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Huddersfield Town A. F. C. - WikipediaHuddersfield TownFull nameHuddersfield Town Association Football ClubNickname(s)The TerriersFounded15 August 1908; 114 years agoGroundJohn Smith's StadiumCapacity24, 121[1]Coordinates53°39′15. 0361″N 1°46′5. 8605″W / 53. 654176694°N 1. 768294583°WCoordinates: 53°39′15. 768294583°WHead CoachMark FotheringhamLeagueEFL Championship2021–22EFL Championship, 3rd of 24WebsiteClub website Home colours Away colours Third colours Current season Huddersfield Town Association Football Club is a professional football club based in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England, which compete in the EFL Championship.
[119][120] Town hold the better head-to-head record against City; 21 matches have been won, 17 drawn, and 14 lost. [121] Including games against United's predecessor team Leeds City, Huddersfield have won 36 of the 90 derbies between the two sides, with 20 draws and 34 Leeds wins. [122][123] There are smaller rivalries with South Yorkshire clubs Barnsley and Sheffield Wednesday, and there is a Roses rivalry with Oldham Athletic. [120] Huddersfield also have a rivalry with Cambridgeshire club Peterborough United, largely fuelled by the play-off meetings in 1992 and 2011.
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[5] A deterioration of their league position followed, although they finished runners-up in 1933–34, and two more FA Cup Finals were reached under new manager Clem Stephenson. [8][6] Town were defeated in 1930 by Chapman's Arsenal, [25] and in 1938 by Preston North End after extra time, which was the first FA Cup Final to be broadcast on television. [26] A record home attendance of 67, 037 was achieved in 1932 during an FA Cup sixth round tie against Arsenal. [27] Decline and recovery (1945–1992)[edit] Town were relegated for the first time in the 1951–52 season. [6] Stockport County manager Andy Beattie was appointed in April 1952, and managed Stockport and Huddersfield in three divisions in the same month. He also had two horseshoes nailed to his office wall for luck. [28] The team finished second in the Second Division in 1952–53 and made an immediate return.
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They finished the season in eighth place, just outside the play-offs. [60] Bruce was sacked in October 2000. Rubery accused Bruce of "wasting £3m", arguing that the money would have been "spent more wisely by a more experienced manager without an ego to feed". [61] He was replaced by Lou Macari, who was unable to halt the slide as relegation to the third tier followed at the end of the season. [62] Huddersfield reached the play-offs in 2001–02, but lost 2–1 to Brentford in the semi-final. [63] Around this time, the club had debts of 20 million pounds following relegation and the collapse of ITV Digital. The players went months without being paid, and manager Mick Wadsworth was sacked in January 2003, only to be reinstated because the club did not have any money for his pay-off. [64] Wadsworth was eventually sacked in March and replaced by Mel Machin, [65] who oversaw relegation to the fourth tier. [66] The club was put into administration, but Ken Davy bought the club in the summer of 2003 and rescued Town from liquidation.
[78] After defeating Sheffield Wednesday on penalties in the semi-final, they faced Reading in the Final. [79] Another penalty shoot-out followed, and Huddersfield were again victorious. Promotion to the Premier League meant a return to the first tier for the first time since 1972. [80] Huddersfield also became the second club, after Blackpool, to have won all three divisional play-offs. [81] The team finished 16th and stayed up on their return, [82] but were relegated after a 20th-place finish in 2018–19.
[3] In 2019, Town agreed to have Paddy Power shirt sponsorship in a striking beauty queen style diagonal sash design. Within days, the club were contacted by The Football Association for their "observations" about the kit. [97] Shortly after, it was revealed that the shirt was a prank envisioned by Paddy Power, and that the club would play in shirts without a sponsor. as part of their "Save Our Shirt" campaign. [98] Huddersfield returned to a updated version of their heraldic-style crest in 2019. The three stars (representing their hat-trick of league titles in the 1920s) were moved inside the shield.
