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Notts County F.C.

Notts County Football Club is a professional association football club based in Nottingham, England. The team compete in the National League, the fifth level of the English football league system, as of the 2022–23 season. Founded on 28 November 1862, it is the oldest professional association football club in the world and predates the Football Association itself. The club became one of the 12 founder members of the Football League in 1888. They are nicknamed the "Magpies" due to the black and white colour of their home strip, which inspired Italian club Juventus to adopt the colours for their kit in 1903. After playing at different home grounds during its first fifty years, including Trent Bridge, the club moved to Meadow Lane in 1910 and remains there. Notts County has a local rivalry with city neighbour Nottingham Forest, as well as with other nearby clubs such as Mansfield Town.

Notts County
Full nameNotts County Football Club
Nickname(s)The Magpies
Founded28 November 1862; 160 years ago (28 November 1862)[1]
GroundMeadow Lane
Capacity19,841[2]
Coordinates52°56′33″N 1°8′14″W / 52.94250°N 1.13722°W / 52.94250; -1.13722
OwnerAlexander and Christoffer Reedtz[3]
ChairmanChristoffer Reedtz[4]
Head coachLuke Williams
LeagueNational League
2022–23National League, 2nd of 24 (promoted via play-offs)
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Notts County finished third in the top flight of English football in the 1890–91 season, which, together with the same achievement 10 seasons later, remains their highest ever league position. They also reached the 1891 FA Cup final, finishing as runners-up to Blackburn Rovers. However three years later the club won the 1894 FA Cup final with a 4–1 victory over Bolton Wanderers. From 1897 until 1920 they played in the First Division which was then the top flight, barring the 1913–14 season when they won the Second Division immediately following relegation the previous year. They won the Second Division for a third time in the 1922–23 campaign, before suffering relegations down to the Third Division South, which they won in their first attempt in 1930–31.

The club were back in the Third Division South by World War II, but were again promoted as champions in 1949–50 and spent most of the 1950s in the second tier before successive relegations saw them drop back into the Fourth Division. County won promotion as runners-up in 1959–60. They returned to the fourth tier by 1964, but were promoted as champions in the 1970–71 season, before securing promotion out of the Third Division under the stewardship of Jimmy Sirrel in 1972–73. They made their return to the top flight by finishing as runners-up of the Second Division in 1980–81. County were relegated after a three-season stay, and ended the decade back in the third tier, before Neil Warnock masterminded play-off successes in 1990 and 1991 that saw them promoted back into the top flight. Immediate relegations followed, and despite a takeover by a Middle Eastern consortium in 2009, County were eventually relegated from the Football League for the first time in 2018–19. Four years later in 2022–23, they returned to League Two via the National League play-offs.

History

 
Plaque at the George Hotel Nottingham commemorating Notts County Football Club's first meeting to elect officers and committee on 7 December 1864
 
Chart showing the progress of Notts County F.C. through the English football league system

Beginnings 1862–1942

Notts County was formed on 28 November 1862 as Nottingham Football Club[1] with official formation took place during committee meeting at the George Hotel on 7 December 1864 as 'Notts. Foot Ball Club',[1][5] thus claiming it to be as the oldest professional association football club in the world.[6][7] The club predates The Football Association and initially played a game of its own devising, rather than association football. At the time of its formation, Notts County, like most sports teams, were considered to be a "gentlemen-only" club. Notts County are considered to be one of the pioneers of the modern game and are the oldest of the world's professional association football clubs (there are older professional clubs in other codes of football, and Sheffield F.C., an amateur club founded in 1857, are the oldest club now playing association football).[8] In November 1872, the Notts County full-back Harwood Greenhalgh played for England against Scotland in the first-ever international match, thereby, becoming the club's first international player.[9] In 1888, Notts County, along with 11 other football clubs, became a founding member of The Football League.[10] They finished their first league season in 11th place, but avoided the dubious honour of the wooden spoon, which went to Midlands rivals Stoke City.[11] However, the club did achieve their highest ever league finish of third in 1890–91,[12] an achievement they repeated 10 seasons later.[13]

 
The team that won the 1894 FA Cup

On 21 March 1891, Notts County played in the FA Cup final for the first time.[14] The Magpies were defeated 3–1 by Blackburn Rovers at The Oval, despite having beaten the same side 7–1 in the league only a week earlier. County made up for this on 31 March 1894, when they won the FA Cup at Goodison Park, defeating Bolton Wanderers 4–1 in a game in which Jimmy Logan scored the second hat-trick in FA Cup final history.[6] This achievement is also memorable for Notts County becoming the first club outside the top division to win the FA Cup: Notts County finished third in Division Two that season. In 1910 they moved to Meadow Lane.[6] County were relegated in 1926 in what was to be their last season in the English top flight for over half a century.[15] The 1925–26 season was the last season that famed giant goalkeeper Albert Iremonger played for the club. Legend among Notts County supporters it has been said he had "hands like the claws of a JCB and was a seven foot tall monster".[16]

