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Millwall F.C.

Millwall Football Club (/ˈmɪlwɔːl/)[1] is a professional football club in Bermondsey, South East London, England. They compete in the EFL Championship, the second tier of English football. Founded as Millwall Rovers in 1885, the club has retained its name despite having last played in the Millwall area of the Isle of Dogs in 1910. From then until 1993, the club played at what is now called The Old Den in New Cross, before moving to its current home stadium nearby, called The Den. The traditional club crest is a lion rampant, referred to in the team's nickname 'The Lions'. Millwall's traditional kit consists of dark blue shirts, white shorts, and blue socks.

Millwall
Full nameMillwall Football Club
Nickname(s)The Lions
Founded1885; 138 years ago (1885), as Millwall Rovers
GroundThe Den
Capacity20,146
OwnerMillwall Holdings
ChairmanJohn Berylson
ManagerGary Rowett
LeagueEFL Championship
2021–22EFL Championship, 9th of 24
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Millwall was one of the founding members of the Southern League in 1894. They competed in it for 22 seasons until 1920, claiming the title twice in 1895 and 1896. Since joining the Football League in the 1920–21 season, the club have been promoted eleven times (five times as champions in 1928, 1938, 1962, 1988, and 2001) and relegated nine times. They have spent 89 of their 96 seasons in the Football League yo-yoing between the second and third tiers. The club did have a brief spell in the top flight between 1988 and 1990, in which they achieved their highest ever league finish of tenth place in the First Division in 1988–89. Millwall reached the 2004 FA Cup final and qualified for Europe for the first time in their history, playing in the UEFA Cup. The club have also won two League One play-off finals in 2010 and 2017, the Football League Group Cup in 1983, and were Football League Trophy finalists in 1999.

In the media, Millwall's supporters have often been associated with hooliganism, with numerous films having been made fictionalising their notoriety. The fans are renowned for their terrace chant "No one likes us, we don't care". Millwall have a long-standing rivalry with West Ham United. The local derby between the two sides has been contested almost a hundred times since 1899. The club also share a rivalry with Leeds United, and contest the South London derby with local rivals Crystal Palace and Charlton Athletic.

History

Beginnings, Southern League and relocation: 1885–1919

 
The first Millwall Rovers kit, worn by club secretary Jasper Sexton in 1885.[2]

The club was founded as Millwall Rovers by the workers of J.T. Morton's canning and preserve factory in the Millwall area of the Isle of Dogs in London's East End in 1885.[3] J.T. Morton was founded in Aberdeen in 1849 to supply sailing ships with food, the company opened their first English cannery and food processing plant at Millwall dock in 1872 and attracted a workforce from across the country, including the east coast of Scotland, primarily Dundee.[3] The club secretary was 17-year-old Jasper Sexton, the son of the landlord of The Islander pub in Tooke Street where Millwall held their club meetings.[4] Millwall Rovers' first fixture was held on a piece of waste ground on Glengall Road, on 3 October 1885 against Fillebrook, a team that played in Leytonstone. The newly formed team were beaten 5–0.[3]

Rovers found a better playing surface for the 1886–87 season, at the rear of the Lord Nelson pub and it became known as the Lord Nelson Ground.[3] In November 1886, the East End Football Association was formed, along with the Senior Cup Competition. Millwall made it to the final against London Caledonians, which was played at Leyton Cricket Ground. The match finished 2–2 and the teams shared the cup for six months each.[5] Millwall won the East London Senior Cup at the first attempt. The club also won the cup in the following two years, and the trophy became their property.[3][5]

In April 1889, a resolution was passed for Millwall to drop "Rovers" from their name, and they began playing under the name Millwall Athletic, inspired by their move to their new home The Athletic Grounds.[5][6] They were founding members of the Southern Football League which they won for the first two years of its existence, and were runners-up in its third.[7] During this period the club was invited to join the Second Division of the Football League but the committee turned down the opportunity, partly due to the expected increase in travel expenses but also to stay loyal to the Southern League.[8] They were forced to move to a new ground North Greenwich in 1901, as the Millwall Dock Company wanted to use their land as a timberyard.[9] Millwall Athletic reached the semi-finals of the FA Cup in 1900 and 1903, and were also champions of the Western Football League in 1908 and 1909.[10] On 10 October 1910, Millwall played their last game as an East London club against Woolwich Arsenal in the London Challenge Cup.[11] Millwall won the game 1–0 in front of a crowd of 3000.[11]

Millwall moved to a new stadium, named The Den, in New Cross, South London in 1910.[12] The club had previously occupied four different grounds in the 25 years since their formation in East London; limited expansion space on the Isle of Dogs meant The Lions had to move to boost support and attendances.[9] The estimated cost of The Den was £10,000.[9] The first match played at the new ground was on 22 October 1910 against reigning Southern League champions Brighton & Hove Albion, who won 1–0.[13]

Entering the Football League: 1920–1939

 
Millwall fans watch a South London derby against Crystal Palace in a 1922 FA Cup replay.

Millwall, who had now also dropped "Athletic" from their name, were invited to join the Football League in 1920 for the 1920–21 season, along with 22 other clubs, through the creation of the new Football League Third Division.[14] The Southern League was shorn of its status, with almost all its clubs deciding to leave—Millwall followed suit.[14] Millwall's first Football League match was on 28 August 1920 at The Den, and they were 2–0 winners against Bristol Rovers.[15]

In the 1925–26 season Millwall had 11 consecutive clean sheets, a Football League record, which they hold jointly with York City and Reading.[16] Millwall became known as a hard-fighting Cup team and competed in various memorable matches, notably defeating three-time league winners and reigning champions Huddersfield Town 3–1 in the third round of the 1926–27 FA Cup.[17] In the 1927–28 season Millwall won the Third Division South title and scored 87 goals at home in the league, an English record which still stands.[16] Matches against Sunderland and Derby County saw packed crowds of 48,000-plus in the 1930s and 1940s.[18] Their 1937 FA Cup run saw Millwall reach the semi-finals for the third time, and a fifth-round game against Derby still stands as Millwall's record attendance of 48,762.[17][18] Millwall were the 11th best supported team in England in 1939, despite being in the Second Division.[19] Millwall were one of the most financially wealthy clubs in England. The club proposed plans to improve the Den and signed international players.[20] Winger Reg 'JR' Smith was capped twice, scoring two goals for England in 1938.[21] The Lions were pushing for promotion to the First Division toward the end of the decade, but one week into the 1939–40 season, World War II broke out and Millwall were robbed of their aim.[20]

Wartime doldrums and relegation to fourth tier: 1940–1965

 
Annual table positions of Millwall in the Football League, 1920–2022.

On 7 April 1945, Millwall appeared in a Football League War Cup final at Wembley Stadium against Chelsea, but because it was a wartime cup final it is not acknowledged in the record books.[22] With the war in Europe in its last days, the number of spectators allowed to attend games was relaxed. The attendance was 90,000, the largest crowd Millwall have ever played in front of, which included King George VI, whom the team were introduced to before kick-off.[23]

The loss of so many young men during the Second World War made it difficult for clubs to retain their former status. This was especially true for Millwall, who appeared to suffer more than most. From being one of the country's biggest clubs before the war, Millwall were reduced to one of its smallest afterward.[22] The Den sustained severe bomb damage on 19 April 1943, and one week later a fire, determined to have been caused by a discarded cigarette, also destroyed an entire stand.[22] The club accepted offers from neighbours Charlton Athletic, Crystal Palace and West Ham United to stage games at their grounds.[22] On 24 February 1944, Millwall returned to The Den, to play in an all-standing stadium. This was achieved with considerable volunteer labour by Lions fans.[22]

Millwall's fortunes fluctuated in the immediate post war years, they were relegated to Division Three South in 1948 and had to apply for re-election to the league in 1950 after finishing in the bottom two. An upswing in fortunes saw Millwall finish 5th, 4th, and then runners up in Division Three South in 1952–53 season; but with only the Champions being promoted, Millwall found themselves stuck in the third tier despite averaging crowds of over 20,000. Millwall then suffered a down swing in fortunes with a number of bottom-half finishes. One highlight of the period was one of the biggest giant-killing upsets in the Fourth Round of the 1956–57 FA Cup on 26 January 1957, when Millwall beat Newcastle United 2–1 in front of a crowd of 45,646.[24] Millwall suffered the ill fortune of becoming a founding member of Division Four[25] in 1958. While initially suffering from this reorganisation, the de-regionalisation of Third Division North and Third Division South opened up the way for promotion via the runner up spots. Millwall won the Division Four Title in 1962 with the help of 23 Goals from Peter Burridge and 22 from Dave Jones. They were relegated again in the 1963–64 season, but were to bounce back by winning back-to-back promotions as runner up. This is the last time Millwall played in the fourth tier.[26]

Unbeaten home record and the class of '71: 1966–1987

Later in the decade, Millwall established a record of 59 home games without defeat (43 wins and 16 draws) from 22 August 1964 to 14 January 1967. During this spell, Millwall played 55 different teams, kept 35 clean sheets, scored 112 goals and conceded 33.[27] This was thanks largely to managers Billy Gray, who laid the foundations, and Benny Fenton, a former player who continued to build on Gray's side. All the players, which included winger Barry Rowan, goalkeeper Alex Stepney and strikers Hugh Curran and Len Julians, were presented with a commemorative gold cigarette lighter by the Football Association.[27] The record was eventually broken by Liverpool, who were unbeaten for 63 games at home between 1978 and 1981.[27]

In the early 1970s, the Millwall team included many notable and memorable players, now remembered by some fans as "The Class of '71". This was a team that included; goalkeeper Bryan King, defender Harry Cripps, goalscoring midfielder Derek Possee, Millwall's most capped international player to date, Eamon Dunphy[28] and the club's longest serving player, Barry Kitchener.[29] They missed out on promotion to Division One by one point.[30] By remaining unbeaten at home in Division Two for the 1971–72 season, Millwall became the only club to go through an entire season without losing a match at home in four different divisions 1927–28 Division Three South, 1964–65 Division Four, 1965–66 Division Three and 1971–72 Division Two.[8] In 1974, Millwall hosted the first game to be played on a Sunday against Fulham.[31] The Lions reached the quarter-finals of the League Cup in 1974, and again in 1977.[32]

George Graham managed Millwall from 1983 to 1986, and during that time he guided the club to a Football League Group Cup win, beating Lincoln City 3–2 in the final in the 1982–83 season.[33] The 1984–85 season was particularly successful, Millwall reached the FA Cup quarter-finals and gained promotion to the Second Division, going unbeaten at home again in Division Three, winning 18 games and drawing five.[34] In the FA Cup they were beaten 1–0 by First Division Luton Town at Kenilworth Road. The match is remembered for all the wrong reasons, after hooligans rioted at the game. 81 people (including 31 police officers) were injured in the disturbances.[35]

Promotion to top tier, new stadium and administration: 1988–2000

 
In their three seasons together at Millwall, Tony Cascarino and Teddy Sheringham scored 99 goals between them.[36]

Graham's replacement was Glaswegian John Docherty. In his second season as manager, Millwall won the Second Division championship and gained promotion to the top flight of English football for the first time in the club's history.[37][38] Starting the 1988–89 season strongly, Millwall topped the league on 1 October 1988 having played six games (winning four and drawing two) and rarely slipped out of the top five before Christmas. This was mainly due to Tony Cascarino and Teddy Sheringham, who scored 99 goals between them in three seasons playing together.[39] Millwall's first top division season ended with a tenth-place finish, which was the lowest place occupied by the club all season. The following season, they briefly led the league for one night in September 1989 after beating Coventry City 4–1, but won only two more games all season and were relegated in 20th place at the end of the 1989–90 season.[40]

Just before relegation was confirmed, Docherty was sacked and replaced by ex-Middlesbrough manager Bruce Rioch.[41] Striker Teddy Sheringham, who later played for England and was the highest-scoring player throughout the Football League in the 1990–91 season,[42] was sold to Nottingham Forest for £2 million after Millwall's 6–2 defeat to Brighton & Hove Albion in the Second Division play-offs.[43] Rioch left Millwall in 1992 to be succeeded by Irish defender Mick McCarthy. McCarthy guided Millwall to third place in the new Division One at the end of the 1993–94 season.[44] This was their first season at a new ground, at first known as The New Den (to distinguish it from its predecessor) but now called simply The Den, which was opened by the Labour party leader John Smith on 4 August 1993.[45] The new ground was the first all-seater stadium to be built in England after the Taylor report on the Hillsborough disaster.[46] The Lions knocked Arsenal out of the 1994–95 FA Cup in a third-round replay, beating them 2–0 at Highbury.[47] They also reached the quarter-finals of the League Cup in 1995.[32] Millwall lost 5–1 on aggregate to Derby County in the play-off semi-finals that same 1994–95 season, in a tie blighted by crowd trouble.[4] McCarthy resigned to take charge of the Republic of Ireland national team on 5 February 1996, shortly after Millwall had been knocked off the top of the Division One table by Sunderland, following a 6–0 defeat.[44]

Jimmy Nicholl of Raith Rovers was appointed as McCarthy's replacement, but could not reverse the slump in form which saw Millwall relegated at the end of the 1995–96 season in 22nd place.[4] Just five months earlier they had been top of Division One, but now Millwall found themselves in the third tier for the 1996–97 season. The club experienced severe financial difficulties that resulted in them being placed in financial administration for a short time.[4] Nicholl was relieved of his duties and John Docherty returned on a short-term basis to stabilise the club.[4]

Millwall came out of administration, and new chairman Theo Paphitis appointed ex-West Ham United manager Billy Bonds as manager.[48] The 1997–98 season was not a successful one, with the club hovering close to relegation to the fourth tier. Bonds was sacked and replaced by Keith "Rhino" Stevens, with Alan McLeary as his assistant. McLeary was later promoted to the role of joint-manager alongside Stevens.[4] Stevens and McLeary led Millwall to their first ever official appearance at Wembley Stadium.[4] The Lions reached the 1999 Football League Trophy Final with a golden goal win against Gillingham in the semi-finals, and a 2–1 aggregate victory over Walsall in the regional final. They faced Wigan Athletic in the final but, while playing in front of 49,000 of their own fans, lost 1–0 to an injury-time goal.[49] Millwall also lost 1–0 on aggregate to Wigan in the Second Division play-off semi-finals the 1999–2000 season.[49]

Champions, FA Cup Final and European football: 2001–2004

Mark McGhee was named as Millwall's new manager in September 2000, and eight months later the club won promotion as Division Two champions, with the team built by Keith Stevens, after five years in the third tier of the league.[4] They finished with 93 points, a club record.[50] Winning the first match of the 2001–02 season 4–0 at home to Norwich City set the team up well for a good year, in which Millwall qualified for the Division One play-offs, but lost to eventual winners Birmingham City 2–1 in the semi-finals. Millwall finished mid-table in the 2002–03 season and McGhee was sacked soon after the start of the 2003–04 season.[51]

