England national
football team playing at Wembley Stadium
Football is the national sport
of England, and as such has an important place
within English national life.
The sport is almost always referred to simply as football;
it is unusual for it to be called soccer
and it is only referred to as "association football" in very limited
circumstances. Any unqualified reference to football in an English
context should be read as a reference to association football rather
than to any other member of the football family of sports. The only
other members of this family played to any great extent in England
belong to the rugby football sub-family, and are usually referred to as
rugby. The title and remainder of this
article refers to football in its English sense.
Kicking ball games are described in England since
at least 1280.
England has the earliest ever documented use of the English word
"football" (1409) and the earliest reference to football in French
(1314). A description of an exclusively kicking ball game from
Nottinghamshire
in the fifteenth century bears similarity to football. There is good
evidence for refereed, team "foteball" games being played in English
public schools since at least 1581.The
modern global game of football was first codified in 1863 in London by
the English Football Association,
the oldest football association in the world. The modern passing game
is believed to have been innovated in London in the early 1870s.
England is home to the oldest association football clubs in the world
(dating from at least 1857), the world's oldest competition (the FA Cup
founded in 1871) and the first ever football league (1888). For these
reasons England is considered the home of the game of
football.
The Football League, established in 1888 by Aston Villa director
William McGregor,
was the first professional football league in the world. Since its
founding, however, many other leagues have been founded in England.
Over recent years there has been an increasing effort to link all these
leagues together in a Pyramidal structure
allowing promotion and relegation between different levels. The primary
motivation for this drive is to maintain the possibility that any club
in England may dream of one day rising to the very top, no matter what
status they currently hold. There are around 40,000 clubs registered
with the FA - this is 11,000 more than any other country; even without
taking relative population into account, England has more football
clubs than any other country in the world.
Premier League
The Premier League
was founded in 1992 after England's top clubs broke away from the
Football League in a successful effort aimed at increasing their income
at the expense of clubs in the lower divisions. Links with The Football
League were maintained, and each season the bottom three clubs are
relegated from the Premier League and replaced by three from the
Championship.
The Football League
Although the oldest league in the world, The
Football League
now ranks second in the hierarchy of English football after the split
of England's top clubs in 1992 to form the FA Premier League. The
Football League has 72 member clubs evenly divided among three
divisions, currently named the Championship, League One and League Two.
English football league system
Below the Football League is what is commonly
known as "non-League football".
This term is confusing, as it refers to those clubs outside the
(Football) League, although they still play in organised league
competitions. In recent years, the top few levels have been
consolidated into the National League System, operated by the FA. Most
clubs in the Conference National division are fully professional, the
remainder are semi-professional.
There is automatic promotion and relegation
between League Two and
Conference National, and for several levels below the Conference,
although this becomes more irregular further down the league system.
The non-League system is often known as the "pyramid", because the
number of leagues at each level begins to increase as you go down
through the levels, with each league covering a smaller geographic area.
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Amateur
football
Although the Football Association abandoned a
formal definition of
"amateur" in the early 1970s, the vast majority of clubs still
effectively play as amateurs, with no financial reward. The Amateur
English Football Alliance is the largest organised of such
competitions, being particularly strong in the London area.
Smaller-sided versions of the game such as
five-a-side and Futsal
are becoming increasingly popular too. These are often played
informally, but there are many competitive small-sided leagues running
across the country.
Reserve leagues
Many teams operate reserve teams in separate
leagues; in some lower
levels of the pyramid, reserve teams play against first teams. The top
division for reserve teams of professional clubs is the FA Premier Reserve League.
Beneath that operate the Central League, and the Football Combination,
which cover the north and south of England respectively.
Youth leagues
Many club sides have Academy (youth) teams; the
top level of youth football is the FA
Premier Academy League,
consisting of Premier League and Football League club's Academy sides,
which operates at U18 and U16 levels (although the latter is
non-competitive). The next level below the Academy League is the
English Football League Youth Alliance, in which the remainder of
Football League clubs field their youth teams. There is also the FA
Youth Cup, a nationwide cup competition for U18 teams.