The club suspended all fixtures during the 1941–42 season after Meadow Lane was hit by enemy bombing.[17]

Two golden ages 1945–1987

In the 1946–47 season, the ground was used temporarily by Nottingham Forest after the River Trent flooded both Meadow Lane and the City Ground.[18] Forest again used Meadow Lane in 1968, after fire destroyed the main stand at the City Ground.[19] The 'golden age' of the club came just after the end of the Second World War.[6] County stunned the footballing world by signing Tommy Lawton from Chelsea for a then-record fee of £20,000[17] (equivalent to £832,500 in 2021).[20] Lawton's arrival increased crowds by over 10,000. One incident during this period saw 10,000 fans locked outside the ground. In the 1949–50 season, Notts County clinched the Third Division (South) championship.[21] Crowds averaged 35,000 as The Magpies held off Nottingham Forest in a thrilling championship race.[6] As the 1950s drew to a close, Nottingham Forest replaced Notts County as the city's biggest club. After the 1957–58 season, the two clubs did not play each other again in a League match for 16 years, until 26 December 1973.[22]

 
Jimmy Sirrel & Jack Wheeler statue at Meadow Lane

The Magpies struggled during the 1960s, being on the brink of financial ruin and striving to avoid the indignity of having to apply for re-election to the league.[citation needed] This situation continued until Jack Dunnett, a local member of parliament, took control of the club.[23] He appointed Jimmy Sirrel, a charismatic Scot who had once played for Celtic, as manager in November 1969.[23] In the 1970–71 season County clinched the Fourth Division title in record-breaking style, remaining unbeaten at Meadow Lane.[24] Two seasons later Notts County was again promoted, this time to Division Two.[25] Sirrel departed for Sheffield United in October 1975 but returned two years later.[citation needed] He completed the remarkable transformation of Notts County in May 1981.[citation needed] He had turned The Magpies from Fourth Division strugglers to a top division side in little over a decade, ending an absence of 55 years from the top flight.[6] This achievement was with the same chairman (Jack Dunnett) and trainer (Jack Wheeler) throughout the decade.[citation needed]

In one of the most famous moments in the club's modern history, Notts County visited newly crowned champions Aston Villa on the opening day of the 1981-82 season. The Villa team had paraded their 1980-81 League Championship trophy to an expectant crowd before kickoff, but against all odds, County came away with a 1–0 victory. After surviving relegation at the end of the season, Sirrel became the club's general manager, with his assistant Howard Wilkinson taking over as manager.[citation needed] County survived relegation a little more comfortably the following season, but Wilkinson was tempted away by the manager's job at his boyhood club, Sheffield Wednesday, and the board recruited former Wigan Athletic manager Larry Lloyd to replace him. Despite a good run to the quarter-finals of the FA Cup, where they were knocked out by eventual winners Everton, the club had a poor league campaign that ultimately resulted in their relegation.[citation needed] This poor form continued into the following season, resulting in Lloyd's dismissal with the club bottom of the Second Division. Richie Barker took over as manager, but failed to improve the club's fortunes, and was dismissed after less than six months in charge.[citation needed]

Jimmy Sirrel took charge of the team once again, and while the club's form improved, it came too late, and County suffered their second successive relegation.[citation needed] After two decent but unremarkable finishes in the Third Division, Sirrel finally retired in 1987, bringing to a close one of the most successful and memorable periods in Notts County's history.[citation needed]

Chasing the Premier League 1987–1995

Sirrel was replaced by John Barnwell, who nearly steered the club to automatic promotion in the season that followed, but a late stumble meant they had to settle for the play-offs, where they lost to eventual winners Walsall.[citation needed] The team failed to repeat their form the following season and instead found themselves battling relegation to the Fourth Division, resulting in Barnwell being dismissed just before Christmas.[citation needed]

In late 1988, a new manager arrived. Neil Warnock had previously led Scarborough into the Football League as champions of the Football Conference. At the end of his first full season, Warnock had led Notts County to promotion back to Division Two. The club anthem The Wheelbarrow song originated during this season, stemming from the club's historic first game at Wembley Stadium in a 2–0 win over Tranmere Rovers. A famous 1–0 victory over Manchester City in the FA Cup booked them a place in the quarter-final, which they lost to eventual winners Tottenham Hotspur. Notts County also booked their second successive visit to Wembley and their second successive promotion. The Magpies defeated Brighton & Hove Albion 3–1 in front of 60,000 spectators, 25,000 of which were Notts County fans.

