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Crewe Alexandra F.C.

Crewe Alexandra Football Club is an English professional association football club based in the town of Crewe, Cheshire, that competes in League Two, the fourth tier of the English football league system. Nicknamed 'The Railwaymen' because of the town's links with the rail industry, and also commonly known as 'The Alex', they have played at Gresty Road since 1906. The supporters' fiercest rivalry is with Staffordshire-based side Port Vale.

Crewe Alexandra
Full nameCrewe Alexandra Football Club
Nickname(s)The Railwaymen, The Alex
Founded1877; 146 years ago (1877) (as Crewe)
GroundGresty Road
Capacity10,153
ChairmanCharles Grant[1][2]
ManagerLee Bell
LeagueEFL League Two
2021–22EFL League One, 24th of 24 (relegated)
WebsiteClub website
Current season

The club was formed in 1877 as the football division of Crewe Alexandra Cricket Club, named after Princess Alexandra. Crewe reached the FA Cup semi-finals in 1888 and were then a founding member of the Football League Second Division in 1892. In 1921, the club was invited to join the newly created Football League Third Division North, where they stayed for the next 37 years before being placed in the new Fourth Division in 1958. The team achieved their first promotion after finishing third in 1962–63. Crewe were immediately relegated but were promoted again in 1967–68; they again lasted just one season in the Third Division.

Crewe spent 20 years struggling in the fourth tier before their fortunes were revived under Dario Gradi, manager for 24 years from 1983. He twice led the team to promotion to the third tier, and after two unsuccessful play-off campaigns, won the 1997 Second Division play-off final to win a place in the Football League First Division. After an absence of 101 years, they played at this second tier level―renamed the Football League Championship before the start of the 2004–05 season―for eight of the following nine seasons. Gradi encouraged Crewe to play attractive, technical football and built a reputation for developing young players, with future England internationals David Platt, Danny Murphy, Seth Johnson and Dean Ashton all emerging at the club. After Crewe dropped down to the fourth tier again in 2009, Steve Davis led the club to promotion to the third tier via the play-offs in 2012. In 2013, the club won its first and only Football League Trophy. Under David Artell, manager from January 2017, Crewe returned to third tier League One in 2020 and finished 12th in the 2020–21 season, but were relegated in 2022.

From late 2016 through to publication of the FA's Sheldon review in March 2021, the club—and Gradi—were heavily implicated in the football sexual abuse scandal, facing criticism for their handling of youth coach Barry Bennell, imprisoned in 1995 for child sexual abuse, and jailed again in 2018. Gradi was suspended by the Football Association in December 2016, and club chairman John Bowler resigned in March 2021.

History

Formation and early years

Crewe Alexandra Football Club was formed in 1877 as an offshoot of Crewe Alexandra Cricket Club (established in September 1866 by Thomas Abraham[a] and other workers at Crewe locomotive works),[4][5][b] and named after Princess Alexandra.[7][8] They were based at the Alexandra Recreation Ground in Crewe, adjacent to Crewe railway station, and played their first match against a side from Basford in North Staffordshire on 1 December 1877, drawing 1–1.[3][6] In 1883, Crewe Alexandra's first match in the FA Cup was against Scottish club Queen's Park of Glasgow, losing 10–0.[9] In February 1886, William Bell became the first Crewe player to win an international cap, playing for Wales against Ireland in Wrexham.[10] In 1887–88, the club reached the FA Cup semi-finals, defeating Swifts,[11][c] Derby County and Middlesbrough en route, before going out to Preston North End. In 1891, the football club split away from the cricket club—a step that was condemned by Francis Webb, chief engineer of the town's London and North Western Railway works, who supported the exclusion of professional sportsmen; following the schism, Webb and the LNWR said the company would 'refuse to find employment in the Crewe Works for any professional football player'.[3] Consequently, "the football section of the Alexandra Club owed little to the LNWR..., despite the teams being closely linked to the local railway industry."[13] On 5 March 1892, John Pearson became the first Crewe player to win an England cap, playing against Ireland in Belfast;[14][15] he remains the only Crewe player capped for the full England side while playing for the club.[16]

Crewe secretary J.G. Hall helped found the unsuccessful Combination (launched at Crewe's Royal Hotel in early 1889) and then the Football Alliance (1889–1892).[17] When the latter merged with the Football League, Crewe were a founding member of the Football League Second Division in 1892, but lost their league status in 1896 after only four seasons—finishing third from bottom, fourth from bottom, then bottom twice—possibly due to a player budget that was a quarter of that of other clubs.[18] The club left the Alexandra Recreation Ground shortly before the end of the 1895–96 season, and after playing at a number of different venues, including in nearby Sandbach, they moved to the first Gresty Road ground in 1897 (in 1906 the current Gresty Road ground was rebuilt to the west of the original site).[19] Incorporated as a limited company on 29 May 1899,[20][d] Crewe spent two further seasons in the second incarnation of the Combination from 1896 followed by three seasons in the Lancashire League, before competing in the Birmingham & District League for ten years. They also won the Cheshire Senior Challenge Cup in 1907 and 1910.[11] The team spent the 1910s in the Central League, finishing second in 1913–14 and 1920–21.[21]

 
Chart of table positions of Crewe Alexandra in the Football League.

Crewe rejoined the Football League in 1921; they finished 6th in their first two seasons in the Third Division North but did not finish as high again until 1931–32 and 1935–36.[22] In October 1932, defender Fred Keenor's last Wales appearance marked Crewe's first international cap of the 20th century.[23] Crewe's first major honours were Welsh Cup wins in 1936 and 1937;[24] Crewe is not in Wales but English clubs, usually from border areas, participated by invitation. In 1936, Bert Swindells scored his 100th League goal for Crewe,[25] going on to score 128 League goals for the club,[24] a record that still stands,[26] as well as goals in both Welsh Cup finals.[27]

Post-World War II

From the 1950s to the early 1980s, Crewe enjoyed only occasional success. Looking over Gresty Road, Michael Palin, in the 1980 BBC Great Railway Journeys of the World series, described Crewe as "like those other railway towns, Swindon and Doncaster, possessed of a football team which is perpetually propping up the bottom of the Fourth Division".[28] Between 1894 and 1982, Crewe finished last in the Football League eight times, more than any other league club.[29] On 25 December 1954, Crewe embarked on a sequence where they did not win away from home for 56 matches; the run ended with a 1–0 win at Southport on 24 April 1957.[30] Crewe finished bottom of Division Three North three times in a row from 1955–56 to 1957–58, tallying just 28, 21 and 23 points from 46 games in each respective season.[31] The club was placed into the newly formed Fourth Division in 1958–59.[32]

All-time records were set against First Division Tottenham Hotspur in the FA Cup fourth round in 1960. A new record Gresty Road attendance of 20,000 saw Crewe hold Spurs to a 2–2 draw on 30 January.[33] On 3 February, Tottenham convincingly won the replay 13–2, Crewe's record defeat.[34] The following year, however, Jimmy McGuigan's Crewe side defeated another First Division club, Chelsea, 2–1 in the FA Cup at Stamford Bridge on 7 January 1961. Chelsea's side included former Crewe player Frank Blunstone—who scored Chelsea's goal—as well as England internationals Peter Bonetti, Jimmy Greaves and Terry Venables.[35] Crewe were then again drawn against the eventual double-winning Spurs side, who won 5–1 in the fourth round at White Hart Lane.[36]

1960s promotions and relegations

In 1963, Crewe secured their first promotion to the Third Division, winning the season's final game against Exeter City, with Frank Lord scoring the only goal in front of a crowd of 9,807 at Gresty Road. Lord holds the record for most hat-tricks for the club with eight.[37] The club finished in third place, behind champions Brentford and Oldham Athletic, but were relegated back to Division Four the following season. In the 1964–65 season, Terry Harkin scored a record 34 league goals for Crewe.[38][24] Managed by Ernie Tagg, the club achieved promotion for a second time in 1967–68, but again spent just one season in the Third Division.[39]

1970s and early 1980s

From 1969, Crewe spent 20 years in Division Four, finishing bottom in 1971–72, 1978–79 and 1981–82, and not achieving a top half finish until 1985.[40] In 1974, they came within two minutes of taking Aston Villa into extra time in a League Cup third round replay at Villa Park.[41] In 1977, Tommy Lowry played his record-setting 475th and last game for the Railwaymen; he had earlier passed Peter Leigh's total of 430 appearances between 1960 and 1972.[24] From February to September 1979, the club went a record 16 matches (15 league, one League Cup tie) without winning at Gresty Road.[42] In December 1979, manager Tony Waddington signed the goalkeeper Bruce Grobbelaar who kept eight clean-sheets in his 24 matches played,[43] and, on 5 May 1980, scored a penalty—his only professional goal—to seal a 2–0 victory over York City.[44]

Gradi years (1983–2011)

 
Dario Gradi managed 1,359 Crewe first team games

In June 1983, after Crewe finished second from bottom at the end of the 1982–83 season, the then club chairman Norman Rowlinson appointed Milan-born Dario Gradi as manager.[45][46] Gradi looked to build an academy structure to develop players that could be sold to help fund the player development programme.[47] Among his early transfer successes were Geoff Thomas and John Pemberton (both signed from Rochdale and sold to Crystal Palace, in 1987 and 1988 respectively),[48][49] and former Manchester United apprentice David Platt, signed in 1985 and sold to Aston Villa for £200,000 in February 1988.[50]

Under Gradi, and despite some Crewe fans' initial reservations,[51] Crewe played attractive, technical football and gained a reputation for developing young talent. Steve Walters became Crewe's youngest player, aged just 16 years and 119 days when he played against Peterborough United on 7 May 1988.[52] In 1989, Crewe won their third promotion, a 1–1 draw at Tranmere Rovers enough to take both teams into the Third Division.[53] Meanwhile, on 7 January 1989, Crewe had hosted Aston Villa—and Platt—at Gresty Road in the FA Cup third round, taking a 2–0 lead before the visitors rallied to secure a 3–2 win,[54][55] with Platt netting the winner but refusing to celebrate against his former club.[56] A year later, on 6 January 1990, Crewe were again drawn away at Chelsea in the third round; Walters gave Crewe a first-half lead at Stamford Bridge before Chelsea equalised in the 82nd minute to force a replay which they won 2–0.[57][58] In March 1990, Crewe defender Paul Edwards was sold to Coventry City for £350,000;[59] he was later named in the 1989-1990 Third Division PFA Team of the Year,[60] Crewe's first player to feature in the awards.

