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City |
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Liverpool |
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Founded
in 1905, they play in the Premier League and have spent most of
their
history in
the top tier in English football. They have had two broad
periods of success,
one during
the 1960s and early 1970s, and the
second from the late 1990s to the
present
day.They
have won three league titles, four FA Cups, four League Cups
and two
UEFA Cup Winners' Cups.
Their
home is the 42,055 capacity Stamford Bridge football stadium in
Fulham,
West
London, where they have played since their foundation.
Despite
their name, the club are based in the London Borough of
Hammersmith
and
Fulham.
In
2003, the club were bought by Russian oil magnate Roman Abramovich.

History
The first Chelsea FC team in September
1905.
Chelsea
FC
were founded on 14
March 1905 at The Rising Sun pub
(now
The
Butcher's Hook), opposite the present-day main entrance to the ground
on
Fulham Road,
and were elected to the Football League shortly afterwards.
The
club's
early years saw little success; the closest they came to winning a
major
trophy
was reaching the FA
Cup final in 1915, where they lost to Sheffield United.
Chelsea
FC gained a reputation for signing big-name players and for
being
entertainers,
but made little impact on the English game in the
inter-war years.
Former
England
centre-forward Ted Drake became manager in 1952
and proceeded
to
modernise the club. He removed the club's Chelsea
pensioner
crest, improved the
youth
set-up and training regime, rebuilt the side,
and led Chelsea to their first
major
trophy success – the League
championship – in 1954–55. The
following season
saw
UEFA create the European Champions' Cup,
but after objections from
The
Football League
and the FA Chelsea were
persuaded to withdraw from the
competition
before it started.
The
1960s saw the emergence of a talented young
Chelsea FC side under manager
Tommy
Docherty.
They challenged for honours throughout the decade, and endured
several
near-misses. They were on course for a treble of League, FA Cup
and
League
Cup going into
the final stages of the 1964–65
season, winning the League Cup
but
faltering late on in the other two. In three
seasons the side were beaten in three
major
semi-finals and
were FA Cup runners-up. In 1970 Chelsea were FA Cup winners,
beating
Leeds United 2–1 in a final
replay. Chelsea took their first European honour,
a
UEFA
Cup Winners' Cup
triumph, the following year, with another replayed win,
this
time over
Real Madrid in Athens.
The
late 1970s and the 1980s were a turbulent
period for Chelsea. An
ambitious
redevelopment
of Stamford Bridge threatened the financial
stability of the club,
star
players were sold
and the team were relegated. Further problems were caused
by
a
notorious hooligan element among the
support, which was to plague the club
throughout
the decade. Chelsea
FC
were, at the nadir of their fortunes, acquired by
Ken
Bates
for the nominal sum of £1, although by now the Stamford Bridge
freehold
had
been sold to property developers, meaning the club faced losing
their home.
On
the pitch, the team had fared little better, coming close to relegation
to the
Third
Division
for the first time, but in 1983 manager John Neal put
together an
impressive
new team for minimal outlay. Chelsea
FC won the
Second Division
title
in 1983–84
and established themselves in the top division, before being
relegated
again in 1988. The club bounced back immediately by winning
the
Second
Division championship in 1988–89.
After
a long-running legal battle, Bates reunited
the stadium
freehold with the
club
in 1992 by doing a deal with the banks of the
property developers, who had
been
bankrupted by a market crash. Chelsea
FC's
form in the new Premier League
was
unconvincing, although they did reach the FA Cup final in 1994.
It was not until
the
appointment of former European
Footballer of the Year Ruud Gullit as
player-manager
in
1996 that
their fortunes changed. He added several top-class
international
players to the side, particularly Gianfranco Zola, as the
club won the
FA
Cup in 1997
and established themselves as one of England's top sides
again.
Gullit
was replaced by Gianluca Vialli, who led
the team to victory in the League
Cup
and
the Cup Winners' Cup
in 1998, the FA Cup in 2000
and the UEFA Champions League
quarter-finals
in 2000. Vialli was sacked in favour of another Italian,
Claudio Ranieri,
who
guided Chelsea to the 2002 FA
Cup final and Champions League qualification
in
2002–03.
In
June 2003, Bates sold Chelsea FC to Russian
billionaire Roman Abramovich for
£140
million, completing what was then the biggest-ever sale of an
English
football club.
Owing
to Abramovich's Russian heritage, the club were
soon popularly dubbed
"Chelski"
in the British media.