The following season was disappointing, seeing Notts County relegated from the top flight after just one season back there. Their first game of that season was a visit to Manchester United at Old Trafford, where they lost 2–0. However, they did manage to hold Manchester United to a 1–1 draw in the return game at Meadow Lane just after the turn of the year, as United began a dismal second half of the season which ultimately cost them the league title. County's relegation came shortly after the sale of strikers Paul Rideout and Tommy Johnson, which raked in nearly £2million in total and contributed towards a £5million stadium revamp which saw Meadow Lane rebuilt on three sides shortly afterwards.[26] With the introduction of the Premier League, County were relegated from the old Division One to the new Division One. Warnock was dismissed in January 1993 and was succeeded by Mick Walker. Walker successfully averted a second consecutive relegation.[citation needed]

The Magpies narrowly missed the play-offs for promotion to the Premiership.[citation needed] The season is most remembered for a 2–1 victory over archrivals Nottingham Forest in which Charlie Palmer scored the winning goal with just four minutes remaining. Notts had led for much of the game, until Forest got a free kick from which they equalised. Notts fans were reluctantly resigning themselves to a draw, when Palmer headed in the winner. This was all the more remarkable because he only scored 4 goals in his whole career. The game has become a celebrated event among Notts County fans, who have dubbed 12 February (the anniversary of the game) Sir Charlie Palmer Day, and Charlie Palmer has been referred to as "Sir Charlie" by Notts fans ever since.[27] In March 1994, Notts County lost the Anglo-Italian Cup final to Brescia.[28]

Walker was surprisingly sacked in September 1994.[citation needed] This event triggered a dramatic decline in the club's fortunes that has persisted to the present. Notts won the Anglo-Italian Cup at Wembley in March 1995, but ended the season relegated to Division Two, with Walker, Russell Slade, Howard Kendall and Steve Nicol each taking control of the team at different times throughout the season, before the club appointed yet another manager, Colin Murphy after the season ended.[29]

Mixed fortunes 1995–2008

County made another visit to Wembley Stadium in the 1996 play-off final, but missed the chance of a return to Division One with a 2–0 defeat to Bradford City.[30] The following season ranks among the club's worst, as they managed just seven victories all season and finished in the bottom position of the league table.[31] Relegation to the league's basement division happened just six years after promotion to the top flight. However, success followed relegation under Sam Allardyce.[32] The Magpies secured the Division Three title in March 1998 by a record margin of seventeen points.[33] They became the first side since World War II to win promotion in mid-March, with six games still remaining.[34]

 
Logo used from 2002 to 2009

Allardyce left in October 1999 to join his old team Bolton Wanderers.[35] In September 2003, Notts County faced the real possibility of dissolution.[36] Crippling debts and an increasingly impatient Football League board combined to leave the future of the league's oldest club in doubt.[36] However, the considerable efforts of a group of local businessmen and the club's supporters helped save the club from extinction.[37] But despite new ownership, the club were unable to avoid relegation back to the bottom division in 2004.[38] In a similar circumstance as their relegation in 1992, due to the rebranding of the Football League, County went from Division Two to League Two.[citation needed]

Ian Richardson replaced Gary Mills as manager in November 2004.[39] Richardson managed to guide the club away from the relegation zone and held the manager's job until the end of the season when Gudjon Thordarson became the club's sixth manager in five years.[40] The 2005–06 season began well for the Magpies: they won or drew their first seven league games and were top of the table in September.[41] But their form dropped and they escaped relegation only on the final day of the season with a 2–2 draw against Bury, whilst Oxford United lost and went down.[42] The Magpies' 21st place in League Two, and 89th place overall, was the lowest position the club had ever finished, and at the end of the season both the chairman and the manager left, a long-standing youth squad programme was ended, and many of the first-team players were out-of-contract or nearing contract maturity.[citation needed]

Former assistant manager Steve Thompson was appointed as manager and he led the team to a 13th place division finish in 2006–07.[citation needed] The following season started with poor results, including early exits from the League Cup and the EFL Trophy, and Thompson was sacked in October 2007, to be replaced by Ian 'Charlie' McParland.[citation needed] However, the team's poor form continued and safety from relegation was only secured in the penultimate match of the season.[citation needed]

The 2009–10 season

 
The logo used during the 2009–10 season

In June 2009, it was announced that County were in talks on a takeover by Munto Finance, a Middle Eastern consortium owned by Qadbak Investments and represented by Nathan and Peter Willett. Speculated by the British media and supported in part by various press releases, the club were believed to be given multimillion-pound backing, and were linked during the takeover's initial planning stages with the Qatari royal family by British tabloids. However, the latter claim was denied by the family.[43] The supporters' trust, which owned the majority 60% share in the club, voted in favour of the takeover.[44] On 14 July 2009, the takeover was confirmed, with Peter Trembling being appointed as executive chairman.[45] A week later, former England manager Sven-Göran Eriksson was announced as the club's new director of football,[6][46] having been persuaded by convicted fraudster Russell King to join Notts County.[47] On 28 July 2009, the club unveiled a new logo.[48]

The biggest headlines of the summer were made with the signings of England international defender Sol Campbell, and of goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel. Schmeichel, a future Denmark international and Premier League winner, had just been released by Manchester City, and dropped a full three divisions to accept a five-year contract with County. Campbell, 34, moved from Premier League Portsmouth where he had been an FA Cup winner just eight months previously, but played only one game for County before walking out citing false promises.[49] Schmeichel remained for the whole season, travelling with the squad to away games by private jet, but was never paid by the club, claiming in hindsight "it was all a farce" and "I knew something was wrong but I didn't care because I just wanted to play football".[50]

On 20 October 2009, the League announced that County's owners had met its "fit and proper persons" regulations, and that while their structure was "complicated" and featured "both offshore entities and discretionary trusts", it had provided "extensive disclosure" to the League on their ownership structure.[51] The League also stated that public disclosure of their ownership structure was a "matter for the club".[51] McParland parted company with the club in October 2009 with Notts fifth in League Two and 4 points from the top of the table; youth team manager Michael Johnson and assistant manager Dave Kevan were installed as joint caretaker managers.[citation needed].