In 2003, Dennis Wise, ex-Chelsea and England player, became caretaker, and subsequently permanent player-manager, of the club. In his first season in charge Wise led the club to the first FA Cup Final in their history.[52] When Millwall took to the field at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff they were only the second team from outside the top flight to play in the Cup final since 1982, and were the first team from outside the Premier League to reach the final since the foundation of the top tier in 1992.[53] The club was missing 16 players from their squad due to suspension or injury. They played the Cup final on 22 May 2004, losing 3–0 to Manchester United.[54] As United had already qualified for the UEFA Champions League, Millwall were assured of playing in the UEFA Cup. Midfielder Curtis Weston, substituted for Wise with one minute of normal time remaining, became the youngest Cup final player in history at 17 years 119 days, beating the 125-year-old record of James F. M. Prinsep.[55] In the 2004–05 UEFA Cup, Millwall lost 4–2 on aggregate in the first round proper to Hungarian champions Ferencváros, with Wise scoring both Millwall's goals.[56]

Upheaval, stability and first play-off success: 2005–2013

 
Millwall players celebrating promotion to the Football League Championship at Wembley Stadium in 2010.[57]

In 2005, Theo Paphitis announced that he was stepping down as chairman of the club with Jeff Burnige to replace him from May 2005.[58] At the end of the 2004–05 season, manager Dennis Wise announced that he was leaving as he was unable to form a working relationship with the new chairman.[52] Former Millwall striker Steve Claridge was announced as the new player-manager of Millwall. However, when Burnige then stepped down just two months after taking up the post, it was announced on 27 July that Claridge had been sacked after just 36 days, without ever taking charge of the team in a competitive match.[59] Former Wolverhampton Wanderers manager Colin Lee replaced him but lasted only five months in charge of the club.[59] On 21 December, with the club bottom of the Championship, he became the club's Director of Football and was replaced as manager by 32-year-old player Dave Tuttle, on a short-term contract until the end of the 2005–06 season.[60] Tuttle had no prior experience in football management. In February 2006, Lee left the club altogether. Millwall experienced a difficult season, having had four managers in 2005. Their 13 goals scored at home was the second worst in Football League history.[16] Their relegation to League One was confirmed on 17 April 2006 with a 2–0 loss against Southampton. In the closed season Nigel Spackman was appointed as the new manager, but he lasted only four months after a string of bad results.[61] In September 2006, Theo Paphitis (chairman from 1997 to 2005) ended his nine-year association with the club after a year-long spell as a non-executive director.[62] On 19 March 2007, Willie Donachie signed a two-year contract following some progress which had seen the club climb to 11th place in the league.[63] Before Donachie took charge, Millwall had taken only six points from their first ten games. In the 2007–08 season Millwall sat bottom of the table at the beginning of October. Donachie was sacked on 8 October, with Richard Shaw and Colin West becoming caretaker managers.[63]

In March 2007, Chestnut Hill Ventures, led by American John Berylson, which have interests in business and financial services, retail, property and sport, invested £5 million into the club. The continued investment of Berylson, who has since become the club's major shareholder and chairman,[64] has steered The Lions on a better course on and off the pitch. The appointment of Kenny Jackett as manager on 6 November 2007, proving crucial.[65] Over the course of the next two seasons Jackett led Millwall to two top six finishes in League One, in fifth and third place respectively. He won the League One Manager of the Month award three times while in charge of the club.[66] Several of his key signings helped propel Millwall toward the play-offs, and eventual promotion. After a play-off final defeat in the 2008–09 season against Scunthorpe United and losing out on automatic promotion on the last day of the 2009–10 season to Leeds United by one point, Millwall made it back to Wembley, finally breaking the play-off hoodoo run of five successive failures in 1991, 1994, 2000, 2002 and 2009, with a 1–0 win in the 2010 League One play-off final against Swindon Town, securing a return to the Football League Championship after a four-year absence.[57]

Millwall's first game back in the Championship was a 3–0 away win at Bristol City. The game had been much hyped due to City's signing of then-England goalkeeper David James. Only days after the defeat, Steve Coppell resigned as City manager.[67] The Lions celebrated the 125th anniversary of the club on 2 October 2010, which was the closest home game date to the first fixture Millwall ever played against Fillebrook on 3 October 1885. Millwall drew 1–1 with Burnley and wore a special one-off kit for the game, made by manufacturers Macron, which bore the names of every footballer who had played for the club.[68] Kenny Jackett celebrated five years in charge of the club in November 2012, with a 4–1 victory away at Nottingham Forest.[69] After a strong start to the 2012–13 season, including a 13-game unbeaten run and flirting with the play-offs,[70] Millwall finished poorly, with only five wins in the last 23 games, narrowly avoiding relegation on the last day of the season.[71] Their poor league form coincided with reaching the semi-final of the FA Cup for the fifth time in their history.[72] They played Wigan Athletic at Wembley Stadium on 14 April 2013, losing 2–0 to the eventual cup winners.[73] Kenny Jackett resigned on 7 May 2013.[74] He was Millwall's fourth-longest serving manager.[75] After a month of searching, Millwall appointed St Johnstone boss Steve Lomas as their new manager on 6 June 2013.[76] His appointment provoked mixed emotions among some supporters, due to him being a former captain of West Ham United, their biggest rival.[77] Club record goalscorer Neil Harris returned to Millwall as a coach on 23 June 2013 after retiring as a player through injury.[78] Millwall sacked Lomas on 26 December 2013, after winning only five of his first 22 games in charge.[79] Harris and youth team coach Scott Fitzgerald took over as joint caretaker-managers.[79] On 4 January 2014 Millwall lost 4–1 at Southend United in the FA Cup, a team 31 places below them in the football pyramid. Harris described the performance as a "shambles."[80]

FA Cup giant-killers and fifth trip to Wembley in eight years: 2014–present

 
Millwall and rivals Leeds United perform huddles before kick-off at The Den in 2019.

The club appointed Ian Holloway as their new manager on 6 January 2014, with the club sitting 21st in the Championship table. He was given the priority of maintaining their Football League Championship status, which he achieved. Millwall went unbeaten in the last eight games of the 2013–14 season and finished in 19th place, four points above the relegation zone.[81][82] The following season, Holloway was sacked on 10 March 2015 with the team second from bottom in the Championship, and Neil Harris was reinstated as caretaker manager until the end of the season.[83] He was unable to ensure survival, however, as Millwall's relegation to League One was confirmed on 28 April with one game of the 2014–15 season still to play.[84] Harris was confirmed as Millwall's permanent manager the next day.[85] In his first full season in charge, Harris led Millwall to a fourth-place finish in League One and a play-off final at Wembley, which the Lions lost 3–1 to Barnsley.[86]

In the 2016–17 FA Cup, Millwall reached the Quarter-finals for the tenth time in their history, knocking out Premier League opposition in three consecutive rounds: Bournemouth in the third round, Watford in the fourth round, and reigning Premier League champions Leicester City in the fifth round.[87] On 28 February 2017, Millwall beat Peterborough United 1–0 and increased their unbeaten run to 16 games in all competitions, and have gone nine games without conceding a goal for the first time since the 1925–26 season.[88] Millwall made it to the League One play-off final at Wembley for the second successive year, after beating Scunthorpe United 3–2 in the semi-final. They were promoted back to the Championship following a 1–0 playoff final victory over Bradford City, thanks to an 85th-minute winner from Steve Morison, his 86th goal for the club.[89] In Millwall's return to the Championship in the 2017–18 season the team went on a club record 17-game unbeaten run; their longest streak in the second tier, which surpassed a record of 15 set in 1971.[90] During the undefeated run they won six away wins in a row, equalling a club record set in the 2008–09 season.[91] In the 2018–19 FA Cup, Millwall once again reached the Quarter-finals for an 11th time, only losing to Premier League side Brighton on penalties. In the previous round they knocked out Premier League side Everton, to equal Southampton's FA Cup 'Giant-killings' record, having knocked out 25 top-flight teams when not in the top flight themselves.[92]

On 3 October 2019, Neil Harris resigned as Millwall manager with the club sitting in 18th place with two wins from their first ten Championship games.[93] Harris led Millwall to Wembley twice, with one promotion, and two FA Cup quarter-finals during his tenure.[93] He was the Lions fifth longest-serving manager, having spent four and a half years at the club.[75] On 21 October, he was replaced by former Stoke City boss Gary Rowett, who beat his former club 2–0 in his very first game in charge.[94] The 2019–20 season ended in an 8th-placed finish, after a late play-off run came up short. Rowett then guided the club to 11th and 9th the following two seasons.

Colours, crest and nickname

Kit

 
 
 
 
 
 
Millwall Rovers first home kit from their 1885–86 season, which the team wore for the 125-year anniversary of the club in the 2010–11 season.[2]
 
The leaping lion has been on the club's crest from 1979 to 1999, and from 2007 to present. This version was used from 1992 to 1994.[2]

Millwall's traditional kit has predominantly consisted of blue shirts, white shorts and blue socks throughout their 125-year history.[2] For the first 50 years, up until 1936, they played in a traditional navy blue, similar to the colours of Scotland national team.[2] This colour was chosen because it paid homage to the Scottish roots of the club,[3] with the nucleus of the first Millwall Rovers squad being from Dundee.[95] In 1936, newly appointed Millwall manager Charlie Hewitt opted to change the kit colour from navy blue to a lighter royal blue,[96] and the team played in this colour for the best part of 74 years, with the exception of 1968–75 and 1999–2001, in which the team played in an all-white strip.[2] Their kit for the 2010–11 season celebrated the 125th anniversary of the club, with Millwall adopting the darker navy blue of their first strip.[97] The club has retained this colour since.[2] As for change colours, white shirts and blue shorts or yellow shirts and black shorts have been the Lions primary away colours. They have also played in red and black stripes, all grey, all orange, all red, and green and white stripes. Millwall wore a special one-off camouflage kit to commemorate the centenary of the First World War against Brentford on 8 November 2014. It went on sale to fans, with proceeds going to Headley Court, a rehabilitation centre for injured members of the British Armed Forces.[98]

Badge

The club crest has been a rampant lion since 1936, which was also introduced by Charlie Hewitt.[96] There have been many variations of the lion; the first was a single red lion, often mistakenly said to be chosen because of the club's Scottish roots.[99] The lion bore a striking resemblance to signs used by pubs named The Red Lion.[99] From 1956 to 1974 Millwall's crest was two leaping red lions facing each other.[2] Former chairman Theo Paphitis brought back the badge in 1999, where it was used for a further eight years. The current crest is a leaping lion, which first appeared on a Millwall kit in 1979.[2] It remained until 1999 and was re-introduced again in 2007.[2] The club mascot is a giant lion called Zampa, named after Zampa Road, the road The Den is located on.[100]

The Lions

The team nickname is The Lions, previously The Dockers.[101][102] The original Dockers name arose from the job of many of the club's supporters in the early 1900s.[3] The club did not like the moniker and changed the nickname after press headlined Millwall as 'Lions of the South', after knocking Football League leaders Aston Villa out of the 1899–1900 FA Cup. Millwall, then a Southern League side, went on to reach the semi-final.[103] The club adopted the motto: We Fear No Foe Where E'er We Go.[104] In the 2000s the club started to recognise its unique link with London's docks by introducing Dockers' Days, and archiving the club's dock roots in the Millwall FC Museum.[105] Dockers' Days bring together past successful Millwall teams who parade on the pitch at half-time. Supporters who were dockers are allowed to attend the game for free.[105] In 2011, Millwall officially named the east stand of The Den as the 'Dockers Stand' in honour of the club's former nickname.[106]

Kit sponsors and manufacturers

For the 2013–14 season, Millwall chose the charity Prostate Cancer UK to sponsor their shirt for free.[107]

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1936–39 strip. The first change of colour from navy blue to royal blue. This was the first appearance of the lion rampant crest on the kit.[2]
 
The two red lions first appeared on the Millwall crest in 1956.[2]
Year Kit manufacturer[2] Main shirt sponsor Secondary sponsor(s)
1975–80 Bukta None
1980–83 Osca
1983–85 LDDC
1985–86 Gimer London Docklands
1986–87 Spall
1987–89 Lewisham Council
1989–90 Millwall
1990–91 Lewisham Council
1991–92 Fairview Homes PLC
1992–93 Bukta Fairview
1993–94 Captain Morgan
1994–96 ASICS
1996–97 South London Press
1997–99 L!VE TV
1999–2001 Strikeforce Giorgio
2001–03 24 Seven
2003–04 Ryman
2004–05 Beko
2005–06 Lonsdale
2006–07 Oppida
2007–08 Bukta K&T Heating Services Ltd
2008–10 CYC Oppida
2010–11 Macron Matchbet
2011–12 Racing+ Sasco Sauces
2012–13 BestPay
2013–14 Prostate Cancer UK Wallis Teagan
2014–15 Euroferries
2015–16 Wallis Teagan
2016–17 Erreà
2017–18 TW Drainage & EnergyBet DCS Roofing
2018–22 Macron
2019–24 Huski Chocolate
2022–27 Hummel

Stadiums

History

 
A Junior Lions day at The Den in 1988

Millwall began life on the Isle of Dogs and inhabited four different grounds in the club's first 25 years.[9] Their first home was a piece of waste ground called Glengall Road, where they only stayed for one year. From 1886 to 1890 they played behind The Lord Nelson pub on East Ferry Road, which was known as the Lord Nelson Ground, before being forced to leave by the landlady, who received a better offer for its use.[9]

They moved to their third home, The Athletic Grounds, on 6 September 1890.[9] This was their first purpose-built ground, with a grandstand that seated 600 people and an overall capacity of between 10,000 and 15,000. The club was forced to move on again though, this time by the Millwall Dock Company who wanted to use it as a timberyard. They relocated in 1901 to a location near their second home, which became known as North Greenwich.[9] They remained an east London club for a further nine years, with the last game played on the Isle of Dogs on 8 October 1910 against Portsmouth, which Millwall won 3–1.

On 22 October 1910, Millwall crossed the river to South London, moving to Cold Blow Lane in New Cross. The fifth ground was called The Den, built at a cost of £10,000 by noted football ground architect Archibald Leitch. The first game played there was against Brighton & Hove Albion, which Brighton won 1–0.[13] Millwall remained there for 83 years, until moving to their sixth and current ground, at first known as The New Den but now called simply The Den, on 4 August 1993. The ground has an all-seated capacity of 20,146.[108][18] A Sporting CP team, managed by Bobby Robson helped open the ground by playing a friendly, which The Lions lost 2–1.[4][104]

 
A panoramic view of The Den from the upper Dockers Stand.[106]
 
A panorama view of The Den from behind the players tunnel in the lower Barry Kitchener Stand.