Crewe were relegated in 1991. However, despite further player sales―defender Rob Jones joined Liverpool for £300,000,[61] then Craig Hignett was sold for a club record £500,000 to Middlesbrough[62]―the club reached the 1993 Third Division play-off final but lost against York City at Wembley.[63] Crewe then gained promotion in 1994 after a final day victory at Chester City.[64][65] In the same year, Neil Lennon became the first Crewe player to win an international cap since Fred Keenor in 1932 when he was selected to play for Northern Ireland against Mexico.[66] Crewe twice lost in play-off semi-finals, to Bristol Rovers in 1995[67] and Notts County in 1996,[68][69] then returned to Wembley in the 1997 Division Two play-off final, securing a 1–0 victory over Brentford to put the club back in the second tier for the first time since 1896.[70]

Second tier survival

Crewe achieved their highest finishing position, 11th, in the 1997–98 First Division season.[24] Gradi kept his team in the division until 2002, despite a matchday income on which many more lowly clubs could not survive. Boosting the finances, notable player sales included Lennon (to Leicester City for £750,000),[71] Danny Murphy (to Liverpool for an initial fee of £1.5m),[61] and Seth Johnson (to Derby County for £3m).[72] Gradi celebrated his 1,000th game in charge of Crewe on 20 November 2001.[73]

After one season in the Division Two the team were promoted back to Division One at the end of the 2002–03 season,[74] having finished in second place—Crewe's first runner-up position—with Rob Hulse scoring 22 league goals, and being named in the PFA Team of the Year,[75] ahead of a £750,000 transfer to West Bromwich Albion.[76] Crewe retained their Division One place in the 2003–04 season, during which assistant manager Neil Baker took temporary charge between 22 September and 17 October 2003 while Gradi underwent heart surgery.[77] At the start of the 2004–05 season, Crewe were rated one of the teams most likely to be relegated from the newly renamed 'Championship'. In the event, they put in a good showing in the first half of the season, but after selling Dean Ashton to Norwich City for £3 million in the January 2005 transfer window,[78] Crewe failed to win until the final match of the season, when they defeated Coventry City 2–1 to avoid relegation on goal difference. However, they were relegated to League One (level three) the following season. Nonetheless, Crewe were named the "Most Admired Club" in the 2006 Football League Awards.[79]

Stepping back

By the summer of 2007, Gradi was the longest-serving manager in English league football, having completed 24 years in sole charge of the club. Crewe announced that, from 1 July 2007, Gradi would take up a new role as the club's technical director while gradually allowing newly appointed first-team coach Steve Holland control of the team.[80] Holland's first season was a disappointment as the club narrowly avoided relegation, finishing 20th with 50 points.[81] Ahead of his second season, he spent half a million pounds on new signings, while striker Nicky Maynard joined Bristol City for £2.25 million.[82] However, despite a positive pre-season, Crewe took only nine points from their first 16 games. The board sacked Holland as first team coach in November 2008, and re-appointed Gradi as caretaker manager.[83]

On 24 December 2008, former Stoke City manager Gudjon Thordarson was appointed as Holland's successor.[84] He made a promising start, and received the February 2009 Manager of the Month award (the first time a Crewe manager had won the award),[85] but the team suffered a poor end-of-season run, not winning for 10 games, and were relegated to League Two. On 2 October 2009, after nine months in charge and another poor run of results, Thordarson was sacked,[86] and Gradi was reinstated as caretaker manager. Despite lingering close to the playoff places for the majority of the season, another run of poor form saw the club finish 18th. Crewe improved to 10th in the 2010–11 season, during which Gradi won the January 2011 Manager of the Month.[87] In November 2011, Gradi finally stepped down as manager and returned to his previous role as director of football focusing on youth development.[88]

2011 to present day

Steve Davis was appointed manager in the same month.[89] Previously manager of nearby Nantwich Town, Davis had been appointed assistant manager in June 2009, replacing former assistant Neil Baker.[90] Davis immediately led the team to a 16-match unbeaten run in early 2012 up to 7th position, earning the club a play-off place.[91] Crewe defeated Southend United in the two-legged semi-final, extending the unbeaten run to a club record 18 matches[92] and securing a play-off final against Cheltenham Town at Wembley on 27 May 2012 which they won 2–0; the goalscorers were academy graduates Nick Powell and Byron Moore.[93][94]

Before the 2012–13 season, Crewe sold Powell to Manchester United, and on transfer deadline day captain Ashley Westwood joined Aston Villa. However, with new Academy players coming into the first team, Crewe returned to Wembley to win the Football League Trophy, beating Southend United 2–0 in the final in April 2013.[95] In the league, Crewe finished in mid-table; they ended the season by fielding a team whose starting line-up were all Crewe Academy graduates.[96][97]

 
John Bowler in 2000. He served as chairman from 1988 until resigning in March 2021 following criticisms in the FA's sex abuse inquiry.

In March 2014, John Bowler, Crewe chairman since 1988,[e] was honoured with the Contribution to League Football Award at The Football League Awards.[98] Dario Gradi had earlier won the same award, in 2011. In the 2015 New Year Honours, Bowler was awarded an MBE for services to football; Gradi was presented an MBE in January 1998.[99][100]

Crewe retained their place in League One in the 2013–14 season, but started the following season poorly, gaining four points from the first 11 League games. Some sustained runs of better results pulled the club out of the relegation places. The team needed at least a home draw against Bradford City to secure safety but lost 1–0 and had to rely on results elsewhere to ensure League One football for another year, finishing two points above the bottom four in 20th.[101]

The 2015–16 season started in a similar pattern, with the team winning just two of their first 15 league games. They also crashed out of the FA Cup in the first round against non-league Eastleigh,[102] forcing Davis to defend his position as the 'right man' for the job.[103] Crewe's relegation to League Two was confirmed following a 3–0 defeat at local rivals Port Vale, with five games remaining.[104] After an initially promising start to the following season, Crewe's form slumped during the final months of 2016, and on 8 January 2017, Davis was sacked as Crewe manager.[105]

Former Crewe defender and Academy operations manager David Artell replaced Davis.[106][107] Artell maintained the flow of Academy players and, as Crewe improved to 15th at the end of the 2017–18 season, he emulated Davis in selecting another starting line-up who were all Crewe Academy graduates.[108]

After 36 years involvement with the club, Gradi, 78, announced his retirement from all positions at Crewe Alexandra on 7 October 2019.[109] In February 2020, further changes to the club's board were announced with local businessman Stuart Whitby[110] and former Nantwich Town chairman Tony Davison joining the board following a £1.75m buy-out of majority shareholder Norman Hassall. The Railwaymen Supporters Society also raised £250,000,[111] to earn the right for a Crewe fans' representative on the club's new board.[112]

On the pitch, Artell's progress since 2017 culminated in Crewe vying for promotion for much of the 2019–20 season, with the club top of the table (ahead of Swindon Town on goal difference) when the football season was suspended in March 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic. On 9 June, Crewe's promotion to League One was confirmed, but Swindon were crowned League Two champions on the basis of average points per game.[113] Artell was selected as League Two Manager of the Year in the League Managers Association Awards[114]—becoming the first Crewe manager to win such an annual award—and two Academy graduates, Perry Ng and Charlie Kirk, were named in the PFA League Two Team of the Year.[115] Crewe finished 12th in League One at the end of the 2020–21 season – the club's highest finish since relegation from the Championship in 2006.[116] However, the following season was "one of the worst" seasons in Crewe's modern history; the club was relegated with four games still to play after a 2-0 defeat at Doncaster Rovers on 9 April 2022.[117] Two days later, Crewe parted company with Artell; assistant manager Alex Morris was appointed interim manager,[118] becoming the permanent manager on 28 April 2022.[119] Winless in nine games, on 4 November 2022 Morris stepped down as manager "for compassionate reasons" and reverted to assistant manager. Lee Bell became interim manager[120][121] and on 1 December 2022 was given the job on a permanent basis.[122]

Stadiums

 
Detail of 1888 OS map showing Alexandra Recreation Ground and adjacent football ground in Crewe

Alexandra Recreation Ground

Until 1896, Crewe played at the Alexandra Recreation Ground, located just to the north of the modern-day Gresty Road. After playing at various venues in 1896 and 1897, including in nearby Sandbach, the club returned to the same area of Crewe, adjacent to Crewe railway station, to play at the first Gresty Road ground, located to the south-east of the original stadium. In 1906 the ground was demolished to make way for some new railway lines, and a new Gresty Road stadium was built on a site directly to the west.[19][123]

Gresty Road

 
Gresty Road in 1998, looking east towards the Family Stand, with the old main stand on the right
 
Main stand (left) and Gresty Road End

The pitch runs approximately east to west, with teams playing either west towards Gresty Road or east towards the railway station. The main stand has always been situated on the south side of the ground. Until the 1990s, the main stand was a wooden structure, built in 1932 after a fire destroyed the original stand,[123][124] offering the ground's only (wooden) seating plus a standing area―'The Paddock'―while the other three sides were all standing terraces. This configuration saw the club's record attendance when 20,000 people watched the FA Cup third round tie against Spurs in 1960.[24]

During the 1990s, phased modernisation saw open terracing at the "Railway End" (at one time a roughly formed "ash bank" terraced with sleepers) replaced by a new family stand in 1993.[125] The "Gresty Road End" (then the main away supporters area) was also replaced by an all-seater stand in 1995;[126] and the partially-covered northern stand (the home supporters' "Pop Side") was replaced by an all-seater stand in 1996–97.[127] Completion of the final phase in 2000, including construction of a new £5.2 million main stand, saw some reorganisation of seating allocations. Away fans are currently accommodated in the stand along the northern touchline, with the option of additional capacity in the family stand for particularly large visiting contingents; Crewe hosted its first crowd of over 10,000 in the now all-seater stadium in 2000[128] with the record attendance of 10,092 when Crewe played Manchester City on 12 March 2002.[129] The Gresty Road End and main stand are solely for home supporters.[130]

In June 2021, the club agreed a £0.5m naming rights deal with long-term shirt sponsor Mornflake; the ground will be called the "Mornflake Stadium" until 2023–24.[131] Also known as the Alexandra Stadium, it has an all-seated capacity of 10,153. It features four stands:[130]

  • The "Boughey Stand", or main stand, seats 6,809 spectators and also has a directors area and media seating, and houses the club's offices, team changing rooms, hospitality facilities, ticket office and club shop.[132]
  • The "Rhino Safety Stand",[133] also known as the "Gresty Road End", accommodates 982 spectators and 4 disabled spectators. A bar for home supporters is situated to the north of this stand.
  • The "Blue Bell Family Stand", also known as the "Railway End", accommodates 682 spectators.
  • The "Whitby Morrison Ice Cream Van Stand",[134] formerly the "Pop Side", accommodates 1,680 away spectators, and also houses the ground's matchday video filming facilities. In July 2021, Whitby Morrison announced a 99-year extension of its stand sponsorship at Crewe.[135]

Should the ground require expansion, the most likely change will be redevelopment of the Ice Cream Van Stand to become a two-tiered stand.[130]

Club identity

 
Crewe Alexandra kit, 1988–1989

Since the late 1890s, the main (home) Crewe playing strip has featured a red or predominantly red top, usually with white shorts (though red and black shorts have also been briefly adopted) and red socks.[136] The team played in white shirts and blue shorts from 1886 to 1896, but have since played mainly in red and white.[136][137] The red shirts earned the early nickname of the "Robins",[137] though the club is more commonly referred to as the "Alex" or the "Railwaymen" (reflecting the club's railway works founders, the town's associations with the railway industry, and the club's proximity to Crewe railway station).[136]

Crewe's away colours have varied. Blue, white or blue-and-white shirts have been the most commonly adopted, but during the 21st century, the club has also occasionally played in other colours;[138] black with a gold trim was adopted for the 2021–2022 season,[139] then light and dark blue vertical stripes the following season.[140]

The town's crest appeared on the team's shirts in the 1958–59 season.[136] This included a lion―associated with the Marquess of Crewe―holding a cogged wheel, a larger six-spoked railway wheel, and two wheatsheaves reflecting south Cheshire's agricultural connections.[137] This was replaced in 1975 by a simpler badge with a lion holding a railway wheel―a motif borrowed from British Railways[136]―on a circle containing the words 'Crewe Alexandra Football Club' arranged around a football. The current badge, adopted in 1998, features a lion perched on a football, encircled by a laurel and the club's name; it dropped the railway wheel, prompting some Crewe fans to demand the club "bring back the wheel".[137][13] The club's mascot is also a lion: Gresty the Lion appears on matchdays and in other community activities.[141]

The current shirt sponsor is cereals supplier Mornflake―also based in Gresty Road―whose logo has appeared on the shirts since 2005,[136] and is set to continue through to 2023–24.[142]

Supporters and rivalries

Attendances

Crewe is a small town: its built-up area had a total population of 71,722 in 2011.[143] Founded by employees of the railway works, the club drew many of its supporters from the works, as well as residents from more rural areas surrounding the town. The club's location next to Crewe railway station has also helped supporters travel to and from games at Gresty Road. From the 1920s through to the 1960s, attendances typically averaged around 6,000,[144] but local derbies could more than double crowds: the visit of Stoke City on 26 October 1926 attracted 15,102, for example,[145] while Port Vale drew 17,883 on 21 September 1953,[146] Crewe's record league crowd.[144] Cup matches against major clubs such as Spurs also drew large crowds (a record 20,000 in 1960).[33] However, league attendances dwindled in the 1970s and 1980s,[147] when seasonal averages of under 2,000 were recorded four times, with 1986-87 being lowest: 1,817;[144] just 1,009 watched a 1–1 draw with Peterborough United on 4 February 1986.[148] Crewe's resurgence from the mid-1980s under Gradi boosted local interest, with 5,000-plus attendances increasingly common, even as Gresty Road's transition to an all-seater stadium began to restrict numbers in the late 1990s; average attendance peaked at 7,741 in 2004 during Crewe's years in the Championship.[144] League Two crowds before the COVID-19 pandemic shutdown in 2020 averaged 4,580,[144] just above their all-time average, 4,576.[149]