On 27 November 2009, The Guardian revealed that the league had reopened inquiries into the ownership of Notts County.[52] The League chairman, Brian Mawhinney, confirmed that the club had been sent a series of questions relating to its ownership structure.[52] On 12 December 2009, Peter Trembling purchased the club from Munto Finance for a nominal fee.[53] Hans Backe, Eriksson's former assistant at Manchester City, was given the job of manager in October 2009. He signed a three-year deal and stated his intent to get the club promoted to League One, but resigned two months later after just nine games in charge.[54]

Ray Trew bought the club in February 2010,[55] after it had been served with two winding up petitions from HM Revenue and Customs due to demands for a late PAYE payment of around £500,000.[56] After two months without a permanent manager, Steve Cotterill was given the Notts County job until the end of the 2009–2010 season in February 2010.[57][58] Cotterill led the club to the League Two title after a 5–0 away win against the already-relegated Darlington,[59] becoming the third club to win the fourth tier of English football three times. A month after winning the title, Cotterill stated that he would not be renewing his contract at Meadow Lane.

Falling out of the Football League 2010–

A succession of short-term managers were able to keep the club afloat in League One. Ex-Notts County player Craig Short replaced Cotterill as Manager but was relieved of duties on 24 October 2010.[60] Paul Ince took over in October 2010,[61] then Martin Allen in April 2011,[62] Keith Curle in February 2012, Chris Kiwomya in March 2013 after a short caretaker spell,[63] and Shaun Derry in November 2013.[64] Derry was able to turn the team's fortunes around and avoid relegation thanks to a 1–1 draw away at Oldham Athletic on the final day of the 2013–14 season.[65]

In March 2015, following Derry and assistant manager Greg Abbott's sackings they were relegated to League Two.[66] Ricardo Moniz joined on a three-year contract,[67] but lasted only until 29 December 2015.[68] Jamie Fullarton's reign was even shorter; appointed in January 2016 on a three-and-a-half year contract,[69] but sacked in March after 12 games,[70] during which time Ray Trew stepped down as chairman. Mark Cooper was Fullarton's temporary replacement, with the contract to be made permanent if a certain, undisclosed, amount of points total was achieved,[71] but on 7 May Cooper left the club of his own volition.[72]

Later that month John Sheridan left Oldham Athletic to become manager on a three-year contract.[73] Sheridan was sacked in January 2017 for gross misconduct, following his verbal assaults and threats against match officials during the club's 2–0 home defeat by Wycombe Wanderers in December.[74][75] On 7 January 2017, Notts County set a new club record of 10 successive defeats.

On 12 January 2017, Alan Hardy completed the takeover of the club from Ray Trew[76] and appointed Kevin Nolan as manager, followed in August 2018 by Harry Kewell.[77] Kewell left the club On 13 November 2018, to be replaced by Neal Ardley.[78][79] On 27 January 2019, with County bottom of League Two, Hardy officially put the club up for sale,[80] though not before attracting the attention of the FA for accidentally including a picture of his penis in a screenshot posted to Twitter.[81] On 4 May 2019, following a 3–1 defeat away at Swindon Town, Notts County was relegated from the English Football League for the first time in their 157-year history. In the summer, the club was sold to Danish businessmen Alexander and Christoffer Reedtz.[82]

The Danish Football Radar ownership 2019–

In the 2019-20 season, Notts County came within 90 minutes of regaining their Football League status at the first attempt, but lost 3–1 to Harrogate Town on 2 August 2020 in the National League play-off final, held behind closed doors at Wembley Stadium.[83]

In the 2020–21 season, which was also their second consecutive season in the National League, they finished in 5th place, and beat Chesterfield 3–2 in the quarter-final of the promotion play-offs.[84] However, they lost 4–2 to Torquay United in the semi-finals in extra time.[85] In the 2021–22 season, they again finished fifth in the League, but were knocked out by Grimsby Town in the quarter-final.[86]

In the 2022–23 season, they finished second in the League with 107 points surpassing the previous league record for points in a season but finishing behind Wrexham. In the play-off semi-final, they beat Boreham Wood, coming from two goals down to equalise in stoppage time before securing their win with a goal in the final minute of extra time.[87] In the 2023 National League play-off final, County won promotion to the League Two by defeating Chesterfield at Wembley Stadium.[88] The match finished 2–2 after extra time with Notts County winning the subsequent penalty shootout, 4–3.[88]