[129] Player of the Year (Hargreaves Memorial Trophy)[edit] As voted for by members of the official Huddersfield Town Supporters Club. [130] Year Winner 1975 Terry Dolan 1976 Terry Gray 1977 Kevin Johnson 1978 Mick Butler 1979 Alan Starling 1980 Malcolm Brown 1981 Mark Lillis 1982 Mick Kennedy 1983 David Burke 1984 Paul Jones 1985 1986 Joey Jones 1987 Duncan Shearer 1988 Simon Trevitt 1989 Steve Hardwick 1990 Lee Martin 1991 Graham Mitchell 1992 Iwan Roberts 1993 Neil Parsley 1994 Steve Francis 1995 Ronnie Jepson 1996 Tom Cowan 1997 1998 Jon Dyson 1999 Nico Vaesen 2000 Jamie Vincent 2001 Craig Armstrong 2002 Leon Knight 2003 Martin Smith 2004 Jon Worthington 2005 Nathan Clarke 2006 Andy Booth 2007 David Mirfin 2008 Andy Holdsworth 2009 Gary Roberts 2010 Peter Clarke 2011 2012 2013 James Vaughan 2014 Adam Clayton 2015 Jacob Butterfield 2016 Nahki Wells 2017 Aaron Mooy 2018 Christopher Schindler 2019 2020 Lewis O'Brien 2021 Jonathan Hogg 2022 Club management[edit] Club officials[edit] Position Name Managing Director David Baldwin Operations Director Ann Hough Financial Director Matt Wright Marketing & Communications Director David Threfall-Sykes Non-Executive Director David Kirby Source:[131] First team technical staff[edit] Head Coach Mark Fotheringham Assistant Head Coaches Kenny MillerNarcís "Chicho" Pèlach Head of Football Operations Leigh Bromby Head of Analysis & Innovation James Beck First Team Analysts Mackenzie LongleyHarrison GlewLinas Treigys Head of Goalkeeping Paul Clements Head of Medical Ian Kirkpatrick Senior Physiotherapists Liam KershawCraig Sedgwick Sports Therapists Dave HallamMatty Greenlees Head of Physical Performance Paul Bower Source:[132] Managerial history[edit] Honours and achievements[edit] In 1926, Huddersfield Town became the first English team to win the First Division title in three consecutive seasons, a feat not surpassed to this day, although it has been equalled by Arsenal, Liverpool, and on two occasions by Manchester United.
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The anthem was created by G. W. Chappell of Longwood, Huddersfield, before the 1920 FA Cup Final against Aston Villa. It was an adapted version of the popular First World War song "Till We Meet Again". Chappell's creation was originally called "The Town Anthem", and was sung by Town supporters ahead of the Final. The anthem is still sung by Huddersfield supporters at home matches. [111] In 2014, a group of Town fans formed a collective called "North Stand Loyal". Its aim was "to improve the atmosphere around the stadium on matchdays", and the members were "inspired by fan groups of continental Europe and other parts of the world".
Retrieved 26 June 2020. ^ "Huddersfield Town match record: 1925". 11v11. Retrieved 26 June 2020. ^ Say, Tony (1996). "Herbert Chapman: Football Revolutionary? " (PDF). The Sports Historian. 16: 81–98. doi:10. 1080/17460269609446395. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 December 2013. ^ Marshall-Bailey, Tom (18 July 2014). "Huddersfield Town greats: William 'Billy' Smith".
Yorkshire Live. Retrieved 25 June 2020. ^ Page (2006), p. 139 ^ Threlfall-Sykes, David (12 April 2020). "Happy Huddersfield Town day! ". Retrieved 26 June 2020. ^ Felton, Paul; Spencer, Barry (31 January 2013). "England 1926–27". Retrieved 26 June 2020. ^ "Huddersfield Town match record: 1927". Retrieved 26 June 2020.
^ Thomson, Doug (14 August 2013). "The Huddersfield Town men in the middle of England v Scotland Wembley drama". Retrieved 26 June 2020. ^ "The 1930 final — how Arsenal won the cup". Arsenal FC. 24 January 2014. Retrieved 26 June 2020. ^ "The FA Cup Final first televised". BBC. Retrieved 26 June 2020. ^ "Huddersfield Town — a rich history". Retrieved 26 June 2020. ^ a b "Auction of ex-Town chief's memories". 5 October 2006. Retrieved 26 June 2020. ^ Felton, Paul.
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[69] The team reached the play-offs in 2005–06, but were eliminated by Barnsley in the semi-final, after further seasons in League One followed. [69] Dean Hoyle took over as chairman, and majority shareholder, of the club in June 2009. [70] Town reached the play-offs in 2009–10 under manager Lee Clark, but lost against Millwall in the semi-final. The team again qualified for the play-offs the following season, however, Peterborough United were victorious in the Final.
The team have played home games at the Kirklees Stadium since moving from Leeds Road in 1994. The club colours of blue and white stripes were adopted in 1916. Their nickname, "The Terriers", was taken in 1969. Huddersfield's current emblem is based on the town's coat of arms. The team have long-standing West Yorkshire derby rivalries with Bradford City and Leeds United, as well as an A62 derby with Oldham Athletic. Founded in 1908, Huddersfield competed in the North Eastern League and Midland League, before gaining admittance to the Football League in 1910. They were promoted out of the Second Division in 1919–20 and went on to win the FA Cup in 1922, having been beaten finalists in 1920.
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