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History of Sheffield United F.C.

The history of Sheffield United Football Club, an English football club based in Sheffield, dates back to the club's formation in 1889.

Formative years edit

Sheffield United Football Club was formed at Bramall Lane on 22 March 1889 by the Sheffield United Cricket Club at the suggestion of its president, Sir Charles Clegg.[1] Clegg was a famous local sportsman, Chairman of the Sheffield FA and also chairman of Sheffield Wednesday, who had been the tenants at Bramall Lane from 1881 to 1887 but had vacated after a dispute over rent. Due to the lost revenue the decision was taken to form a football branch of the Cricket club thus United were established.

The Sheffield United cricket club itself had been going at Bramall Lane since 1854 and was the first English sports club to use United in its name after a number of local clubs were unable to self-sustain and merged. It has been suggested that some of The Blades original players came from an earlier amateur side called Norfolk F.C., who played in the Youdan Cup.

The team was formed six days after a crowd of 22,688 paid to watch the FA Cup semi-final played at Bramall Lane between Preston North End and West Bromwich Albion,[2] with gate receipts of £574.[3] Charles Stokes, a member of the Ground Committee saw the financial possibilities of a permanent football team and they were a professional club almost from the start. They played their first game against Notts Rangers of the Midland Counties League on 7 September 1889 losing 4–1 at Meadow Lane.[2] Their first game at Bramall Lane did not come until 28 September 1889 against Birmingham St George's of the Football Alliance which they also lost 4–0.[2]

United's first season was composed of friendlies and local cup matches, but notable for them reaching the second round of the FA Cup at their first attempt by beating Football League side Burnley 2–1 at home. However, the next cup game against Bolton Wanderers gave United their record defeat 13–0[3] and persuaded the committee that regular competitive league games were required.

They joined the Midland Counties League for the 1890–91 season, finishing fifth.[4] This season was the first time that the club introduced a red stripe to their shirts, having played their first season in all-white shirts.[5] Unhappy at being overlooked for the Football Alliance and no longer satisfied with the Midland, they then competed the following season in the Northern League finishing third.[6] At the end of the season they applied to join the Football League First Division, which was expanding from 14 to 16 clubs for the 1892 season, but polled only 5 votes and were instead admitted as one of the twelve founder members of the Second Division with the Alliance clubs, replacing Birmingham St George's which had folded.[3][4]

The glory years (1890s–1930s) edit

 
The Sheffield United team in 1895

United made waves straight away by securing promotion to the First Division in 1892–93, after finishing second to Small Heath and beating Accrington 1–0 in the Test Match on 22 April.

United enjoyed an unbroken 37-season spell in the top flight (which remains a record for a newly promoted team) winning the League Championship in 1897–98 and were runners up in 1896–97 and 1899–1900. After the League Championship, United played and won an unofficial two-legged "Champions of Great Britain" title against Celtic, who had won that year's Scottish League Championship.[7][8][9][10] Despite this, the 1898–99 season was one of struggle, when United finished 16th out of 18, just one place above the (at the time) two relegation places – the first poor title defence in English League history.

 
The 1899 team that won the FA Cup

They won their first FA Cup Final on 15 April 1899, beating Derby County 4–1[3] at Crystal Palace, returning to the London venue to play Tottenham Hotspur on 20 April 1901. Despite Spurs being a Southern League club, they took The Blades to a replay with a 1–1 draw. Seven days later, at Burnden Park in Bolton, the London side won 3–1 in the replay.[3]

United returned to Crystal Palace the following year on 19 April 1902, and were again taken to a replay. This time Southampton (also from the Southern League) drew 1–1 but the replay exactly a week later, on the same ground was won 2–1[3] by the Blades.

 
Captain George Utley leads Sheffield United out for the 1915 FA Cup final

The next final appearance came on 24 April 1915 at Old Trafford when United beat Chelsea 3–0[3] to win "The Khaki Cup final", the last game before the Football League and FA Cup competition was suspended until the end of the First World War.

The fourth and final win came with their first Wembley Cup Final, beating Cardiff City 1–0 on 25 April 1925.[3] Their last appearance in a final came on 25 April 1936, losing 1–0 to Arsenal.[3]

Disappointment and relegation (late 1930s) edit

After several close shaves – including the 1898–99 title defence mentioned above, 1919–20, when they won just 6 matches, and 1929–30, when a 5–1 win at Old Trafford on the final day pulled them out of the bottom spot – they finished bottom of the First Division in 1934 and were relegated for the first time.

A contributing factor to relegation was the decision to sell Irish centre forward Jimmy Dunne, who scored over 140 goals for the club in just six seasons, to Arsenal early in the 1933–4 season. Dunne scored over 30 top division goals in each of 3 consecutive seasons between 1930–1 and 1932–3, a feat which was not performed again until Alan Shearer managed it in 1993–96. This included 41 goals in 1930–31, which remains the club record and also the record single season tally by an Irishman.

During the 1920s United equalled their record victory with a 10–0 home win against Burnley in January 1930, and also beat Cardiff City 11–2 in 1926. Their record league defeat, 3–10 at Middlesbrough, occurred in their relegation season.

They fell just short in promotion battles in 1936 and 1938 – finishing third in the Second Division on each occasion – but it was third time lucky when they pipped local rivals Sheffield Wednesday for second spot in 1939, winning their last game 6–1 against Tottenham. They started the 1939–40 season brightly before World War II curtailed the campaign.

Post-war (1940s–1950s) edit

The restart of League competition after the war came a year too late for The Blades as they won League North – a regional competition featuring the Northern clubs from the top two Divisions – in 1945–46. This good form carried over into the following year with a 6th-place finish, combined with reaching the FA Cup Quarter-finals.

This good form was not to last, as the club were relegated again in 1948–49, and suffered the agony of missing out on an instant promotion the following season when Wednesday gained revenge for 1939 and pipped them for second place and promotion on goal average with a 0–0 draw at home to Tottenham Hotspur when a scoring draw or defeat would have sent The Blades up instead.

After a couple of middling seasons, featuring many goals (including 7–3 and 3–1 wins against the Owls in the Steel City Derby 1951–2), but inconsistent results, Teddy Davison ended his 20-year managerial career at the Lane. He was replaced by Reg Freeman, who guided the Blades to the Second Division Championship in 1952–53, scoring 97 goals along the way. Two seasons of struggle, but survival, in the First Division followed before Freeman died in the summer of 1955. His replacement, Joe Mercer, was unable to stave off relegation in 1956.

Revival (1960s–mid 1970s) edit

Mercer left the club in 1958 to join Aston Villa (who were promptly relegated) and was replaced by former Chelsea captain John Harris, who inherited a team with a backbone of good homegrown talent, including Joe Shaw, a centre half who played over 600 games for the club, and Alan Hodgkinson, a young goalkeeper capped five times by England (he remains England's youngest ever goalkeeper) who also went on to play over 600 league games, and half-back Graham Shaw. The team was always in the promotion frame and had some good cup runs, reaching the quarter-finals in 1959 and 1960, and finally achieved promotion in 1961 as runners up to Ipswich Town. In the same season, they reached the FA Cup semi finals but went down 0–2 to Leicester City in a second replay after two scoreless draws.

Sheffield United's most memorable post-war run was in 1971, where they ended the season with six victories and five draws to win promotion from Division Two. The following season United took the First Division by storm. Led by such players as Tony Currie, Alan Woodward, Eddie Colquhoun, Len Badger, Ted Hemsley, Trevor Hockey, Alan Hodgkinson, Gil Reece and Bill Dearden they played the first ten games without defeat, recording eight victories and two draws. With one League Cup victory during this period, United had an unbeaten run of 22 matches. They finally lost the top spot in Division One in a memorable encounter with Manchester United at Old Trafford on 2 October 1971, The Blades losing out 2–0 on that occasion. The memorable goal scored by George Best six minutes from the end is still replayed on television to this day.