Ticket prices at Gresty Road are broadly in line with other clubs' rates for all-seated areas. In the BBC's 2017 Price of Football survey, Crewe's tickets for individual League Two games cost a maximum of £22 (15 other clubs charged higher prices); the most expensive Crewe season ticket cost £325 (only one other club, Accrington Stanley, charged less for its most expensive season tickets), and its lowest priced season ticket (£280) was in the mid-range for the division.[150] For the 2021–2022 season in League One, matchday tickets cost a maximum of £25.[151]

Rivalries

Crewe's main rivals are fellow English Football League team Port Vale. As of March 2021, the clubs have played 81 games since 1892 (8 games against Burslem Port Vale); overall, Crewe have won 20 games, Port Vale have won 38, with the teams drawing 23 games.[152][153] The rivalry (known by some since the 1980s as the A500 Derby) intensified after the millennium, when both clubs were in Leagues One and Two, with close encounters sometimes resulting in violence and arrests.[154][155] On 22 February 2014, Crewe beat Vale 3–1, at Vale Park and there was trouble before, during and after the game, with several arrests made and flares thrown on the pitch.[156] In January 2015 at Vale Park, Crewe won 1–0 to seal their first league double over Port Vale, and two arrests were made at the game, with minor disturbances between rival fans after the match.[157] Six arrests were made at Gresty Road during the 22 September 2018 meeting between the two sides.[158] A 2019 study ranked the Port Vale-Crewe Alexandra rivalry as the 14th biggest rivalry in English professional football.[159]

Crewe also maintain smaller rivalries with Wrexham, Shrewsbury Town, Stoke City and traditional local Cheshire derbies with Macclesfield Town, Chester City, Stockport County and Tranmere Rovers. The Railwaymen's rivalry with Stockport intensified somewhat in 2009 when Stockport all but relegated Crewe from League One, after beating them 4–3 at Edgeley Park.[160] Crewe then returned the favour on 30 April 2011, when they beat County 2–0 at Gresty Road, confirming County's relegation to non-League football.[161]

Songs and music

Crewe's fans were the first to sing the song "Blue Moon"[162]―also sung by fans of Manchester City―(with lyrics that do not quite match the Rodgers and Hart original) and said to be a response to the gloomy days of the 1950s and 1960s,[163] or reflecting an old joke that the team only wins 'once in a blue moon', ie, rarely.[164] During the 1990s, one Crewe supporter, classically trained musician Richard Sutton, was known for taking a trumpet to games,[165] playing occasional fanfares such as the theme from Star Wars during matches.[166] The Crewe-based dance trio Dario G were named after Dario Gradi.[167][168]

Railwaymen Supporters Society

Crewe supporters often sing a song featuring the line "We are the Railwaymen". Aggregating and formalising several former Crewe supporters groups, and supported by the national Football Supporters' Association, the independent Railwaymen Supporters Society was established in 2018, and incorporated as a community benefit society on 8 July 2019.[169][170] Initiatives have included a campaign, Project250, to raise £250,000 to invest in club shares and gain representation on the club's board (achieved in February 2020),[171] and the establishment of an Ex-Players Association (Gareth Whalley is its president).[172]

Reputation

Player development

As an early professional club in the late 19th century, several Crewe players achieved international selection, particularly for Wales. During the 20th century, however, Crewe had few stars. Welsh international Fred Keenor played his final league games for the club and his last international cap in 1932 was Crewe's first of the century.[23] Some players started or developed their careers at Crewe before achieving fame elsewhere. For example, forward Frank Blunstone played 48 League games for Crewe in the early 1950s before a move to Chelsea and five England caps,[173] Stan Bowles scored 18 Crewe goals in 51 games in the early 1970s and went on to play for Queens Park Rangers and England,[174] and goalkeeper Bruce Grobbelaar played 24 Crewe matches at the start of the 1980s before moving to Liverpool.[44]

Crewe's conscious investment in young players began in the late 1980s when then manager Dario Gradi and club chairman John Bowler got the local council to contribute towards the costs of an all-weather pitch at Gresty Road.[175] This formed the starting point for a youth coaching facility, which by the early 1990s was coaching 120 youngsters every week.[176] In 1995, Crewe leased a 20-acre site at Reaseheath, near Nantwich, planning a £750,000 training and player development facility largely funded by transfer sales.[177] In 1996, Crewe received a lottery grant to develop a youth coaching facility in nearby Shavington.[178] By 2015, player sales had generated over £20 million which had contributed to modernising Gresty Road and developing Crewe's Academy,[179] making it the only club outside the top two divisions to have a Category Two academy club;[179] in 2022, it was ranked in the top 10 academies in England and Wales.[180]

Players who passed through the ranks since establishment of the Academy include England internationals Geoff Thomas and David Platt, Wales international Robbie Savage, and Northern Ireland's Neil Lennon and Steve Jones. These were all youngsters signed from other clubs, but the Academy also nurtured Crewe's own trainees – most notably England internationals Rob Jones, Danny Murphy, Seth Johnson and Dean Ashton, plus Wales midfielder David Vaughan.[181][182]

Sexual abuse scandal

On 16 November 2016, former Crewe defender Andy Woodward revealed that he had been the victim of child sexual abuse by former football coach Barry Bennell (convicted as a paedophile in the US in 1994) at the club in the 1980s.[183][184] By the time club chairman John Bowler responded to the revelations, on Monday 21 November, six other individuals had contacted the police,[185] with Woodward's Crewe teammate Steve Walters alleging he was another of Bennell's victims.[186] Woodward criticised Crewe for failing to apologise.[187] On 27 November 2016, a third former Crewe player, Anthony Hughes, revealed that he too had been abused by Bennell,[188] as did Crewe trainee, later Wimbledon and Northern Ireland international Mark Williams.[189][190]

Bennell was tried at Liverpool Crown Court in early 2018, and convicted of 50 offences of sexual abuse against 12 boys[191] (and on 20 February 2018 was sentenced to 30 years in prison).[192] After the guilty verdicts on 15 February, victims including Andy Woodward and Steve Walters read statements outside court.[191] Crewe Alexandra expressed its "deepest sympathies" to Bennell's victims, saying it was not aware of any sexual abuse by Bennell nor had it received any complaint about sexual abuse by him before or during his employment with the club,[193][191] though this has been disputed.[194]

Walters accused Crewe of "victim blaming" in a bid to avoid compensation payouts. He and at least one other former Crewe player have launched High Court damages claims of upwards of £200,000 against the club;[195] an eight-week trial is listed to start in October 2021.[196] On 19 March 2019, the Guardian reported Crewe Alexandra planned to contest victims' claims,[197] but later (27 March 2019), reported an apparent U-turn in Crewe's approach; it had agreed an out-of-court financial settlement with one of Bennell's victims.[198] Andy Woodward had unsuccessfully sued Crewe for damages in 2004.[199]

Crewe were additionally criticised for not holding an independent review into how they dealt with historical child sex abuse allegations.[200] In March 2018, the said that, as it had fully co-operated with police investigations, it did "not intend to commission a further independent investigation," and the police's report had also been supplied to the FA review headed by Clive Sheldon.[201] This decision was criticised by local MP Laura Smith,[202] by MP Damian Collins, chair of the DCMS select committee,[203] by Crewe Town Council,[204] and by the Professional Footballers Association's Gordon Taylor.[205] In his final report, Sheldon said he "liaised with the Club and its lawyers with a view to suggesting other lines of enquiry that could usefully be followed up by the Club. Ultimately, the Club agreed to conduct those further enquiries, and provided me with a report setting out its conclusions."[206]

The FA's 710-page report,[206] published on 17 March 2021, identified failures to act adequately on complaints or rumours of sexual abuse at eight professional clubs including Crewe. Considering whether senior Crewe people knew about Bennell, Sheldon concluded they had not received specific reports of abuse. However, directors had discussed concerns about inappropriate behaviour, and the club "should have done more to check on the well-being of the boys".[207] Following publication of the report, Crewe Alexandra apologised to all survivors of Bennell's abuse, expressing "wholehearted regret" about their ignorance of his crimes,[208] and Gradi also apologised.[209] With Gradi "effectively banned for life" from football for safeguarding reasons,[210] Crewe chairman John Bowler was pressed to resign[211] and did so on 25 March 2021.[212]

Honours

Crewe Alexandra F.C.
Honour No. Years
Football League Second Division (3rd tier)[f] - 2nd place 1 2002–03[74]
Football League Second Division (3rd tier) - play-off winner 1 1997[70]
Football League Fourth Division / League Two (4th tier)[f] - 2nd place 1 2019–20[113]
League Two (4th tier) - play-off winner 1 2012[93][94]
Football League Trophy 1 2013[95]
Welsh Cup 2 1935-36, 1936-37[24]

Crewe Alexandra have never won a division title, and have only been division runners-up twice. In addition to play-off promotions, the club also achieved four promotions from the fourth tier, by third place finishes in 1962–63 and 1993–94[215] and by fourth place finishes in 1967–68 and 1988–89.[215] Crewe's highest finishing league position was 11th in the second tier, the First Division in 1997–98.[11]

In the major cup competitions, Crewe reached the semi-finals of the FA Cup in 1888.[11] They have reached the third round of the League Cup ten times (1960, 1974, 1975, 1978, 1992, 1999, 2001, 2004, 2006, 2008),[216] losing 1–0 to Aston Villa in a replay at Villa Park in 1974,[41] and taking cup holders Manchester United into extra time at Gresty Road in 2006 before losing 2–1.[217]

While Crewe is not in Wales, English clubs, usually from border areas, have participated by invitation in the Welsh Cup, which Crewe won twice, in 1936 and 1937.[24] The club won the Cheshire Senior Cup 19 times up to 1998,[24] and have won it a further three times, most recently in 2017.[218]

Records

Crewe's biggest league victory came against Rotherham United on 1 October 1932 in the Third Division North when they won 8–0.[219] In the FA Cup, their biggest win was 9–1 over Northwich Victoria on 16 November 1889.[220] The club's heaviest defeat was in the FA Cup in 1960 when they were beaten 13–2 by Tottenham Hotspur at White Hart Lane on 30 January 1960,[24] a game watched by 64,365: the largest crowd for a match involving Crewe.[221] In the league, Crewe's worst performance saw them beaten 11–1 at Lincoln City on 29 September 1951 in the Third Division North.[222]

Tommy Lowry made the most first team appearances in all competitions for Crewe: 482 between 1965 and 1977.[24] Bert Swindells holds the record for most Crewe goals: 128, scored from 1927 to 1937,[24] while Terry Harkin scored the most Crewe goals in a single season: 34 in 1964–65.[38][24] Best match return was five goals, scored by Tony Naylor in Crewe's 7–1 league defeat of Colchester United at Gresty Road on 24 April 1993.[223]

William Bell was the first Crewe player to win an international cap, playing for Wales against Ireland in Wrexham in February 1886.[10] Clayton Ince, with 31 caps for Trinidad and Tobago, has won most caps while playing for Crewe.[224] Efe Sodje is the only Crewe player to play in a World Cup Finals tournament, for Nigeria against Argentina, on 2 June 2002, and then against England on 12 June 2002, both in Japan.[225]

Crewe's most expensive player was Rodney Jack, signed from Torquay United in August 1998 for £650,000.[226] Crewe were reported to have received £3 million for Nick Powell when he moved to Manchester United on 2 July 2012, with options for the fee to grow to £6 million depending on appearances.[227] Crewe also received £3 million for Seth Johnson's 1999 move to Derby County,[72] and for Dean Ashton's move to Norwich City in 2005.[78]

Players

As of 6 January 2023[228]

Current squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
15 DF   IRL Connor O'Riordan
16 MF   ENG Charlie Colkett
17 FW   AUS Lachlan Brook (on loan from Brentford)
19 FW   GER Bassala Sambou
21 MF   ENG Tariq Uwakwe
22 DF   WAL Billy Sass-Davies
23 GK   ENG Tom Booth
24 MF   ENG Charlie Finney
25 MF   ENG Joel Tabiner
26 FW   WAL Connor Evans
27 MF   SVK Matúš Holíček
29 DF   ENG Sean Lawton
30 MF   ENG Owen Lunt