Kit and badge

Notts County's first known colours were amber and black hooped shirts, dating from the 1870s. This was followed by short spells playing in amber, then chocolate and blue halves. In 1890, the club adopted black and white striped shirts, and have played in these colours for most of the rest of their history.[89]

Juventus F.C. shirts

The Italian football club Juventus derived its famous black-and-white striped kits from Notts County. Juventus have played in black and white striped shirts, and with white or sometimes black shorts, since 1903. Originally, they played in pink shirts with a black tie, which only occurred due to the wrong shirts being sent to them. The father of one of the players made the earliest shirts, but continual washing faded the colour so much that in 1903 the club sought to replace them.[90] Juventus asked one of their team members, Englishman John Savage, if he had any contacts in England who could supply new shirts in a colour that would better withstand the elements. He had a friend who lived in Nottingham, who being a Notts County supporter, shipped out the black and white striped shirts to Turin.[91] Juve have worn the shirts ever since, considering the colours to be aggressive and powerful.[91]

On 8 September 2011 to mark the opening of their new stadium in Turin, Juventus invited Notts County for an historic exhibition match. After a spectacular opening ceremony referencing Juve's history, the game ended 1–1, with goals from Luca Toni and Lee Hughes both coming in the second half.[92][93]

Stadium

 
View from Notts County's home ground, Meadow Lane, in 2007

The club initially played at Park Hollow in the grounds of the old Nottingham Castle.[94] In December 1864, the decision was made to play games against outside opposition, and it was decided that the club needed to find a bigger venue. After playing at several grounds, including the Castle Ground, the Magpies settled at Trent Bridge Cricket Ground in 1883.[94] However, when Trent Bridge was in use for cricket, Notts played matches at the Castle Ground or Nottingham Forest's Town Ground.[94] The club moved to their current ground, Meadow Lane, in 1910. It currently has an all-seated capacity of 19,841 for Football League games. The record attendance is 47,310, who watched Notts lose 1–0 to York City in the FA Cup sixth round on 12 March 1955.[95]

Supporters and rivalries

The Notts County Supporters Trust were the majority shareholders in the club between 2006 and 2009. When the club went into administration in 2003, and looked to be going out of business, the money to keep it in business was only found a week before the Football League's deadline. During this time, the supporters decided to form a supporters trust. In 2006 the trust eventually took control of Notts County Football Club, buying the club from Haydn Green. In 2009, members of the trust voted to accept a takeover bid from Munto Finance, with Peter Trembling named as Chairman. The group saw Sven-Göran Eriksson come in as Director of Football and Sol Campbell as a player. The club has a very large overseas following, with a large number of overseas fans mostly from Italy and Hungary, despite its relative lack of silverware; it was reported the number was one of the highest in The Football League.[96][97]

Famous supporters include television and theatre writer William Ivory,[98] musician Jake Bugg who sponsored the club in 2017,[99] MP Kenneth Clarke[100] (although he supports Forest as well) and infamously mass-murderer serial killer Harold Shipman.[101][100][102]

Notts County view their main rivals as neighbours Nottingham Forest. However, during recent stints in the lower levels of the Football League, rivalry has increased with Nottinghamshire neighbours Mansfield Town. Other clubs sharing local rivalries with Notts County are Derby County, Lincoln City, Leicester City, and Chesterfield.

Honours

source:[103][104]

League

1896–97, 1913–14, 1922–23, 1991 (play off)
1930–31, 1949–50, 1990 (play off)
1970–71, 1997–98, 2009–10
2023 (play off)

Cup

1893–94
Runners-up: 1890–91
1995
  • Notts Senior Cup: 11
1884–85, 1899–1900, 1900–01, 1902–03, 1910–11, 1911–12, 1924–25, 1928–29, 1933–34, 1934–35, 1935–36

Club records

Highest attendance 47,310 vs York City, FA Cup 6th round, 12 March 1955
Highest gate receipts £277,781.25 vs Manchester City, FA Cup 4th round, 30 January 2011
Record League victory 11–1 vs Newport County, Division Three South, 15 January 1949
Record Cup victory 15–0 vs Rotherham Town, FA Cup 1st round, 24 October 1885
Most League points (2 for a win) 69, Division Four 1970–71
Most League points (3 for a win) 107, National League 2022–23
Most League goals 117, National League 2022–23
Highest scorer in one season Macaulay Langstaff, 42, National League 2022–23
All-time top scorer (League) Les Bradd, 125, 1967–78
Fastest goal 6 seconds, Barrie Jones, 31 March 1962
All-time most appearances (League) Albert Iremonger, 564, 1904–26
Youngest player (League) Tony Bircumshaw, 16 years and 54 days, 3 April 1961
Longest league unbeaten run 25, 24 September 2022 – 25 February 2023. 19 wins, 6 draws.
Most consecutive away league games without defeat 19, 28 February 2012 – 26 December 2012

As of the 2018–19 season, Notts County had played more league games (4,986) than any other English team, although following relegation to the National League this has subsequently been superseded by Preston North End.[105][106]

League history

L1 = Level 1 of the football league system; L2 = Level 2 of the football league system; L3 = Level 3 of the football league system; L4 = Level 4 of the football league system; L5 = Level 5 of the football league system.

