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Notts County F.C.

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Notts County
Full nameNotts County Football Club
Founded1862
GroundMeadow Lane
Nottingham
Capacity19,588
ChairmanChristoffer Reedtz
ManagerLuke Williams
LeagueNational League
2018-19League Two, 23rd (Relegated)

Notts County Football Club is a football club in Nottingham, England, and also the oldest professional association football club in the world.[1] The club now plays in Football League One of the EFL, part of the English football league system. "The Magpies" play at the Meadow Lane stadium in black and white striped shirts.

The club has also played many times in the top division of English football, the most recent in 1991–92, when they played in the last season of the old First Division before the creation of the Premier League.

Well-known past managers of Notts County have been Jimmy Sirrel, Neil Warnock, and Sam Allardyce.

Formation and early years

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Notts County started in 1862. The club was started before The Football Association and in the beginning they played a game with club rules, rather than association football. When it started, Notts County, like most sports teams, were considered to be a "gentlemen-only" club. Notts County are thought to be to be one of the starters of the current game, even being credited with the invention of the offside trap.[2] Notts County is the oldest of the world's professional association football clubs.[3][4][5]

The club in the beginning played at Park Hollow at Nottingham Castle. In December 1864, the decision was made to play games against outside teams, and it was decided that the club needed to find a larger stadium. After playing at several places, The Magpies settled at Trent Bridge Cricket Ground in 1883. When the ground was used for Cricket, they played at Castle Ground or Nottingham Forest's Town Ground. The club moved to their current stadium, Meadow Lane, in 1910.

Football League

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Chart showing the progress of Notts County through the English football league system from the first season in 1888–89 to the present time.

In 1888, Notts County, along with eleven other football clubs, became a founding member of The Football League.[6] They finished their first league season in eleventh place. Notts County got their highest ever league finish of third in 1890-91, and they also finished third ten seasons later.

FA Cup finals

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On 25 March 1891, Notts County reached the FA Cup final for the first time but did not win. They lost 3-1 to Blackburn Rovers.[7]

Notts County made up for this in 1894, when they won the FA Cup at Goodison Park for the first time in their history. The Magpies beat Bolton Wanderers 4-1 and Jimmy Logan scored the first hat-trick in FA Cup final history. Notts County became the first club outside the top division to win the FA Cup - they finished in third place in the Second Division that season.[7]

League position

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SeasonLeaguePosition
2000-01Second Division8th
2001-02Second Division19th
2002-03Second Division15th
2003-04Second Division23rd
2004-05League Two19th
2005-06League Two21st
2006-07League Two13th
2007-08League Two21st
2008-09League Two19th
2009-10 League Two 1st (Promoted)
2010-11 League One 19th
2011-12 League One 7th
2012-13 League One 12th
2013-14 League One 20th
2014-15 League One 21st (Relegated)
2015-16 League Two 17th
2016-17 League Two 16th
2017-18 League Two 5th
2018-19 League Two 23rd (Relegated)
2019-20 National League

Former position

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Other websites

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References

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  1. Notts County - A Picture History ISBN 0954783034 page 8
  2. Wilson, Jonathan. Inverting The Pyramid: The History of Soccer Tactics. PublicAffairs. p. 37. ISBN 978-1-64503-056-0.
  3. Conn, David (22 September 2016). "Another Notts County era begins with cautious optimism after £3.5m takeover". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 25 November 2022. Retrieved 6 October 2024.
  4. Smith, Rory (8 April 2023). "The Team Trying to Change the Ending of 'Welcome to Wrexham'". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 9 April 2023. Retrieved 27 September 2023.
  5. "Notts County have resources and ambitions to reach Championship, says CEO". BBC Sport. 28 December 2023. Archived from the original on 3 February 2024. Retrieved 6 October 2024.
  6. The Magpies Keith Warsop page 31 ISBN 086023214X
  7. 1 2 "FA Cup Finals, 1872-today". www.thefa.com. Archived from the original on 2017-06-13. Retrieved 2020-06-12.