Sunderland A.F.C.

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Template:Football club infobox Sunderland Association Football Club (Sunderland AFC or SAFC) is a Premiership football club (however, they have been relegated to the Championship for the 2006-2007 season), based at the Stadium of Light in Sunderland, North-East England. They are nicknamed the 'Black Cats'.

Sunderland's traditional local rivals are Newcastle United and, to a lesser extent, Middlesbrough.

Sunderland A.F.C. Women is the women's football club affiliated with Sunderland A.F.C. They play in the Premier Division.

Contents

History

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Main Article: Sunderland A.F.C. History

Formed in 1879, Sunderland entered The Football League in only its third season, becoming the 13th professional team in the country. During the late 19th century, they were known as the "Team of All-Talents" - between 1892 and 1902 they won the league four times and were runners-up a further three times. Sunderland have been English Champions six times in total (last time was 1936), and won the FA Cup twice; most famously as a Second Division club in 1973, when they beat the then-mighty Leeds United.

After World War II, Sunderland's fortunes faded, and in 1958, following an illegal-payment scandal which saw the club heavily fined, they were relegated for the first time in their history. Since the war, the 1973 FA Cup has been the only major trophy won.

Since the late 1960's, Sunderland have moved up and down divisions at regular intervals, rarely settling for more than five years. In 1987, they were relegated to the third division. They spent only one season there; their only season outside of the top two divisions.

In 1997, Sunderland moved from Roker Park, home for 99 years, to the Stadium of Light, a 42,000 seater stadium (later increased to 49,000) on the banks of the River Wear. The stadium brought huge crowds and after two seasons they were promoted to the Premiership. Around this time, Sunderland also began to lay plans for the Academy of Light, a new world-class training academy for young stars.

After a promising few seasons in the Premiership, the club was eventually relegated back to the Championship, with heavy debts.

After another two seasons in the second-level of English football, Mick McCarthy took the club back up as Champions. The return to England's top flight however has seen a return to the depressing days of the 2002-03 season when wins, goals, and points were scarce. Sunderland, for the first time in their history, failed to win a home game before Christmas. They still failed to win a home game by the end of February and embarrassment was compounded when they were knocked-out of the FA Cup at the 4th round stage by League One side Brentford.

On March 6 2006, McCarthy was sacked by the club, the day after a 2-1 defeat at Manchester City. Former club captain and Academy coach Kevin Ball took control as caretaker manager for the remainder of the season.

The almost-inevitable relegation was mathematically confirmed on April 14th 2006, when they drew, 0-0, against Manchester United at Old Trafford.

Statistics

Main article: Sunderland A.F.C. Statistics
Current season: 2005-06 Season for Sunderland A.F.C.

Sunderland are currently lying bottom of the Premier League. This is their 105th full professional league season, and their 76th in England's top division. In 115 years they have played over 4000 league games, of which they have won 41%, drawn 24% and lost 35%. Sunderland have an all-time positive league goal-difference of over 600.

Sunderland last won the league in 1936. Since then, their highest league finish was 3rd in 1950, although they did reach 7th in consecutive seasons at the turn of the 21st century. Since they were first relegated in 1958, Sunderland have not spent longer than 6 years in a division without being promoted or relegated.

Nicknames

In 2000 following a poll on the official SAFC website, Sunderland announced the new club nickname would be "The Black Cats". The other options at the time were: "The Light Brigade", "The SOLs", "The Miners" and the "The Mackems". The club had been without a nickname since 1997 when it moved away from Roker Park - the nickname "The Rokerites" was no longer relevant.

There is a long historical link between Black Cats and Sunderland; including the "Black Cat Battery", a battery gun based on the River Wear. Black Cats have appeared in numerous photos around the club, and a black cat was even resident at Roker Park for a number of years, his entrance sparking a long winning-streak. This link is reinforced by folklore in which the black cat is said to bring luck. Since the 1960's the emblem of the Sunderland AFC Supporters Association has been a black cat. After 2000, Sunderland's Mascot became "Samson the Cat" and a few years later he was joined by Delilah. Samson was originally named after shirt sponsor at the time (Vaux Samson bitter). Delilah was given her name to create the "Samson and Delilah" pairing; the name of a biblical couple.

As well as the "Team of All Talents" at the turn of the 20th century, Sunderland were also known as the "Bank of England club" during the 1950's. This was due to the club's huge spending on the transfer market at the time, which saw the transfer-record broken twice.

In recent years, despite corporate attempts to introduce nicknames (such as the unpopular "Rokermen" and "Rokerites"), Sunderland fans have generally adopted their own unofficial nickname - including, rather simply, "The Lads" (The phrase "Ha'way the Lads" is emblazoned across the North Stand seats at the Stadium of Light), and also the "Mackems" which was originally coined as an insult by Geordies but has since been adopted by the people of Sunderland. This nickname was not officially adopted by Sunderland AFC because it refers specifically to a resident of Sunderland, and the club did not wish to alienate it's fans from further afield.