Bermondsey redevelopment controversy

In September 2016 Lewisham Council approved a compulsory purchase order (CPO) of land surrounding The Den rented by Millwall, as part of a major redevelopment of the "New Bermondsey" area. The plans were controversial because the developer, Renewal, is controlled by offshore companies with unclear ownership, and is seen by the club and local community to be profiteering by demolishing existing homes and businesses as well as Millwall's car-park and the Millwall Community Trust facility to build up to 2,400 new private homes, with no social housing. The club contemplated the possibility of having to relocate to Kent. Millwall had submitted their own plans for regeneration centred around the club itself, but the council voted in favour of Renewal's plans.[109]

In December 2016 Private Eye reported how Renewal had been founded by a former Lewisham Council leader and senior officer, suggesting potential bias, and that the decision to approve Renewal's plans may have been made as far back as 2013 despite the fact that no due diligence had been able to be carried out by PricewaterhouseCoopers due to "poor" and "limited" access to information and management at Renewal, which is controlled from the Isle of Man and British Virgin Islands.[110]

In the face of mounting community opposition and media scrutiny, the Council said in January 2017 it will not proceed with the CPO.[111] However, it was later reported to be taking legal advice regarding other avenues of securing the CPO, and Council cabinet members will decide how to proceed after a "review". Private Eye reported that Millwall are continuing to explore relocation options in Kent.[112]

Traditional songs

A tradition at The Den is the playing of the official club song[113] "Let 'em Come", by Roy Green, as Millwall and the opposing team walk onto the pitch. It was specifically written for the club and the lyrics represent old London culture, such as eating jellied eels[114] and having a glass of beer before going to the game. The song ends with all home fans standing, arms raised (usually in the direction of the travelling fans singing the last line, "Let 'em all... come down.... to The Den!" A television drama about a Millwall supporter and ex-docker, starring David Jason, featured a lyric from the song in its title, Come Rain Come Shine. The song was played on repeat at Wembley Stadium after Millwall gained promotion to the Championship in 2010.[115] The song "Shoeshine Boy" by the Mills Blue Rhythm Band was played as the entrance song before "Let 'em Come".[116]

Other songs that have been regularly played at The Den over the years in the build-up to a game include "London Calling" by The Clash, "No Surrender" by Bruce Springsteen, "Town Called Malice" by The Jam and "House of Fun" by Madness, which features the lyric "welcome to the lion's den...". Status Quo's cover version of "Rockin' All Over the World" is played after every home win.[117]

Rivalries

Millwall were listed eighth out of a list of 92 Football League clubs with the most rivals, with West Ham United, Leeds United, Crystal Palace, and Charlton Athletic considering them a major rival.[118][119] Portsmouth, Everton and Gillingham also share minor rivalries with Millwall, with hooliganism between their fans dating back to the 1970s.[120][118][121]

Major rivalry with West Ham United

 
West Ham and Millwall players shake hands before kick-off in 2011.[122]

Millwall's fiercest rival is West Ham United. It is one of the most passionately contested local derbies in football.[123] The two clubs have rarely met in recent years due to them playing in different leagues; the majority of their meetings happened before the First World War, with some 60 meetings between 1899 and 1915.[124] The clubs have played 99 times since the first contest in 1899. Millwall have won 38, drawn 27 and lost 34.[125] Despite violence between the two sets of supporters and calls for future games between the clubs to be played behind closed doors, they last met in the Football League Championship in 2011–12 with no outright ban on either set of fans, and no repeat of crowd trouble.[122][126] The rivalry between the sides, specifically the clubs' two hooligan firms has been depicted on the big screen several times, in films such as Green Street.[127]

Rivalry with Leeds United

Millwall share a fierce rivalry with Leeds United. The rivalry between the teams is intensified by both clubs' passionate fans and association with football hooliganism.[128][129] The clubs' two hooligan firms; the Leeds United Service Crew and the Millwall Bushwackers were notorious in the 1970s and 80s for their violence, being called "dirty Leeds" and "the scourge of football" respectively.[129][130] From 1920 to 2003 the sides met just 12 times; competing in different tiers for the majority of their histories, and neither considering the other a rival on the pitch. Since Leeds were relegated from the Premier League in 2004, the teams have met 28 times in 16 years. The rivalry began in League One during the 2007–08 season, with disorder and violent clashes between both sets of fans and the police at Elland Road.[131] It continued into the 2008–09 season; where the teams were vying for promotion to the Championship, culminating in Millwall knocking Leeds out of the League One playoffs at the semi-final stage.[132][133] The clubs have played each other 40 times and are evenly matched; Millwall has won 18, Leeds 17 and five games have ended in a draw.

South East London derbies

Millwall are closest in proximity to Charlton Athletic, with The Den and The Valley being less than four miles (6.4 km) apart. They last met in July 2020, a 1–0 win for Millwall at the Valley.[134] Since their first competitive game in 1921, Millwall have won 37, drawn 26 and lost 12.[135] The Lions are unbeaten in their last twelve games against Charlton, spanning 24 years, where they have won seven and drawn five. The Addicks last win came in March 1996 at The Valley.[134] The Lions last played against fellow South East London club Crystal Palace in the 2012–13 season when both teams were in the Football League Championship. They drew 0–0 at The Den and 2–2 at Selhurst Park.[136] In almost 100 competitive games between the two clubs since 1906, Millwall have won 39, drawn 29 and lost 29.[137]

Players

Current squad

As of 5 January 2023[138]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   ENG George Long
2 DF   IRL Danny McNamara
3 DF   SCO Murray Wallace
4 DF   ENG Shaun Hutchinson (captain)
5 DF   ENG Jake Cooper (vice-captain)
6 MF   ENG George Evans
8 MF   ENG Billy Mitchell
9 FW   WAL Tom Bradshaw
10 FW   NED Zian Flemming
11 DF   ENG Scott Malone
13 GK   ENG Ryan Sandford
14 MF   ENG Tyler Burey
15 DF   ENG Charlie Cresswell (on loan from Leeds United)
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 MF   ENG Jamie Shackleton (on loan from Leeds United)
17 MF   HUN Callum Styles (on loan from Barnsley)
18 MF   ENG Ryan Leonard
20 FW   ENG Mason Bennett
21 FW   GER Andreas Voglsammer
23 MF   NIR George Saville
27 GK   ENG Connal Trueman
33 GK   POL Bartosz Białkowski
39 MF   ENG George Honeyman
50 MF   ENG Romain Esse

Out on Loan

As of 19 January 2023

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
34 DF   ENG Alex Mitchell (at St Johnstone until 30 June 2023)
MF   ENG Sha’mar Lawson (at Maidstone United until January 2023)

Millwall Under 21s

As of 26 November 2022.[139]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
30 DF   ENG Chinwiki Okoli
36 MF   ENG Alfie Allen
37 FW   ENG Abdulsabur Abdulmalik
38 FW   ENG Nana Boateng
41 GK   ENG Joe Wright
44 MF   ENG George Walker
GK   ENG Jordan Gillmore
DF   ENG Nino Adom-Malaki
DF   ENG Kamarl Grant
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF   ENG Arthur Penney (captain)
DF   ENG Kyle Smith
DF   ENG Jeremy Kyezu
MF   ENG Sebastian Drozd
MF   ENG Henry Hearn
FW   ENG Tyrese Briscoe
FW   ENG Tomas Leahy
FW   ENG Laquay Coleman
FW   IRL Aidomo Emakhu

Player of the year

As voted by Millwall Supporters Club members and season ticket holders.[140]

Personnel honours

English Football Hall of Fame

Millwall players inducted into the English Football Hall of Fame:[141]

PFA Fans' Player of the Year

PFA Team of the Year

Notable former players

The following is a list of notable footballers who have played for Millwall, including players who have been honoured in Millwall's Hall of Fame, international players who were capped by their country while playing for Millwall, players who have been given a testimonial for 10 years of service at the club, players who have made over 100 appearances or scored 50 goals, and also 1885 founder member players who contributed significantly to the clubs' history.[21][143][144][4][145][146]

Note: Current player George Saville has been capped internationally while playing for Millwall, and will be added to the list when they leave the club.

Managers

There have been 34 permanent and 15 caretaker managers since the appointment of the club's first professional manager, Bert Lipsham on 4 May 1911.[147] From 1890 to 1910, Millwall directors Kidd, Stopher and Saunders were honorary managers, also working under the title of club secretary.[148] Bob Hunter is Millwall's longest serving manager, having stayed at the helm for 15 years. Prior to becoming manager, he was the club's trainer for 21 years. He died in office in 1933, having served at the club for a total of 36 years.[149] Steve Claridge holds the shortest tenure at the club, having been in charge for a period of 36 days without ever taking charge of a first-team game.[59] Every Millwall manager has come from the United Kingdom or Ireland.[147]

(s) = secretary (c) = caretaker

Club officials

 
Millwall's American chairman John Berylson[64][150]
As of 12 July 2022.[151][152]

Board

  • Chairman: John Berylson
  • Chief Executive Officer: Steve Kavanagh
  • Directors: James Berylson, Constantine Gonticas, Trevor Keyse, Demos Kouvaris, Richard Press and Peter Garston

Coaching staff

Honours

 
Millwall Rovers with the East London Cup, 1887.[5]
Competition Achievement Year Notes
Second Division (tier 2) Champions 1988 Promoted to the top flight for the first time in the club's history.[37]
Second Division / First Division (tier 2) Play-off Semi-Finalists 1991, 1994, 2002
Third Division South / Second Division (tier 3) Champions 1928, 1938, 2001 Millwall set an English record in 1928 with 87 league goals scored at home.[16] Finished with 93 points in 2001, a club record.[50]
Third Division (tier 3) Promoted 1966, 1976, 1985 Unbeaten at home for the second successive season in 1965–66 season.[27] Automatically promoted after finishing third in 1976.[153]
Football League One (tier 3) Play-off Winners 2010, 2017 Won 1–0 against Swindon Town in 2010 and 1–0 against Bradford City in 2017.[154]
Football League One (tier 3) Play-off Finalists 2009, 2016
Second Division (tier 3) Play-off Semi-Finalists 2000
Fourth Division (tier 4) Champions 1962
Fourth Division (tier 4) Runners-Up 1965 Finished one point behind the champions Brighton & Hove Albion.[155]
FA Cup Finalists 2004 Qualified for the UEFA Cup. Game was played at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.[56]
FA Cup Semi-Finalists 1900, 1903, 1937, 2013
FA Cup Quarter-Finalists 1922, 1927, 1978, 1985, 2017, 2019
League Cup Quarter-Finalists 1974, 1977, 1995
Football League Trophy Finalists 1999 First official appearance at Wembley in a recognised competition.[4]
Football League Group Cup Winners 1983
FA Youth Cup Winners 1979, 1991
FA Youth Cup Runners-up 1994
FA Youth Cup Quarter-Finalists 2020
Football League War Cup Finalists 1945 South final runners-up.[156]
Third Division South Cup Winners 1937 Joint winners with Watford (3–3 aggregate in final.)[157]
Kent Senior Shield Winners 1912, 1913
London Challenge Cup Winners 1909, 1915, 1928, 1938
Western Football League Champions 1908, 1909
Southern Football League Champions 1895, 1896
London League Champions 1904 Unbeaten with 11 wins and one draw.[158]
United League Champions 1897, 1899
East London Senior Cup Winners 1887, 1888, 1889
East London FA Cup Joint-winners 1886

Records and statistics

Barry Kitchener holds the record for Millwall appearances, having played 596 matches between 1966 and 1982.[29] The goalscoring record is held by former manager Neil Harris, with 138 in all competitions.[159][160] He broke the previous record of 111 goals, held by Teddy Sheringham on 13 January 2009, during a 3–2 away win at Crewe Alexandra.[161] The club's widest victory margin in the league is 9–1,[162] a scoreline which they achieved twice in their Football League Third Division South championship-winning year of 1927.[163] They beat both Torquay United and Coventry City by this score at The Den. Millwall's heaviest league defeat was 8–1 away to Plymouth Argyle in 1932.[162] The club's heaviest loss in all competitions was a 9–1 defeat at Aston Villa in an FA Cup fourth-round second-leg in 1946.[162] Millwall's largest Cup win was 7–0 over Gateshead in 1936.[162] Their highest scoring aggregate game was a 12-goal thriller at home to Preston North End in 1930 when Millwall lost 7–5.[162]

Player records

As of 5 May 2019.
Appearances
  • Players in bold denotes still playing for the club.[164]
  1. 596 Barry Kitchener (1966–82)
  2. 557 Keith Stevens (1980–99)
  3. 443 Harry Cripps (1961–74)
  4. 431 Neil Harris (1998–04, 2007–11)
  5. 413 Alan McLeary (1981–93, 1997–99)
  6. 388 Alan Dunne (2000–2015)
  7. 361 Paul Robinson (2001–2015)
  8. 343 Jimmy Forsyth (1929–39)
  9. 342 Jimmy Abdou (2008–2018)
  10. 341 Richard Hill (1919–30)
  11. 341 Len Graham (1923–34)
 
Goals
  • Only Football League and senior cup competitions included.[165]
  1. 138 Neil Harris (1998–04, 2007–11)
  2. 111 Teddy Sheringham (1982–91)
  3. 92 Steve Morison (2009–11, 2013–14, 2015–19)
  4. 87 Derek Possee (1967–73)
  5. 83 Jack Cock (1927–31)
  6. 80 Jimmy Constantine (1948–52)
  7. 78 Johnny Shepherd (1952–58)
  8. 77 Lee Gregory (2014–19)
  9. 74 David Jones (1959–64)
  10. 71 Jack Landells (1925–33)
  11. 71 Alex Rae (1990–96)

See List of Millwall F.C. seasons for Millwall's top goalscorer each year since 1895.

Millwall in European football

On 22 May 2004 Millwall played Manchester United in the FA Cup Final, losing 3–0. As United had already qualified for the UEFA Champions League, Millwall were assured of playing in the UEFA Cup. Millwall played in the first round proper and lost 4–2 on aggregate to Ferencváros.

European record

Season Competition Round Opponents 1st leg 2nd leg Aggregate
2004–05[166] UEFA Cup First round   Ferencváros 1–1 1–3 2–4

Supporters and hooliganism

 
The first pitch invasion at the new Wembley by Millwall fans, May 2017.[167]

Millwall have averaged a gate close to 12,000 per home game over their 93 seasons in the Football League, while the club have spent the majority of that time yo-yoing back and forth between the second and third tiers of English football.[169][170] Originally based in the East End of London, the club moved across the River Thames in 1910 to south east London and support is drawn from the surrounding areas.[171] The club and fans have a historic association with football hooliganism, which came to prevalence in the 1970s and 1980s with a firm known originally as F-Troop, eventually becoming more widely known as the Millwall Bushwackers, who were one of the most notorious hooligan gangs in England.[172] On five occasions The Den was closed by The FA and the club has received numerous fines for crowd disorder.[173] The BBC documentary Panorama was invited into the club by Millwall in 1977 to show the hooligan reputation was a myth and being blown out of proportion by reporting. Instead the BBC portrayed hooliganism as being deeply rooted in Millwall, and linked them to the far-right political party National Front. The show was extremely damaging for the club.[35][171] Former club chairman Reg Burr once commented: "Millwall are a convenient coat peg for football to hang its social ills on",[174] an example being the reporting of convicted murderer Gavin Grant. Although he had played for eight different clubs, playing his fewest games (four) for Millwall, and was signed to Bradford City at the time, the BBC used the headline, "Former Millwall striker Gavin Grant guilty of murder".[175]

The stigma of violence attached to Millwall can be traced back over 100 years. Millwall played local rivals West Ham United away at Upton Park on 17 September 1906 in a Western League game. Both sets of supporters were primarily made up of dockers, who lived and worked in the same locality in east London. Many were rivals working for opposing firms and vying for the same business.[176] A local newspaper, East Ham Echo, reported that, "From the very first kick of the ball it was seen likely to be some trouble, but the storm burst when Dean and Jarvis came into collision (Millwall had two players sent off during the match). This aroused considerable excitement among the spectators. The crowds on the bank having caught the fever, free fights were plentiful."[177] In the 1920s Millwall's ground was closed for two weeks after a Newport County goalkeeper, who had been struck by missiles, jumped into the crowd to confront some of the home supporters and was knocked unconscious.[178] The ground was again closed for two weeks in 1934 following crowd disturbances after the visit of Bradford Park Avenue. Pitch invasions resulted in another closure in 1947 and in 1950 the club was fined after a referee and linesman were ambushed outside the ground.[173]