  • Seasons spent at Level 1 of the football league system: 30
  • Seasons spent at Level 2 of the football league system: 37
  • Seasons spent at Level 3 of the football league system: 34
  • Seasons spent at Level 4 of the football league system: 18
  • Seasons spent at Level 5 of the football league system: 4

With a total of 14 promotions and 17 relegations,[107] no club has moved between the divisions of the Football League on more occasions than Notts County.

Promotion years: 1897 1914 1923 1931 1950 1960 1971 1973 1981 1990 1991 1998 2010 2023

Relegation years: 1893 1913 1920 1926 1930 1935 1958 1959 1964 1984 1985 1992 1995 1997 2004 2015 2019

Most appearances

Name Career Appearances
1   Albert Iremonger 1904–26 601
2   Brian Stubbs 1968–80 486
3   Pedro Richards 1974–86 485
4   David Needham 1965–77 471
5   Don Masson 1968–82 455
6   Les Bradd 1967–78 442
7   Percy Mills 1927–39 434
8=   Billy Flint 1908–26 408
8=   David Hunt 1977–87 408
10   Dean Yates 1985–95 394

Most goals

Name Career Goals
1   Les Bradd 1967–78 137
2   Tony Hateley 1958–63, 1970–72 114
3   Jackie Sewell 1946–51 104
4   Tommy Lawton 1947–52 103
5   Tom Keetley 1929–33 98
6   Don Masson 1968–82 97
7   Tom Johnston 1948–57 93
8   Ian McParland 1980–89 90
9   Harry Daft 1885–95 81
10=   Mark Stallard 1999–2004, 2005 79
10=   Trevor Christie 1979–84 79
10=   Gary Lund 1987–95 79


Players

Current squad

As of 23 May 2023[108]

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 Sam Slocombe
2 DF   ENG Richard Brindley
4 DF   SCO Kyle Cameron (captain)
5 DF   WAL Connell Rawlinson
6 MF   IRL Jim O'Brien
8 MF   ENG Sam Austin
9 FW   ENG Macaulay Langstaff
10 MF   MLT Jodi Jones
11 MF   FRA Aaron Nemane
12 GK   IRL Tiernan Brooks
15 DF   ENG Aden Baldwin
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 DF   ALB Geraldo Bajrami
18 MF   ENG Matt Palmer
19 FW   ENG Cedwyn Scott
20 FW   POR Rúben Rodrigues
21 DF   ENG Tobi Adebayo-Rowling
22 FW   ENG Luther Munakandafa
23 DF   ZIM Adam Chicksen
24 MF   ENG John Bostock
26 FW   JAM Junior Morias
31 DF   ENG Lucien Mahovo
33 MF   ENG Charlie Gill

Players of the season

As voted for by supporters of the club.[109]
Year Winner
1965   George Smith
1966   Brian Bates
1967   Alex Gibson
1968   Keith Smith
1969   Don Masson
1970   David Needham
1971   Brian Stubbs
1972   Les Bradd
1973   Roy Brown
1974   Don Masson
1975   Bill Brindley
1976   Ray O'Brien
1977   Arthur Mann
1978   Mick Vinter
1979   Eric McManus
Year Winner
2023   Macaulay Langstaff

Club management

Coaching staff

Position Staff
Head coach Luke Williams
Assistant coach Ryan Harley
First team assistant George Lawtey[111]
Goalkeeping coach Tom Weal
Academy manager Dave Plant
Performance analyst João Alves