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
28 DF   ENG Lewis Billington (on loan at Leek Town until February 2023)

Former players

In 2004 the BBC's Football Focus asked fans of all professional football clubs in England and Scotland to vote for their cult hero. For Crewe, Seth Johnson won with 59% of the vote; Danny Murphy came second with 33%, and Craig Hignett third with 8%.[229]

Full international players

William Bell was the first Crewe player to win an international cap, playing for Wales against Ireland in Wrexham in February 1886.[10] On 15 March 1890, three Crewe players – Alfred Davies (also Wales captain), Dick Jones and Billy Lewis – played in Wales's 3–1 defeat by England in Wrexham;[230] Lewis scored Wales's goal,[231] the first international goal scored by a Crewe player. John 'Jackie' Pearson became the first Crewe player to win an international cap for England, playing against Ireland in Belfast on 5 March 1892.[14][15] He remains the only Crewe player capped for England while playing at the club.[16] Donervon Daniels was the most recent Crewe player to win a full international cap; he played for Montserrat in their FIFA World Cup 2022 qualifier against US Virgin Islands on 2 June 2021.[232]

Player Country Caps Goals Years of caps Notes
Clayton Ince   Trinidad and Tobago 36 0 1999–2005 [224]
Steve Jones   Northern Ireland 22 1 2003–2006 [233]
Marcus Haber   Canada 13 1 2014–2016 [234]
David Vaughan   Wales 13 0 2003–2007 [235]
Efe Sodje   Nigeria 8 1 2000–2003 [225]
Rodney Jack   Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 6 4 2000 [236]
Neil Lennon   Northern Ireland 6 0 1994–1995 [237]
Billy Lewis   Wales 6 1 1890–1892 [231]
Michael O'Connor   Northern Ireland 6 0 2008–2009 [238]
William Bell   Wales 3 0 1886 [239]
Colin Murdock   Northern Ireland 3 0 2005 [240]
Robbie Savage   Wales 3 0 1995–1996 [241]
Mathias Pogba   Guinea 2 0 2013 [242]
Trevor Owen   Wales 2 0 1893 [243]
Edwin Williams   Wales 2 0 1893 [244]
Madjid Bougherra   Algeria 1 0 2006 [245]
Donervon Daniels   Montserrat 1 0 2021 [232]
Alfred Davies   Wales 1 0 1890 [246]
Dick Jones   Wales 1 0 1890 [247]
Fred Keenor   Wales 1 0 1932 [23]
Ben Lewis   Wales 1 1 1892 [248]
John Pearson   England 1 0 1892 [14][15][16]
Robert Roberts   Wales 1 0 1893 [249]

Management

Managerial history

 
Alex Morris, current assistant manager of Crewe Alexandra, applauding travelling supporters at Lincoln City on 30 April 2022.

Since 1892, 27 men have managed Crewe. Dario Gradi holds the record for the most games: 1,359 first team games.[250] Two Crewe managers have been inducted into the English Football Hall of Fame: Gradi in 2004[251] and Harry Catterick, posthumously, in 2010.[252]

As of 8 January 2023.[250] Only competitive matches are counted.

Name Nat From To Record
P W D L Win %
W.C. McNeill1   August 1892 May 1894 50 12 10 28 024.00
J.G. Hall1   August 1895 May 1896 31 5 3 23 016.13
Robert Roberts1   January 1897 December 1897 0 0 0 0 !
John Blomerley2   January 1898 May 1925 169 56 44 69 033.14
Tom Bailey   August 1925 May 1938 578 223 113 242 038.58
George Lillycrop   August 1938 July 1944 45 20 7 18 044.44
Frank Hill   July 1944 October 1948 102 45 19 38 044.12
Arthur Turner   October 1948 December 1951 149 56 39 54 037.58
Harry Catterick   December 1951 June 1953 74 31 11 32 041.89
Ralph Ward   June 1953 May 1955 96 25 28 43 026.04
Maurice Lindley   August 1955 May 1958 143 23 28 92 016.08
Harry Ware   August 1958 May 1960 100 36 22 42 036.00
Jimmy McGuigan   June 1960 November 1964 222 87 85 50 039.19
Ernie Tagg   November 1964 October 1970 273 105 69 99 038.46
Tom McAnearney   October 1970 July 1971 34 14 7 13 041.18
Dennis Viollet   August 1971 November 1971 15 4 2 9 026.67
Jimmy Melia   May 1972 December 1973 70 16 23 31 022.86
Ernie Tagg   January 1974 December 1974 48 13 12 23 027.08
Harry Gregg   January 1975 May 1978 163 53 53 57 032.52
Warwick Rimmer   August 1978 May 1979 46 6 14 26 013.04
Tony Waddington   June 1979 July 1981 93 24 27 42 025.81
Arfon Griffiths   August 1981 October 1982 59 9 10 40 015.25
Peter Morris   November 1982 June 1983 33 8 7 18 024.24
Dario Gradi[253]3   June 1983 July 2007 1,241 464 476 301 037.39
Dario Gradi4 / Steve Holland5   /   July 2007 November 2008 72 19 16 37 026.39
Dario Gradi[253]6   November 2008 December 2008 8 3 1 4 037.50
Gudjon Thordarson   December 2008 October 2009 37 12 7 18 032.43
Dario Gradi[253]6   October 2009 November 2011 110 38 23 49 034.55
Steve Davis   November 2011 January 2017 272 84 71 117 030.88
David Artell   January 2017 April 2022 274 100 51 123 036.50
Alex Morris   April 2022 November 2022 24 5 9 10 020.83
Lee Bell   November 2022 present 9 4 1 4 044.44

1As secretary-manager
2A railway clerk, John Bradburn Blomerley (also among the club's first directors in 1899,[20] and, in 1902, chairman of the Cheshire F.A.)[254] was secretary-manager to 1911; honorary secretary to 1925
3As sole manager. Between 22 September and 17 October 2003, Gradi underwent heart surgery. Assistant manager Neil Baker took charge of the team for this period (P6, W0, D1, L5).
4As technical director
5As first team coach
6As caretaker manager

Coaching positions

As of 6 January 2023.[119][255]
Name Nationality Role
Lee Bell   England Manager
Alex Morris   England Assistant manager
Fred Barber   England Goalkeeping coach
Michael Jackson   England U23 manager
Kenny Lunt   England Player development manager
Ryan Dicker   England U18 manager
David Vaughan   Wales U18 assistant manager
Aidan Callan   England Academy manager

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ Abraham also supported the formation of the Cheshire Football Association in 1878, being appointed secretary, and was an umpire in the first Lancashire Senior Cup final, held at Darwen in 1880. He refereed the first Liverpool Senior Cup final, also in 1880, and travelled extensively to umpire Crewe Alexandra's matches. He also made a significant contribution to amateur athletics, helping organise annual events at the cricket club's ground in Earle Street, as well as becoming a long-standing official of the Northern Counties Athletic Association and the Amateur Athletic Association.[3]
  2. ^ Crisp notes 1950s newspaper correspondence suggesting the formation of a football club was proposed by cricketer A.N. Hornby, who also played professional football, and who elicited the support of 'Thomas Abrams' (presumably Thomas Abraham) and John O'Brien Tandy.[6]
  3. ^ Crewe drew 2–2, and lost the replay 3–2, but successfully appealed against the result in respect of the size of the Swifts' goals (the crossbars were too low). Crewe won the replay played at a neutral ground, Derby County's Baseball Ground, 2–1.[12]
  4. ^ The first Articles of Association lists seven directors, three of whom were railway clerks (as was the first company secretary), plus a tailor, grocer, painter and foreman.
  5. ^ Different sources give varying dates (some suggest 1987), however records at Companies House show Rowlinson was chairman in May 1988; Bowler had become chairman by the time the following years accounts were signed in May 1989.
  6. ^ a b Upon its formation in 1992, the Premier League became the top tier of English football; the Football League First, Second and Third Divisions then became the second, third and fourth tiers, respectively.[213] From 2004, the First Division became the Championship, the Second Division became League One and the Third Division became League Two.[214]

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Sources

External links

  • Official website
  • Crewe Alexandra F.C. on BBC Sport: Club news – Recent results and fixtures
  • Railwaymen Supporters Society