In the 1960s, hooliganism in England became more widely reported. On 6 November 1965 Millwall beat west London club Brentford 2–1 away at Griffin Park and during the game a hand grenade was thrown onto the pitch from the Millwall end. Brentford's goalkeeper Chic Brodie picked it up, inspected it and threw it into his goal. It was later retrieved by police and determined to be a harmless dummy. There was fighting inside and outside the ground during the game between both sets of supporters, with one Millwall fan sustaining a broken jaw. The Sun newspaper ran the sensationalist grenade-related headline "Soccer Marches to War!"[179][180] Trouble was reported at Loftus Road on 26 March 1966 during a match between Queens Park Rangers and Millwall, at a time when both sides were near the top of the league table pushing for promotion to Division Two, but the London derby was won 6–1 by the west London based team, QPR. In the second-half, a coin was thrown from the terraces, which struck Millwall player Len Julians on the head, drawing blood. The stadium announcer warned that the game would be abandoned if there were any more disturbances from the crowd, prompting some Millwall fans to invade the pitch in an unsuccessful attempt to get the game abandoned.[35] When Millwall's unbeaten home record of 59 games came to an end against Plymouth Argyle in 1967, the windows of the away team's coach were smashed. In the same year, a referee was attacked and the FA ordered the club to erect fences around The Den's terracing.[173] On 11 March 1978 a riot broke out at The Den during an FA Cup quarter-final between Millwall and Ipswich Town, with the home team losing 6–1. Fighting began on the terraces and spilled onto the pitch; dozens of fans were injured, with some hooligans turning on their own team's supporters leaving some innocent fans bloodied. Bobby Robson, then manager of Ipswich, said of Millwall fans afterward, "They [the police] should have turned the flamethrowers on them".[35] In 1982 Millwall club chairman Alan Thorne threatened to close the club because of violence sparked by losing in the FA Cup to non-league side Slough Town.[173][178]

The 1985 Kenilworth Road riot, after an FA Cup sixth-round match between Luton Town and Millwall on 13 March 1985, became one of the worst and widely reported incidents of football hooliganism to date. On that night, approximately 20,000 people packed into a ground that usually only held half that number to watch Luton beat Millwall 1–0.[173] Numerous pitch invasions, fighting in the stands and missile-throwing occurred, of which one such object hit Luton's goalkeeper Les Sealey. It led to a ban on away supporters by Luton from their Kenilworth Road ground for four years. Luton were asked by Millwall to make the Wednesday night match all-ticket, but this was ignored.[178] As a result, rival hooligan firms gained access to the stadium. As well as the Millwall hooligans and those belonging to Luton's firm the MIGs, many of the 31 fans arrested after the violence were identified as being from Chelsea's Headhunters firm and West Ham United's Inter City Firm.[178] The FA commissioned an inquiry which concluded that it was "not satisfied that Millwall F.C. took all reasonable precautions in accordance with the requirements of FA Rule 31(A)(II)." A£7,500 fine was levied against Millwall, though this was later withdrawn on appeal.[181] The penalty that Millwall faced was perhaps that the club's name was now "synonymous with everything that was bad in football and society".[182]

In May 2002, hundreds of hooligans attaching themselves to Millwall were involved in disorder around the ground, after the team lost a play-off game to Birmingham City. It was described by the BBC as one of the worst cases of civil disorder seen in Great Britain in recent times. A police spokeswoman said that 47 police officers and 24 police horses were injured, and the Metropolitan Police considered suing the club after the events.[183] The then chairman Theo Paphitis responded that Millwall could not be blamed for the actions of a mindless minority who attach themselves to the club. "The problem of mob violence is not solely a Millwall problem, it is not a football problem, it is a problem which plagues the whole of our society", he said. Paphitis later introduced a membership scheme whereby only fans who would be prepared to join and carry membership cards would be allowed into The Den. Scotland Yard withdrew its threat to sue, stating: "In light of the efforts made and a donation to a charity helping injured police officers, the Metropolitan Police Service has decided not to pursue legal action against Millwall F.C. in relation to the disorder".[184] Some legal experts said it would have been difficult to hold a football club responsible for something that occurred away from its ground and involved people who did not attend the match. The scheme introduced by Paphitis now only applies to perceived high-risk away games. Many fans blame the scheme for diminishing Millwall's away support, such as at Leeds United where fans are issued with vouchers which are then exchanged for tickets at a designated point of West Yorkshire Police's choosing on the day of the game. Also, early kick-off times arranged by the police often result in only a few hundred fans making the trip.[185][186]

Millwall supporters celebrate Shane Lowry's 35-yard freekick against Charlton Athletic at The Valley on 16 March 2013[187]

In January 2009, hundreds of Millwall fans perceived as "high risk" individuals gained access to an FA Cup fourth-round match away at Hull City. The game, won 2–0 by Hull, was overshadowed when seats, coins and plastic bottles were thrown by some away supporters. There were conflicting reports in the media as to whether missiles were initially thrown by Hull supporters following chanting and jeering by Millwall fans of Jimmy Bullard (an ex-West Ham player) just prior to the fixture.[188] On 25 August 2009, Millwall played away at West Ham United in the Football League Cup, losing 3–1 after extra time. One Millwall supporter was stabbed during clashes between the two sets of fans outside the ground. The game saw hundreds of West Ham fans invade the pitch on three occasions, forcing the game to be temporarily suspended once. The police later said the violence, because of its scale, was organised beforehand.[189][190] In the aftermath of the disorder, Millwall were handed three charges by the FA and later cleared of all of them; West Ham received four charges and were found guilty on two counts: violent, threatening, obscene and provocative behaviour, and entering the field of play. West Ham were fined £115,000, an amount seen as an insult by Millwall, which staunchly defended the actions of its own fans and the club's inability to do any more than it had for a match at a rival's ground.[191]

After a game against Queens Park Rangers at Loftus Road in September 2010, manager Kenny Jackett said Millwall's hooligan problems are to a certain extent exaggerated by media sensationalism. "I see it as unjust. We are an easy club to criticise and in my time [at the club], the way we have been reported is unfair", he said.[192] Other examples of this include archive footage of their hooligan element's past bad behaviour being shown, when disorder has occurred at other grounds, not involving them.[193] During a game between Millwall and Huddersfield Town, The Observer reported that a Huddersfield Town fan had thrown a coin at a linesman, and that some Millwall fans had intervened, and handed the culprit over to police. The News of the World, however, bore the headline: "Millwall Thugs Deck Linesman With Concrete". This has led to a siege mentality among supporters of the club, which gave rise to the Millwall fans' famous terrace chant, No one likes us, we don't care, being sung in defiant defence of themselves and their team.[194][195][196] In April 2013, Millwall met Wigan Athletic in a semi-final of the FA Cup. Millwall lost the game 2–0.[73] Towards the end of the match, violence broke out in part of the stand allocated to Millwall, with individuals fighting amongst themselves and then against police, resulting in 14 arrests, of which two were Wigan supporters.[197] In January 2014, a Millwall fan ripped a linesman's flag after a corner was not given to his side during a game against Leicester City; Millwall lost 1–3.[198] On 29 May 2016, Millwall played in the Football League One play-off final against Barnsley at Wembley Stadium, but towards the end of the match, with Barnsley winning 3–1, a group of Millwall supporters broke through a security barrier and attacked Barnsley supporters, some of whom were forced to leave the stadium to avoid the violence. Also there were objects thrown towards the Barnsley players and Barnsley supporters during the game. The fighting and violence was condemned by the Football Association.[199][200] On 26 January 2019, Millwall beat Everton 3–2 and knocked them out of the FA Cup. The two teams supporters clashed away from The Den before the game, with an Everton fan being slashed across the face with a knife.[120] A senior Metropolitan Police officer said, it was "some of the most shocking football violence seen for some time".[120] The game was also blighted by allegations of racist chanting.[120]

On 5 December 2020, Millwall played against Derby County in the first game back at the Den for fans in ten months due to the COVID-19 Pandemic. Some of the 2,000 fans present booed the players who took a knee and raised a fist before the game in support of the Black Lives Matter social and political movement. The booing was condemned by The FA, EFL, Kick it Out, and mainstream media.[201][202][203] Cabinet minister George Eustice refused to condemn Millwall fans, stating Black Live Matter political movement was against what most British people believed in and fans should be free to express their views.[204] The leader of the Brexit Party Nigel Farage called BLM a Marxist Party who had been "sussed out" by Millwall fans and called for kneeling to stop.[205] In the next game at the Den against QPR on 8 December 2020, Millwall fans applauded as QPR and Millwall players raised aloft an anti-racism banner about inequality in football. The 2,000 Millwall fans also cheered the QPR players who took the knee. No Millwall player kneeled. Before the game, every fan was given a letter from the club saying, "The eyes of the world are on this football club tonight – your club – and they want us to fail. Together as one, we will not let that happen." Some Millwall supporters had said their boos at the Derby game did not have racist intent, but was instead against the politicisation of the Black Lives Matter movement in the UK.[206]

Notable supporters

In the community

In 1985, the club founded the Millwall Community Trust (MCT), which offers sporting, educational and charitable projects.[241] The Trust is based next door to The Den, in the Lions Centre.[242] Working with local people from the surrounding boroughs of Lewisham, Southwark and the wider Millwall Community. The Trust offers sports and fitness programmes, educational workshops, disability activities and soccer schools. The club helps promote anti-knife and anti-gun crime.[243] In a match against Charlton Athletic in 2009, both teams wore special kits for the match in honour of murdered local teenagers and supporters Jimmy Mizen and Rob Knox. The logos of both clubs' shirt sponsors were replaced by the text, "Street violence ruins lives".[244] The club has also helped raise over £10,000 for the charity Help for Heroes.[245]

In popular culture

Millwall have been depicted in films several times, specifically highlighting the club's hooliganism firm the Bushwackers and the rivalry with West Ham United.[172] Often glorifying football violence in the beginning, each film typically ends in loss of life, showing the futility of hooliganism.[246]

  • The Firm (1989) – Real life Millwall supporter Gary Oldman plays Bex, leader of football firm the Inter City Crew, a fictional representation of West Ham's Inter City Firm and their violent exploits. Millwall's Bushwackers firm are called The Buccaneers in the film.[233][247]
  • Arrivederci Millwall (1990) – A group of Millwall supporters travel to the 1982 World Cup in Spain, just after the Falklands War breaks out, intent on avenging a personal loss.[248]
  • Black Books (2000) – In the first episode "Cooking the Books", Bernard Black (Dylan Moran) attempts to antagonise some Millwall hooligans into injuring him severely enough so that he may avoid doing his taxes. Upon remarking, "How does the song go? Millwall, Millwall, we're really dreadful and all of our girlfriends are unfulfilled and alienated," he succeeds.
  • The Football Factory (2004) – Primarily about the Chelsea Headhunters, who fight numerous other firms on away days, culminating in a big fight against Millwall's Bushwackers.[249]
  • Green Street (2005) – Elijah Wood plays an American student who gets involved with West Ham's firm. The film builds up to a big clash with Millwall's firm at the climax, after the two teams are drawn against each other in the Cup, foreshadowing similarities to the 2009 Upton Park riot.[127]
  • Rise of the Footsoldier (2007) – The rise of a football hooligan is chronicled from his beginnings on the terraces to becoming a member of a notorious gang of criminals. The rivalry between West Ham and Millwall is portrayed during the opening scenes of the film.[250]
  • Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal (2007) – The main protagonist Sunny Bhasin (John Abraham) initially agrees to leave Southhall United Football Club and signs a lucrative offer to play for Millwall F.C. He later decides not to play for Millwall though.
  • Green Street 2: Stand Your Ground (2009) – A direct-to-video sequel to Green Street. It follows on directly from the original's climax, with several members of West Ham's and Millwall's firms ending up in prison together and arranging a football match.[251]
  • The Firm (2009) – A remake by Nick Love, director of The Football Factory and himself a Millwall supporter.<