Last updated: 25 August 2022
Source: Staff directory

Managerial history

As of 13 May 2023
Name Nat From To Days in
charge
Record
P W D L Win %
by committee[112]   1862 1913
Albert Fisher (secretary – manager)   1913 1927
R.C.White (Fisher's absence due to WW1)   1917 1919
Horace Henshall (secretary – manager)   1927 1934
Charlie Jones   1934 1935
David Pratt   1935 1935
Percy Smith   1935 1936
Jimmy McMullan   1936 1937
Harry Parkes   1938 1938
J.R. `Tony`Towers   1939 1942
Frank Womack   1942 1943
Frank Buckley   1944 1946
Arthur Stollery   1946 1949
Eric Houghton   1949 1953
George Poyser   1953 1957
Frank Broome (caretaker)   1957 1957
Tommy Lawton   7 May 1957 1 July 1958 44 13 6 25 029.55
Ernie Coleman (caretaker)   1958 1958
Frank Hill   1958 1961
Ernie Coleman   1961 1963
Eddie Lowe   1963 1965
Tim Coleman   1965 1965
Jack Burkitt   1966 1967
Andy Beattie   February 1967 September 1967 22 5 3 14 022.73
Billy Gray   1967 1968
Jack Wheeler   1968 1969
Jimmy Sirrel   1969 1975 291 139 72 80 047.77
Ronnie Fenton   1975 1977 90 35 24 31 038.89
Jimmy Sirrel   1977 1982 180 61 57 62 033.89
Howard Wilkinson   1982 1983 49 19 8 22 038.78
Larry Lloyd   1983 1984 66 19 15 32 028.79
Richie Barker   1984 1985 27 5 6 16 018.52
Jimmy Sirrel   1985 1987 110 46 32 32 041.82
John Barnwell   1987 1988 74 28 23 23 037.84
Neil Warnock   5 January 1989 14 January 1993 1,470 205 90 45 70 043.90
Mick Walker   14 January 1993 14 September 1994 608 82 31 19 32 037.80
Russell Slade   September 1994 January 1995 23 6 5 12 026.09
Howard Kendall   12 January 1995 1 April 1995 79 15 4 4 7 026.67
Steve Nicol   20 January 1995 5 June 1995 136 20 4 7 9 020.00
Colin Murphy   5 June 1995 23 December 1996 567 83 33 24 26 039.76
Sam Allardyce   16 January 1997 19 October 1999 1,006 145 56 39 50 038.62
Gary Brazil   23 October 1999 June 2000 34 10 9 15 029.41
Jocky Scott   28 June 2000 10 October 2001 469 71 28 19 24 039.44
Gary Brazil   10 October 2001 7 January 2002 89 20 4 6 10 020.00
Bill Dearden   7 January 2002 6 January 2004 730 103 30 27 46 029.13
Gary Mills   9 January 2004 4 November 2004 301 40 10 11 19 025.00
Ian Richardson (Caretaker)   4 November 2004 17 May 2005 194 34 11 9 14 032.35
Gudjon Thordarson   17 May 2005 12 June 2006 391 50 13 16 21 026.00
Steve Thompson   12 June 2006 16 October 2007 491 65 21 19 25 032.31
Ian McParland   18 October 2007 12 October 2009 725 103 28 31 44 027.18
Dave Kevan /
Michael Johnson (Caretakers)
 
 
13 October 2009 27 October 2009 14 2 1 1 0 050.00
Hans Backe   27 October 2009 15 December 2009 49 7 2 3 2 028.57
Dave Kevan (caretaker)   15 December 2009 23 February 2010 70 11 6 3 2 054.55
Steve Cotterill   23 February 2010 27 May 2010 93 18 14 3 1 077.78
Craig Short   1 July 2010 24 October 2010 115 18 8 1 9 044.44
Paul Ince   27 October 2010 3 April 2011 158 29 10 6 13 034.48
Carl Heggs (caretaker)   3 April 2011 11 April 2011 8 2 0 0 2 000.00
Martin Allen   11 April 2011 18 February 2012 313 43 16 10 17 037.21
Keith Curle   20 February 2012 2 February 2013 348 51 23 14 14 045.10
Chris Kiwomya   2 February 2013 27 October 2013 267 34 9 9 16 026.47
Steve Hodge (caretaker)   27 October 2013 6 November 2013 10 2 1 0 1 050.00
Shaun Derry   6 November 2013 23 March 2015 502 77 26 14 37 033.77
Paul Hart /
Mick Halsall (caretakers)
 
 
23 March 2015 7 April 2015 15 3 0 3 0 000.00
Ricardo Moniz   7 April 2015 29 December 2015 266 34 11 8 15 032.35
Mick Halsall /
Richard Dryden (caretakers)
 
 
29 December 2015 10 January 2016 12 1 0 0 1 000.00
Jamie Fullarton   10 January 2016 19 March 2016 69 12 3 1 8 025.00
Mark Cooper   20 March 2016 7 May 2016 48 10 3 2 5 030.00
John Sheridan   27 May 2016 2 January 2017 220 32 8 6 18 025.00
Alan Smith (caretaker)   3 January 2017 12 January 2017 10 1 0 0 1 000.00
Kevin Nolan   12 January 2017 26 August 2018 591 84 35 23 26 041.67
Steve Chettle /
Mark Crossley (caretakers)
 
 
26 August 2018 1 September 2018 6 1 0 0 1 000.00
Harry Kewell   31 August 2018 13 November 2018 74 14 3 4 7 021.43
Steve Chettle (caretaker)   13 November 2018 27 November 2018 15 4 1 2 1 025.00
Neal Ardley[113]   28 November 2018 24 March 2021 855 108 46 29 33 042.59
Ian Burchnall   25 March 2021 27 May 2022 428 70 36 14 20 051.43
Luke Williams   14 June 2022 Present 51 34 13 4 066.67