Beyond organised football
English Football is not just a spectator sport or
the preserve of
official leagues and clubs, but a sport attracting mass participation
at many different levels and in a wide variety of forms, including
Sunday league English football and five-a-side English football.
Cup competitions
The two most important cup competitions in English
Football are the FA Cup
and the League Cup, but several other national cups are targeted at
clubs at different levels.
The FA Cup,
first held in 1872, is the oldest and most respected national cup
competition in the world. It is open to around 600 clubs in the higher
levels of the pyramid. The FA Community Shield is
played each August as a one-off match between the FA Cup winners and
the Premier League champions.
The League Cup (currently
known as the Carling Cup)
is England's second major cup competition, and is contested by the 92
Premier League and Football League clubs. The winners of both main cup
competitions qualify for the UEFA Cup, and both are considered as
important tournaments.
The English Football League Trophy
is a competition for clubs in English Football League One and English
Football League Two.
The FA Trophy is open to clubs
in the top four levels of the National League System, and the FA
Vase is for clubs in the next couple of levels below that.
These competitions replaced the FA Amateur Cup,
which was the leading competition for amateur non-League teams for many
years. Representative teams from leagues lower still, mostly at county
level, contest the FA National League System Cup,
and the FA Sunday Cup is for Sunday league football
teams.
Defunct national cup competitions include:
Full Members Cup
Super Cup
Anglo-Italian Cup
Anglo-Scottish Cup
Texaco Cup
Watney Cup
Qualification for European competitions
Clubs who do well in English Football either the
Premier League, FA Cup or League Cup can qualify to compete in various
UEFA-organised
Europe-wide competitions in the following season (as well as continuing
to play in domestic competitions). The number of English Football clubs
playing
in Europe in any one season can range from seven to eleven, depending
on the qualification scenarios. Currently, England is awarded the
following places in European competitions:
Competition
Who Qualifies
Notes
UEFA Champions League
Club finishing 1st in the Premier League
Club finishing 2nd in the Premier League
UEFA Champions League
Third Qualifying Round
Club finishing 3rd in the Premier League
Club finishing 4th in the Premier League
Ordinarily, the fourth-place Premier League
club automatically
earns a spot in the Champions League qualifying rounds. However, a
fourth-place performance will not grant the
fourth-place
finisher a place in the Champions League competition should another,
below-fourth-place-finishing Premier League club have also been the
previous season's Champions League winner. This is because winners of
the Champions League competition earn automatic qualification for the
following season's Champions League event, regardless of their
performance in their club league. Therefore, in such a case, the
fourth-place Premier League club would qualify only for the UEFA Cup.
UEFA Cup
Club finishing 5th in the Premier League
If the fifth-placed club has already
qualified for Europe through
the FA Cup or League Cup, then the next-highest Premier League
finishers get this place
FA Cup winners
If the FA Cup winners have already
qualified for the UEFA Champions League, by the UEFA Cup regulations (Regulation 1.04),
the runners-up qualify for the spot; if they have also qualified for
the Champions League, the next highest league finisher not already
qualified for Europe takes the place.