millwall, millwall, football, club, ɔː, professional, football, club, bermondsey, south, east, london, england, they, compete, championship, second, tier, english, football, founded, millwall, rovers, 1885, club, retained, name, despite, having, last, played, . Millwall Football Club ˈ m ɪ l w ɔː l 1 is a professional football club in Bermondsey South East London England They compete in the EFL Championship the second tier of English football Founded as Millwall Rovers in 1885 the club has retained its name despite having last played in the Millwall area of the Isle of Dogs in 1910 From then until 1993 the club played at what is now called The Old Den in New Cross before moving to its current home stadium nearby called The Den The traditional club crest is a lion rampant referred to in the team s nickname The Lions Millwall s traditional kit consists of dark blue shirts white shorts and blue socks MillwallFull nameMillwall Football ClubNickname s The LionsFounded1885 138 years ago 1885 as Millwall RoversGroundThe DenCapacity20 146OwnerMillwall HoldingsChairmanJohn BerylsonManagerGary RowettLeagueEFL Championship2021 22EFL Championship 9th of 24WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonMillwall was one of the founding members of the Southern League in 1894 They competed in it for 22 seasons until 1920 claiming the title twice in 1895 and 1896 Since joining the Football League in the 1920 21 season the club have been promoted eleven times five times as champions in 1928 1938 1962 1988 and 2001 and relegated nine times They have spent 89 of their 96 seasons in the Football League yo yoing between the second and third tiers The club did have a brief spell in the top flight between 1988 and 1990 in which they achieved their highest ever league finish of tenth place in the First Division in 1988 89 Millwall reached the 2004 FA Cup final and qualified for Europe for the first time in their history playing in the UEFA Cup The club have also won two League One play off finals in 2010 and 2017 the Football League Group Cup in 1983 and were Football League Trophy finalists in 1999 In the media Millwall s supporters have often been associated with hooliganism with numerous films having been made fictionalising their notoriety The fans are renowned for their terrace chant No one likes us we don t care Millwall have a long standing rivalry with West Ham United The local derby between the two sides has been contested almost a hundred times since 1899 The club also share a rivalry with Leeds United and contest the South London derby with local rivals Crystal Palace and Charlton Athletic Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginnings Southern League and relocation 1885 1919 1 2 Entering the Football League 1920 1939 1 3 Wartime doldrums and relegation to fourth tier 1940 1965 1 4 Unbeaten home record and the class of 71 1966 1987 1 5 Promotion to top tier new stadium and administration 1988 2000 1 6 Champions FA Cup Final and European football 2001 2004 1 7 Upheaval stability and first play off success 2005 2013 1 8 FA Cup giant killers and fifth trip to Wembley in eight years 2014 present 2 Colours crest and nickname 2 1 Kit 2 2 Badge 2 3 The Lions 2 4 Kit sponsors and manufacturers 3 Stadiums 3 1 History 3 2 Bermondsey redevelopment controversy 4 Traditional songs 5 Rivalries 5 1 Major rivalry with West Ham United 5 2 Rivalry with Leeds United 5 3 South East London derbies 6 Players 6 1 Current squad 6 2 Out on Loan 6 3 Millwall Under 21s 6 4 Player of the year 6 5 Personnel honours 6 5 1 English Football Hall of Fame 6 5 2 PFA Fans Player of the Year 6 5 3 PFA Team of the Year 6 6 Notable former players 7 Managers 8 Club officials 8 1 Board 8 2 Coaching staff 9 Honours 10 Records and statistics 10 1 Player records 11 Millwall in European football 11 1 European record 12 Supporters and hooliganism 13 Notable supporters 14 In the community 15 In popular culture 16 References 16 1 Bibliography 16 2 Further reading 17 External links 17 1 News 17 2 GeneralHistory EditMain article History of Millwall F C For a statistical breakdown by season see List of Millwall F C seasons Beginnings Southern League and relocation 1885 1919 Edit The first Millwall Rovers kit worn by club secretary Jasper Sexton in 1885 2 The club was founded as Millwall Rovers by the workers of J T Morton s canning and preserve factory in the Millwall area of the Isle of Dogs in London s East End in 1885 3 J T Morton was founded in Aberdeen in 1849 to supply sailing ships with food the company opened their first English cannery and food processing plant at Millwall dock in 1872 and attracted a workforce from across the country including the east coast of Scotland primarily Dundee 3 The club secretary was 17 year old Jasper Sexton the son of the landlord of The Islander pub in Tooke Street where Millwall held their club meetings 4 Millwall Rovers first fixture was held on a piece of waste ground on Glengall Road on 3 October 1885 against Fillebrook a team that played in Leytonstone The newly formed team were beaten 5 0 3 Rovers found a better playing surface for the 1886 87 season at the rear of the Lord Nelson pub and it became known as the Lord Nelson Ground 3 In November 1886 the East End Football Association was formed along with the Senior Cup Competition Millwall made it to the final against London Caledonians which was played at Leyton Cricket Ground The match finished 2 2 and the teams shared the cup for six months each 5 Millwall won the East London Senior Cup at the first attempt The club also won the cup in the following two years and the trophy became their property 3 5 In April 1889 a resolution was passed for Millwall to drop Rovers from their name and they began playing under the name Millwall Athletic inspired by their move to their new home The Athletic Grounds 5 6 They were founding members of the Southern Football League which they won for the first two years of its existence and were runners up in its third 7 During this period the club was invited to join the Second Division of the Football League but the committee turned down the opportunity partly due to the expected increase in travel expenses but also to stay loyal to the Southern League 8 They were forced to move to a new ground North Greenwich in 1901 as the Millwall Dock Company wanted to use their land as a timberyard 9 Millwall Athletic reached the semi finals of the FA Cup in 1900 and 1903 and were also champions of the Western Football League in 1908 and 1909 10 On 10 October 1910 Millwall played their last game as an East London club against Woolwich Arsenal in the London Challenge Cup 11 Millwall won the game 1 0 in front of a crowd of 3000 11 Millwall moved to a new stadium named The Den in New Cross South London in 1910 12 The club had previously occupied four different grounds in the 25 years since their formation in East London limited expansion space on the Isle of Dogs meant The Lions had to move to boost support and attendances 9 The estimated cost of The Den was 10 000 9 The first match played at the new ground was on 22 October 1910 against reigning Southern League champions Brighton amp Hove Albion who won 1 0 13 Entering the Football League 1920 1939 Edit Millwall fans watch a South London derby against Crystal Palace in a 1922 FA Cup replay Millwall who had now also dropped Athletic from their name were invited to join the Football League in 1920 for the 1920 21 season along with 22 other clubs through the creation of the new Football League Third Division 14 The Southern League was shorn of its status with almost all its clubs deciding to leave Millwall followed suit 14 Millwall s first Football League match was on 28 August 1920 at The Den and they were 2 0 winners against Bristol Rovers 15 In the 1925 26 season Millwall had 11 consecutive clean sheets a Football League record which they hold jointly with York City and Reading 16 Millwall became known as a hard fighting Cup team and competed in various memorable matches notably defeating three time league winners and reigning champions Huddersfield Town 3 1 in the third round of the 1926 27 FA Cup 17 In the 1927 28 season Millwall won the Third Division South title and scored 87 goals at home in the league an English record which still stands 16 Matches against Sunderland and Derby County saw packed crowds of 48 000 plus in the 1930s and 1940s 18 Their 1937 FA Cup run saw Millwall reach the semi finals for the third time and a fifth round game against Derby still stands as Millwall s record attendance of 48 762 17 18 Millwall were the 11th best supported team in England in 1939 despite being in the Second Division 19 Millwall were one of the most financially wealthy clubs in England The club proposed plans to improve the Den and signed international players 20 Winger Reg JR Smith was capped twice scoring two goals for England in 1938 21 The Lions were pushing for promotion to the First Division toward the end of the decade but one week into the 1939 40 season World War II broke out and Millwall were robbed of their aim 20 Wartime doldrums and relegation to fourth tier 1940 1965 Edit Annual table positions of Millwall in the Football League 1920 2022 On 7 April 1945 Millwall appeared in a Football League War Cup final at Wembley Stadium against Chelsea but because it was a wartime cup final it is not acknowledged in the record books 22 With the war in Europe in its last days the number of spectators allowed to attend games was relaxed The attendance was 90 000 the largest crowd Millwall have ever played in front of which included King George VI whom the team were introduced to before kick off 23 The loss of so many young men during the Second World War made it difficult for clubs to retain their former status This was especially true for Millwall who appeared to suffer more than most From being one of the country s biggest clubs before the war Millwall were reduced to one of its smallest afterward 22 The Den sustained severe bomb damage on 19 April 1943 and one week later a fire determined to have been caused by a discarded cigarette also destroyed an entire stand 22 The club accepted offers from neighbours Charlton Athletic Crystal Palace and West Ham United to stage games at their grounds 22 On 24 February 1944 Millwall returned to The Den to play in an all standing stadium This was achieved with considerable volunteer labour by Lions fans 22 Millwall s fortunes fluctuated in the immediate post war years they were relegated to Division Three South in 1948 and had to apply for re election to the league in 1950 after finishing in the bottom two An upswing in fortunes saw Millwall finish 5th 4th and then runners up in Division Three South in 1952 53 season but with only the Champions being promoted Millwall found themselves stuck in the third tier despite averaging crowds of over 20 000 Millwall then suffered a down swing in fortunes with a number of bottom half finishes One highlight of the period was one of the biggest giant killing upsets in the Fourth Round of the 1956 57 FA Cup on 26 January 1957 when Millwall beat Newcastle United 2 1 in front of a crowd of 45 646 24 Millwall suffered the ill fortune of becoming a founding member of Division Four 25 in 1958 While initially suffering from this reorganisation the de regionalisation of Third Division North and Third Division South opened up the way for promotion via the runner up spots Millwall won the Division Four Title in 1962 with the help of 23 Goals from Peter Burridge and 22 from Dave Jones They were relegated again in the 1963 64 season but were to bounce back by winning back to back promotions as runner up This is the last time Millwall played in the fourth tier 26 Unbeaten home record and the class of 71 1966 1987 Edit Later in the decade Millwall established a record of 59 home games without defeat 43 wins and 16 draws from 22 August 1964 to 14 January 1967 During this spell Millwall played 55 different teams kept 35 clean sheets scored 112 goals and conceded 33 27 This was thanks largely to managers Billy Gray who laid the foundations and Benny Fenton a former player who continued to build on Gray s side All the players which included winger Barry Rowan goalkeeper Alex Stepney and strikers Hugh Curran and Len Julians were presented with a commemorative gold cigarette lighter by the Football Association 27 The record was eventually broken by Liverpool who were unbeaten for 63 games at home between 1978 and 1981 27 In the early 1970s the Millwall team included many notable and memorable players now remembered by some fans as The Class of 71 This was a team that included goalkeeper Bryan King defender Harry Cripps goalscoring midfielder Derek Possee Millwall s most capped international player to date Eamon Dunphy 28 and the club s longest serving player Barry Kitchener 29 They missed out on promotion to Division One by one point 30 By remaining unbeaten at home in Division Two for the 1971 72 season Millwall became the only club to go through an entire season without losing a match at home in four different divisions 1927 28 Division Three South 1964 65 Division Four 1965 66 Division Three and 1971 72 Division Two 8 In 1974 Millwall hosted the first game to be played on a Sunday against Fulham 31 The Lions reached the quarter finals of the League Cup in 1974 and again in 1977 32 George Graham managed Millwall from 1983 to 1986 and during that time he guided the club to a Football League Group Cup win beating Lincoln City 3 2 in the final in the 1982 83 season 33 The 1984 85 season was particularly successful Millwall reached the FA Cup quarter finals and gained promotion to the Second Division going unbeaten at home again in Division Three winning 18 games and drawing five 34 In the FA Cup they were beaten 1 0 by First Division Luton Town at Kenilworth Road The match is remembered for all the wrong reasons after hooligans rioted at the game 81 people including 31 police officers were injured in the disturbances 35 Promotion to top tier new stadium and administration 1988 2000 Edit In their three seasons together at Millwall Tony Cascarino and Teddy Sheringham scored 99 goals between them 36 Graham s replacement was Glaswegian John Docherty In his second season as manager Millwall won the Second Division championship and gained promotion to the top flight of English football for the first time in the club s history 37 38 Starting the 1988 89 season strongly Millwall topped the league on 1 October 1988 having played six games winning four and drawing two and rarely slipped out of the top five before Christmas This was mainly due to Tony Cascarino and Teddy Sheringham who scored 99 goals between them in three seasons playing together 39 Millwall s first top division season ended with a tenth place finish which was the lowest place occupied by the club all season The following season they briefly led the league for one night in September 1989 after beating Coventry City 4 1 but won only two more games all season and were relegated in 20th place at the end of the 1989 90 season 40 Just before relegation was confirmed Docherty was sacked and replaced by ex Middlesbrough manager Bruce Rioch 41 Striker Teddy Sheringham who later played for England and was the highest scoring player throughout the Football League in the 1990 91 season 42 was sold to Nottingham Forest for 2 million after Millwall s 6 2 defeat to Brighton amp Hove Albion in the Second Division play offs 43 Rioch left Millwall in 1992 to be succeeded by Irish defender Mick McCarthy McCarthy guided Millwall to third place in the new Division One at the end of the 1993 94 season 44 This was their first season at a new ground at first known as The New Den to distinguish it from its predecessor but now called simply The Den which was opened by the Labour party leader John Smith on 4 August 1993 45 The new ground was the first all seater stadium to be built in England after the Taylor report on the Hillsborough disaster 46 The Lions knocked Arsenal out of the 1994 95 FA Cup in a third round replay beating them 2 0 at Highbury 47 They also reached the quarter finals of the League Cup in 1995 32 Millwall lost 5 1 on aggregate to Derby County in the play off semi finals that same 1994 95 season in a tie blighted by crowd trouble 4 McCarthy resigned to take charge of the Republic of Ireland national team on 5 February 1996 shortly after Millwall had been knocked off the top of the Division One table by Sunderland following a 6 0 defeat 44 Jimmy Nicholl of Raith Rovers was appointed as McCarthy s replacement but could not reverse the slump in form which saw Millwall relegated at the end of the 1995 96 season in 22nd place 4 Just five months earlier they had been top of Division One but now Millwall found themselves in the third tier for the 1996 97 season The club experienced severe financial difficulties that resulted in them being placed in financial administration for a short time 4 Nicholl was relieved of his duties and John Docherty returned on a short term basis to stabilise the club 4 Millwall came out of administration and new chairman Theo Paphitis appointed ex West Ham United manager Billy Bonds as manager 48 The 1997 98 season was not a successful one with the club hovering close to relegation to the fourth tier Bonds was sacked and replaced by Keith Rhino Stevens with Alan McLeary as his assistant McLeary was later promoted to the role of joint manager alongside Stevens 4 Stevens and McLeary led Millwall to their first ever official appearance at Wembley Stadium 4 The Lions reached the 1999 Football League Trophy Final with a golden goal win against Gillingham in the semi finals and a 2 1 aggregate victory over Walsall in the regional final They faced Wigan Athletic in the final but while playing in front of 49 000 of their own fans lost 1 0 to an injury time goal 49 Millwall also lost 1 0 on aggregate to Wigan in the Second Division play off semi finals the 1999 2000 season 49 Champions FA Cup Final and European football 2001 2004 Edit Mark McGhee was named as Millwall s new manager in September 2000 and eight months later the club won promotion as Division Two champions