Over £100
million was spent on new players, but Ranieri
was
unable to deliver any
trophies, so he was replaced by successful Portuguese
coach
José
Mourinho, who had just
guided FC Porto
to victory in the UEFA Champions League.
In
2005, Chelsea's centenary
year, the club became Premiership champions in a
record-breaking
season
(most clean sheets, fewest goals conceded, most victories,
most
points
earned),
League
Cup winners with a 3–2 win over Liverpool at the
Millennium
Stadium and
reached the Champions League
semi-finals.
The
following year, Chelsea FC were again League
Champions, equaling their
own
Premiership
record of 29 wins set the previous season.
They
also became the fifth
team to win back-to-back championships since
the
Second
World War and the first London club to do so since Arsenal
in 1933–34.
In
2007,
Chelsea won the FA Cup and League Cup, but
finished runners-up to
Manchester
United in the Premier League. On 20 September 2007,
Mourinho parted
company
with Chelsea and was replaced by Israeli
Director of Football Avram Grant,
under
whom the club
finished as runners-up in the Premier League and the
League
Cup,
and reached their first UEFA Champions League final, where they
lost
on
penalties to Manchester
United. On 24 May 2008,
Grant's contract was terminated.
On
11
June 2008, it was announced that Luiz Felipe Scolari
would be taking over as
managerof
Chelsea FC on 1
July 2008.
Chelsea FC

Stamford
Bridge
Chelsea vs. West
Bromwich
Albion at Stamford Bridge on September 23, 1905; Chelsea won 1-0.
Chelsea
have only ever had one home ground, Stamford Bridge, where
they have
played
since foundation. It was officially opened on 28 April
1877. For the first 28 years
of
its existence it was used almost
exclusively by the London Athletics Club as an arena
for
athletics
meetings and not at all for football. In 1904 the ground was acquired
by
businessman
Gus Mears and his brother, J T Mears, who had previously
acquired
additional
land (formerly a large market
garden) with the aim of staging football matches
on
the
now 12.5 acre (51,000 m²) site.
Stamford
Bridge was designed for the Mears family by the noted football
architect
Archibald
Leitch.
They offered the stadium to Fulham
Football
Club,
but the offer was
turned
down. As a consequence, the owners decided to
form their own football club to
occupy
their new ground. Most football
clubs were founded first, and then sought
grounds
in which to play, but
Chelsea were founded for Stamford Bridge. Since there
was
already a
football club named Fulham in the borough, the founders decided
to
adopt
the name of the adjacent borough of Chelsea for the new club,
having rejected
names
such as Kensington FC, Stamford
Bridge FC and London FC.
Starting
with an open bowl-like design and one covered terrace, Stamford Bridge
had
an
original capacity of around 100,000. The early
1930s saw the construction of a
terrace
on the southern part
of the ground with a roof that covered around one fifth
of
the stand.
It eventually became known as the "Shed End", the home of
Chelsea's
most
loyal and vocal supporters, particularly during the 1960s, 70s and
80s.
The
exact origins of the name are unclear, but the fact that the
roof looked like a
corrugated
iron shed roof played a part.

The East Stand during a match in
2006. The cost
of building this stand
caused many of Chelsea's financial problems during the 1970s and 1980s.
During
the
late 1960s and early 70s, the Chelsea FC's owners embarked on
a
modernisation
of Stamford Bridge with plans for a 50,000 all-seater
stadium.
Work
began on the East Stand in the early 1970s but the cost
almost brought the
club
to its knees, and the freehold was sold to property
developers.
Following a long
legal
battle, it was not until the mid-1990s that
Chelsea's future at the stadium was
secured
and renovation work
resumed.
The north, west and southern parts of the
ground
were converted into
all-seater stands and moved closer to the pitch,
a
process completed by
2001.
The
Stamford Bridge pitch,
the freehold, the turnstiles and Chelsea's naming rights
are
now owned
by Chelsea Pitch Owners,
a non-profit organisation in which fans
are
the shareholders.
The
CPO
was created to ensure the stadium could never again be sold to
developers.
t
also means that if someone tries to move the football
club to a new stadium they could
not
use the Chelsea FC name.