League Cup winners
If the League Cup winners have already
qualified for Europe by a
high Premier League finish, then the next highest-finishing Premier
League club gets this place
Any English club that wins the UEFA Cup and
has not already qualified for the Champions League or UEFA Cup
By the UEFA
Cup regulations (Regulation 1.06),
this club's entry into the UEFA Cup will not be at the expense of any
other entries to which its national federation is entitled
UEFA Cup First Qualifying Round
FA Premier League club with the best UEFA
Fair Play ranking
that has not already qualified for Europe, but only if England has the
best fair play ranking or has a fair play score of above 8 and is one
of the two countries drawn out of the hat
UEFA Intertoto Cup Final Round
Club finishing highest in the Premier
League to have entered and not qualified for any other European
competition
If the club finishes lower than four places
below the last club to
have qualified for the UEFA on the basis on league position, this place
will be reallocated to another country; conversely, if another country
does not take up their Intertoto Cup allocation, England may receive
two places in the competition
In addition, once in a European competition, it
becomes possible to qualify for others:
All the winners of the Champions League Third
Qualifying Round go forward to the Champions League
All the losers of the Champions League Third
Qualifying Round go forward to the UEFA Cup
All the winners of the UEFA Cup Second
Qualifying Round go forward to the UEFA Cup
All the winners in the Intertoto Cup Final
Round go forward to the UEFA Cup Second Qualifying Round
Any clubs playing in the Champions League that
finish third in the group stage go into the UEFA Cup Round of 32
History of
English football
The modern global game of Football was first
codified in 1863 in
London. The impetus for this was to unify English public school and
university football games. There is evidence for refereed, team
football games being played in English schools since at least 1581. An
account of an exclusively kicking football game from Nottinghamshire
in the fifteenth century bears similarity to association football.
England can boast the earliest ever documented use of the English word
"football" (1409) and the earliest reference to the sport in French
(1314). The modern passing game is believed to have been innovated in
London and England is home to the oldest football clubs in the
world (dating
from at least 1857), the world's oldest competition (the FA cup founded
in 1871) and the first ever association football league (1888). For
these reasons England is considered the home of the game of football.
Football was played in England as far back as medieval times, with the
first account of a football-like game coming in 1280, and references to
"foot balls" dating as far back as 1314. By the 16th centuries
references to organised teams and goals had appeared. The 19th century
saw the origins of codification of the game, by members of the nation's
public schools and universities. The Cambridge
Rules were created in 1848, the Sheffield rules in 1857 and
the English Football Association was founded in 1863. That led to the
foundation of the FA Cup in 1871, and the England team played the
world's first international match, against Scotland, the following year.
The late nineteenth century was dominated by the
growing split
between the amateur and professional teams in English Football, which
was roughly aligned
along a North-South divide;
northern clubs were keen to adopt professionalism as workers could not
afford to play on an amateur basis, while Southern clubs by the large
part stuck by traditional "Corinthian" values of amateurism. Eventually, in
1885 the FA legalised professionalism, which led in turn to the
foundation of the English Football
League by twelve clubs in 1888. Preston North End were
inaugural winners in 1888-89,
and also were the first team to complete the Double. Aston Villa
repeated the feat in 1896-97.
TheEnglish Football League expanded over the next
25 years as football boomed in
England, from one division of twelve teams in 1888, to two divisions of
40 by 1914; during this time sides from the North and Midlands
dominated, with Aston Villa, Sunderland, The Wednesday and Newcastle
United all winning three or more league titles in the period leading up
to World War I. During hostilities, competitive football was suspended
but games were still played at a regional and less official level.
The inter-war years were dominated by Huddersfield
Town, Everton and Arsenal,
who won 11 of the 18 league titles contested between them, with
Huddersfield and Arsenal each grabbing a hat-trick, and Arsenal taking
five in total, as well as two FA Cups. The national stadium at Wembley
was opened in 1923, with the "White
Horse Final"
being the first FA Cup final to be played there. By the turn of the
thirties, the League expanded to include two whole new divisions and 88
clubs, and the national side started to play sides from outside the
British Isles.
However, the FA's resignation from FIFA in 1928 meant that England did
not contest any of the first three World Cups.
The post-war years were dominated first by
Manchester United (three titles and an FA Cup) and Wolverhampton
Wanderers (two titles and two FA Cups), although the former's progress
was halted by the 1958 Munich air disaster. However, during this time
English football was being outstripped abroad; England lost 1-0 to the
United States at the 1950 World Cup, and then 6-3 to Hungary at Wembley
in 1953. English clubs had little success in the European club
competitions set up; The Football Association and the Football League
persuaded the 1955 English champions Chelsea from participating in the
first European Cup competition (1955/56). Chelsea's successors as
English champions, Manchester United ignored such advice and reached
the semi-final of the 1957 European Cup, where they lost to the
eventual winners Real Madrid.