The remarkable success in the early 1970s brought to a head the long-standing argument about the desirability of playing football and cricket at the same ground and a decision was taken to build a new stand to provide a fourth side to what was essentially a three-sided stadium. This stand (originally known as 'The South Stand') with a seating capacity of 7746 people, was opened in 1975.

Lower division football (late 1970s–late 1980s) edit

Unfortunately, the completion of the new stand coincided with a slump in fortunes on the field, despite the team finishing that season sixth in Division One. The failure to qualify for the UEFA Cup by one point after failing to beat Birmingham City at St Andrew's in the final game of the season was followed by relegation to the Second Division in 1976.

Relegation was a financial disaster, and the drop in season ticket sales meant limited funds for strengthening the team. The club's bank was reluctant to give additional loans on top of the debt on the new South Stand. Revenue from the transfer of club legend Tony Currie and season ticket sales was quickly swallowed up and the bank declined to make further loans unless they could be underwritten by personal guarantees from Board members.

Jimmy Sirrel left on 27 September 1977, with United next to bottom of the Second Division, and was replaced on a temporary basis by Cec Coldwell who had previously taken control between the reign of John Harris and Ken Furphy. Results picked up but the lack of funds for new players was matched by the lack of reserve players suitable for the step up to the first team.

A bad run in January led to the appointment of Harry Haslam, a 'wheeler dealer' who had successfully managed a Luton Town side in similar circumstances for nine years. "Happy Harry" brought in Danny Bergara, a Uruguayan as Assistant Manager.

With a reputation for finding talent, Haslam brought in a number of players, most notably Alex Sabella but was forced to sell promising players such as Keith Edwards, Imre Varadi and Simon Stainrod. Alan Woodward left for the United States as did Bruce Rioch whose short loan spell brought a mini-revival in the club's fortunes.

The 1978–79 season ended with relegation to the Third Division. United's first ever season outside the top two divisions started promisingly, but their early form soon burned out, and the team spent the rest of the season in mid-table, never threatening the promotion places. 1980–81 saw another good start, with the team at the top of the table at Christmas. Haslam's health started to fail at this point though, and he was eventually forced to stand down in mid-January. 1966 World Cup winner Martin Peters succeeded him, but then the team went into free fall, winning only three of the last sixteen games and were relegated to the Fourth Division. The 1981 relegation came as a result of a last minute miss from a penalty kick in the final game of the season[3] against Walsall, who would have been relegated instead had the kick (by Don Givens) been successful.

Having dropped to the lowest level, United appointed Ian Porterfield from neighbours Rotherham United to help them start the recovery, and with investment from a willing boardroom, United went on to become Fourth Division Champions in 1982, with 92 points – a new record due to the change of 3 points being awarded for a win in the 1981–82 season. United's top goalscorer that season was Keith Edwards, re-signed from Hull City, who linked up well with Bob Hatton, and later that season, Colin Morris (signed from Blackpool), who was to become part of a renowned partnership that would delight Bramall Lane crowds well into the mid-1980s. Edwards won an Adidas Golden Boot for his contribution – his 35 goals being a large part of United's success. The Golden Boot is now on show at United's "Legends of the Lane" exhibition.

United's promotion in 1982 saw them initially struggle in the Third Division, and finish in the lower reaches of the league in the 1982–83 season. By applying themselves to the cause, along with a number of additions to the side, including the signings of Paul Stancliffe and Glenn Cockerill from Lincoln City, the 1983–84 season saw the Blades cruise into the top 3 – which they would not drop out of all season. They were challenged for the promotion spots by Hull City, who by their final match were 3 goals behind them and 3 points behind. Hull's final match of that season was on a weekday at Burnley, and the Tigers went into the game knowing that 3 goals would be enough. Many United fans travelled to Turf Moor for the game, and were biting their nails when Hull cruised into a 2-goal lead, but try as they may, City could not find a third and United were up again to Division 2 – their second promotion in 3 seasons. Keith Edwards was top goalscorer again this season.

United seemed content to bide their time in the Second Division, but scared fans initially by finishing 18th in season 1984–85 in a poor first season back. Further financial backing saw Porterfield and the Blades make a push for promotion in season 1985–86, when manager Porterfield went for experience to get the Blades up, signing veterans Ken McNaught, Peter Withe, Phil Thompson and Ray Lewington. This led the Blades to gain the nickname "Dad's Army" because of the combined ages of the 4 players signed (they were all in their 30s). Fans were unhappy that crowd favourite Edwards was dropped to the bench in favour of his "aged" colleagues. United's start was actually very bright that season however, and after a 3–0 win away to early season promotion favourites Portsmouth, were fancied for another climb to the top tier. However, injury and bad results saw the club's fortunes falter, and the crowd's anger turn on Porterfield, who after a 5–2 defeat to Norwich, was sacked after a car-park demonstration.

Although linked with a number of high-profile managers, United promoted from within, and made Youth Team manager Billy McEwan first team manager in March 1986. Although he soon restored Edwards to the side, the talented forward became disillusioned, and at the end of the 1985–86 season, left for rivals Leeds United for £125,000, and the club finished in 7th position.

McEwan's first full season in charge saw the Blades finish in a disappointing 9th place, but saw the Blades debut of future Manchester City, Everton and Bradford City player, Peter Beagrie, signed from Middlesbrough. The following season saw him trying to mix youth with talent, by giving debuts to future Blackburn star Chris Marsden and to Charlton Athletic and Grimsby Town legend Clive Mendonca, but results saw the club drop into the bottom half of the table, and McEwan tendered his resignation on New Years Day 1988 after an embarrassing 5–0 defeat at home to Oldham Athletic.

Danny Bergara took charge as Caretaker Manager again for the match against Maidstone United in the FA Cup in January 1988, but at the following away game at Bournemouth in the League, a manager who'd recently resigned from his role at Watford was spotted taking more than a passing interest in the action on the pitch. Three days later, he became manager. That man was Dave Bassett ...

Dave Bassett era (1988–1995) edit

 
Sheffield United vs Manchester United, on the opening day of the Premiership season in 1992

Dave Bassett took charge on 21 January 1988 shortly before the club's relegation to the Third Division, via a loss in the playoffs against Bristol City. He then masterminded two successive promotions which saw them in the First Division for the 1990–91 season – the first in season 1988–89. Bassett's inspired signings of Tony Agana and Brian Deane were instrumental in getting the Blades finished in 2nd place that year, with the pair weighing in with over 20 goals each.

The following season saw United battle with rivals Leeds United for the top spot all season, with Leeds only becoming Champions on the final day. They were the subject of a BBC2 documentary "United", shown over a 6-week period towards the end of the 1989–90 season, with the fortunes of the club being played out in front of an audience of millions. The BBC got their fairytale ending – United gaining promotion on a glorious day at Leicester, winning 5–2 with goals from Paul Wood, Brian Deane, Wilf Rostron, and 2 from Tony Agana. This season also saw the rise of the chant "Ooh Ah Bob Booker" in adulation of 32-year-old Bob Booker, signed by Bassett from Brentford in 1989 but soon a hero to fans of the club. This would later be borrowed for Eric Cantona, but Booker maintains in the book "Match of My Life – Sheffield United" by Nick Johnson, that the chant was originally started by fans of the club. They reached the quarter-finals of the FA Cup, losing 1–0 at home to eventual winners Manchester United.