with the team built by Keith Stevens after five years in the third tier of the league 4 They finished with 93 points a club record 50 Winning the first match of the 2001 02 season 4 0 at home to Norwich City set the team up well for a good year in which Millwall qualified for the Division One play offs but lost to eventual winners Birmingham City 2 1 in the semi finals Millwall finished mid table in the 2002 03 season and McGhee was sacked soon after the start of the 2003 04 season 51 In 2003 Dennis Wise ex Chelsea and England player became caretaker and subsequently permanent player manager of the club In his first season in charge Wise led the club to the first FA Cup Final in their history 52 When Millwall took to the field at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff they were only the second team from outside the top flight to play in the Cup final since 1982 and were the first team from outside the Premier League to reach the final since the foundation of the top tier in 1992 53 The club was missing 16 players from their squad due to suspension or injury They played the Cup final on 22 May 2004 losing 3 0 to Manchester United 54 As United had already qualified for the UEFA Champions League Millwall were assured of playing in the UEFA Cup Midfielder Curtis Weston substituted for Wise with one minute of normal time remaining became the youngest Cup final player in history at 17 years 119 days beating the 125 year old record of James F M Prinsep 55 In the 2004 05 UEFA Cup Millwall lost 4 2 on aggregate in the first round proper to Hungarian champions Ferencvaros with Wise scoring both Millwall s goals 56 Upheaval stability and first play off success 2005 2013 Edit Millwall players celebrating promotion to the Football League Championship at Wembley Stadium in 2010 57 In 2005 Theo Paphitis announced that he was stepping down as chairman of the club with Jeff Burnige to replace him from May 2005 58 At the end of the 2004 05 season manager Dennis Wise announced that he was leaving as he was unable to form a working relationship with the new chairman 52 Former Millwall striker Steve Claridge was announced as the new player manager of Millwall However when Burnige then stepped down just two months after taking up the post it was announced on 27 July that Claridge had been sacked after just 36 days without ever taking charge of the team in a competitive match 59 Former Wolverhampton Wanderers manager Colin Lee replaced him but lasted only five months in charge of the club 59 On 21 December with the club bottom of the Championship he became the club s Director of Football and was replaced as manager by 32 year old player Dave Tuttle on a short term contract until the end of the 2005 06 season 60 Tuttle had no prior experience in football management In February 2006 Lee left the club altogether Millwall experienced a difficult season having had four managers in 2005 Their 13 goals scored at home was the second worst in Football League history 16 Their relegation to League One was confirmed on 17 April 2006 with a 2 0 loss against Southampton In the closed season Nigel Spackman was appointed as the new manager but he lasted only four months after a string of bad results 61 In September 2006 Theo Paphitis chairman from 1997 to 2005 ended his nine year association with the club after a year long spell as a non executive director 62 On 19 March 2007 Willie Donachie signed a two year contract following some progress which had seen the club climb to 11th place in the league 63 Before Donachie took charge Millwall had taken only six points from their first ten games In the 2007 08 season Millwall sat bottom of the table at the beginning of October Donachie was sacked on 8 October with Richard Shaw and Colin West becoming caretaker managers 63 In March 2007 Chestnut Hill Ventures led by American John Berylson which have interests in business and financial services retail property and sport invested 5 million into the club The continued investment of Berylson who has since become the club s major shareholder and chairman 64 has steered The Lions on a better course on and off the pitch The appointment of Kenny Jackett as manager on 6 November 2007 proving crucial 65 Over the course of the next two seasons Jackett led Millwall to two top six finishes in League One in fifth and third place respectively He won the League One Manager of the Month award three times while in charge of the club 66 Several of his key signings helped propel Millwall toward the play offs and eventual promotion After a play off final defeat in the 2008 09 season against Scunthorpe United and losing out on automatic promotion on the last day of the 2009 10 season to Leeds United by one point Millwall made it back to Wembley finally breaking the play off hoodoo run of five successive failures in 1991 1994 2000 2002 and 2009 with a 1 0 win in the 2010 League One play off final against Swindon Town securing a return to the Football League Championship after a four year absence 57 Millwall s first game back in the Championship was a 3 0 away win at Bristol City The game had been much hyped due to City s signing of then England goalkeeper David James Only days after the defeat Steve Coppell resigned as City manager 67 The Lions celebrated the 125th anniversary of the club on 2 October 2010 which was the closest home game date to the first fixture Millwall ever played against Fillebrook on 3 October 1885 Millwall drew 1 1 with Burnley and wore a special one off kit for the game made by manufacturers Macron which bore the names of every footballer who had played for the club 68 Kenny Jackett celebrated five years in charge of the club in November 2012 with a 4 1 victory away at Nottingham Forest 69 After a strong start to the 2012 13 season including a 13 game unbeaten run and flirting with the play offs 70 Millwall finished poorly with only five wins in the last 23 games narrowly avoiding relegation on the last day of the season 71 Their poor league form coincided with reaching the semi final of the FA Cup for the fifth time in their history 72 They played Wigan Athletic at Wembley Stadium on 14 April 2013 losing 2 0 to the eventual cup winners 73 Kenny Jackett resigned on 7 May 2013 74 He was Millwall s fourth longest serving manager 75 After a month of searching Millwall appointed St Johnstone boss Steve Lomas as their new manager on 6 June 2013 76 His appointment provoked mixed emotions among some supporters due to him being a former captain of West Ham United their biggest rival 77 Club record goalscorer Neil Harris returned to Millwall as a coach on 23 June 2013 after retiring as a player through injury 78 Millwall sacked Lomas on 26 December 2013 after winning only five of his first 22 games in charge 79 Harris and youth team coach Scott Fitzgerald took over as joint caretaker managers 79 On 4 January 2014 Millwall lost 4 1 at Southend United in the FA Cup a team 31 places below them in the football pyramid Harris described the performance as a shambles 80 FA Cup giant killers and fifth trip to Wembley in eight years 2014 present Edit Millwall and rivals Leeds United perform huddles before kick off at The Den in 2019 The club appointed Ian Holloway as their new manager on 6 January 2014 with the club sitting 21st in the Championship table He was given the priority of maintaining their Football League Championship status which he achieved Millwall went unbeaten in the last eight games of the 2013 14 season and finished in 19th place four points above the relegation zone 81 82 The following season Holloway was sacked on 10 March 2015 with the team second from bottom in the Championship and Neil Harris was reinstated as caretaker manager until the end of the season 83 He was unable to ensure survival however as Millwall s relegation to League One was confirmed on 28 April with one game of the 2014 15 season still to play 84 Harris was confirmed as Millwall s permanent manager the next day 85 In his first full season in charge Harris led Millwall to a fourth place finish in League One and a play off final at Wembley which the Lions lost 3 1 to Barnsley 86 In the 2016 17 FA Cup Millwall reached the Quarter finals for the tenth time in their history knocking out Premier League opposition in three consecutive rounds Bournemouth in the third round Watford in the fourth round and reigning Premier League champions Leicester City in the fifth round 87 On 28 February 2017 Millwall beat Peterborough United 1 0 and increased their unbeaten run to 16 games in all competitions and have gone nine games without conceding a goal for the first time since the 1925 26 season 88 Millwall made it to the League One play off final at Wembley for the second successive year after beating Scunthorpe United 3 2 in the semi final They were promoted back to the Championship following a 1 0 playoff final victory over Bradford City thanks to an 85th minute winner from Steve Morison his 86th goal for the club 89 In Millwall s return to the Championship in the 2017 18 season the team went on a club record 17 game unbeaten run their longest streak in the second tier which surpassed a record of 15 set in 1971 90 During the undefeated run they won six away wins in a row equalling a club record set in the 2008 09 season 91 In the 2018 19 FA Cup Millwall once again reached the Quarter finals for an 11th time only losing to Premier League side Brighton on penalties In the previous round they knocked out Premier League side Everton to equal Southampton s FA Cup Giant killings record having knocked out 25 top flight teams when not in the top flight themselves 92 On 3 October 2019 Neil Harris resigned as Millwall manager with the club sitting in 18th place with two wins from their first ten Championship games 93 Harris led Millwall to Wembley twice with one promotion and two FA Cup quarter finals during his tenure 93 He was the Lions fifth longest serving manager having spent four and a half years at the club 75 On 21 October he was replaced by former Stoke City boss Gary Rowett who beat his former club 2 0 in his very first game in charge 94 The 2019 20 season ended in an 8th placed finish after a late play off run came up short Rowett then guided the club to 11th and 9th the following two seasons Colours crest and nickname EditKit Edit Millwall Rovers first home kit from their 1885 86 season which the team wore for the 125 year anniversary of the club in the 2010 11 season 2 The leaping lion has been on the club s crest from 1979 to 1999 and from 2007 to present This version was used from 1992 to 1994 2 Millwall s traditional kit has predominantly consisted of blue shirts white shorts and blue socks throughout their 125 year history 2 For the first 50 years up until 1936 they played in a traditional navy blue similar to the colours of Scotland national team 2 This colour was chosen because it paid homage to the Scottish roots of the club 3 with the nucleus of the first Millwall Rovers squad being from Dundee 95 In 1936 newly appointed Millwall manager Charlie Hewitt opted to change the kit colour from navy blue to a lighter royal blue 96 and the team played in this colour for the best part of 74 years with the exception of 1968 75 and 1999 2001 in which the team played in an all white strip 2 Their kit for the 2010 11 season celebrated the 125th anniversary of the club with Millwall adopting the darker navy blue of their first strip 97 The club has retained this colour since 2 As for change colours white shirts and blue shorts or yellow shirts and black shorts have been the Lions primary away colours They have also played in red and black stripes all grey all orange all red and green and white stripes Millwall wore a special one off camouflage kit to commemorate the centenary of the First World War against Brentford on 8 November 2014 It went on sale to fans with proceeds going to Headley Court a rehabilitation centre for injured members of the British Armed Forces 98 Badge Edit The club crest has been a rampant lion since 1936 which was also introduced by Charlie Hewitt 96 There have been many variations of the lion the first was a single red lion often mistakenly said to be chosen because of the club s Scottish roots 99 The lion bore a striking resemblance to signs used by pubs named The Red Lion 99 From 1956 to 1974 Millwall s crest was two leaping red lions facing each other 2 Former chairman Theo Paphitis brought back the badge in 1999 where it was used for a further eight years The current crest is a leaping lion which first appeared on a Millwall kit in 1979 2 It remained until 1999 and was re introduced again in 2007 2 The club mascot is a giant lion called Zampa named after Zampa Road the road The Den is located on 100 The Lions Edit The team nickname is The Lions previously The Dockers 101 102 The original Dockers name arose from the job of many of the club s supporters in the early 1900s 3 The club did not like the moniker and changed the nickname after press headlined Millwall as Lions of the South after knocking Football League leaders Aston Villa out of the 1899 1900 FA Cup Millwall then a Southern League side went on to reach the semi final 103 The club adopted the motto We Fear No Foe Where E er We Go 104 In the 2000s the club started to recognise its unique link with London s docks by introducing Dockers Days and archiving the club s dock roots in the Millwall FC Museum 105 Dockers Days bring together past successful Millwall teams who parade on the pitch at half time Supporters who were dockers are allowed to attend the game for free 105 In 2011 Millwall officially named the east stand of The Den as the Dockers Stand in honour of the club s former nickname 106 Kit sponsors and manufacturers Edit For the 2013 14 season Millwall chose the charity Prostate Cancer UK to sponsor their shirt for free 107 1936 39 strip The first change of colour from navy blue to royal blue This was the first appearance of the lion rampant crest on the kit 2 The two red lions first appeared on the Millwall crest in 1956 2 Year Kit manufacturer 2 Main shirt sponsor Secondary sponsor s 1975 80 Bukta None1980 83 Osca1983 85 LDDC1985 86 Gimer London Docklands1986 87 Spall1987 89 Lewisham Council1989 90 Millwall1990 91 Lewisham Council1991 92 Fairview Homes PLC1992 93 Bukta Fairview1993 94 Captain Morgan1994 96 ASICS1996 97 South London Press1997 99 L VE TV1999 2001 Strikeforce Giorgio2001 03 24 Seven2003 04 Ryman2004 05 Beko2005 06 Lonsdale2006 07 Oppida2007 08 Bukta K amp T Heating Services Ltd2008 10 CYC Oppida2010 11 Macron Matchbet2011 12 Racing Sasco Sauces2012 13 BestPay2013 14 Prostate Cancer UK Wallis Teagan2014 15 Euroferries2015 16 Wallis Teagan2016 17 Errea2017 18 TW Drainage amp EnergyBet DCS Roofing2018 22 Macron2019 24 Huski Chocolate2022 27 HummelStadiums EditHistory Edit Main articles The Den 1993 present The Den 1910 1993 North Greenwich The Athletic Grounds and Lord Nelson Ground A Junior Lions day at The Den in 1988 Millwall began life on the Isle of Dogs and inhabited four different grounds in the club s first 25 years 9 Their first home was a piece of waste ground called Glengall Road where they only stayed for one year From 1886 to 1890 they played behind The Lord Nelson pub on East Ferry Road which was known as the Lord Nelson Ground before being forced to leave by the landlady who received a better offer for its use 9 They moved to their third home The Athletic Grounds on 6 September 1890 9 This was their first purpose built ground with a grandstand that seated 600 people and an overall capacity of between 10 000 and 15 000 The club was forced to move on again though this time by the Millwall Dock Company who wanted to use it as a timberyard They relocated in 1901 to a location near their second home which became known as North Greenwich 9 They remained an east London club for a further nine years with the last game played on the Isle of Dogs on 8 October 1910 against Portsmouth which Millwall won 3 1 On 22 October 1910 Millwall crossed the river to South London moving to Cold Blow Lane in New Cross The fifth ground was called The Den built at a cost of 10 000 by noted football ground architect Archibald Leitch The first game played there was against Brighton amp Hove Albion which Brighton won 1 0 13 Millwall remained there for 83 years until moving to their sixth and current ground at first known as The New Den but now called simply The Den on 4 August 1993 The ground has an all seated capacity of 20 146 108 18 A Sporting CP team managed by Bobby Robson helped open the ground by playing a friendly which The Lions lost 2 1 4 104 A panoramic view of The Den from the upper Dockers Stand 106 A panorama view of The Den from behind the players tunnel in the lower Barry Kitchener Stand Bermondsey redevelopment controversy Edit In September 2016 Lewisham Council approved a compulsory purchase order CPO of land surrounding The Den rented by Millwall as part of a major redevelopment of the New Bermondsey area The plans were controversial because the developer Renewal is controlled by offshore companies with unclear ownership and is seen by the club and local community to be profiteering by demolishing existing homes and businesses as well as Millwall s car park and the Millwall Community Trust facility to build up to 2 400 new private homes with no social housing The club contemplated the possibility of having to relocate to Kent Millwall had submitted their own plans for regeneration centred around the club itself but the council voted in favour of Renewal s plans 109 In December 2016 Private Eye reported how Renewal had been founded by a former Lewisham Council leader and senior officer suggesting potential bias and that the decision to approve Renewal s plans may have been made as far back as 2013 despite the fact that no due diligence had been able to be carried out by PricewaterhouseCoopers due to poor and limited access to information and management at Renewal which is controlled from the Isle of Man and British Virgin Islands 110 In the face of mounting community opposition and media scrutiny the Council said in January 2017 it will not proceed with the CPO 111 However it