crewe, alexandra, crewe, alexandra, football, club, english, professional, association, football, club, based, town, crewe, cheshire, that, competes, league, fourth, tier, english, football, league, system, nicknamed, railwaymen, because, town, links, with, ra. Crewe Alexandra Football Club is an English professional association football club based in the town of Crewe Cheshire that competes in League Two the fourth tier of the English football league system Nicknamed The Railwaymen because of the town s links with the rail industry and also commonly known as The Alex they have played at Gresty Road since 1906 The supporters fiercest rivalry is with Staffordshire based side Port Vale Crewe AlexandraFull nameCrewe Alexandra Football ClubNickname s The Railwaymen The AlexFounded1877 146 years ago 1877 as Crewe GroundGresty RoadCapacity10 153ChairmanCharles Grant 1 2 ManagerLee BellLeagueEFL League Two2021 22EFL League One 24th of 24 relegated WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursCurrent seasonThe club was formed in 1877 as the football division of Crewe Alexandra Cricket Club named after Princess Alexandra Crewe reached the FA Cup semi finals in 1888 and were then a founding member of the Football League Second Division in 1892 In 1921 the club was invited to join the newly created Football League Third Division North where they stayed for the next 37 years before being placed in the new Fourth Division in 1958 The team achieved their first promotion after finishing third in 1962 63 Crewe were immediately relegated but were promoted again in 1967 68 they again lasted just one season in the Third Division Crewe spent 20 years struggling in the fourth tier before their fortunes were revived under Dario Gradi manager for 24 years from 1983 He twice led the team to promotion to the third tier and after two unsuccessful play off campaigns won the 1997 Second Division play off final to win a place in the Football League First Division After an absence of 101 years they played at this second tier level renamed the Football League Championship before the start of the 2004 05 season for eight of the following nine seasons Gradi encouraged Crewe to play attractive technical football and built a reputation for developing young players with future England internationals David Platt Danny Murphy Seth Johnson and Dean Ashton all emerging at the club After Crewe dropped down to the fourth tier again in 2009 Steve Davis led the club to promotion to the third tier via the play offs in 2012 In 2013 the club won its first and only Football League Trophy Under David Artell manager from January 2017 Crewe returned to third tier League One in 2020 and finished 12th in the 2020 21 season but were relegated in 2022 From late 2016 through to publication of the FA s Sheldon review in March 2021 the club and Gradi were heavily implicated in the football sexual abuse scandal facing criticism for their handling of youth coach Barry Bennell imprisoned in 1995 for child sexual abuse and jailed again in 2018 Gradi was suspended by the Football Association in December 2016 and club chairman John Bowler resigned in March 2021 Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation and early years 1 2 Post World War II 1 2 1 1960s promotions and relegations 1 2 2 1970s and early 1980s 1 3 Gradi years 1983 2011 1 3 1 Second tier survival 1 3 2 Stepping back 1 4 2011 to present day 2 Stadiums 2 1 Alexandra Recreation Ground 2 2 Gresty Road 3 Club identity 4 Supporters and rivalries 4 1 Attendances 4 2 Rivalries 4 3 Songs and music 4 4 Railwaymen Supporters Society 5 Reputation 5 1 Player development 5 2 Sexual abuse scandal 6 Honours 7 Records 8 Players 8 1 Current squad 8 1 1 Out on loan 8 2 Former players 8 3 Full international players 9 Management 9 1 Managerial history 9 2 Coaching positions 10 Notes and references 10 1 Notes 10 2 References 10 3 Sources 11 External linksHistory EditFormation and early years Edit Crewe Alexandra Football Club was formed in 1877 as an offshoot of Crewe Alexandra Cricket Club established in September 1866 by Thomas Abraham a and other workers at Crewe locomotive works 4 5 b and named after Princess Alexandra 7 8 They were based at the Alexandra Recreation Ground in Crewe adjacent to Crewe railway station and played their first match against a side from Basford in North Staffordshire on 1 December 1877 drawing 1 1 3 6 In 1883 Crewe Alexandra s first match in the FA Cup was against Scottish club Queen s Park of Glasgow losing 10 0 9 In February 1886 William Bell became the first Crewe player to win an international cap playing for Wales against Ireland in Wrexham 10 In 1887 88 the club reached the FA Cup semi finals defeating Swifts 11 c Derby County and Middlesbrough en route before going out to Preston North End In 1891 the football club split away from the cricket club a step that was condemned by Francis Webb chief engineer of the town s London and North Western Railway works who supported the exclusion of professional sportsmen following the schism Webb and the LNWR said the company would refuse to find employment in the Crewe Works for any professional football player 3 Consequently the football section of the Alexandra Club owed little to the LNWR despite the teams being closely linked to the local railway industry 13 On 5 March 1892 John Pearson became the first Crewe player to win an England cap playing against Ireland in Belfast 14 15 he remains the only Crewe player capped for the full England side while playing for the club 16 Crewe secretary J G Hall helped found the unsuccessful Combination launched at Crewe s Royal Hotel in early 1889 and then the Football Alliance 1889 1892 17 When the latter merged with the Football League Crewe were a founding member of the Football League Second Division in 1892 but lost their league status in 1896 after only four seasons finishing third from bottom fourth from bottom then bottom twice possibly due to a player budget that was a quarter of that of other clubs 18 The club left the Alexandra Recreation Ground shortly before the end of the 1895 96 season and after playing at a number of different venues including in nearby Sandbach they moved to the first Gresty Road ground in 1897 in 1906 the current Gresty Road ground was rebuilt to the west of the original site 19 Incorporated as a limited company on 29 May 1899 20 d Crewe spent two further seasons in the second incarnation of the Combination from 1896 followed by three seasons in the Lancashire League before competing in the Birmingham amp District League for ten years They also won the Cheshire Senior Challenge Cup in 1907 and 1910 11 The team spent the 1910s in the Central League finishing second in 1913 14 and 1920 21 21 Chart of table positions of Crewe Alexandra in the Football League Crewe rejoined the Football League in 1921 they finished 6th in their first two seasons in the Third Division North but did not finish as high again until 1931 32 and 1935 36 22 In October 1932 defender Fred Keenor s last Wales appearance marked Crewe s first international cap of the 20th century 23 Crewe s first major honours were Welsh Cup wins in 1936 and 1937 24 Crewe is not in Wales but English clubs usually from border areas participated by invitation In 1936 Bert Swindells scored his 100th League goal for Crewe 25 going on to score 128 League goals for the club 24 a record that still stands 26 as well as goals in both Welsh Cup finals 27 Post World War II Edit From the 1950s to the early 1980s Crewe enjoyed only occasional success Looking over Gresty Road Michael Palin in the 1980 BBC Great Railway Journeys of the World series described Crewe as like those other railway towns Swindon and Doncaster possessed of a football team which is perpetually propping up the bottom of the Fourth Division 28 Between 1894 and 1982 Crewe finished last in the Football League eight times more than any other league club 29 On 25 December 1954 Crewe embarked on a sequence where they did not win away from home for 56 matches the run ended with a 1 0 win at Southport on 24 April 1957 30 Crewe finished bottom of Division Three North three times in a row from 1955 56 to 1957 58 tallying just 28 21 and 23 points from 46 games in each respective season 31 The club was placed into the newly formed Fourth Division in 1958 59 32 All time records were set against First Division Tottenham Hotspur in the FA Cup fourth round in 1960 A new record Gresty Road attendance of 20 000 saw Crewe hold Spurs to a 2 2 draw on 30 January 33 On 3 February Tottenham convincingly won the replay 13 2 Crewe s record defeat 34 The following year however Jimmy McGuigan s Crewe side defeated another First Division club Chelsea 2 1 in the FA Cup at Stamford Bridge on 7 January 1961 Chelsea s side included former Crewe player Frank Blunstone who scored Chelsea s goal as well as England internationals Peter Bonetti Jimmy Greaves and Terry Venables 35 Crewe were then again drawn against the eventual double winning Spurs side who won 5 1 in the fourth round at White Hart Lane 36 1960s promotions and relegations Edit In 1963 Crewe secured their first promotion to the Third Division winning the season s final game against Exeter City with Frank Lord scoring the only goal in front of a crowd of 9 807 at Gresty Road Lord holds the record for most hat tricks for the club with eight 37 The club finished in third place behind champions Brentford and Oldham Athletic but were relegated back to Division Four the following season In the 1964 65 season Terry Harkin scored a record 34 league goals for Crewe 38 24 Managed by Ernie Tagg the club achieved promotion for a second time in 1967 68 but again spent just one season in the Third Division 39 1970s and early 1980s Edit From 1969 Crewe spent 20 years in Division Four finishing bottom in 1971 72 1978 79 and 1981 82 and not achieving a top half finish until 1985 40 In 1974 they came within two minutes of taking Aston Villa into extra time in a League Cup third round replay at Villa Park 41 In 1977 Tommy Lowry played his record setting 475th and last game for the Railwaymen he had earlier passed Peter Leigh s total of 430 appearances between 1960 and 1972 24 From February to September 1979 the club went a record 16 matches 15 league one League Cup tie without winning at Gresty Road 42 In December 1979 manager Tony Waddington signed the goalkeeper Bruce Grobbelaar who kept eight clean sheets in his 24 matches played 43 and on 5 May 1980 scored a penalty his only professional goal to seal a 2 0 victory over York City 44 Gradi years 1983 2011 Edit Dario Gradi managed 1 359 Crewe first team games In June 1983 after Crewe finished second from bottom at the end of the 1982 83 season the then club chairman Norman Rowlinson appointed Milan born Dario Gradi as manager 45 46 Gradi looked to build an academy structure to develop players that could be sold to help fund the player development programme 47 Among his early transfer successes were Geoff Thomas and John Pemberton both signed from Rochdale and sold to Crystal Palace in 1987 and 1988 respectively 48 49 and former Manchester United apprentice David Platt signed in 1985 and sold to Aston Villa for 200 000 in February 1988 50 Under Gradi and despite some Crewe fans initial reservations 51 Crewe played attractive technical football and gained a reputation for developing young talent Steve Walters became Crewe s youngest player aged just 16 years and 119 days when he played against Peterborough United on 7 May 1988 52 In 1989 Crewe won their third promotion a 1 1 draw at Tranmere Rovers enough to take both teams into the Third Division 53 Meanwhile on 7 January 1989 Crewe had hosted Aston Villa and Platt at Gresty Road in the FA Cup third round taking a 2 0 lead before the visitors rallied to secure a 3 2 win 54 55 with Platt netting the winner but refusing to celebrate against his former club 56 A year later on 6 January 1990 Crewe were again drawn away at Chelsea in the third round Walters gave Crewe a first half lead at Stamford Bridge before Chelsea equalised in the 82nd minute to force a replay which they won 2 0 57 58 In March 1990 Crewe defender Paul Edwards was sold to Coventry City for 350 000 59 he was later named in the 1989 1990 Third Division PFA Team of the Year 60 Crewe s first player to feature in the awards Crewe were relegated in 1991 However despite further player sales defender Rob Jones joined Liverpool for 300 000 61 then Craig Hignett was sold for a club record 500 000 to Middlesbrough 62 the club reached the 1993 Third Division play off final but lost against York City at Wembley 63 Crewe then gained promotion in 1994 after a final day victory at Chester City 64 65 In the same year Neil Lennon became the first Crewe player to win an international cap since Fred Keenor in 1932 when he was selected to play for Northern Ireland against Mexico 66 Crewe twice lost in play off semi finals to Bristol Rovers in 1995 67 and Notts County in 1996 68 69 then returned to Wembley in the 1997 Division Two play off final securing a 1 0 victory over Brentford to put the club back in the second tier for the first time since 1896 70 Second tier survival Edit Crewe achieved their highest finishing position 11th in the 1997 98 First Division season 24 Gradi kept his team in the division until 2002 despite a matchday income on which many more lowly clubs could not survive Boosting the finances notable player sales included Lennon to Leicester City for 750 000 71 Danny Murphy to Liverpool for an initial fee of 1 5m 61 and Seth Johnson to Derby County for 3m 72 Gradi celebrated his 1 000th game in charge of Crewe on 20 November 2001 73 After one season in the Division Two the team were promoted back to Division One at the end of the 2002 03 season 74 having finished in second place Crewe s first runner up position with Rob Hulse scoring 22 league goals and being named in the PFA Team of the Year 75 ahead of a 750 000 transfer to West Bromwich Albion 76 Crewe retained their Division One place in the 2003 04 season during which assistant manager Neil Baker took temporary charge between 22 September and 17 October 2003 while Gradi underwent heart surgery 77 At the start of the 2004 05 season Crewe were rated one of the teams most likely to be relegated from the newly renamed Championship In the event they put