 
Sheffield United vs Manchester United, on the opening day of the Premiership Season in 1992

From 1990, Sheffield United were in the top division of English football for four seasons – including the first two Premier League campaigns. They failed to win any of their first 17 league games in 1990–91 and seemed set for an immediate return to the Second Division, only to recover dramatically and comfortably achieve survival in 13th place. A slow start followed at the beginning of the 1991–92 season, but Bassett's team recaptured their form and finished an impressive ninth, comfortably qualifying for a place in the new Premier League for the 1992–93 season.

Brian Deane scored the first ever Premiership goal on 15 August 1992, five minutes into the 2–1 home win over Manchester United. Despite spending most of the first half of the season in the relegation zone, they showed the form of a title-winning team in the second half of the season, with only Arsenal matching them for points won in the New year. They also ended Manchester United's double bid with a 2–1 win at Bramall Lane in the FA Cup fifth round, going on to reach the semi-finals, where they lost to local rivals Sheffield Wednesday.

Brian Deane was sold to Leeds United in the summer of 1993, and the Blades were unable to find a suitable replacement. They found it increasingly difficult to score goals in 1993–94, and were relegated on the final day of the season when a last minute goal gave Chelsea a 3–2 win. 1994–95 saw the Blades finish eighth in Division One – not enough for even a playoff place. By December 1995, Bassett had stepped down as manager of a side at the foot of the Division One table, and the club's new board of directors appointed Howard Kendall as the man faced with the task of saving the club from relegation.

Pushing for promotion (1995–2006) edit

Dave Bassett resigned as manager in November 1995 to be replaced by Howard Kendall, who was at the helm for 18 months before being lured back to Everton for his third spell as manager at the end of the 1996–97 season, just a few weeks after Sheffield United blew the chance of a return to the Premiership by losing 1–0 to Crystal Palace in the Division One Play-Off Final.

Over the next two-and-a-half years, Sheffield United had three unsuccessful managers – Nigel Spackman, Steve Bruce and Adrian Heath – although they reached the FA Cup semi final again in 1998. In December 1999 the club turned to Neil Warnock in a bid to re-establish the club as promotion challengers. At this time the club was over £20m in debt and the priority was cutting costs, so Warnock's first three seasons in charge ended in mid-table finishes in Division One.

2002–03 was a promising season for Sheffield United, when they reached the semi-finals of the FA Cup and League Cup, losing both ties to Premiership clubs, (Arsenal and Liverpool, respectively). They also reached the Division One playoff final, but were beaten 3–0 by Wolverhampton Wanderers at the Millennium Stadium.

In both 2003–04 and 2004–05, Sheffield United narrowly missed out on a place in the playoffs for promotion to the Premier League finishing 8th in both seasons.

2005–06 was the team's twelfth straight season at the second level of the English football pyramid – a period longer than any other team currently in the Championship, and their longest spell in any Division since 1934.

After beating Cardiff 1–0 on Good Friday and never being outside of the top two places all season, United required only one point from their final three games to secure their promotion. Results later that evening meant only Leeds United could in theory catch Sheffield United, but the following day, 15 April 2006, they failed to beat Reading at Elland Road. After many disappointments in the previous few seasons, Sheffield United finally won promotion back into the Premiership.

A season of Premiership football edit

Sheffield United finished 18th in the Premiership, and were relegated to the Championship after just one season back in the top flight.

In total, they won ten games during this season, seven at home and three away. Their 2–1 home victory against Middlesbrough on 30 September was their first Premiership victory since April 1994. The first away win of the season came against Newcastle United on 4 November. The remaining victories came against Charlton Athletic (home), Watford (home and away), West Ham United (home), Wigan Athletic (away), Arsenal (home), Fulham (home) and Tottenham Hotspur (home).

They lost just five home games, to Reading, Chelsea, Newcastle United and both Manchester clubs.

United's Premiership top scorer was Rob Hulse with eight goals. Danny Webber, Phil Jagielka and Jon Stead each scored four goals. Keith Gillespie, Stephen Quinn, Christian Nadé scored two goals apiece. Colin Kazım-Richards, Chris Morgan and Michael Tonge each score once.

On 24 October 2006, a second string side was knocked out of the League Cup at the third round stage by Championship side Birmingham City, suffering a 4–2 defeat at Bramall Lane. A similarly understrength team had narrowly beaten Bury of League Two in the previous round. In the FA Cup third round, United lost 3–0 at home to League One side Swansea City.

During the game against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on 17 March 2007, Hulse suffered a broken leg in a collision with Chelsea's goalkeeper Petr Čech and was ruled out for the rest of the season. This coincided with a poor run of form that saw United slide down the table and into relegation trouble.

On 14 April, after losing three games in succession, United climbed out of the relegation zone by beating fellow relegation battlers West Ham United 3–0 at Bramall Lane. A week later, the club drew 1–1 away to 18th place rivals Charlton Athletic and were well-placed to retain their status.

On 13 May, Sheffield United played Wigan Athletic at home in the last game of the season, needing to avoid defeat to ensure Premiership status. United lost 2–1, meaning both clubs finished on 38 points. By virtue of Wigan's goal difference being one better than United's, they stayed up at the Blades' expense. Even with this result, a defeat for West Ham against Manchester United at Old Trafford would have seen the Blades safe and the Hammers relegated, but West Ham recorded a 1–0 victory to guarantee their survival.

Sheffield United mounted a legal challenge against their relegation on the basis that West Ham should have been docked points over irregularities with the transfers of Carlos Tevez and Javier Mascherano. West Ham were fined £5.5 million instead of having points deducted. However, Sheffield United failed in their appeal and started the 200708 season in the Championship. A claim for compensation against West Ham was finally settled out of court in August 2013, with Sheffield United reportedly receiving £10m payable in instalments over a five-year period.[11]

Relegations (2007–2016) edit

Neil Warnock resigned shortly after the relegation, ending a near-eight year reign as manager. Bryan Robson was named as his successor, but was sacked on 14 February 2008 following a goalless draw at previous club West Bromwich Albion, with the Blades languishing in the bottom half of the Championship. Having turned down the chance to become Director of Football at Bramall Lane, Robson left the club altogether.[12]

Kevin Blackwell, who had been assistant manager to Warnock in the first four seasons of his reign, was named as Robson's successor until the end of the season. In the final stages of the season a marked improvement in form was achieved and the Blades finished ninth. Indeed, the play-offs were not mathematically out of reach until the end of the last match of the season. He was confirmed as the permanent successor to Robson with two games of the season remaining, signing a 3-year contract. From Blackwell's initial appointment until the end of the season, only Hull City gained more points than the Blades.[13]

On 25 May 2009, Sheffield United came up against Burnley in the Championship Play-Off final. They lost the match 1–0 and were forced to stay in the Championship for at least the following year. Jamie Ward was sent off during the match after receiving two yellow cards and Lee Hendrie received a red card after the match.

The Championship campaign started well for The Blades, drawing 1–1 away at Cardiff on the opening day of the season. However, results since then have not been favourable, recording six losses in the first nine games of the season.[14][failed verification] Kevin Blackwell was subsequently sacked as manager after two league games, with Gary Speed taking over, before leaving to manage Wales after a matter of months. After a caretaker spell by John Carver, the club subsequently appointed Micky Adams, without an improvement in results, leaving the Blades bottom of the table by early April. On 30 April 2011, Sheffield United were relegated to League One after the results of relegation rivals Doncaster Rovers and Crystal Palace meant that a 2–2 draw at home to Barnsley was of no relevance.