Chelsea
FC plans to increase its capacity to over 50,000. Owing to its
location in a
built-up
part of London on a main road and next to two railway lines, fans can
only
enter
the stadium through the Fulham Road entrance, which places
severe constraints
on
expansion due to health
and safety regulations. As a
result, Chelsea have been
linked
with a move away from Stamford Bridge
to sites including the Earls Court
Exhibition
Centre, Battersea Power
Station and the Chelsea Barracks.
However,
the club have reiterated
their desire to keep Chelsea at their current home.
Chelsea FC
Crest
Since
the
club's foundation, Chelsea have had four main crests,
though all underwent
minor
variations. In 1905, Chelsea adopted as
their first crest the image of a
Chelsea
pensioner,
which obviously contributed to the "pensioner" nickname,
and
remained
for the next half-century, though it never appeared on the
shirts.
As
part of Ted Drake's
modernisation of the club from 1952 onwards, he insisted
that
the
pensioner badge be removed from the match day programme in order
to
change
the club's image and that a new crest be adopted.
As a stop-gap, a temporary
emblem
comprising simply the initials C.F.C.
was adopted for one year. In 1953,
Chelsea's
crest was changed to an
upright blue lion looking backwards and holding
a
staff, which was to
endure for the next three decades. This crest was based on
elements
in
the coat of arms of the Metropolitan Borough of Chelsea with
the
"lion
rampant regardant" taken from the arms of then club president Viscount
Chelsea
and
the staff from the Abbots of Westminster,
former Lords of the Manor of Chelsea.
It
also featured three red roses,
to represent England, and two footballs.
This
was the first club badge
to appear on shirts, since the policy of putting the crest
on
the
shirts was only adopted in the early 1960s.
In
1986,
with new owners now at the club, Chelsea's crest was
changed again as
part
of another attempt to modernise and to capitalise
on new marketing opportunities.
The
new badge featured a more naturalistic non-heraldic lion, yellow
and not blue,
standing
over the C.F.C. initials. It lasted for the next
19 years, with some
modifications
such as the use of different colours.
With new ownership,
and
the club's centenary
approaching, combined with demands from fans for
the
club's traditional
badge to be restored, it was decided that the crest should
be
changed
again in 2004.
The
new crest was officially adopted for the start of
the 2005–06 season
and
marks
a return to the older design of the blue heraldic lion
holding a staff.
As
with previous crests, this one has appeared in
various colours, including white and gold.
Chelsea FC

Colours
Chelsea
have always worn blue shirts, although they initially
adopted a lighter shade
than the current version, and unlike today wore
white shorts and dark blue socks.
The
lighter blue was taken from the
racing colours of then club president, Earl Cadogan.
The
light blue
shirts were short-lived, however, and replaced by a royal blue
version in
around 1912. When
Tommy Docherty
became manager in the early 1960s he changed
the kit again, adding blue
shorts (which have remained ever since) and
white socks, believing it
made the club's colours more distinctive, since
no other major side
used that combination; this
kit was first worn during the 1964–65
season.Chelsea's
traditional away colours are all yellow or all white with
blue trim, but,
as with most teams, they have had some more unusual
ones.
The
first away strip consisted of black and white stripes and for
one game
in the 1960s the team wore Inter
Milan-style blue and black stripes, again
at Docherty's
behest. Other
memorable away kits include a mint green strip
in the 1980s, a
red and white checked one in the early 90s and a graphite
and tangerine
addition in the mid-1990s.
The
2007/2008 Chelsea away strip consists of an 'electric yellow'
shirt with thick
black lines forming separate panels of the shirt. The
adidas
three stripes are black, and run down the arms. It is
worn with black
shorts and black socks, but in the case of further clashes it
is
worn
with "electric yellow" shorts and/or socks. he
crest on the shirt is
in "electric yellow" and black to go with the rest of the
kit, instead
of the usual blue, white, red and gold. For the 07/08 season, there is
also a
third kit, which is all white with blue and black trim.
Chelsea's
kit is currently manufactured by Adidas, which
is contracted to supply
the club's kit from 2006 to 2011.
Their
previous kit manufacturer was
Umbro. Chelsea's first shirt sponsor was Gulf Air, agreed
midway
through the 1983–84 season.
Following
that, the club were sponsored by Grange
Farms, Bai
Lin tea and Italian company
Simod before a long-term deal
was signed with computer manufacturer Commodore
International in 1989;
Amiga, an off-shoot of Commodore, also
appeared on the shirts.
Chelsea
were subsequently sponsored by Coors
beer (1995–97), Autoglass
(1997–2001) and Emirates
Airline (2001–05).