in a good showing in the first half of the season but after selling Dean Ashton to Norwich City for 3 million in the January 2005 transfer window 78 Crewe failed to win until the final match of the season when they defeated Coventry City 2 1 to avoid relegation on goal difference However they were relegated to League One level three the following season Nonetheless Crewe were named the Most Admired Club in the 2006 Football League Awards 79 Stepping back Edit By the summer of 2007 Gradi was the longest serving manager in English league football having completed 24 years in sole charge of the club Crewe announced that from 1 July 2007 Gradi would take up a new role as the club s technical director while gradually allowing newly appointed first team coach Steve Holland control of the team 80 Holland s first season was a disappointment as the club narrowly avoided relegation finishing 20th with 50 points 81 Ahead of his second season he spent half a million pounds on new signings while striker Nicky Maynard joined Bristol City for 2 25 million 82 However despite a positive pre season Crewe took only nine points from their first 16 games The board sacked Holland as first team coach in November 2008 and re appointed Gradi as caretaker manager 83 On 24 December 2008 former Stoke City manager Gudjon Thordarson was appointed as Holland s successor 84 He made a promising start and received the February 2009 Manager of the Month award the first time a Crewe manager had won the award 85 but the team suffered a poor end of season run not winning for 10 games and were relegated to League Two On 2 October 2009 after nine months in charge and another poor run of results Thordarson was sacked 86 and Gradi was reinstated as caretaker manager Despite lingering close to the playoff places for the majority of the season another run of poor form saw the club finish 18th Crewe improved to 10th in the 2010 11 season during which Gradi won the January 2011 Manager of the Month 87 In November 2011 Gradi finally stepped down as manager and returned to his previous role as director of football focusing on youth development 88 2011 to present day Edit Steve Davis was appointed manager in the same month 89 Previously manager of nearby Nantwich Town Davis had been appointed assistant manager in June 2009 replacing former assistant Neil Baker 90 Davis immediately led the team to a 16 match unbeaten run in early 2012 up to 7th position earning the club a play off place 91 Crewe defeated Southend United in the two legged semi final extending the unbeaten run to a club record 18 matches 92 and securing a play off final against Cheltenham Town at Wembley on 27 May 2012 which they won 2 0 the goalscorers were academy graduates Nick Powell and Byron Moore 93 94 Before the 2012 13 season Crewe sold Powell to Manchester United and on transfer deadline day captain Ashley Westwood joined Aston Villa However with new Academy players coming into the first team Crewe returned to Wembley to win the Football League Trophy beating Southend United 2 0 in the final in April 2013 95 In the league Crewe finished in mid table they ended the season by fielding a team whose starting line up were all Crewe Academy graduates 96 97 John Bowler in 2000 He served as chairman from 1988 until resigning in March 2021 following criticisms in the FA s sex abuse inquiry In March 2014 John Bowler Crewe chairman since 1988 e was honoured with the Contribution to League Football Award at The Football League Awards 98 Dario Gradi had earlier won the same award in 2011 In the 2015 New Year Honours Bowler was awarded an MBE for services to football Gradi was presented an MBE in January 1998 99 100 Crewe retained their place in League One in the 2013 14 season but started the following season poorly gaining four points from the first 11 League games Some sustained runs of better results pulled the club out of the relegation places The team needed at least a home draw against Bradford City to secure safety but lost 1 0 and had to rely on results elsewhere to ensure League One football for another year finishing two points above the bottom four in 20th 101 The 2015 16 season started in a similar pattern with the team winning just two of their first 15 league games They also crashed out of the FA Cup in the first round against non league Eastleigh 102 forcing Davis to defend his position as the right man for the job 103 Crewe s relegation to League Two was confirmed following a 3 0 defeat at local rivals Port Vale with five games remaining 104 After an initially promising start to the following season Crewe s form slumped during the final months of 2016 and on 8 January 2017 Davis was sacked as Crewe manager 105 Former Crewe defender and Academy operations manager David Artell replaced Davis 106 107 Artell maintained the flow of Academy players and as Crewe improved to 15th at the end of the 2017 18 season he emulated Davis in selecting another starting line up who were all Crewe Academy graduates 108 After 36 years involvement with the club Gradi 78 announced his retirement from all positions at Crewe Alexandra on 7 October 2019 109 In February 2020 further changes to the club s board were announced with local businessman Stuart Whitby 110 and former Nantwich Town chairman Tony Davison joining the board following a 1 75m buy out of majority shareholder Norman Hassall The Railwaymen Supporters Society also raised 250 000 111 to earn the right for a Crewe fans representative on the club s new board 112 On the pitch Artell s progress since 2017 culminated in Crewe vying for promotion for much of the 2019 20 season with the club top of the table ahead of Swindon Town on goal difference when the football season was suspended in March 2020 amid the COVID 19 pandemic On 9 June Crewe s promotion to League One was confirmed but Swindon were crowned League Two champions on the basis of average points per game 113 Artell was selected as League Two Manager of the Year in the League Managers Association Awards 114 becoming the first Crewe manager to win such an annual award and two Academy graduates Perry Ng and Charlie Kirk were named in the PFA League Two Team of the Year 115 Crewe finished 12th in League One at the end of the 2020 21 season the club s highest finish since relegation from the Championship in 2006 116 However the following season was one of the worst seasons in Crewe s modern history the club was relegated with four games still to play after a 2 0 defeat at Doncaster Rovers on 9 April 2022 117 Two days later Crewe parted company with Artell assistant manager Alex Morris was appointed interim manager 118 becoming the permanent manager on 28 April 2022 119 Winless in nine games on 4 November 2022 Morris stepped down as manager for compassionate reasons and reverted to assistant manager Lee Bell became interim manager 120 121 and on 1 December 2022 was given the job on a permanent basis 122 Stadiums Edit Detail of 1888 OS map showing Alexandra Recreation Ground and adjacent football ground in Crewe Alexandra Recreation Ground Edit Main article Alexandra Recreation Ground Until 1896 Crewe played at the Alexandra Recreation Ground located just to the north of the modern day Gresty Road After playing at various venues in 1896 and 1897 including in nearby Sandbach the club returned to the same area of Crewe adjacent to Crewe railway station to play at the first Gresty Road ground located to the south east of the original stadium In 1906 the ground was demolished to make way for some new railway lines and a new Gresty Road stadium was built on a site directly to the west 19 123 Gresty Road Edit Main article Gresty Road Gresty Road in 1998 looking east towards the Family Stand with the old main stand on the right Main stand left and Gresty Road End The pitch runs approximately east to west with teams playing either west towards Gresty Road or east towards the railway station The main stand has always been situated on the south side of the ground Until the 1990s the main stand was a wooden structure built in 1932 after a fire destroyed the original stand 123 124 offering the ground s only wooden seating plus a standing area The Paddock while the other three sides were all standing terraces This configuration saw the club s record attendance when 20 000 people watched the FA Cup third round tie against Spurs in 1960 24 During the 1990s phased modernisation saw open terracing at the Railway End at one time a roughly formed ash bank terraced with sleepers replaced by a new family stand in 1993 125 The Gresty Road End then the main away supporters area was also replaced by an all seater stand in 1995 126 and the partially covered northern stand the home supporters Pop Side was replaced by an all seater stand in 1996 97 127 Completion of the final phase in 2000 including construction of a new 5 2 million main stand saw some reorganisation of seating allocations Away fans are currently accommodated in the stand along the northern touchline with the option of additional capacity in the family stand for particularly large visiting contingents Crewe hosted its first crowd of over 10 000 in the now all seater stadium in 2000 128 with the record attendance of 10 092 when Crewe played Manchester City on 12 March 2002 129 The Gresty Road End and main stand are solely for home supporters 130 In June 2021 the club agreed a 0 5m naming rights deal with long term shirt sponsor Mornflake the ground will be called the Mornflake Stadium until 2023 24 131 Also known as the Alexandra Stadium it has an all seated capacity of 10 153 It features four stands 130 The Boughey Stand or main stand seats 6 809 spectators and also has a directors area and media seating and houses the club s offices team changing rooms hospitality facilities ticket office and club shop 132 The Rhino Safety Stand 133 also known as the Gresty Road End accommodates 982 spectators and 4 disabled spectators A bar for home supporters is situated to the north of this stand The Blue Bell Family Stand also known as the Railway End accommodates 682 spectators The Whitby Morrison Ice Cream Van Stand 134 formerly the Pop Side accommodates 1 680 away spectators and also houses the ground s matchday video filming facilities In July 2021 Whitby Morrison announced a 99 year extension of its stand sponsorship at Crewe 135 Should the ground require expansion the most likely change will be redevelopment of the Ice Cream Van Stand to become a two tiered stand 130 Club identity Edit Crewe Alexandra kit 1988 1989 Since the late 1890s the main home Crewe playing strip has featured a red or predominantly red top usually with white shorts though red and black shorts have also been briefly adopted and red socks 136 The team played in white shirts and blue shorts from 1886 to 1896 but have since played mainly in red and white 136 137 The red shirts earned the early nickname of the Robins 137 though the club is more commonly referred to as the Alex or the Railwaymen reflecting the club s railway works founders the town s associations with the railway industry and the club s proximity to Crewe railway station 136 Crewe s away colours have varied Blue white or blue and white shirts have been the most commonly adopted but during the 21st century the club has also occasionally played in other colours 138 black with a gold trim was adopted for the 2021 2022 season 139 then light and dark blue vertical stripes the following season 140 The town s crest appeared on the team s shirts in the 1958 59 season 136 This included a lion associated with the Marquess of Crewe holding a cogged wheel a larger six spoked railway wheel and two wheatsheaves reflecting south Cheshire s agricultural connections 137 This was replaced in 1975 by a simpler badge with a lion holding a railway wheel a motif borrowed from British Railways 136 on a circle containing the words Crewe Alexandra Football Club arranged around a football The current badge adopted in 1998 features a lion perched on a football encircled by a laurel and the club s name it dropped the railway wheel prompting some Crewe fans to demand the club bring back the wheel 137 13 The club s mascot is also a lion Gresty the Lion appears on matchdays and in other community activities 141 The current shirt sponsor is cereals supplier Mornflake also based in Gresty Road whose logo has appeared on the shirts since 2005 136 and is set to continue through to 2023 24 142 Supporters and rivalries EditAttendances Edit Crewe is a small town its built up area had a total population of 71 722 in 2011 143 Founded by employees of the railway works the club drew many of its supporters from the works as well as residents from more rural areas surrounding the town The club s location next to Crewe railway station has also helped supporters travel to and from games at Gresty Road From the 1920s through to the 1960s attendances typically averaged around 6 000 144 but local derbies could more than double crowds the visit of Stoke City on 26 October 1926 attracted 15 102 for example 145 while Port Vale drew 17 883 on 21 September 1953 146 Crewe s record league crowd 144 Cup matches against major clubs such as Spurs also drew large crowds a record 20 000 in 1960 33 However league attendances dwindled in the 1970s and 1980s 147 when seasonal averages of under 2 000 were recorded four times with 1986 87 being lowest 1 817 144 just 1 009 watched a 1 1 draw with Peterborough United on 4 February 1986 148 Crewe s resurgence from the mid 1980s under Gradi boosted local interest with 5 000 plus attendances increasingly common even as Gresty Road s transition to an all seater stadium began to restrict numbers in the late 1990s average attendance peaked at 7 741 in 2004 during Crewe s years in the Championship 144 League Two crowds before the COVID 19 pandemic shutdown in 2020 averaged 4 580 144 just above their all time average 4 576 149 Ticket prices at Gresty Road are broadly in line with other clubs rates for all seated areas In the BBC s 2017 Price of Football survey Crewe s tickets for individual League Two games cost a maximum of 22 15 other clubs charged higher prices the most expensive Crewe season ticket cost 325 only one other club Accrington Stanley charged less for its most expensive season tickets and its lowest priced season ticket 280 was in the mid range for the division 150 