Following relegation, Adams was dismissed as manager and replaced by Danny Wilson, a controversial appointment considering his past spell managing cross-city rivals Wednesday. Ironically, Wednesday would narrowly pip United to automatic promotion that season, as a late run of poor form saw the Blades finish third. They went into the play-offs, but were ultimately defeated by another Yorkshire side, Huddersfield Town. Wilson left late into the 2012–13 season with the club in the play-offs but well off the automatic promotion race. Chris Morgan was appointed as temporary manager for the remainder of the season, and a fifth-place finish saw them enter the play-offs again, where despite a 1–0 win at Bramall Lane in the first leg they were ultimately eliminated by eventual play-off winners Yeovil Town.

David Weir was appointed as the club's new manager over the summer and heavily backed with funds by the board, but despite a promising opening-day win over Notts County, a disastrous run of form saw the Blades bottom of the table by the end of September, leading to Weir being dismissed and eventually replaced by Nigel Clough. The rest of the 2013–14 season was a considerable improvement, as the club finished seventh and were only kept out of the play-offs by their dismal early-season form, though the real story was a run to the semi-finals of the FA Cup, where they were ultimately eliminated 5–3 by Hull City. 2014–15 would be a similar story, with strong cup runs, including to the fourth round of the FA Cup and the semi-finals of the League Cup, and a fifth-place finish in League One. However, a 7–6 aggregate elimination by Swindon Town saw Clough dismissed as manager, with the board feeling he had taken the club as far as he could. Nigel Adkins succeeded him as manager, but the 2015–16 season saw the Blades struggle for league form, never seriously challenging for promotion at any point in the campaign and ultimately finishing eleventh, their lowest league finish since 1983, which saw Adkins' term as manager cut short after just a year.

Promotions (2016–present) edit

Former player Chris Wilder was appointed as manager over the summer, and despite a four-game winless run at the start of the season, finally managed to turn things around for the Blades. The club broke into the top two in mid-November and never left the automatic promotion places, eventually securing a return to the Championship on 8 April 2017. On 15 April they secured the League One title when Bolton Wanderers, their closest challenger, lost 1–0 at Oldham Athletic, the Blades becoming the fourth club to win all four tiers of professional English football after Wolverhampton Wanderers in 1988, Burnley in 1992, and Preston North End in 1996, all of them having won the fourth-tier title. Sheffield United was also the first of these clubs to not be among the founding members of the original English Football League. The Blades finished the season with a club record 100 points after defeating Chesterfield 3–2 on the final day of the season.

Two returns to the Premier League edit

 
Prince Abdullah at Sheffield United in 2013

In September 2013, Abdullah bin Musaid Al Saud of the House of Saud had bought a 50 per cent stake in United's parent company "Blades Leisure Ltd". Both parties, at that time, agreed to include a "roulette notice" mechanism to end their arrangement when they no longer wished to work together. In late 2017, co-owner Kevin McCabe served a roulette notice on Prince Abdullah, giving him the option to sell his 50 per cent at £5 million or buy McCabe's 50 per cent for the same price. Prince Abdullah chose to buy but McCabe refused to sell, a decision that ended up before the High Court of Justice.[15]

In the 2018–19 season, Sheffield United achieved automatic promotion to the Premier League.[16] United's first season back in the Premier League, despite being tipped by many for relegation, produced a ninth-place finish.[17] Despite this, ownership disputes between Prince Abdullah and McCabe continued. In September 2019, after 20 months of litigation, the High Court issued its judgment, requiring McCabe's company to sell its shares in United.[18] McCabe sought permission to appeal from the High Court and Court of Appeal but both appeals were rejected.[19] As a result, Prince Abdullah became the sole beneficial owner of the club. In the 2020–21 season, the club made a very poor start to the season, taking just one win in their opening eighteen matches. Wilder left the club by mutual consent in March 2021.[20] He was replaced by Paul Heckingbottom as caretaker manager, who could not prevent relegation at the end of the season.[21] In May 2021, the club appointed Slaviša Jokanović as the new manager, making him the first overseas manager the club's history.[22] However, Jokanović was dismissed in November 2021 after a poor start to the season and Heckingbottom was reappointed as manager, this time on a permanent basis.[23] Heckingbottom appointed former Sheffield United players Stuart McCall and Jack Lester as part of his coaching team. The 2021–22 season resulted in a fifth place finish in the Championship, losing in the play-off semi-finals to Nottingham Forest on penalties. During the following season, Nigerian businessman Dozy Mmobuosi failed with an attempted £90 million takeover of the financially troubled club[24][25][26] having reportedly paying a near-£10 million non-refundable deposit.[27] By the end of the season, Heckingbottom had guided United back to the Premier League, securing automatic promotion with a second place finish. The team also reached the F.A. Cup Semi-final, losing 3–0 to Manchester City at Wembley Stadium.[28]

United's return to the Premier League for the 2023–24 season proved to be difficult and by early December the team was bottom of the League. The Club's Board decided to sack Paul Heckingbottom, replacing him with former Blades manager, Chris Wilder.[29]

References edit

  1. ^ "Football: New Local Professional Team". The Sheffield & Rotherham Independent. 23 March 1889. At a meeting of the Sheffield United Cricket Club held last evening, an important decision was arrived at. It was resolved to undertake the organisation of a football professional team for next season… The club in future will be known as the Sheffield United Cricket and Football Club.
  2. ^ a b c Denis Clarebrough (1989) Sheffield United: The First 100 Years. Sheffield United Football Club. ISBN 0-9508588-1-1
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sheffield United F.C – Full History 25 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 18 March 2007. Retrieved 6 March 2007.
  5. ^ Denis Clareborough (1998) Images of Sport: Sheffield United Football Club. ISBN 0-7524-1059-8
  6. ^ "Sheffield United in The Northern League". Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  7. ^ Saturday's Football. | Other Matches., The Glasgow Herald, 14 March 1898
  8. ^ Champions, The Scottish Referee, 15 April 1898, scan via London Hearts Supporters Club
  9. ^ Celtic v Sheffield United. The Glasgow Herald, 18 April 1898
  10. ^ The League Champions. The Scottish Referee, 18 April 1898, scan via London Hearts Supporters Club
  11. ^ Kelso, Paul (13 March 2009). "West Ham and Sheffield United reach out-of-court settlement over Carlos Tevez affair". The Telegraph. London. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
  12. ^ "Blackwell in for Robson at Blades". BBC Sport. 14 February 2008. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  13. ^ "Sheffield United – Football". BBC Sport. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  14. ^ . BBC News. 29 July 2009. Archived from the original on 27 December 2007. Retrieved 30 April 2011.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. ^ "The bitter battle for Sheffield United – 'He tried to screw me, he got screwed'". The Guardian. 3 February 2020. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  16. ^ "Sheffield United 2–0 Ipswich Town". BBC Sport. 27 April 2019.
  17. ^ "'Absolute heroes' – Sheffield United fans salute their team after sealing ninth place in Premier League". The Star. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
  18. ^ "Sheffield United ownership: Prince Abdullah wins court battle". BBC News. 16 September 2019. Retrieved 16 September 2019.
  19. ^ "Kevin McCabe refused right to appeal in Sheffield United ownership saga". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 January 2020.
  20. ^ "Club Statement". Sheffield United F.C. 13 March 2021. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
  21. ^ "Wolves 1–0 Sheffield United: Blades relegated from Premier League after Willian Jose strike". Sky Sports. Retrieved 17 April 2021.
  22. ^ "Slavisa Jokanovic named Sheffield United manager, succeeding Chris Wilder at the Blades' helm". Sky Sports. 28 May 2021. Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  23. ^ "Club Statement". 25 November 2021.
  24. ^ Lawton, Matt. "Nigerian billionaire Dozy Mmobuosi's Sheffield United takeover close". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  25. ^ King, Kieran (2 February 2023). "African billionaire worth £7bn to move into English football with takeover close". mirror. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  26. ^ Dozy Mmobuosi: Nigerian businessman on the cusp of buying Premier League-bound Sheffield United – CNN Video, 9 February 2023, retrieved 21 March 2023
  27. ^ Slater, Matt (26 March 2024). "'Under every rock, we found a lie': How the bid to be English football's first black owner unravelled". The Athletic. Retrieved 15 April 2024.
  28. ^ McNulty, Phil. "Manchester City 3–0 Sheffield United". BBC Sport. Retrieved 22 April 2023.
  29. ^ Poole, Harry. "Sheffield United sack manager Paul Heckingbottom and appoint Chris Wilder". BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 5 December 2023.