Honours

Top Flight

  • Football League Champions: 6
    • 1891/1892, 1892/1893, 1894/1895, 1901/1902, 1912/1913, 1935/1936
  • Football League runners-up: 5
    • 1893/1894, 1897/1898, 1900/1901, 1922/1923, 1934/1935

Second Flight

Third Flight

Cup Competitions

  • FA Cup beaten finalists: 2
    • 1913, 1992

Club Records

  • Sequences
    • Most back-to-back league wins: 13 (November 14th, 1891 - April 2nd, 1892)
    • Most back-to-back league draws: 6 (March 26th, 1949 - April 19th, 1949)
    • Most back-to-back league losses: 17 (January 18th, 2003 - August 23rd, 2003)
    • Longest run of consecutive league wins: 19 (May 3rd, 1998 - November 11th, 1998)
    • Longest run without a league win: 22 (December 21st, 2002 - August 23rd, 2003)

Current squad

As of 3 March, 2006:

Number Player Position Year Signed Previous Club
Goalkeepers
1 Template:Flagicon Kelvin Davis GK 2005 Ipswich Town
13 Template:Flagicon Ben Alnwick GK 2003 Academy of Light
30 Template:Flagicon Joe Murphy GK 2005 West Brom
Defenders
2 Template:Flagicon Stephen Wright RB 2002 Liverpool F.C.
3 Template:Flagicon George McCartney LB/CB 1998 Academy of Light
5 Template:Flagicon Gary Breen (captain) CB 2003 West Ham United
6 Template:Flagicon Steven Caldwell CB 2004 Newcastle United
12 Template:Flagicon Nyron Nosworthy RB 2005 Gillingham F.C.
15 Template:Flagicon Danny Collins CB/LB 2004 Chester City
27 Template:Flagicon Ben Christensen CB 2000 Wallsend Boys Club
28 Template:Flagicon Dan Smith LB 2003 Academy of Light
29 Template:Flagicon Sean Taylor CB 1995 Alnwick Town
32 Template:Flagicon Justin Hoyte CB/RB/LB 2005 (on loan from Arsenal)
33 Template:Flagicon Julio Arca LB/LW 2000 Argentinos Juniors
Midfielders / Wingers
4 Template:Flagicon Rory Delap CM/RW 2006 Southampton F.C.
7 Template:Flagicon Liam Lawrence RW 2004 Mansfield Town
8 Template:Flagicon Dean Whitehead CM/RW 2004 Oxford United
14 Template:Flagicon Tommy Miller CM 2005 Ipswich Town
17 Template:Flagicon Anthony Le Tallec CM/AM/CF 2005 (On season long loan from Liverpool F.C.)
19 Template:Flagicon Martin Woods CM 2005 Leeds United
23 Template:Flagicon Grant Leadbitter CM 1997 Academy of Light
31 Template:Flagicon Christian Bassila DM 2005 RC Strasbourg
Forwards
9 Template:Flagicon Jonathan Stead CF 2005 Blackburn Rovers
10 Template:Flagicon Stephen Elliott CF 2004 Manchester City
16 Template:Flagicon Kevin Kyle CF 2000 Academy of Light
20 Template:Flagicon Chris Brown CF 2002 Academy of Light
26 Template:Flagicon Daryl Murphy CF 2005 Waterford United
- Template:Flagicon Kevin Smith CF 2006 Leeds United
Manager
- Template:Flagicon Kevin Ball - 2006 Sunderland

Players out on loan

Grounds

Managerial History

 

(c) - Caretaker Manager

Notable Managerial Achievements

  • Bob Stokoe - Guided Sunderland to their finest moment in 1973, when as a Second Division side they achieved a shock 1-0 win over Leeds United - then one of Europe's most feared sides - in the F.A Cup final.
  • Denis Smith - Took Sunderland to the old Third Division title in 1988 and into the First Division two years later.
  • Peter Reid - Took over during the 1994-95 season when Sunderland were struggling in Division One, and during eight seasons at the helm he oversaw the relocation to a new stadium and an upturn in on-the-field fortunes which saw the Wearsiders achieved two seventh-placed finishes which followed their second promotion to the Premiership in 1999.

Notable Sunderland players

 

Trivia

References

External links

Official website

Other sites

Template:BBC Football Info


Template:Sunderland A.F.C.

Template:FA Premier League teamlist
FA Premier League seasons

1992-93 | 1993-94 | 1994-95 | 1995-96 | 1996-97 | 1997-98 | 1998-99
1999-00 | 2000-01 | 2001-02 | 2002-03 | 2003-04 | 2004-05 | 2005-06 edit

Football in England (Women's)
League competitions The FA Cup competitions
FA Premier League England (men) FA Cup (Women's)
The Football League (Champ, 1, 2) (women) League Cup
Football Conference (Nat, N, S) List of clubs FA Community Shield
Northern Premier League (Prem, 1) List of venues Football League Trophy
Southern League (Prem, 1W, 1E) (by capacity) FA Trophy
Isthmian League (Prem, 1, 2) List of leagues FA Vase
English football league system Records FA NLS Cup
cs:Sunderland AFC

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