For the 2021 2022 season in League One matchday tickets cost a maximum of 25 151 Rivalries Edit Crewe s main rivals are fellow English Football League team Port Vale As of March 2021 the clubs have played 81 games since 1892 8 games against Burslem Port Vale overall Crewe have won 20 games Port Vale have won 38 with the teams drawing 23 games 152 153 The rivalry known by some since the 1980s as the A500 Derby intensified after the millennium when both clubs were in Leagues One and Two with close encounters sometimes resulting in violence and arrests 154 155 On 22 February 2014 Crewe beat Vale 3 1 at Vale Park and there was trouble before during and after the game with several arrests made and flares thrown on the pitch 156 In January 2015 at Vale Park Crewe won 1 0 to seal their first league double over Port Vale and two arrests were made at the game with minor disturbances between rival fans after the match 157 Six arrests were made at Gresty Road during the 22 September 2018 meeting between the two sides 158 A 2019 study ranked the Port Vale Crewe Alexandra rivalry as the 14th biggest rivalry in English professional football 159 Crewe also maintain smaller rivalries with Wrexham Shrewsbury Town Stoke City and traditional local Cheshire derbies with Macclesfield Town Chester City Stockport County and Tranmere Rovers The Railwaymen s rivalry with Stockport intensified somewhat in 2009 when Stockport all but relegated Crewe from League One after beating them 4 3 at Edgeley Park 160 Crewe then returned the favour on 30 April 2011 when they beat County 2 0 at Gresty Road confirming County s relegation to non League football 161 Songs and music Edit Crewe s fans were the first to sing the song Blue Moon 162 also sung by fans of Manchester City with lyrics that do not quite match the Rodgers and Hart original and said to be a response to the gloomy days of the 1950s and 1960s 163 or reflecting an old joke that the team only wins once in a blue moon ie rarely 164 During the 1990s one Crewe supporter classically trained musician Richard Sutton was known for taking a trumpet to games 165 playing occasional fanfares such as the theme from Star Wars during matches 166 The Crewe based dance trio Dario G were named after Dario Gradi 167 168 Railwaymen Supporters Society Edit Crewe supporters often sing a song featuring the line We are the Railwaymen Aggregating and formalising several former Crewe supporters groups and supported by the national Football Supporters Association the independent Railwaymen Supporters Society was established in 2018 and incorporated as a community benefit society on 8 July 2019 169 170 Initiatives have included a campaign Project250 to raise 250 000 to invest in club shares and gain representation on the club s board achieved in February 2020 171 and the establishment of an Ex Players Association Gareth Whalley is its president 172 Reputation EditPlayer development Edit Main article Crewe Alexandra F C Academy As an early professional club in the late 19th century several Crewe players achieved international selection particularly for Wales During the 20th century however Crewe had few stars Welsh international Fred Keenor played his final league games for the club and his last international cap in 1932 was Crewe s first of the century 23 Some players started or developed their careers at Crewe before achieving fame elsewhere For example forward Frank Blunstone played 48 League games for Crewe in the early 1950s before a move to Chelsea and five England caps 173 Stan Bowles scored 18 Crewe goals in 51 games in the early 1970s and went on to play for Queens Park Rangers and England 174 and goalkeeper Bruce Grobbelaar played 24 Crewe matches at the start of the 1980s before moving to Liverpool 44 Crewe s conscious investment in young players began in the late 1980s when then manager Dario Gradi and club chairman John Bowler got the local council to contribute towards the costs of an all weather pitch at Gresty Road 175 This formed the starting point for a youth coaching facility which by the early 1990s was coaching 120 youngsters every week 176 In 1995 Crewe leased a 20 acre site at Reaseheath near Nantwich planning a 750 000 training and player development facility largely funded by transfer sales 177 In 1996 Crewe received a lottery grant to develop a youth coaching facility in nearby Shavington 178 By 2015 player sales had generated over 20 million which had contributed to modernising Gresty Road and developing Crewe s Academy 179 making it the only club outside the top two divisions to have a Category Two academy club 179 in 2022 it was ranked in the top 10 academies in England and Wales 180 Players who passed through the ranks since establishment of the Academy include England internationals Geoff Thomas and David Platt Wales international Robbie Savage and Northern Ireland s Neil Lennon and Steve Jones These were all youngsters signed from other clubs but the Academy also nurtured Crewe s own trainees most notably England internationals Rob Jones Danny Murphy Seth Johnson and Dean Ashton plus Wales midfielder David Vaughan 181 182 Sexual abuse scandal Edit Main article United Kingdom football sexual abuse scandal Further information Sexual abuse cases at Crewe Alexandra F C On 16 November 2016 former Crewe defender Andy Woodward revealed that he had been the victim of child sexual abuse by former football coach Barry Bennell convicted as a paedophile in the US in 1994 at the club in the 1980s 183 184 By the time club chairman John Bowler responded to the revelations on Monday 21 November six other individuals had contacted the police 185 with Woodward s Crewe teammate Steve Walters alleging he was another of Bennell s victims 186 Woodward criticised Crewe for failing to apologise 187 On 27 November 2016 a third former Crewe player Anthony Hughes revealed that he too had been abused by Bennell 188 as did Crewe trainee later Wimbledon and Northern Ireland international Mark Williams 189 190 Bennell was tried at Liverpool Crown Court in early 2018 and convicted of 50 offences of sexual abuse against 12 boys 191 and on 20 February 2018 was sentenced to 30 years in prison 192 After the guilty verdicts on 15 February victims including Andy Woodward and Steve Walters read statements outside court 191 Crewe Alexandra expressed its deepest sympathies to Bennell s victims saying it was not aware of any sexual abuse by Bennell nor had it received any complaint about sexual abuse by him before or during his employment with the club 193 191 though this has been disputed 194 Walters accused Crewe of victim blaming in a bid to avoid compensation payouts He and at least one other former Crewe player have launched High Court damages claims of upwards of 200 000 against the club 195 an eight week trial is listed to start in October 2021 196 On 19 March 2019 the Guardian reported Crewe Alexandra planned to contest victims claims 197 but later 27 March 2019 reported an apparent U turn in Crewe s approach it had agreed an out of court financial settlement with one of Bennell s victims 198 Andy Woodward had unsuccessfully sued Crewe for damages in 2004 199 Crewe were additionally criticised for not holding an independent review into how they dealt with historical child sex abuse allegations 200 In March 2018 the said that as it had fully co operated with police investigations it did not intend to commission a further independent investigation and the police s report had also been supplied to the FA review headed by Clive Sheldon 201 This decision was criticised by local MP Laura Smith 202 by MP Damian Collins chair of the DCMS select committee 203 by Crewe Town Council 204 and by the Professional Footballers Association s Gordon Taylor 205 In his final report Sheldon said he liaised with the Club and its lawyers with a view to suggesting other lines of enquiry that could usefully be followed up by the Club Ultimately the Club agreed to conduct those further enquiries and provided me with a report setting out its conclusions 206 The FA s 710 page report 206 published on 17 March 2021 identified failures to act adequately on complaints or rumours of sexual abuse at eight professional clubs including Crewe Considering whether senior Crewe people knew about Bennell Sheldon concluded they had not received specific reports of abuse However directors had discussed concerns about inappropriate behaviour and the club should have done more to check on the well being of the boys 207 Following publication of the report Crewe Alexandra apologised to all survivors of Bennell s abuse expressing wholehearted regret about their ignorance of his crimes 208 and Gradi also apologised 209 With Gradi effectively banned for life from football for safeguarding reasons 210 Crewe chairman John Bowler was pressed to resign 211 and did so on 25 March 2021 212 Honours EditCrewe Alexandra F C Honour No YearsFootball League Second Division 3rd tier f 2nd place 1 2002 03 74 Football League Second Division 3rd tier play off winner 1 1997 70 Football League Fourth Division League Two 4th tier f 2nd place 1 2019 20 113 League Two 4th tier play off winner 1 2012 93 94 Football League Trophy 1 2013 95 Welsh Cup 2 1935 36 1936 37 24 Crewe Alexandra have never won a division title and have only been division runners up twice In addition to play off promotions the club also achieved four promotions from the fourth tier by third place finishes in 1962 63 and 1993 94 215 and by fourth place finishes in 1967 68 and 1988 89 215 Crewe s highest finishing league position was 11th in the second tier the First Division in 1997 98 11 In the major cup competitions Crewe reached the semi finals of the FA Cup in 1888 11 They have reached the third round of the League Cup ten times 1960 1974 1975 1978 1992 1999 2001 2004 2006 2008 216 losing 1 0 to Aston Villa in a replay at Villa Park in 1974 41 and taking cup holders Manchester United into extra time at Gresty Road in 2006 before losing 2 1 217 While Crewe is not in Wales English clubs usually from border areas have participated by invitation in the Welsh Cup which Crewe won twice in 1936 and 1937 24 The club won the Cheshire Senior Cup 19 times up to 1998 24 and have won it a further three times most recently in 2017 218 Records EditMain article List of Crewe Alexandra F C records and statistics Crewe s biggest league victory came against Rotherham United on 1 October 1932 in the Third Division North when they won 8 0 219 In the FA Cup their biggest win was 9 1 over Northwich Victoria on 16 November 1889 220 The club s heaviest defeat was in the FA Cup in 1960 when they were beaten 13 2 by Tottenham Hotspur at White Hart Lane on 30 January 1960 24 a game watched by 64 365 the largest crowd for a match involving Crewe 221 In the league Crewe s worst performance saw them beaten 11 1 at Lincoln City on 29 September 1951 in the Third Division North 222 Tommy Lowry made the most first team appearances in all competitions for Crewe 482 between 1965 and 1977 24 Bert Swindells holds the record for most Crewe goals 128 scored from 1927 to 1937 24 while Terry Harkin scored the most Crewe goals in a single season 34 in 1964 65 38 24 Best match return was five goals scored by Tony Naylor in Crewe s 7 1 league defeat of Colchester United at Gresty Road on 24 April 1993 223 William Bell was the first Crewe player to win an international cap playing for Wales against Ireland in Wrexham in February 1886 10 Clayton Ince with 31 caps for Trinidad and Tobago has won most caps while playing for Crewe 224 Efe Sodje is the only Crewe player to play in a World Cup Finals tournament for Nigeria against Argentina on 2 June 2002 and then against England on 12 June 2002 both in Japan 225 Crewe s most expensive player was Rodney Jack signed from Torquay United in August 1998 for 650 000 226 Crewe were reported to have received 3 million for Nick Powell when he moved to Manchester United on 2 July 2012 with options for the fee to grow to 6 million depending on appearances 227 Crewe also received 3 million for Seth Johnson s 1999 move to Derby County 72 and for Dean Ashton s move to Norwich City in 2005 78 Players EditAs of 6 January 2023 228 Current squad Edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player1 GK WAL Dave Richards2 DF ENG Kelvin Mellor3 DF ENG Rio Adebisi4 DF WAL Zac Williams5 DF ENG Rod McDonald6 DF ENG Luke Offord captain 7 FW ENG Chris Long8 MF ENG Conor Thomas9 FW ENG Courtney Baker Richardson10 MF ENG Callum Ainley11 FW ENG Dan Agyei12 MF ENG Regan Griffiths13 GK ENG Arthur Okonkwo on loan from Arsenal 14 MF ENG Oliver Finney No Pos Nation Player15 DF IRL Connor O Riordan16 MF ENG Charlie Colkett17 FW AUS Lachlan Brook on loan from Brentford 19 FW GER Bassala Sambou21 MF ENG Tariq Uwakwe22 DF WAL Billy Sass Davies23 GK ENG Tom Booth24 MF ENG Charlie Finney25 MF ENG Joel Tabiner26 FW WAL Connor Evans27 MF SVK Matus Holicek29 DF ENG Sean Lawton30 MF ENG Owen LuntOut on loan Edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player28 DF ENG Lewis Billington on loan at Leek Town until February 2023 Former players Edit Main article List of Crewe Alexandra F C players In 2004 the BBC s Football Focus asked fans of all professional football clubs in England and Scotland to vote for their cult hero For Crewe Seth Johnson won with 59 of the vote Danny Murphy came second with 33 and Craig Hignett third with 8 229 Full international players Edit William Bell was the first Crewe player to win an international cap playing for Wales against Ireland in Wrexham in February 1886 10 On 15 March 1890 three Crewe players Alfred Davies also Wales captain Dick Jones and Billy Lewis played in Wales s 3 1 defeat by England in Wrexham 230 Lewis scored Wales s goal 231 the first international goal scored by a Crewe player John Jackie Pearson became the first Crewe player to win an international cap for England playing against Ireland in Belfast on 5 March 1892 14 15 He remains the only Crewe player capped for England while playing at the club 16 Donervon Daniels was the most recent Crewe player to win a full international cap he played for Montserrat in their FIFA World Cup 2022 qualifier against US Virgin Islands on 2 June 2021 232 Player Country Caps Goals Years of caps NotesClayton Ince Trinidad and Tobago 36 0 1999 2005 224 Steve Jones Northern Ireland 22 1 