history, sheffield, united, this, article, appears, slanted, towards, recent, events, please, keep, recent, events, historical, perspective, more, content, related, recent, events, october, 2020, history, sheffield, united, football, club, english, football, c. This article appears to be slanted towards recent events Please try to keep recent events in historical perspective and add more content related to non recent events October 2020 The history of Sheffield United Football Club an English football club based in Sheffield dates back to the club s formation in 1889 Contents 1 Formative years 2 The glory years 1890s 1930s 3 Disappointment and relegation late 1930s 4 Post war 1940s 1950s 5 Revival 1960s mid 1970s 6 Lower division football late 1970s late 1980s 7 Dave Bassett era 1988 1995 8 Pushing for promotion 1995 2006 8 1 A season of Premiership football 9 Relegations 2007 2016 10 Promotions 2016 present 10 1 Two returns to the Premier League 11 ReferencesFormative years editSheffield United Football Club was formed at Bramall Lane on 22 March 1889 by the Sheffield United Cricket Club at the suggestion of its president Sir Charles Clegg 1 Clegg was a famous local sportsman Chairman of the Sheffield FA and also chairman of Sheffield Wednesday who had been the tenants at Bramall Lane from 1881 to 1887 but had vacated after a dispute over rent Due to the lost revenue the decision was taken to form a football branch of the Cricket club thus United were established The Sheffield United cricket club itself had been going at Bramall Lane since 1854 and was the first English sports club to use United in its name after a number of local clubs were unable to self sustain and merged It has been suggested that some of The Blades original players came from an earlier amateur side called Norfolk F C who played in the Youdan Cup The team was formed six days after a crowd of 22 688 paid to watch the FA Cup semi final played at Bramall Lane between Preston North End and West Bromwich Albion 2 with gate receipts of 574 3 Charles Stokes a member of the Ground Committee saw the financial possibilities of a permanent football team and they were a professional club almost from the start They played their first game against Notts Rangers of the Midland Counties League on 7 September 1889 losing 4 1 at Meadow Lane 2 Their first game at Bramall Lane did not come until 28 September 1889 against Birmingham St George s of the Football Alliance which they also lost 4 0 2 United s first season was composed of friendlies and local cup matches but notable for them reaching the second round of the FA Cup at their first attempt by beating Football League side Burnley 2 1 at home However the next cup game against Bolton Wanderers gave United their record defeat 13 0 3 and persuaded the committee that regular competitive league games were required They joined the Midland Counties League for the 1890 91 season finishing fifth 4 This season was the first time that the club introduced a red stripe to their shirts having played their first season in all white shirts 5 Unhappy at being overlooked for the Football Alliance and no longer satisfied with the Midland they then competed the following season in the Northern League finishing third 6 At the end of the season they applied to join the Football League First Division which was expanding from 14 to 16 clubs for the 1892 season but polled only 5 votes and were instead admitted as one of the twelve founder members of the Second Division with the Alliance clubs replacing Birmingham St George s which had folded 3 4 The glory years 1890s 1930s edit nbsp The Sheffield United team in 1895 United made waves straight away by securing promotion to the First Division in 1892 93 after finishing second to Small Heath and beating Accrington 1 0 in the Test Match on 22 April United enjoyed an unbroken 37 season spell in the top flight which remains a record for a newly promoted team winning the League Championship in 1897 98 and were runners up in 1896 97 and 1899 1900 After the League Championship United played and won an unofficial two legged Champions of Great Britain title against Celtic who had won that year s Scottish League Championship 7 8 9 10 Despite this the 1898 99 season was one of struggle when United finished 16th out of 18 just one place above the at the time two relegation places the first poor title defence in English League history nbsp The 1899 team that won the FA Cup They won their first FA Cup Final on 15 April 1899 beating Derby County 4 1 3 at Crystal Palace returning to the London venue to play Tottenham Hotspur on 20 April 1901 Despite Spurs being a Southern League club they took The Blades to a replay with a 1 1 draw Seven days later at Burnden Park in Bolton the London side won 3 1 in the replay 3 United returned to Crystal Palace the following year on 19 April 1902 and were again taken to a replay This time Southampton also from the Southern League drew 1 1 but the replay exactly a week later on the same ground was won 2 1 3 by the Blades nbsp Captain George Utley leads Sheffield United out for the 1915 FA Cup final The next final appearance came on 24 April 1915 at Old Trafford when United beat Chelsea 3 0 3 to win The Khaki Cup final the last game before the Football League and FA Cup competition was suspended until the end of the First World War The fourth and final win came with their first Wembley Cup Final beating Cardiff City 1 0 on 25 April 1925 3 Their last appearance in a final came on 25 April 1936 losing 1 0 to Arsenal 3 Disappointment and relegation late 1930s editAfter several close shaves including the 1898 99 title defence mentioned above 1919 20 when they won just 6 matches and 1929 30 when a 5 1 win at Old Trafford on the final day pulled them out of the bottom spot they finished bottom of the First Division in 1934 and were relegated for the first time A contributing factor to relegation was the decision to sell Irish centre forward Jimmy Dunne who scored over 140 goals for the club in just six seasons to Arsenal early in the 1933 4 season Dunne scored over 30 top division goals in each of 3 consecutive seasons between 1930 1 and 1932 3 a feat which was not performed again until Alan Shearer managed it in 1993 96 This included 41 goals in 1930 31 which remains the club record and also the record single season tally by an Irishman During the 1920s United equalled their record victory with a 10 0 home win against Burnley in January 1930 and also beat Cardiff City 11 2 in 1926 Their record league defeat 3 10 at Middlesbrough occurred in their relegation season They fell just short in promotion battles in 1936 and 1938 finishing third in the Second Division on each occasion but it was third time lucky when they pipped local rivals Sheffield Wednesday for second spot in 1939 winning their last game 6 1 against Tottenham They started the 1939 40 season brightly before World War II curtailed the campaign Post war 1940s 1950s editThe restart of League competition after the war came a year too late for The Blades as they won League North a regional competition featuring the Northern clubs from the top two Divisions in 1945 46 This good form carried over into the following year with a 6th place finish combined with reaching the FA Cup Quarter finals This good form was not to last as the club were relegated again in 1948 49 and suffered the agony of missing out on an instant promotion the following season when Wednesday gained revenge for 1939 and pipped them for second place and promotion on goal average with a 0 0 draw at home to Tottenham Hotspur when a scoring draw or defeat would have sent The Blades up instead After a couple of middling seasons featuring many goals including 7 3 and 3 1 wins against the Owls in the Steel City Derby 1951 2 but inconsistent results Teddy Davison ended his 20 year managerial career at the Lane He was replaced by Reg Freeman who guided the Blades to the Second Division Championship in 1952 53 scoring 97 goals along the way Two seasons of struggle but survival in the First Division followed before Freeman died in the summer of 1955 His replacement Joe Mercer was unable to stave off relegation in 1956 Revival 1960s mid 1970s editMercer left the club in 1958 to join Aston Villa who were promptly relegated and was replaced by former Chelsea captain John Harris who inherited a team with a backbone of good homegrown talent including Joe Shaw a centre half who played over 600 games for the club and Alan Hodgkinson a young goalkeeper capped five times by England he remains England s youngest ever goalkeeper who also went on to play over 600 league games and half back Graham Shaw The team was always in the promotion frame and had some good cup runs reaching the quarter finals in 1959 and 1960 and finally achieved promotion in 1961 as runners up to Ipswich Town In the same season they reached the FA Cup semi finals but went down 0 2 to Leicester City in a second replay after two scoreless draws Sheffield United s most memorable post war run was in 1971 where they ended the season with six victories and five draws to win promotion from Division Two The following season United took the First Division