Chelsea's
current shirt sponsor is Samsung.
Chelsea FC
Supporters

Chelsea fans at a match with
Tottenham Hotspur,
on 11 March 2006.
Chelsea
have the fifth highest average all-time attendance in English football
and regularly
attract over 40,000 fans to Stamford Bridge; they were
the fifth best-supported
Premiership team in the 2005–06
season, with an
average gate of
41,870.
Chelsea's
traditional fanbase comes from
working-class parts of West London, such
as Hammersmith and Battersea,
from wealthier areas like Chelsea and Kensington, and
from the Home Counties.
In
addition
to the standard football chants, Chelsea fans sing
songs like
"Carefree", "Blue is the Colour", "We all follow the
Chelsea" (to
the
tune of Land of Hope and Glory), "Ten
Men Went to Mow", "Zigga Zagga", "Hello! Hello!" and the
celebratory "Celery", with
the latter often resulting in fans ritually
throwing celery.
Chelsea
do not have a traditional rivalry in the manner of Liverpool and
Everton
or Arsenal
and Tottenham Hotspur. The club's nearest neighbours are
Fulham, but
they are not seen as big rivals by Chelsea fans, because the clubs
have spent most of
the last 40 years in separate divisions.
A
2004
survey by Planetfootball.com found that
Chelsea fans consider their
main rivalries to be with (in order): Arsenal, Tottenham
Hotspur and
Manchester United.
Additionally,
a strong rivalry
with Leeds
United dates back to several heated and controversial matches in the
1960s and
1970s, particularly the FA
Cup final in 1970. A more recent rivalry has
grown with
Liverpool following several clashes in cup competitions.
During
the 1970s and 1980s in particular, Chelsea FC supporters were long
associated with
football
hooliganism. The club's "football
firm", originally the Chelsea Shed Boys, now
known as the
Chelsea Headhunters, were nationally notorious for violent
acts against
hooligans from other teams, such as West Ham United's Inter City Firm
and Millwall's
Bushwhackers, both during and after matches.
The
increase in hooliganism in the 1980s led chairman Ken Bates to
propose an electric
fence to deter them from invading the pitch; the
proposal was rejected by the GLC.
Chelsea's
hooligan element were
revealed to have links with neo-nazi
groups such as Combat
18, and other far-right or racist organisations
including the British
National Party.
Since
the 1990s there has been a
marked decline in crowd trouble at matches, as
a result of stricter
policing, CCTV in grounds and the advent of all-seater stadia.
Chelsea FC
Records

Among Chelsea's current players,
Frank Lampard
has made the most appearances and scored the most goals.
Chelsea's
highest appearance-maker is ex-captain Ron Harris, who played in
795 first-class
games for the club between 1961 and 1980. This
record is unlikely to be broken
in the near future; Chelsea's current
highest appearance-maker is Frank Lampard with
366.
The
record for a Chelsea goalkeeper is held by Harris's
contemporary, Peter
Bonetti, who made 729 appearances (1959–79). With 116 caps (67
while at the club), Marcel Desailly of France is Chelsea's most
capped international
player.
Bobby
Tambling is Chelsea's all-time top goalscorer, with 202 goals in 370
games (1959–70).
Seven other players have also
scored over 100
goals for Chelsea: George
Hilsdon (1906–12), George Mills (1929–39),
Roy Bentley (1948–56), Jimmy
Greaves (1957–61), Peter Osgood (1964–74
& 1978–79), Kerry Dixon
(1983–92), and
Frank Lampard (2001–). With 193 goals, Dixon is the only
player in the club's recent
history to have come close to matching
Tambling's record. Greaves holds the record
for the most goals scored
in one season (43 in 1960–61).
Lampard
is the top scorer
currently at
the club.
Officially,
Chelsea's highest home attendance is 82,905 for a First Division
match against
Arsenal on 12 October 1935. However, an estimated crowd of
over 100,000
attended a friendly
match against Soviet team Dynamo Moscow on 13
November
1945.
The
modernisation of Stamford Bridge during the 1990s and the
introduction of all-seater
stands mean that neither record will be
broken for the foreseeable future. The
current legal capacity of
Stamford Bridge is 42,055.
Chelsea
hold numerous records in English
and European football.