was later reported to be taking legal advice regarding other avenues of securing the CPO and Council cabinet members will decide how to proceed after a review Private Eye reported that Millwall are continuing to explore relocation options in Kent 112 Traditional songs EditA tradition at The Den is the playing of the official club song 113 Let em Come by Roy Green as Millwall and the opposing team walk onto the pitch It was specifically written for the club and the lyrics represent old London culture such as eating jellied eels 114 and having a glass of beer before going to the game The song ends with all home fans standing arms raised usually in the direction of the travelling fans singing the last line Let em all come down to The Den A television drama about a Millwall supporter and ex docker starring David Jason featured a lyric from the song in its title Come Rain Come Shine The song was played on repeat at Wembley Stadium after Millwall gained promotion to the Championship in 2010 115 The song Shoeshine Boy by the Mills Blue Rhythm Band was played as the entrance song before Let em Come 116 Other songs that have been regularly played at The Den over the years in the build up to a game include London Calling by The Clash No Surrender by Bruce Springsteen Town Called Malice by The Jam and House of Fun by Madness which features the lyric welcome to the lion s den Status Quo s cover version of Rockin All Over the World is played after every home win 117 Rivalries EditMillwall were listed eighth out of a list of 92 Football League clubs with the most rivals with West Ham United Leeds United Crystal Palace and Charlton Athletic considering them a major rival 118 119 Portsmouth Everton and Gillingham also share minor rivalries with Millwall with hooliganism between their fans dating back to the 1970s 120 118 121 Major rivalry with West Ham United Edit Main article Millwall F C West Ham United F C rivalry See also 2009 Upton Park riot West Ham and Millwall players shake hands before kick off in 2011 122 Millwall s fiercest rival is West Ham United It is one of the most passionately contested local derbies in football 123 The two clubs have rarely met in recent years due to them playing in different leagues the majority of their meetings happened before the First World War with some 60 meetings between 1899 and 1915 124 The clubs have played 99 times since the first contest in 1899 Millwall have won 38 drawn 27 and lost 34 125 Despite violence between the two sets of supporters and calls for future games between the clubs to be played behind closed doors they last met in the Football League Championship in 2011 12 with no outright ban on either set of fans and no repeat of crowd trouble 122 126 The rivalry between the sides specifically the clubs two hooligan firms has been depicted on the big screen several times in films such as Green Street 127 Rivalry with Leeds United Edit Main article Leeds United F C Millwall F C rivalry Millwall share a fierce rivalry with Leeds United The rivalry between the teams is intensified by both clubs passionate fans and association with football hooliganism 128 129 The clubs two hooligan firms the Leeds United Service Crew and the Millwall Bushwackers were notorious in the 1970s and 80s for their violence being called dirty Leeds and the scourge of football respectively 129 130 From 1920 to 2003 the sides met just 12 times competing in different tiers for the majority of their histories and neither considering the other a rival on the pitch Since Leeds were relegated from the Premier League in 2004 the teams have met 28 times in 16 years The rivalry began in League One during the 2007 08 season with disorder and violent clashes between both sets of fans and the police at Elland Road 131 It continued into the 2008 09 season where the teams were vying for promotion to the Championship culminating in Millwall knocking Leeds out of the League One playoffs at the semi final stage 132 133 The clubs have played each other 40 times and are evenly matched Millwall has won 18 Leeds 17 and five games have ended in a draw South East London derbies Edit Main article South London derby Millwall are closest in proximity to Charlton Athletic with The Den and The Valley being less than four miles 6 4 km apart They last met in July 2020 a 1 0 win for Millwall at the Valley 134 Since their first competitive game in 1921 Millwall have won 37 drawn 26 and lost 12 135 The Lions are unbeaten in their last twelve games against Charlton spanning 24 years where they have won seven and drawn five The Addicks last win came in March 1996 at The Valley 134 The Lions last played against fellow South East London club Crystal Palace in the 2012 13 season when both teams were in the Football League Championship They drew 0 0 at The Den and 2 2 at Selhurst Park 136 In almost 100 competitive games between the two clubs since 1906 Millwall have won 39 drawn 29 and lost 29 137 Players EditCurrent squad Edit As of 5 January 2023 138 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 ENG George Long2 DF IRL Danny McNamara3 DF SCO Murray Wallace4 DF ENG Shaun Hutchinson captain 5 DF ENG Jake Cooper vice captain 6 MF ENG George Evans8 MF ENG Billy Mitchell9 FW WAL Tom Bradshaw10 FW NED Zian Flemming11 DF ENG Scott Malone13 GK ENG Ryan Sandford14 MF ENG Tyler Burey15 DF ENG Charlie Cresswell on loan from Leeds United No Pos Nation Player16 MF ENG Jamie Shackleton on loan from Leeds United 17 MF HUN Callum Styles on loan from Barnsley 18 MF ENG Ryan Leonard20 FW ENG Mason Bennett21 FW GER Andreas Voglsammer23 MF NIR George Saville27 GK ENG Connal Trueman33 GK POL Bartosz Bialkowski39 MF ENG George Honeyman50 MF ENG Romain EsseOut on Loan Edit As of 19 January 2023Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player34 DF ENG Alex Mitchell at St Johnstone until 30 June 2023 MF ENG Sha mar Lawson at Maidstone United until January 2023 Millwall Under 21s Edit As of 26 November 2022 139 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player30 DF ENG Chinwiki Okoli36 MF ENG Alfie Allen37 FW ENG Abdulsabur Abdulmalik38 FW ENG Nana Boateng41 GK ENG Joe Wright44 MF ENG George Walker GK ENG Jordan Gillmore DF ENG Nino Adom Malaki DF ENG Kamarl Grant No Pos Nation Player DF ENG Arthur Penney captain DF ENG Kyle Smith DF ENG Jeremy Kyezu MF ENG Sebastian Drozd MF ENG Henry Hearn FW ENG Tyrese Briscoe FW ENG Tomas Leahy FW ENG Laquay Coleman FW IRL Aidomo EmakhuPlayer of the year Edit As voted by Millwall Supporters Club members and season ticket holders 140 Year Winner1971 Barry Bridges1972 Bryan King1973 Alf Wood1974 Alf Wood1975 Phil Summerill1976 Barry Kitchener1977 Terry Brisley1978 Phil Walker1979 Barry Kitchener1980 John Lyons1981 Paul Roberts1982 Dean Horrix1983 Dean Neal Year Winner1984 Anton Otulakowski1985 Paul Sansome1986 Alan McLeary1987 Brian Horne1988 Danis Salman1989 Terry Hurlock1990 Ian Dawes1991 Teddy Sheringham1992 Aidan Davison1993 Kasey Keller1994 Keith Stevens1995 Andy Roberts1996 Ben Thatcher Year Winner1997 Lucas Neill1998 Paul Shaw1999 Neil Harris2000 Stuart Nethercott2001 Matt Lawrence2002 Steve Claridge2003 Tony Warner2004 Darren Ward2005 Darren Ward2006 David Livermore2007 Richard Shaw2008 Paul Robinson2009 Andy Frampton Year Winner2010 Alan Dunne2011 Tamika Mkandawire2012 Jimmy Abdou2013 Danny Shittu2014 David Forde2015 Jimmy Abdou2016 Jordan Archer2017 Steve Morison2018 Shaun Hutchinson2019 Lee Gregory2020 Bartosz Bialkowski2021 Bartosz Bialkowski2022 Murray Wallace Personnel honours Edit English Football Hall of Fame Edit Millwall players inducted into the English Football Hall of Fame 141 Teddy Sheringham 2009 Ray Wilkins 2013 PFA Fans Player of the Year Edit Players included in the PFA Fans Player of the Year whilst playing for Millwall Jay Simpson 2008 while on loan from Arsenal 142 First winner of the award whilst on loan at another club PFA Team of the Year Edit Players included in the PFA Team of the Year whilst playing for Millwall Tim Cahill 2004 Tim Cahill 2001 Matt Lawrence 2001 Neil Harris 2001 Alex Rae 1996 Alex Rae 1995 Ben Thatcher 1995 Colin Cooper 1993 Dave Cusack 1985 John Jackson 1980 Ray Evans 1976 Bryan King 1975 Bryan King 1974 Notable former players Edit The following is a list of notable footballers who have played for Millwall including players who have been honoured in Millwall s Hall of Fame international players who were capped by their country while playing for Millwall players who have been given a testimonial for 10 years of service at the club players who have made over 100 appearances or scored 50 goals and also 1885 founder member players who contributed significantly to the clubs history 21 143 144 4 145 146 Algeria Hameur BouazzaAntigua and Barbuda Mahlon RomeoAustralia Tim Cahill James Meredith Dave Mitchell Kevin Muscat Lucas Neill Jason van BlerkBarbados Michael Gilkes Paul IfillCanada Marc Bircham Adrian Serioux Josh Simpson Kris TwardekComoros Jimmy AbdouCzech Republic Jiri SkalakEngland Gary Alexander Sam Allardyce Chris Armstrong Herbert Banks Mark Beard Gordon Bolland Ray Brand Les Briley Joe Broadfoot Peter Burridge John Calvey Jimmy Carter Nick Chatterton Steve Claridge Jack Cock Jimmy Constantine Colin Cooper Tony Craig Harry Cripps Ian Dawes Danny Dichio Marvin Elliott John Fashanu George Fisher Jack Fort Freddie Fox Paul Goddard Len Graham Lee Gregory Neil Harris Brian Horne Gordon Hill Richard Hill Terry Hurlock Johnny Johnson Len Julians Harry Kane Bryan King Barry Kitchener Matthew Lawrence David Livermore Dave Mangnall Alan McLeary Stuart Nethercott Derek Possee Andy Roberts Henry Roberts Paul Robinson Barry Rowan Neil Ruddock John Seasman Paul Shaw Teddy Sheringham Reg Smith Alex Stepney Keith Stevens John Willie Sutcliffe Tony Towner Alf Twigg Phil Walker Jed Wallace Darren Ward Keith Weller Dennis Wise Tony Witter Steve Wood Iceland Jon Dadi BodvarssonJamaica Shaun CummingsNew Zealand Chris WoodNigeria Danny ShittuNorthern Ireland Daniel Ballard Tom Brolly Shane Ferguson Bryan Hamilton Ted Hinton Chris McGrath Billy McCullough Conor McLaughlin Josh McQuoid Anton Rogan Ian StewartRepublic of Ireland Keith Branagan John Byrne Tony Cascarino Kenny Cunningham Alan Dunne Eamon Dunphy David Forde Jon Goodman Joe Haverty Charlie Hurley Mark Kennedy Andy Keogh Mick McCarthy Aiden O Brien Kevin O Callaghan Steven Reid Robbie Ryan Richard Sadlier Dave Savage Pat Saward Gary Waddock Shaun Williams Saint Kitts and Nevis Bobby BowryRussia Sergei YuranScotland Jordan Archer Willie Carr Stephen Crawford Hugh Curran Jimmy Forsyth Malcolm Finlayson John Gilchrist Paul Hartley Duncan Hean Alex Jardine John McGinlay Alex RaeTrinidad amp Tobago Carlos Edwards Justin Hoyte Tony WarnerUnited States of America Kasey Keller John Kerr Bruce Murray Zak WhitbreadWales Malcolm Allen Joe Davies Walter Davis Jermaine Easter Paul Jones Dick Jones Steve Lovell Steve Lowndes John Lyons Steve Morison Ben Thatcher Alf Watkins Note Current player George Saville has been capped internationally while playing for Millwall and will be added to the list when they leave the club Managers EditThere have been 34 permanent and 15 caretaker managers since the appointment of the club s first professional manager Bert Lipsham on 4 May 1911 147 From 1890 to 1910 Millwall directors Kidd Stopher and Saunders were honorary managers also working under the title of club secretary 148 Bob Hunter is Millwall s longest serving manager having stayed at the helm for 15 years Prior to becoming manager he was the club s trainer for 21 years He died in office in 1933 having served at the club for a total of 36 years 149 Steve Claridge holds the shortest tenure at the club having been in charge for a period of 36 days without ever taking charge of a first team game 59 Every Millwall manager has come from the United Kingdom or Ireland 147 Years Manager1890 1899 Fred Kidd s 1899 1900 Edward Stopher s 1900 1910 George Saunders s 1911 1918 Bert Lipsham1918 1933 Bob Hunter1933 1936 Bill McCracken1936 1940 Charlie Hewitt1940 1944 William Voisey1944 1948 Jack Cock1948 1956 Charlie Hewitt1956 1958 Ron Gray1958 1959 Jimmy Seed1959 1961 Reg J R Smith1961 1963 Ron Gray1963 1966 Billy Gray1966 1974 Benny Fenton1974 Theo Foley c Years Manager1974 1977 Gordon Jago1977 Theo Foley c 1978 1980 George Petchey1980 Terry Long c 1980 1982 Peter Anderson1982 Barry Kitchener c 1982 1986 George Graham1986 1990 John Docherty1990 Bob Pearson c 1990 1992 Bruce Rioch1992 1996 Mick McCarthy1996 Ian Evans c 1996 1997 Jimmy Nicholl1997 John Docherty1997 1998 Billy Bonds1998 1999 Keith Stevens1999 2000 Keith Stevens amp Alan McLeary Years Manager2000 Steve Gritt amp Ray Harford c 2000 2003 Mark McGhee2003 2005 Dennis Wise2005 Steve Claridge2005 2006 Colin Lee2006 Dave Tuttle2006 Tony Burns amp Alan McLeary c 2006 Nigel Spackman2006 2007 Willie Donachie2007 Richard Shaw amp Colin West c 2007 2013 Kenny Jackett2013 Steve Lomas2013 2014 Neil Harris amp Scott Fitzgerald c 2014 2015 Ian Holloway2015 2019 Neil Harris2019 Adam Barrett c 2019 Gary Rowett s secretary c caretakerClub officials Edit Millwall s American chairman John Berylson 64 150 As of 12 July 2022 151 152 Board Edit Chairman John Berylson Chief Executive Officer Steve Kavanagh Directors James Berylson Constantine Gonticas Trevor Keyse Demos Kouvaris Richard Press and Peter GarstonCoaching staff Edit Manager Gary Rowett Assistant Manager Adam Barrett First Team Coach Paul Robinson Technical Coach Joe Carnall Goalkeeping Coach Andy Marshall U23 Elite Development Squad Manager Kevin Nugent U23 Elite Development Squad Assistant Manager Paul Robinson Academy Director Scott FitzgeraldHonours Edit Millwall Rovers with the East London Cup 1887 5 Competition Achievement Year NotesSecond Division tier 2 Champions 1988 Promoted to the top flight for the first time in the club s history 37 Second Division First Division tier 2 Play off Semi Finalists 1991 1994 2002Third Division South Second Division tier 3 Champions 1928 1938 2001 Millwall set an English record in 1928 with 87 league goals scored at home 16 Finished with 93 points in 2001 a club record 50 Third Division tier 3 Promoted 1966 1976 1985 Unbeaten at home for the second successive season in 1965 66 season 27 Automatically promoted after finishing third in 1976 153 Football League One tier 3 Play off Winners 2010 2017 Won 1 0 against Swindon Town in 2010 and 1 0 against Bradford City in 2017 154 Football League One tier 3 Play off Finalists 2009 2016Second Division tier 3 Play off Semi Finalists 2000Fourth Division tier 4 Champions 1962Fourth Division tier 4 Runners Up 1965 Finished one point behind the champions Brighton amp Hove Albion 155 FA Cup Finalists 2004 Qualified for the UEFA Cup Game was played at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff 56 FA Cup Semi Finalists 1900 1903 1937 2013FA Cup Quarter Finalists 1922 1927 1978 1985 2017 2019League Cup Quarter Finalists 1974 1977 1995Football League Trophy Finalists 1999 First official appearance at Wembley in a recognised competition 4 Football League Group Cup Winners 1983FA Youth Cup Winners 1979 1991FA Youth Cup Runners up 1994FA Youth Cup Quarter Finalists 2020Football League War Cup Finalists 1945 South final runners up 156 Third Division South Cup Winners 1937 Joint winners with Watford 3 3 aggregate in final 157 Kent Senior Shield Winners 1912 1913London Challenge Cup Winners 1909 1915 1928 1938Western Football League Champions 1908 1909Southern Football League Champions 1895 1896London League Champions 1904 Unbeaten with 11 wins and one draw 158 United League Champions 1897 1899East London Senior Cup Winners 1887 1888 1889East London FA Cup Joint winners 1886Records and statistics EditMain article List of Millwall F C records and statistics Barry Kitchener holds the record for Millwall appearances having played 596 matches between 1966 and 1982 29 The goalscoring record is held by former manager Neil Harris with 138 in all competitions 159 160 He broke the previous record of 111 goals held by Teddy Sheringham on 13 January 2009 during a 3 2 away win at Crewe Alexandra 161 The club s widest victory margin in the league is 9 1 162 a scoreline which they achieved twice in their Football League Third Division South championship winning year of 1927 163 They beat both Torquay United and Coventry City by this score at The Den Millwall s heaviest league defeat was 8 1 away to Plymouth Argyle in 1932 162 The club s heaviest loss in all competitions was a 9 1 defeat at Aston Villa in an FA Cup fourth round second leg in 1946 162 Millwall s largest Cup win was 7 0 over Gateshead in 1936 162 Their highest scoring aggregate game was a 12 goal thriller at home to Preston North End in 1930 when Millwall lost 7 5 162 Player records Edit As of 5 May 2019 AppearancesPlayers in bold denotes still playing for the club 164 596 Barry Kitchener 1966 82 557 Keith Stevens 1980 99 443 Harry Cripps 1961 74 431 Neil Harris 1998 04 2007 11 413 Alan McLeary 1981 93 1997 99 388 Alan Dunne 2000 2015 361 Paul Robinson 2001 2015 343 Jimmy Forsyth 1929 39 342 Jimmy Abdou 2008 2018 341 Richard Hill 1919 30 341 Len Graham 1923 34 GoalsOnly Football League and senior cup competitions included 165 138 Neil Harris 1998 04 2007 11 111 Teddy Sheringham 1982 91 92 Steve Morison 2009 11 2013 14 2015 19 87 Derek Possee 1967 73 83 Jack Cock 1927 31 80 Jimmy Constantine 1948 52 78 Johnny Shepherd 1952 58 77 Lee Gregory 2014 19 74 David Jones 1959 64 71 Jack Landells 1925 33 71 Alex Rae 1990 96 See List of Millwall F C seasons for Millwall s top goalscorer each year since 1895 Millwall in European football EditMain article Millwall F C in European football On 22 May 2004 Millwall played Manchester United in the FA Cup Final losing 3 0 As United had already qualified for the UEFA Champions League Millwall were assured of playing in the UEFA Cup Millwall played in the first round proper and lost 4 2 on aggregate to Ferencvaros European record Edit Season Competition Round Opponents 1st leg 2nd leg Aggregate2004 05 166 UEFA Cup First round Ferencvaros 1 1 1 3 2 4Supporters and hooliganism Edit The first pitch invasion at the new Wembley by Millwall fans May 2017 167 See also Millwall Bushwackers 