by storm Led by such players as Tony Currie Alan Woodward Eddie Colquhoun Len Badger Ted Hemsley Trevor Hockey Alan Hodgkinson Gil Reece and Bill Dearden they played the first ten games without defeat recording eight victories and two draws With one League Cup victory during this period United had an unbeaten run of 22 matches They finally lost the top spot in Division One in a memorable encounter with Manchester United at Old Trafford on 2 October 1971 The Blades losing out 2 0 on that occasion The memorable goal scored by George Best six minutes from the end is still replayed on television to this day The remarkable success in the early 1970s brought to a head the long standing argument about the desirability of playing football and cricket at the same ground and a decision was taken to build a new stand to provide a fourth side to what was essentially a three sided stadium This stand originally known as The South Stand with a seating capacity of 7746 people was opened in 1975 Lower division football late 1970s late 1980s editUnfortunately the completion of the new stand coincided with a slump in fortunes on the field despite the team finishing that season sixth in Division One The failure to qualify for the UEFA Cup by one point after failing to beat Birmingham City at St Andrew s in the final game of the season was followed by relegation to the Second Division in 1976 Relegation was a financial disaster and the drop in season ticket sales meant limited funds for strengthening the team The club s bank was reluctant to give additional loans on top of the debt on the new South Stand Revenue from the transfer of club legend Tony Currie and season ticket sales was quickly swallowed up and the bank declined to make further loans unless they could be underwritten by personal guarantees from Board members Jimmy Sirrel left on 27 September 1977 with United next to bottom of the Second Division and was replaced on a temporary basis by Cec Coldwell who had previously taken control between the reign of John Harris and Ken Furphy Results picked up but the lack of funds for new players was matched by the lack of reserve players suitable for the step up to the first team A bad run in January led to the appointment of Harry Haslam a wheeler dealer who had successfully managed a Luton Town side in similar circumstances for nine years Happy Harry brought in Danny Bergara a Uruguayan as Assistant Manager With a reputation for finding talent Haslam brought in a number of players most notably Alex Sabella but was forced to sell promising players such as Keith Edwards Imre Varadi and Simon Stainrod Alan Woodward left for the United States as did Bruce Rioch whose short loan spell brought a mini revival in the club s fortunes The 1978 79 season ended with relegation to the Third Division United s first ever season outside the top two divisions started promisingly but their early form soon burned out and the team spent the rest of the season in mid table never threatening the promotion places 1980 81 saw another good start with the team at the top of the table at Christmas Haslam s health started to fail at this point though and he was eventually forced to stand down in mid January 1966 World Cup winner Martin Peters succeeded him but then the team went into free fall winning only three of the last sixteen games and were relegated to the Fourth Division The 1981 relegation came as a result of a last minute miss from a penalty kick in the final game of the season 3 against Walsall who would have been relegated instead had the kick by Don Givens been successful Having dropped to the lowest level United appointed Ian Porterfield from neighbours Rotherham United to help them start the recovery and with investment from a willing boardroom United went on to become Fourth Division Champions in 1982 with 92 points a new record due to the change of 3 points being awarded for a win in the 1981 82 season United s top goalscorer that season was Keith Edwards re signed from Hull City who linked up well with Bob Hatton and later that season Colin Morris signed from Blackpool who was to become part of a renowned partnership that would delight Bramall Lane crowds well into the mid 1980s Edwards won an Adidas Golden Boot for his contribution his 35 goals being a large part of United s success The Golden Boot is now on show at United s Legends of the Lane exhibition United s promotion in 1982 saw them initially struggle in the Third Division and finish in the lower reaches of the league in the 1982 83 season By applying themselves to the cause along with a number of additions to the side including the signings of Paul Stancliffe and Glenn Cockerill from Lincoln City the 1983 84 season saw the Blades cruise into the top 3 which they would not drop out of all season They were challenged for the promotion spots by Hull City who by their final match were 3 goals behind them and 3 points behind Hull s final match of that season was on a weekday at Burnley and the Tigers went into the game knowing that 3 goals would be enough Many United fans travelled to Turf Moor for the game and were biting their nails when Hull cruised into a 2 goal lead but try as they may City could not find a third and United were up again to Division 2 their second promotion in 3 seasons Keith Edwards was top goalscorer again this season United seemed content to bide their time in the Second Division but scared fans initially by finishing 18th in season 1984 85 in a poor first season back Further financial backing saw Porterfield and the Blades make a push for promotion in season 1985 86 when manager Porterfield went for experience to get the Blades up signing veterans Ken McNaught Peter Withe Phil Thompson and Ray Lewington This led the Blades to gain the nickname Dad s Army because of the combined ages of the 4 players signed they were all in their 30s Fans were unhappy that crowd favourite Edwards was dropped to the bench in favour of his aged colleagues United s start was actually very bright that season however and after a 3 0 win away to early season promotion favourites Portsmouth were fancied for another climb to the top tier However injury and bad results saw the club s fortunes falter and the crowd s anger turn on Porterfield who after a 5 2 defeat to Norwich was sacked after a car park demonstration Although linked with a number of high profile managers United promoted from within and made Youth Team manager Billy McEwan first team manager in March 1986 Although he soon restored Edwards to the side the talented forward became disillusioned and at the end of the 1985 86 season left for rivals Leeds United for 125 000 and the club finished in 7th position McEwan s first full season in charge saw the Blades finish in a disappointing 9th place but saw the Blades debut of future Manchester City Everton and Bradford City player Peter Beagrie signed from Middlesbrough The following season saw him trying to mix youth with talent by giving debuts to future Blackburn star Chris Marsden and to Charlton Athletic and Grimsby Town legend Clive Mendonca but results saw the club drop into the bottom half of the table and McEwan tendered his resignation on New Years Day 1988 after an embarrassing 5 0 defeat at home to Oldham Athletic Danny Bergara took charge as Caretaker Manager again for the match against Maidstone United in the FA Cup in January 1988 but at the following away game at Bournemouth in the League a manager who d recently resigned from his role at Watford was spotted taking more than a passing interest in the action on the pitch Three days later he became manager That man was Dave Bassett Dave Bassett era 1988 1995 edit nbsp Sheffield United vs Manchester United on the opening day of the Premiership season in 1992 Dave Bassett took charge on 21 January 1988 shortly before the club s relegation to the Third Division via a loss in the playoffs against Bristol City He then masterminded two successive promotions which saw them in the First Division for the 1990 91 season the first in season 1988 89 Bassett s inspired signings of Tony Agana and Brian Deane were instrumental in getting the Blades finished in 2nd place that year with the pair weighing in with over 20 goals each The following season saw United battle with rivals Leeds United for the top spot all season with Leeds only becoming Champions on the final day They were the subject of a BBC2 documentary United shown over a 6 week period towards the end of the 1989 90 season with the fortunes of the club being played out in front of an audience of millions The BBC got their fairytale ending United gaining promotion on a glorious day at Leicester winning 5 2 with goals from Paul Wood Brian Deane Wilf Rostron and 2 from Tony Agana This season also saw the rise of the chant Ooh Ah Bob Booker in adulation of 32 year old Bob Booker signed by Bassett from Brentford in 1989 but soon a hero to fans of the club This would later be borrowed for Eric Cantona but Booker maintains in the book Match of My Life Sheffield United by Nick Johnson that the chant was originally started by fans of the club They reached the quarter finals of the FA Cup losing 1 0 at home to eventual