2003 2006 233 Marcus Haber Canada 13 1 2014 2016 234 David Vaughan Wales 13 0 2003 2007 235 Efe Sodje Nigeria 8 1 2000 2003 225 Rodney Jack Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 6 4 2000 236 Neil Lennon Northern Ireland 6 0 1994 1995 237 Billy Lewis Wales 6 1 1890 1892 231 Michael O Connor Northern Ireland 6 0 2008 2009 238 William Bell Wales 3 0 1886 239 Colin Murdock Northern Ireland 3 0 2005 240 Robbie Savage Wales 3 0 1995 1996 241 Mathias Pogba Guinea 2 0 2013 242 Trevor Owen Wales 2 0 1893 243 Edwin Williams Wales 2 0 1893 244 Madjid Bougherra Algeria 1 0 2006 245 Donervon Daniels Montserrat 1 0 2021 232 Alfred Davies Wales 1 0 1890 246 Dick Jones Wales 1 0 1890 247 Fred Keenor Wales 1 0 1932 23 Ben Lewis Wales 1 1 1892 248 John Pearson England 1 0 1892 14 15 16 Robert Roberts Wales 1 0 1893 249 Management EditManagerial history Edit Main article List of Crewe Alexandra F C managers Alex Morris current assistant manager of Crewe Alexandra applauding travelling supporters at Lincoln City on 30 April 2022 Since 1892 27 men have managed Crewe Dario Gradi holds the record for the most games 1 359 first team games 250 Two Crewe managers have been inducted into the English Football Hall of Fame Gradi in 2004 251 and Harry Catterick posthumously in 2010 252 As of 8 January 2023 250 Only competitive matches are counted Name Nat From To RecordP W D L Win W C McNeill1 August 1892 May 1894 50 12 10 28 0 24 00J G Hall1 August 1895 May 1896 31 5 3 23 0 16 13Robert Roberts1 January 1897 December 1897 0 0 0 0 John Blomerley2 January 1898 May 1925 169 56 44 69 0 33 14Tom Bailey August 1925 May 1938 578 223 113 242 0 38 58George Lillycrop August 1938 July 1944 45 20 7 18 0 44 44Frank Hill July 1944 October 1948 102 45 19 38 0 44 12Arthur Turner October 1948 December 1951 149 56 39 54 0 37 58Harry Catterick December 1951 June 1953 74 31 11 32 0 41 89Ralph Ward June 1953 May 1955 96 25 28 43 0 26 04Maurice Lindley August 1955 May 1958 143 23 28 92 0 16 08Harry Ware August 1958 May 1960 100 36 22 42 0 36 00Jimmy McGuigan June 1960 November 1964 222 87 85 50 0 39 19Ernie Tagg November 1964 October 1970 273 105 69 99 0 38 46Tom McAnearney October 1970 July 1971 34 14 7 13 0 41 18Dennis Viollet August 1971 November 1971 15 4 2 9 0 26 67Jimmy Melia May 1972 December 1973 70 16 23 31 0 22 86Ernie Tagg January 1974 December 1974 48 13 12 23 0 27 08Harry Gregg January 1975 May 1978 163 53 53 57 0 32 52Warwick Rimmer August 1978 May 1979 46 6 14 26 0 13 04Tony Waddington June 1979 July 1981 93 24 27 42 0 25 81Arfon Griffiths August 1981 October 1982 59 9 10 40 0 15 25Peter Morris November 1982 June 1983 33 8 7 18 0 24 24Dario Gradi 253 3 June 1983 July 2007 1 241 464 476 301 0 37 39Dario Gradi4 Steve Holland5 July 2007 November 2008 72 19 16 37 0 26 39Dario Gradi 253 6 November 2008 December 2008 8 3 1 4 0 37 50Gudjon Thordarson December 2008 October 2009 37 12 7 18 0 32 43Dario Gradi 253 6 October 2009 November 2011 110 38 23 49 0 34 55Steve Davis November 2011 January 2017 272 84 71 117 0 30 88David Artell January 2017 April 2022 274 100 51 123 0 36 50Alex Morris April 2022 November 2022 24 5 9 10 0 20 83Lee Bell November 2022 present 9 4 1 4 0 44 441As secretary manager2A railway clerk John Bradburn Blomerley also among the club s first directors in 1899 20 and in 1902 chairman of the Cheshire F A 254 was secretary manager to 1911 honorary secretary to 19253As sole manager Between 22 September and 17 October 2003 Gradi underwent heart surgery Assistant manager Neil Baker took charge of the team for this period P6 W0 D1 L5 4As technical director5As first team coach6As caretaker manager Coaching positions Edit As of 6 January 2023 119 255 Name Nationality RoleLee Bell England ManagerAlex Morris England Assistant managerFred Barber England Goalkeeping coachMichael Jackson England U23 managerKenny Lunt England Player development managerRyan Dicker England U18 managerDavid Vaughan Wales U18 assistant managerAidan Callan England Academy managerNotes and references EditNotes Edit Abraham also supported the formation of the Cheshire Football Association in 1878 being appointed secretary and was an umpire in the first Lancashire Senior Cup final held at Darwen in 1880 He refereed the first Liverpool Senior Cup final also in 1880 and travelled extensively to umpire Crewe Alexandra s matches He also made a significant contribution to amateur athletics helping organise annual events at the cricket club s ground in Earle Street as well as becoming a long standing official of the Northern Counties Athletic Association and the Amateur Athletic Association 3 Crisp notes 1950s newspaper correspondence suggesting the formation of a football club was proposed by cricketer A N Hornby who also played professional football and who elicited the support of Thomas Abrams presumably Thomas Abraham and John O Brien Tandy 6 Crewe drew 2 2 and lost the replay 3 2 but successfully appealed against the result in respect of the size of the Swifts goals the crossbars were too low Crewe won the replay played at a neutral ground Derby County s Baseball Ground 2 1 12 The first Articles of Association lists seven directors three of whom were railway clerks as was the first company secretary plus a tailor grocer painter and foreman Different sources give varying dates some suggest 1987 however records at Companies House show Rowlinson was chairman in May 1988 Bowler had become chairman by the time the following years accounts were signed in May 1989 a b Upon its formation in 1992 the Premier League became the top tier of English football the Football League First Second and Third Divisions then became the second third and fourth tiers respectively 213 From 2004 the First Division became the Championship the Second Division became League One and the Third Division became League Two 214 References Edit Club Statement Chairman and Vice Chairman Crewe Alexandra F C Retrieved 3 April 2021 Who s Who Crewe Alexandra www crewealex net Retrieved 3 April 2021 a b c Dyer Liam Day Dave The Industrial Middle Class and the Development of Sport in a Railway Town PDF Manchester Metropolitan University Retrieved 16 February 2021 Sandhu Nathan 14 October 2015 Retail hotspot was once home of the Crewe Alexandra Cricket Club Crewe Chonicle Retrieved 16 February 2021 Morse Peter 1 September 2016 Crewe cricket club is planning a big 150th birthday bash Crewe Chronicle Retrieved 16 February 2021 a b Crisp p 6 1877 A Football Club is formed in Crewe as a separate organisation from the successful Crewe Cricket Club They take the name Alexandra after Princess Alexandra from the club s official website Archived 5 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine Seddon Peter 2004 Football Talk The language and folklore of the world s greatest game Chrysalis Books London ISBN 1 86105 683 4 p 174 English Challenge Cup Queen s Park Glasgow v Crewe Sheffield Daily Telegraph 8 October 1883 Retrieved 5 February 2015 via British Newspaper Archive a b c Wales vs Ireland international football match report EU Football Info Retrieved 28 March 2021 a b c d Crisp p 7 Crisp pp 7 18 a b Kural Tom Listen it s time to bring back the wheel Railwaymen Review Retrieved 7 September 2022 quoting Morris s Vain Games of No Value A Social History of Association Football in Britain during its First Century a b c Gibbons Philip 2001 Association Football in Victorian England A History of the Game from 1863 to 1900 Upfront Publishing p 188 ISBN 1 84426 035 6 a b c Ireland 0 England 2 Match summary www englandstats com 5 March 1892 Retrieved 7 March 2009 a b c John Hargreaves Jackie Pearson EU Football Info Retrieved 28 March 2021 Whittle Paul 4 April 2020 The Football Alliance Teams Who Didn t Make the League THE 1888 LETTER Football Then And Now Retrieved 30 November 2021 Crisp pp 7 8 a b Paul Smith amp Shirley Smith 2005 The Ultimate Directory of English amp Scottish Football League Grounds Second Edition 1888 2005 Yore Publications p62 ISBN 0 9547830 4 2 a b Filed 01 Jan 1995 A selection of documents registered before 1 January 1995 including Memorandum of Association of the Crewe Alexandra Football Club Company Limited signed 29 May 1899 Companies House Retrieved 22 September 2021 Crisp p 8 Crisp p 8 p 58 p62 a b c Fred Keenor EU Football Info Retrieved 28 March 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Crisp p 12 Crisp pp 62 63 Potted History Crewe Alexandra Archived from the original on 5 November 2013 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Morris p 99 Fearon Matthew 18 August 2012 Dream Teams Crewe Alexandra Independent Retrieved 20 March 2021 permanent dead link Crisp pp 25 26 130 137 Crisp pp 86 89 Crisp pp 133 134 Crisp p 90 a b Crisp pp 9 91 Crisp pp 9 12 91 Match detail Chelsea v Crewe Alexandra Stamford Bridge com The history of Chelsea F C Retrieved 21 March 2021 Holmes Logan Tottenham On This Day Spurs Put Five Past Crewe In FA Cup Hotspur HQ Retrieved 21 March 2021 Riddle Andy 2001 Plymouth Argyle 101 Golden Greats Westcliff on Sea Desert Island Books pp 105 106 ISBN 1 874287 47 3 a b Crewe Alexandra F C at the English National Football Archive subscription required Crisp pp 99 100 Crisp pp 135 136 a b Northam Randall League cup winner comes so late Hamilton puts Villa through Aston Villa History Retrieved 29 March 2021 permanent dead link Crisp pp 110 111 Crisp p 111 a b Hackett Robin 23 May 2012 Bruce Grobbelaar Tears of a clown ESPN Retrieved 22 March 2021 Alex saviour Rowlinson loses battle Crewe Chronicle 23 August 2006 Archived from the original on 14 July 2012 Retrieved 22 September 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Hornbrook p 11 Hornbrook p 14 McGarry Graham 2 July 2009 Dario Gradi Crewe s longest serving manager BBC Radio Stoke Retrieved 30 March 2017 Thomas Geoff 2008 Riding Through The Storm My Fight Back to Fitness on the Tour de France London Hachette Hornbrook p 38 Crisp p 9 Crisp p 119 Hornbrook pp 47 48 Crisp p 120 Hornbrook pp 46 Morris p 233 Crisp p 121 Hornbrook pp 51 52 Members News Its Xmas But Congrats To Former Sky Blue Paul Edwards Whose Birthday It Is Coventry City Former Players Association Retrieved 20 August 2021 Lynch The Official P F A Footballers Heroes p 148 a b Transfers to or from Crewe Alexandra LFC History Retrieved 22 March 2021 Hornbrook p 75 Crisp pp 10 124 Crisp p 125 Hornbrook p 86 Crewe Alexandra BBC Leeds 11 January 2008 Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 21 November 2013 Hornbrook pp 98 Hornbrook pp 105 Crisp pp 126 127 a b Crisp pp 10 128 Newcastle on the verge of signing Batty The Independent 23 February 1996 Archived from the original on 10 June 2015 Retrieved 16 April 2012 a b Burnton Simon 28 February 2012 The forgotten story of Seth Johnson in an England shirt Guardian Retrieved 22 March 2021 Gradi s landmark BBC Sport 20 November 2001 Retrieved 22 March 2021 a b Crewe Alexandra 2002 03 Statto Archived from the original on 16 February 2016 Retrieved 14 June 2014 McKechnie David 28 April 2003 Henry lands PFA award Guardian Retrieved 22 March 2021 Baggies bag duo BBC Sport 11 July 2003 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Gradi undergoes heart surgery Guardian PA 23 September 2003 Retrieved 22 March 2021 a b Dean Ashton Flown from the Nest Retrieved 22 March 2021 Crewe Alexandra News Latest News Latest News Crewe Delighted With Award www crewealex co uk p preprod performgroup com 6 March 2006 Archived from the original on 5 April 2018 Retrieved 4 July 2006 Rostance Tom 21 April 2007 Gradi gets new role after 24 years Guardian Retrieved 22 March 2021 Coca Cola Football League One Table BBC News Archived from the original on 6 April 2008 Retrieved 10 June 2013 Bristol City clinch Maynard deal BBC Sport 31 July 2008 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Crewe Alexandra sack manager Steve Holland Times 18 November 2008 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Thordarson confirmed as new Crewe manager Guardian 24 December 2008 Retrieved 23 March 2021 Thordarson pays tribute to squad BBC Sport 6 March 2009 Retrieved 18 May 2009 Thordarson sacked as Crewe boss BBC Sport 2 October 2009 Manager of the Month 2010 2011 League Managers Association Retrieved 3 November 2021 Dario Gradi steps down as Crewe Alexandra manager BBC Sport 10 October 2011 Davis To Take Over As First Team Manager Crewe Alexandra F C 10 November 2011 Retrieved 10 November 2011 Davis Becomes Alex Assistant Crewe Chronicle 17 June 2009 Retrieved 16 June 2009 Alex secure play offs spot Sporting Life permanent dead link retrieved 6 May 2012 Go and finish the job says Crewe Alexandra boss Steve Davis BBC News 17 May 2012 a b Ashdown John 28 May 2012 League Two play off final Powell serves notice of rare talent to earn Crewe play off glory Cheltenham T 0 Crewe Alexandra The 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insists he is right man for the job BBC Sport 10 November 2015 Retrieved 12 November 2015 Port Vale 3 0 Crewe Alexandra BBC Sport BBC 9 April 2016 Retrieved 9 April 2016 Club Part Company With Steve Davis Press release Crewe Alexandra F C 8 January 2017 Retrieved 8 January 2017 Artell Replaces Michael Jolley crewealex net 8 July 2014 Retrieved 7 September 2014 Crewe Alexandra David Artell named manager after sacking of Steve Davis BBC Sport BBC 8 January 2017 Retrieved 8 January 2017 Crewe Alexandra 2 1 Cheltenham Town BBC Sport BBC 5 May 2018 Retrieved 10 May 2018 Morse Peter 7 October 2019 Dario Gradi retires from positions at Crewe Alex Cheshire Live Retrieved 7 October 2019 Morse Peter 1 April 2020 Investing in great escape made perfect sense for new Crewe Alex director Stuart Whitby Cheshire Live Retrieved 9 August 2020 Morse Peter 4 February 2020 Nantwich Town chairman Tony Davison resigns to become a director at Crewe Alex Cheshire Live Retrieved 4 February 2020 Tantram Tim 3 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0953887707 Morris Charlie 2019 Generation Game Goldford ISBN 978 1 9160314 0 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Crewe Alexandra F C Official website Crewe Alexandra F C on BBC Sport Club news Recent results and fixtures Railwaymen Supporters Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crewe Alexandra F C amp oldid 1132282598, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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