1985 Luton riot and 2009 Upton Park riot No one likes us we don t care source source track The infamous terrace chant of Millwall supporters No one likes us we don t care 168 Problems playing this file See media help Millwall have averaged a gate close to 12 000 per home game over their 93 seasons in the Football League while the club have spent the majority of that time yo yoing back and forth between the second and third tiers of English football 169 170 Originally based in the East End of London the club moved across the River Thames in 1910 to south east London and support is drawn from the surrounding areas 171 The club and fans have a historic association with football hooliganism which came to prevalence in the 1970s and 1980s with a firm known originally as F Troop eventually becoming more widely known as the Millwall Bushwackers who were one of the most notorious hooligan gangs in England 172 On five occasions The Den was closed by The FA and the club has received numerous fines for crowd disorder 173 The BBC documentary Panorama was invited into the club by Millwall in 1977 to show the hooligan reputation was a myth and being blown out of proportion by reporting Instead the BBC portrayed hooliganism as being deeply rooted in Millwall and linked them to the far right political party National Front The show was extremely damaging for the club 35 171 Former club chairman Reg Burr once commented Millwall are a convenient coat peg for football to hang its social ills on 174 an example being the reporting of convicted murderer Gavin Grant Although he had played for eight different clubs playing his fewest games four for Millwall and was signed to Bradford City at the time the BBC used the headline Former Millwall striker Gavin Grant guilty of murder 175 The stigma of violence attached to Millwall can be traced back over 100 years Millwall played local rivals West Ham United away at Upton Park on 17 September 1906 in a Western League game Both sets of supporters were primarily made up of dockers who lived and worked in the same locality in east London Many were rivals working for opposing firms and vying for the same business 176 A local newspaper East Ham Echo reported that From the very first kick of the ball it was seen likely to be some trouble but the storm burst when Dean and Jarvis came into collision Millwall had two players sent off during the match This aroused considerable excitement among the spectators The crowds on the bank having caught the fever free fights were plentiful 177 In the 1920s Millwall s ground was closed for two weeks after a Newport County goalkeeper who had been struck by missiles jumped into the crowd to confront some of the home supporters and was knocked unconscious 178 The ground was again closed for two weeks in 1934 following crowd disturbances after the visit of Bradford Park Avenue Pitch invasions resulted in another closure in 1947 and in 1950 the club was fined after a referee and linesman were ambushed outside the ground 173 In the 1960s hooliganism in England became more widely reported On 6 November 1965 Millwall beat west London club Brentford 2 1 away at Griffin Park and during the game a hand grenade was thrown onto the pitch from the Millwall end Brentford s goalkeeper Chic Brodie picked it up inspected it and threw it into his goal It was later retrieved by police and determined to be a harmless dummy There was fighting inside and outside the ground during the game between both sets of supporters with one Millwall fan sustaining a broken jaw The Sun newspaper ran the sensationalist grenade related headline Soccer Marches to War 179 180 Trouble was reported at Loftus Road on 26 March 1966 during a match between Queens Park Rangers and Millwall at a time when both sides were near the top of the league table pushing for promotion to Division Two but the London derby was won 6 1 by the west London based team QPR In the second half a coin was thrown from the terraces which struck Millwall player Len Julians on the head drawing blood The stadium announcer warned that the game would be abandoned if there were any more disturbances from the crowd prompting some Millwall fans to invade the pitch in an unsuccessful attempt to get the game abandoned 35 When Millwall s unbeaten home record of 59 games came to an end against Plymouth Argyle in 1967 the windows of the away team s coach were smashed In the same year a referee was attacked and the FA ordered the club to erect fences around The Den s terracing 173 On 11 March 1978 a riot broke out at The Den during an FA Cup quarter final between Millwall and Ipswich Town with the home team losing 6 1 Fighting began on the terraces and spilled onto the pitch dozens of fans were injured with some hooligans turning on their own team s supporters leaving some innocent fans bloodied Bobby Robson then manager of Ipswich said of Millwall fans afterward They the police should have turned the flamethrowers on them 35 In 1982 Millwall club chairman Alan Thorne threatened to close the club because of violence sparked by losing in the FA Cup to non league side Slough Town 173 178 The 1985 Kenilworth Road riot after an FA Cup sixth round match between Luton Town and Millwall on 13 March 1985 became one of the worst and widely reported incidents of football hooliganism to date On that night approximately 20 000 people packed into a ground that usually only held half that number to watch Luton beat Millwall 1 0 173 Numerous pitch invasions fighting in the stands and missile throwing occurred of which one such object hit Luton s goalkeeper Les Sealey It led to a ban on away supporters by Luton from their Kenilworth Road ground for four years Luton were asked by Millwall to make the Wednesday night match all ticket but this was ignored 178 As a result rival hooligan firms gained access to the stadium As well as the Millwall hooligans and those belonging to Luton s firm the MIGs many of the 31 fans arrested after the violence were identified as being from Chelsea s Headhunters firm and West Ham United s Inter City Firm 178 The FA commissioned an inquiry which concluded that it was not satisfied that Millwall F C took all reasonable precautions in accordance with the requirements of FA Rule 31 A II A 7 500 fine was levied against Millwall though this was later withdrawn on appeal 181 The penalty that Millwall faced was perhaps that the club s name was now synonymous with everything that was bad in football and society 182 In May 2002 hundreds of hooligans attaching themselves to Millwall were involved in disorder around the ground after the team lost a play off game to Birmingham City It was described by the BBC as one of the worst cases of civil disorder seen in Great Britain in recent times A police spokeswoman said that 47 police officers and 24 police horses were injured and the Metropolitan Police considered suing the club after the events 183 The then chairman Theo Paphitis responded that Millwall could not be blamed for the actions of a mindless minority who attach themselves to the club The problem of mob violence is not solely a Millwall problem it is not a football problem it is a problem which plagues the whole of our society he said Paphitis later introduced a membership scheme whereby only fans who would be prepared to join and carry membership cards would be allowed into The Den Scotland Yard withdrew its threat to sue stating In light of the efforts made and a donation to a charity helping injured police officers the Metropolitan Police Service has decided not to pursue legal action against Millwall F C in relation to the disorder 184 Some legal experts said it would have been difficult to hold a football club responsible for something that occurred away from its ground and involved people who did not attend the match The scheme introduced by Paphitis now only applies to perceived high risk away games Many fans blame the scheme for diminishing Millwall s away support such as at Leeds United where fans are issued with vouchers which are then exchanged for tickets at a designated point of West Yorkshire Police s choosing on the day of the game Also early kick off times arranged by the police often result in only a few hundred fans making the trip 185 186 source source source source source source source source source source source source Millwall supporters celebrate Shane Lowry s 35 yard freekick against Charlton Athletic at The Valley on 16 March 2013 187 In January 2009 hundreds of Millwall fans perceived as high risk individuals gained access to an FA Cup fourth round match away at Hull City The game won 2 0 by Hull was overshadowed when seats coins and plastic bottles were thrown by some away supporters There were conflicting reports in the media as to whether missiles were initially thrown by Hull supporters following chanting and jeering by Millwall fans of Jimmy Bullard an ex West Ham player just prior to the fixture 188 On 25 August 2009 Millwall played away at West Ham United in the Football League Cup losing 3 1 after extra time One Millwall supporter was stabbed during clashes between the two sets of fans outside the ground The game saw hundreds of West Ham fans invade the pitch on three occasions forcing the game to be temporarily suspended once The police later said the violence because of its scale was organised beforehand 189 190 In the aftermath of the disorder Millwall were handed three charges by the FA and later cleared of all of them West Ham received four charges and were found guilty on two counts violent threatening obscene and provocative behaviour and entering the field of play West Ham were fined 115 000 an amount seen as an insult by Millwall which staunchly defended the actions of its own fans and the club s inability to do any more than it had for a match at a rival s ground 191 After a game against Queens Park Rangers at Loftus Road in September 2010 manager Kenny Jackett said Millwall s hooligan problems are to a certain extent exaggerated by media sensationalism I see it as unjust We are an easy club to criticise and in my time at the club the way we have been reported is unfair he said 192 Other examples of this include archive footage of their hooligan element s past bad behaviour being shown when disorder has occurred at other grounds not involving them 193 During a game between Millwall and Huddersfield Town The Observer reported that a Huddersfield Town fan had thrown a coin at a linesman and that some Millwall fans had intervened and handed the culprit over to police The News of the World however bore the headline Millwall Thugs Deck Linesman With Concrete This has led to a siege mentality among supporters of the club which gave rise to the Millwall fans famous terrace chant No one likes us we don t care being sung in defiant defence of themselves and their team 194 195 196 In April 2013 Millwall met Wigan Athletic in a semi final of the FA Cup Millwall lost the game 2 0 73 Towards the end of the match violence broke out in part of the stand allocated to Millwall with individuals fighting amongst themselves and then against police resulting in 14 arrests of which two were Wigan supporters 197 In January 2014 a Millwall fan ripped a linesman s flag after a corner was not given to his side during a game against Leicester City Millwall lost 1 3 198 On 29 May 2016 Millwall played in the Football League One play off final against Barnsley at Wembley Stadium but towards the end of the match with Barnsley winning 3 1 a group of Millwall supporters broke through a security barrier and attacked Barnsley supporters some of whom were forced to leave the stadium to avoid the violence Also there were objects thrown towards the Barnsley players and Barnsley supporters during the game The fighting and violence was condemned by the Football Association 199 200 On 26 January 2019 Millwall beat Everton 3 2 and knocked them out of the FA Cup The two teams supporters clashed away from The Den before the game with an Everton fan being slashed across the face with a knife 120 A senior Metropolitan Police officer said it was some of the most shocking football violence seen for some time 120 The game was also blighted by allegations of racist chanting 120 On 5 December 2020 Millwall played against Derby County in the first game back at the Den for fans in ten months due to the COVID 19 Pandemic Some of the 2 000 fans present booed the players who took a knee and raised a fist before the game in support of the Black Lives Matter social and political movement The booing was condemned by The FA EFL Kick it Out and mainstream media 201 202 203 Cabinet minister George Eustice refused to condemn Millwall fans stating Black Live Matter political movement was against what most British people believed in and fans should be free to express their views 204 The leader of the Brexit Party Nigel Farage called BLM a Marxist Party who had been sussed out by Millwall fans and called for kneeling to stop 205 In the next game at the Den against QPR on 8 December 2020 Millwall fans applauded as QPR and Millwall players raised aloft an anti racism banner about inequality in football The 2 000 Millwall fans also cheered the QPR players who took the knee No Millwall player kneeled Before the game every fan was given a letter from the club saying The eyes of the world are on this football club tonight your club and they want us to fail Together as one we will not let that happen Some Millwall supporters had said their boos at the Derby game did not have racist intent but was instead against the politicisation of the Black Lives Matter movement in the UK 206 Notable supporters EditName OccupationDanny Baker 207 Radio DJ and comedianMichael Barrymore 208 ActorGeoff Bell 209 ActorBig Narstie 210 MC rapperTed Cheeseman 211 BoxerCM Punk 212 AEW wrestlerBob Crow 213 Former RMT trade union leaderDaniel Day Lewis 214 ActorMadeline Duggan 215 ActressAndy Fordham 216 Former darts world championLars Frederiksen 217 Singer in RancidJohnny Garton 218 BoxerSteve Harley 219 Singer in Cockney RebelFrank Harper 220 ActorBlake Harrison 221 ActorTamer Hassan 222 ActorDavid Haye 223 Retired boxing world championRod Liddle 224 JournalistLord Ouseley 225 Kick It Out FounderNick Love 226 Film directorKellie Maloney 227 Former boxing promoter born Frank MaloneyRoland Manookian 228 ActorLouie McCarthy Scarsbrook 229 Rugby playerLaila Morse 230 ActressPatrick Murray 231 Actor Mickey Pearce in Only Fools and HorsesDes O Connor 232 EntertainerGary Oldman 233 ActorTheo Paphitis 234 Entrepreneur Dragons DenScroobius Pip 235 MusicianTimo Soini 236 PoliticianGregg Wallace 237 MasterChef presenterDenzel Washington 238 ActorIan Wright 239 Former footballerZerkaa 240 YouTuber Danny Baker Daniel Day Lewis Andy Fordham David Haye Lord Ouseley Gary Oldman Joshua Bradley Zerkaa In the community EditIn 1985 the club founded the Millwall Community Trust MCT which offers sporting educational and charitable projects 241 The Trust is based next door to The Den in the Lions Centre 242 Working with local people from the surrounding boroughs of Lewisham Southwark and the wider Millwall Community The Trust offers sports and fitness programmes educational workshops disability activities and soccer schools The club helps promote anti knife and anti gun crime 243 In a match against Charlton Athletic in 2009 both teams wore special kits for the match in honour of murdered local teenagers and supporters Jimmy Mizen and Rob Knox The logos of both clubs shirt sponsors were replaced by the text Street violence ruins lives 244 The club has also helped raise over 10 000 for the charity Help for Heroes 245 In popular culture EditMillwall have been depicted in films several times specifically highlighting the club s hooliganism firm the Bushwackers and the rivalry with West Ham United 172 Often glorifying football violence in the beginning each film typically ends in loss of life showing the futility of hooliganism 246 The Firm 1989 Real life Millwall supporter Gary Oldman plays Bex leader of football firm the Inter City Crew a fictional representation of West Ham s Inter City Firm and their violent exploits Millwall s Bushwackers firm are called The Buccaneers in the film 233 247 Arrivederci Millwall 1990 A group of Millwall supporters travel to the 1982 World Cup in Spain just after the Falklands War breaks out intent on avenging a personal loss 248 Black Books 2000 In the first episode Cooking the Books Bernard Black Dylan Moran attempts to antagonise some Millwall hooligans into injuring him severely enough so that he may avoid doing his taxes Upon remarking How does the song go Millwall Millwall we re really dreadful and all of our girlfriends are unfulfilled and alienated he succeeds The Football Factory 2004 Primarily about the Chelsea Headhunters who fight numerous other firms on away days culminating in a big fight against Millwall s Bushwackers 249 Green Street 2005 Elijah Wood plays an American student who gets involved with West Ham s firm The film builds up to a big clash with Millwall s firm at the climax after the two teams are drawn against each other in the Cup foreshadowing similarities to the 2009 Upton Park riot 127 Rise of the Footsoldier 2007 The rise of a football hooligan is chronicled from his beginnings on the terraces to becoming a member of a notorious gang of criminals The rivalry between West Ham and Millwall is portrayed during the opening scenes of the film 250 Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal 2007 The main protagonist Sunny Bhasin John Abraham initially agrees to leave Southhall United Football Club and signs a lucrative offer to play for Millwall F C He later decides not to play for Millwall though Green Street 2 Stand Your Ground 2009 A direct to video sequel to Green Street It follows on directly from the original s climax with several members of West Ham s and Millwall s firms ending up in prison together and arranging a football match 251 The Firm 2009 A remake by Nick Love director of The Football Factory and himself a Millwall supporter, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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