winners Manchester United nbsp Sheffield United vs Manchester United on the opening day of the Premiership Season in 1992 From 1990 Sheffield United were in the top division of English football for four seasons including the first two Premier League campaigns They failed to win any of their first 17 league games in 1990 91 and seemed set for an immediate return to the Second Division only to recover dramatically and comfortably achieve survival in 13th place A slow start followed at the beginning of the 1991 92 season but Bassett s team recaptured their form and finished an impressive ninth comfortably qualifying for a place in the new Premier League for the 1992 93 season Brian Deane scored the first ever Premiership goal on 15 August 1992 five minutes into the 2 1 home win over Manchester United Despite spending most of the first half of the season in the relegation zone they showed the form of a title winning team in the second half of the season with only Arsenal matching them for points won in the New year They also ended Manchester United s double bid with a 2 1 win at Bramall Lane in the FA Cup fifth round going on to reach the semi finals where they lost to local rivals Sheffield Wednesday Brian Deane was sold to Leeds United in the summer of 1993 and the Blades were unable to find a suitable replacement They found it increasingly difficult to score goals in 1993 94 and were relegated on the final day of the season when a last minute goal gave Chelsea a 3 2 win 1994 95 saw the Blades finish eighth in Division One not enough for even a playoff place By December 1995 Bassett had stepped down as manager of a side at the foot of the Division One table and the club s new board of directors appointed Howard Kendall as the man faced with the task of saving the club from relegation Pushing for promotion 1995 2006 editDave Bassett resigned as manager in November 1995 to be replaced by Howard Kendall who was at the helm for 18 months before being lured back to Everton for his third spell as manager at the end of the 1996 97 season just a few weeks after Sheffield United blew the chance of a return to the Premiership by losing 1 0 to Crystal Palace in the Division One Play Off Final Over the next two and a half years Sheffield United had three unsuccessful managers Nigel Spackman Steve Bruce and Adrian Heath although they reached the FA Cup semi final again in 1998 In December 1999 the club turned to Neil Warnock in a bid to re establish the club as promotion challengers At this time the club was over 20m in debt and the priority was cutting costs so Warnock s first three seasons in charge ended in mid table finishes in Division One 2002 03 was a promising season for Sheffield United when they reached the semi finals of the FA Cup and League Cup losing both ties to Premiership clubs Arsenal and Liverpool respectively They also reached the Division One playoff final but were beaten 3 0 by Wolverhampton Wanderers at the Millennium Stadium In both 2003 04 and 2004 05 Sheffield United narrowly missed out on a place in the playoffs for promotion to the Premier League finishing 8th in both seasons 2005 06 was the team s twelfth straight season at the second level of the English football pyramid a period longer than any other team currently in the Championship and their longest spell in any Division since 1934 After beating Cardiff 1 0 on Good Friday and never being outside of the top two places all season United required only one point from their final three games to secure their promotion Results later that evening meant only Leeds United could in theory catch Sheffield United but the following day 15 April 2006 they failed to beat Reading at Elland Road After many disappointments in the previous few seasons Sheffield United finally won promotion back into the Premiership A season of Premiership football edit Sheffield United finished 18th in the Premiership and were relegated to the Championship after just one season back in the top flight In total they won ten games during this season seven at home and three away Their 2 1 home victory against Middlesbrough on 30 September was their first Premiership victory since April 1994 The first away win of the season came against Newcastle United on 4 November The remaining victories came against Charlton Athletic home Watford home and away West Ham United home Wigan Athletic away Arsenal home Fulham home and Tottenham Hotspur home They lost just five home games to Reading Chelsea Newcastle United and both Manchester clubs United s Premiership top scorer was Rob Hulse with eight goals Danny Webber Phil Jagielka and Jon Stead each scored four goals Keith Gillespie Stephen Quinn Christian Nade scored two goals apiece Colin Kazim Richards Chris Morgan and Michael Tonge each score once On 24 October 2006 a second string side was knocked out of the League Cup at the third round stage by Championship side Birmingham City suffering a 4 2 defeat at Bramall Lane A similarly understrength team had narrowly beaten Bury of League Two in the previous round In the FA Cup third round United lost 3 0 at home to League One side Swansea City During the game against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on 17 March 2007 Hulse suffered a broken leg in a collision with Chelsea s goalkeeper Petr Cech and was ruled out for the rest of the season This coincided with a poor run of form that saw United slide down the table and into relegation trouble On 14 April after losing three games in succession United climbed out of the relegation zone by beating fellow relegation battlers West Ham United 3 0 at Bramall Lane A week later the club drew 1 1 away to 18th place rivals Charlton Athletic and were well placed to retain their status On 13 May Sheffield United played Wigan Athletic at home in the last game of the season needing to avoid defeat to ensure Premiership status United lost 2 1 meaning both clubs finished on 38 points By virtue of Wigan s goal difference being one better than United s they stayed up at the Blades expense Even with this result a defeat for West Ham against Manchester United at Old Trafford would have seen the Blades safe and the Hammers relegated but West Ham recorded a 1 0 victory to guarantee their survival Sheffield United mounted a legal challenge against their relegation on the basis that West Ham should have been docked points over irregularities with the transfers of Carlos Tevez and Javier Mascherano West Ham were fined 5 5 million instead of having points deducted However Sheffield United failed in their appeal and started the 200708 season in the Championship A claim for compensation against West Ham was finally settled out of court in August 2013 with Sheffield United reportedly receiving 10m payable in instalments over a five year period 11 Relegations 2007 2016 editNeil Warnock resigned shortly after the relegation ending a near eight year reign as manager Bryan Robson was named as his successor but was sacked on 14 February 2008 following a goalless draw at previous club West Bromwich Albion with the Blades languishing in the bottom half of the Championship Having turned down the chance to become Director of Football at Bramall Lane Robson left the club altogether 12 Kevin Blackwell who had been assistant manager to Warnock in the first four seasons of his reign was named as Robson s successor until the end of the season In the final stages of the season a marked improvement in form was achieved and the Blades finished ninth Indeed the play offs were not mathematically out of reach until the end of the last match of the season He was confirmed as the permanent successor to Robson with two games of the season remaining signing a 3 year contract From Blackwell s initial appointment until the end of the season only Hull City gained more points than the Blades 13 On 25 May 2009 Sheffield United came up against Burnley in the Championship Play Off final They lost the match 1 0 and were forced to stay in the Championship for at least the following year Jamie Ward was sent off during the match after receiving two yellow cards and Lee Hendrie received a red card after the match The Championship campaign started well for The Blades drawing 1 1 away at Cardiff on the opening day of the season However results since then have not been favourable recording six losses in the first nine games of the season 14 failed verification Kevin Blackwell was subsequently sacked as manager after two league games with Gary Speed taking over before leaving to manage Wales after a matter of months After a caretaker spell by John Carver the club subsequently appointed Micky Adams without an improvement in results leaving the Blades bottom of the table by early April On 30 April 2011 Sheffield United were relegated to League One after the results of relegation rivals Doncaster Rovers and Crystal Palace meant that a 2 2 draw at home to Barnsley was of no relevance Following relegation Adams was dismissed as manager and replaced by Danny Wilson a controversial appointment considering his past spell managing cross city rivals Wednesday Ironically Wednesday would narrowly pip United to automatic promotion that season as a late run of poor