They
hold the record for the highest points
total for a league season (95), the
fewest goals conceded during a
league season (15), the most consecutive clean
sheets
during a league season (10), the highest number of Premier
League victories
in a season (29), the highest number of clean sheets overall
in a Premier League
season (25) (all set during the 2004–05
season), and
the
most consecutive clean
sheets from the start of a league season (6) (2005–06).
Chelsea
FC's 21–0 aggregate
victory over Jeunesse
Hautcharage in the UEFA Cup
Winners' Cup in 1971 remains a
record in European competition.
Chelsea
may also
hold the British transfer record, but the fee for Andriy
Shevchenko, estimated at around
£30m, remains unconfirmed.
Roberto
Di Matteo holds the record for fastest goal
in an FA Cup final at
Wembley, which came 42 seconds into Chelsea's win
over Middlesbrough
in
1997.
Chelsea
hold the record for the longest streak of unbeaten matches at
home in the English
top-flight.
They
secured the record on 12 August
2007, beating the previous run
of 63 matches set by Liverpool between
1978 and 1980. The
record is ongoing, and
currently stands at 81 matches.
Chelsea
FC
have recorded several "firsts" in English football. Along
with Arsenal, they
were the first club to play with shirt numbers on 25
August 1928 in their match against
Swansea
Town.
Chelsea FC were the
first English
side to travel
by aeroplane to a
domestic away match, when they visited Newcastle
United on 19 April 1957, and
the first First Division side
to play a
match on a Sunday, when they faced Stoke
City on 27 January 1974.
On 26
December 1999, Chelsea became the first British
side to field an
entirely foreign (non-UK) starting line-up in a Premier
League match
against Southampton.
On 19 May 2007, they became the
first team to
win the
FA Cup at the new Wembley Stadium, having also been the last to
win it at the
old Wembley.
After
the conclusion of the
2007/2008 season, Chelsea
became the highest ranked club under UEFA's five-year
coefficient system
used in the seeding of European club competitions in
the following season.
Chelsea FC

In
popular
culture
In
1930,
Chelsea featured in one of the earliest football films, The
Great Game. One-time
Chelsea centre forward,
Jack Cock,
who by then was playing for Millwall, was
the star of the film and
several scenes were shot at Stamford Bridge, including the
pitch, the
boardroom and the dressing rooms. It
included guest appearances by
then-Chelsea players Andrew Wilson, George Mills and
Sam Millington. Owing
to
the notoriety of the Chelsea Headhunters, a football firm associated
with the club, Chelsea have also featured in films about football
hooliganism, most
recently The Football Factory.
Chelsea
also appear in the Hindi
film, Jhoom Barabar Jhoom.
Up
until
the 1950s, the club had a long-running association with the music
halls, with
their underachievement often providing material for comedians such
as George
Robey.
It
culminated in comedian Norman
Long's
release of a comic song
in 1933, ironically titled
"On The Day That Chelsea Went and Won The
Cup", the lyrics of which described series
of bizarre and improbable
occurrences on the hypothetical day when Chelsea
finally won a trophy.
The
song
"Blue
is the Colour" was released as a single in the build-up to
the 1972
League Cup Final, with all members of Chelsea's first team squad
singing; it
reached number five in the UK Singles Chart.
The song
was later adapted to " White
is the Colour" and adopted as an
anthem by the Vancouver Whitecaps.
In the
build-up to the 1997 FA Cup
final, the song "Blue Day", performed by Suggs
and
members
of Chelsea's squad, reached number 22 in the UK charts.
Bryan Adams, a fan
of Chelsea, dedicated the song "We're Gonna Win"
from the album 18 Til I
Die
to the club.
Chelsea
FC
Honours
Domestic
League
- First Division/Premier
League
- Winners (3):
1954–55, 2004–05, 2005–06
- Runners-up (3): 2003–04, 2006–07, 2007–08
- Winners (2):
1983–84, 1988–89
- Runners-up (5):
1906–07,
1911–12, 1929–30, 1962–63, 1976–77
Cups
- Winners (4): 1970, 1997, 2000, 2007
- Runners-up (4): 1915, 1967, 1994, 2002
- Winners (4):
1965, 1998,
2005,
2007
- Runners-up (2):
1972, 2008
- FA Charity
Shield/Community Shield[68]
- Winners (3):
1955, 2000, 2005
- Runners-up (4):
1970, 1997,
2006, 2007
- Winners (2):
1986, 1990
European
- Runners-up (1):
2007–08
- Winners (2):
1971, 1998
-
Winners
(1): 1998
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