wenger.
Still, the team has yet to register top finishes in continental competitions, such as the UEFA Champions League. This may have contributed to Thierry Henry's failure to win the FIFA World Player of the Year award in 2003. So far, Henry and other players have shown loyalty to the team and its manager, however, by renewing their contracts.
Limitations at Highbury has led the club to monetary losses in recent seasons despite impressive domestic form. To close the gap with rivals such as Manchester United, Arsenal are currently in the process of building a new 60,000 seater stadium at Ashburton Grove, about 500m South-West towards Holloway Road (map). While this project has been delayed somewhat due to bureaucratic red tape and rising costs, the club has secured financing and hopes that its new stadium will enable it to continue to develop and compete at the very highest level of English and continental football.
Throughout the years the Arsenal crest has modified slightly now and then, resulting in a crest which had no author who could claim the copyright. At the beginning of the 2001-2002 season when Arsenal changed sponsor from Sega/Dreamcast to mmO2, they also introduced a new 'modern' crest. It received a mixed response from fans, some claiming that it had ignored much of Arsenal's history by removing the gothic text, latin motto (Victoria Concordia Crescit which translated means 'victory comes from harmony') and coat of arms.
For more details, including Arsenal's youth and ladies trophies see (for example) http://www.arseweb.com/history/honours.html
History
Arsenal FC's Old Crest (
)New stadium
Crest
Famous players
Achievements
Three "Doubles": 1971 1998 2002
One Domestic Cup Double: 1993Top Scorers
As of March 14, 2004.
Goals Games Average
1 Ian Wright 185 288 0.64
2 Cliff Bastin 178 395 0.45
3 John Radford 149 475 0.31
4 * Thierry Henry 142 241 0.59
5 Ted Drake 139 184 0.76
6 Jimmy Brain 139 232 0.60
7 Doug Lishman 137 244 0.56
8 Joe Hulme 125 374 0.33
9 David Jack 124 208 0.60
10 Reg Lewis 118 176 0.67
11 Alan Smith 115 347 0.33
12 Jack Lambert 109 161 0.68
13 Frank Stapleton 108 300 0.36
14 * Dennis Bergkamp 108 344 0.31
15 David Herd 107 180 0.59
16 Joe Baker 100 156 0.64External links