form saw the Blades finish third They went into the play offs but were ultimately defeated by another Yorkshire side Huddersfield Town Wilson left late into the 2012 13 season with the club in the play offs but well off the automatic promotion race Chris Morgan was appointed as temporary manager for the remainder of the season and a fifth place finish saw them enter the play offs again where despite a 1 0 win at Bramall Lane in the first leg they were ultimately eliminated by eventual play off winners Yeovil Town David Weir was appointed as the club s new manager over the summer and heavily backed with funds by the board but despite a promising opening day win over Notts County a disastrous run of form saw the Blades bottom of the table by the end of September leading to Weir being dismissed and eventually replaced by Nigel Clough The rest of the 2013 14 season was a considerable improvement as the club finished seventh and were only kept out of the play offs by their dismal early season form though the real story was a run to the semi finals of the FA Cup where they were ultimately eliminated 5 3 by Hull City 2014 15 would be a similar story with strong cup runs including to the fourth round of the FA Cup and the semi finals of the League Cup and a fifth place finish in League One However a 7 6 aggregate elimination by Swindon Town saw Clough dismissed as manager with the board feeling he had taken the club as far as he could Nigel Adkins succeeded him as manager but the 2015 16 season saw the Blades struggle for league form never seriously challenging for promotion at any point in the campaign and ultimately finishing eleventh their lowest league finish since 1983 which saw Adkins term as manager cut short after just a year Promotions 2016 present editFormer player Chris Wilder was appointed as manager over the summer and despite a four game winless run at the start of the season finally managed to turn things around for the Blades The club broke into the top two in mid November and never left the automatic promotion places eventually securing a return to the Championship on 8 April 2017 On 15 April they secured the League One title when Bolton Wanderers their closest challenger lost 1 0 at Oldham Athletic the Blades becoming the fourth club to win all four tiers of professional English football after Wolverhampton Wanderers in 1988 Burnley in 1992 and Preston North End in 1996 all of them having won the fourth tier title Sheffield United was also the first of these clubs to not be among the founding members of the original English Football League The Blades finished the season with a club record 100 points after defeating Chesterfield 3 2 on the final day of the season Two returns to the Premier League edit nbsp Prince Abdullah at Sheffield United in 2013 In September 2013 Abdullah bin Musaid Al Saud of the House of Saud had bought a 50 per cent stake in United s parent company Blades Leisure Ltd Both parties at that time agreed to include a roulette notice mechanism to end their arrangement when they no longer wished to work together In late 2017 co owner Kevin McCabe served a roulette notice on Prince Abdullah giving him the option to sell his 50 per cent at 5 million or buy McCabe s 50 per cent for the same price Prince Abdullah chose to buy but McCabe refused to sell a decision that ended up before the High Court of Justice 15 In the 2018 19 season Sheffield United achieved automatic promotion to the Premier League 16 United s first season back in the Premier League despite being tipped by many for relegation produced a ninth place finish 17 Despite this ownership disputes between Prince Abdullah and McCabe continued In September 2019 after 20 months of litigation the High Court issued its judgment requiring McCabe s company to sell its shares in United 18 McCabe sought permission to appeal from the High Court and Court of Appeal but both appeals were rejected 19 As a result Prince Abdullah became the sole beneficial owner of the club In the 2020 21 season the club made a very poor start to the season taking just one win in their opening eighteen matches Wilder left the club by mutual consent in March 2021 20 He was replaced by Paul Heckingbottom as caretaker manager who could not prevent relegation at the end of the season 21 In May 2021 the club appointed Slavisa Jokanovic as the new manager making him the first overseas manager the club s history 22 However Jokanovic was dismissed in November 2021 after a poor start to the season and Heckingbottom was reappointed as manager this time on a permanent basis 23 Heckingbottom appointed former Sheffield United players Stuart McCall and Jack Lester as part of his coaching team The 2021 22 season resulted in a fifth place finish in the Championship losing in the play off semi finals to Nottingham Forest on penalties During the following season Nigerian businessman Dozy Mmobuosi failed with an attempted 90 million takeover of the financially troubled club 24 25 26 having reportedly paying a near 10 million non refundable deposit 27 By the end of the season Heckingbottom had guided United back to the Premier League securing automatic promotion with a second place finish The team also reached the F A Cup Semi final losing 3 0 to Manchester City at Wembley Stadium 28 United s return to the Premier League for the 2023 24 season proved to be difficult and by early December the team was bottom of the League The Club s Board decided to sack Paul Heckingbottom replacing him with former Blades manager Chris Wilder 29 References edit Football New Local Professional Team The Sheffield amp Rotherham Independent 23 March 1889 At a meeting of the Sheffield United Cricket Club held last evening an important decision was arrived at It was resolved to undertake the organisation of a football professional team for next season The club in future will be known as the Sheffield United Cricket and Football Club a b c Denis Clarebrough 1989 Sheffield United The First 100 Years Sheffield United Football Club ISBN 0 9508588 1 1 a b c d e f g h i j Sheffield United F C Full History Archived 25 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine a b Sheffield United History Year by Year Archived from the original on 18 March 2007 Retrieved 6 March 2007 Denis Clareborough 1998 Images of Sport Sheffield United Football Club ISBN 0 7524 1059 8 Sheffield United in The Northern League Retrieved 28 July 2020 Saturday s Football Other Matches The Glasgow Herald 14 March 1898 Champions The Scottish Referee 15 April 1898 scan via London Hearts Supporters Club Celtic v Sheffield United The Glasgow Herald 18 April 1898 The League Champions The Scottish Referee 18 April 1898 scan via London Hearts Supporters Club Kelso Paul 13 March 2009 West Ham and Sheffield United reach out of court settlement over Carlos Tevez affair The Telegraph London Retrieved 26 August 2013 Blackwell in for Robson at Blades BBC Sport 14 February 2008 Retrieved 28 July 2020 Sheffield United Football BBC Sport Retrieved 28 July 2020 Archived copy BBC News 29 July 2009 Archived from the original on 27 December 2007 Retrieved 30 April 2011 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint archived copy as title link The bitter battle for Sheffield United He tried to screw me he got screwed The Guardian 3 February 2020 Retrieved 15 December 2020 Sheffield United 2 0 Ipswich Town BBC Sport 27 April 2019 Absolute heroes Sheffield United fans salute their team after sealing ninth place in Premier League The Star Retrieved 31 July 2020 Sheffield United ownership Prince Abdullah wins court battle BBC News 16 September 2019 Retrieved 16 September 2019 Kevin McCabe refused right to appeal in Sheffield United ownership saga The Guardian Retrieved 21 January 2020 Club Statement Sheffield United F C 13 March 2021 Retrieved 13 March 2021 Wolves 1 0 Sheffield United Blades relegated from Premier League after Willian Jose strike Sky Sports Retrieved 17 April 2021 Slavisa Jokanovic named Sheffield United manager succeeding Chris Wilder at the Blades helm Sky Sports 28 May 2021 Retrieved 23 August 2021 Club Statement 25 November 2021 Lawton Matt Nigerian billionaire Dozy Mmobuosi s Sheffield United takeover close The Times ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved 2 February 2023 King Kieran 2 February 2023 African billionaire worth 7bn to move into English football with takeover close mirror Retrieved 2 February 2023 Dozy Mmobuosi Nigerian businessman on the cusp of buying Premier League bound Sheffield United CNN Video 9 February 2023 retrieved 21 March 2023 Slater Matt 26 March 2024 Under every rock we found a lie How the bid to be English football s first black owner unravelled The Athletic Retrieved 15 April 2024 McNulty Phil Manchester City 3 0 Sheffield United BBC Sport Retrieved 22 April 2023 Poole Harry Sheffield United sack manager Paul Heckingbottom and appoint Chris Wilder BBC Sport British Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 5 December 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Sheffield United F C amp oldid 1222189609, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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