The following season, United defeated Red Star Belgrade in the quarter
final only to be decimated in the Munich
Air Disaster when returning from Belgrade. Their
patched-up team proved no match for A.C. Milan in the semi-finals.
Subsequent European Cup campaigns by Wolverhampton Wanderers in 1959
and 1960 ended in the first round and the quarter finals respectively.
A London XI and Birmingham City did reach the finals of the first two
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup tournaments.
Modernisation followed in the 1960s, with
revolutions in the game such as the George Eastham case allowing
players greater freedom of movement, and the abolition of the maximum
wage in 1961. Tottenham Hotspur became the first club to win The Double
in the 20th century in 1960-61, and the first English club to win a
European trophy, the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1962-63. The most marked
success of the era, however, was Alf Ramsey's England side, which won
the 1966 FIFA World Cup on home soil after controversially beating West
Germany 4-2 after extra time, the first and only time the national side
has won the trophy.
Two years later Manchester United became the first
English Football club to win the European Cup, while Leeds United and
Arsenal both enjoyed success in the late sixties and early seventies.
However, it was Liverpool
who came to dominate the game from the early seventies onwards, for
nearly two decades; they won 11 titles and four European Cups between
1972 and 1990. Other successful sides in the 1970s and 1980s included
their rivals Nottingham Forest,
who won a title and two European Cups in the late seventies, and
Everton, with two titles in the mid eighties, and Aston Villa with a
European Cup in 1982. However while club sides thrived in European
competition, the national team struggled, failing to qualify for both
the 1974 and 1978 World Cups,
By this time serious problems had surfaced. The
rise of hooliganism
marred the game throughout the seventies and eighties, with attendances
dipping. The nadir came in 1985, when Liverpool fans' hooliganism,
combined with poor policing and infrastructure, led to the deaths of 39
Juventus fans before the European Cup final, in the Heysel Stadium disaster;
English clubs were banned from Europe for five years as a result.
England's own ancient and poorly-built stadiums were responsible, along
with other factors, for two disasters, one at Bradford in 1985 and the
other at Hillsborough
in 1989, killing 56 and 96 people respectively.
The post-Hillsborough Taylor Report on English
Football forced the conversion of stadiums to all-seater; at the same
time, the money from television coverage was increasing rapidly. These,
combined with England's relative success at the 1990 World Cup,
reaching the semi-finals only to lose on penalties to West Germany, and
a concerted effort to drive out hooliganism reinvigorated the national
game. In the spring of 1992, the top 22 clubs resigned en
masse
from The English Football League, forming a new top-level competition
overseen
by The FA and named The FA Premier League (from 2007, simply the
Premier League). The Premier League came to be dominated by Manchester
United in its first decade, who won eight titles and four FA Cups
(including two Doubles) and a Champions League title between 1993 and
2003.
Although this boom brought wealth to the game,
clubs' financial
success also became more polarised, particularly after the collapse of
ITV Digital
in 2002, which led to lower-division clubs being put into
administration and one or two facing near-bankruptcy. This polarisation
has occurred even within the Premier League, with it becoming dominated
by Manchester United, Arsenal (winning two doubles in 1998 &
2002,
and a league title unbeaten in 2004), and Chelsea (who were bought by
Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich in 2003 and won back-to-back
titles in 2005 and 2006).
Despite the success of the domestic game, and a
resurgence in
fortunes for English Football clubs in Europe (Liverpool won the
Champions
League again in 2005), the national team's fortunes have been decidedly
mixed, with them missing the '94 World Cup enitrely. They had their
best post-1990 performance coming in Euro
96,
where they were knocked out in the semi-finals on penalties by Germany;
penalty shoot-out defeats went on to haunt England at the 1998 World
Cup, Euro 2004 and
the 2006 World Cup
as well. Most recently England failed to reach the finals of the
European Football Championships to be held in 2008 following a
laclustre display throughout the qualifying campaign, with manager
Steve McClaren being sacked from his position of head coach as a result.