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External links

  • Official website  
  • Notts County F.C. on BBC Sport: Club news – Recent results and fixtures

notts, county, notts, county, football, club, professional, association, football, club, based, nottingham, england, team, compete, national, league, fifth, level, english, football, league, system, 2022, season, founded, november, 1862, oldest, professional, . Notts County Football Club is a professional association football club based in Nottingham England The team compete in the National League the fifth level of the English football league system as of the 2022 23 season Founded on 28 November 1862 it is the oldest professional association football club in the world and predates the Football Association itself The club became one of the 12 founder members of the Football League in 1888 They are nicknamed the Magpies due to the black and white colour of their home strip which inspired Italian club Juventus to adopt the colours for their kit in 1903 After playing at different home grounds during its first fifty years including Trent Bridge the club moved to Meadow Lane in 1910 and remains there Notts County has a local rivalry with city neighbour Nottingham Forest as well as with other nearby clubs such as Mansfield Town Notts CountyFull nameNotts County Football ClubNickname s The MagpiesFounded28 November 1862 160 years ago 28 November 1862 1 GroundMeadow LaneCapacity19 841 2 Coordinates52 56 33 N 1 8 14 W 52 94250 N 1 13722 W 52 94250 1 13722OwnerAlexander and Christoffer Reedtz 3 ChairmanChristoffer Reedtz 4 Head coachLuke WilliamsLeagueNational League2022 23National League 2nd of 24 promoted via play offs WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursCurrent seasonNotts County finished third in the top flight of English football in the 1890 91 season which together with the same achievement 10 seasons later remains their highest ever league position They also reached the 1891 FA Cup final finishing as runners up to Blackburn Rovers However three years later the club won the 1894 FA Cup final with a 4 1 victory over Bolton Wanderers From 1897 until 1920 they played in the First Division which was then the top flight barring the 1913 14 season when they won the Second Division immediately following relegation the previous year They won the Second Division for a third time in the 1922 23 campaign before suffering relegations down to the Third Division South which they won in their first attempt in 1930 31 The club were back in the Third Division South by World War II but were again promoted as champions in 1949 50 and spent most of the 1950s in the second tier before successive relegations saw them drop back into the Fourth Division County won promotion as runners up in 1959 60 They returned to the fourth tier by 1964 but were promoted as champions in the 1970 71 season before securing promotion out of the Third Division under the stewardship of Jimmy Sirrel in 1972 73 They made their return to the top flight by finishing as runners up of the Second Division in 1980 81 County were relegated after a three season stay and ended the decade back in the third tier before Neil Warnock masterminded play off successes in 1990 and 1991 that saw them promoted back into the top flight Immediate relegations followed and despite a takeover by a Middle Eastern consortium in 2009 County were eventually relegated from the Football League for the first time in 2018 19 Four years later in 2022 23 they returned to League Two via the National League play offs Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginnings 1862 1942 1 2 Two golden ages 1945 1987 1 3 Chasing the Premier League 1987 1995 1 4 Mixed fortunes 1995 2008 1 5 The 2009 10 season 1 6 Falling out of the Football League 2010 1 7 The Danish Football Radar ownership 2019 2 Kit and badge 2 1 Juventus F C shirts 3 Stadium 4 Supporters and rivalries 5 Honours 5 1 Club records 5 2 League history 5 3 Most appearances 5 4 Most goals 6 Players 6 1 Current squad 6 2 Players of the season 7 Club management 7 1 Coaching staff 7 2 Managerial history 8 References 9 External linksHistory Edit Plaque at the George Hotel Nottingham commemorating Notts County Football Club s first meeting to elect officers and committee on 7 December 1864 Chart showing the progress of Notts County F C through the English football league system Beginnings 1862 1942 Edit Notts County was formed on 28 November 1862 as Nottingham Football Club 1 with official formation took place during committee meeting at the George Hotel on 7 December 1864 as Notts Foot Ball Club 1 5 thus claiming it to be as the oldest professional association football club in the world 6 7 The club predates The Football Association and initially played a game of its own devising rather than association football At the time of its formation Notts County like most sports teams were considered to be a gentlemen only club Notts County are considered to be one of the pioneers of the modern game and are the oldest of the world s professional association football clubs there are older professional clubs in other codes of football and Sheffield F C an amateur club founded in 1857 are the oldest club now playing association football 8 In November 1872 the Notts County full back Harwood Greenhalgh played for England against Scotland in the first ever international match thereby becoming the club s first international player 9 In 1888 Notts County along with 11 other football clubs became a founding member of The Football League 10 They finished their first league season in 11th place but avoided the dubious honour of the wooden spoon which went to Midlands rivals Stoke City 11 However the club did achieve their highest ever league finish of third in 1890 91 12 an achievement they repeated 10 seasons later 13 The team that won the 1894 FA Cup On 21 March 1891 Notts County played in the FA Cup final for the first time 14 The Magpies were defeated 3 1 by Blackburn Rovers at The Oval despite having beaten the same side 7 1 in the league only a week earlier County made up for this on 31 March 1894 when they won the FA Cup at Goodison Park defeating Bolton Wanderers 4 1 in a game in which Jimmy Logan scored the second hat trick in FA Cup final history 6 This achievement is also memorable for Notts County becoming the first club outside the top division to win the FA Cup Notts County finished third in Division Two that season In 1910 they moved to Meadow Lane 6 County were relegated in 1926 in what was to be their last season in the English top flight for over half a century 15 The 1925 26 season was the last season that famed giant goalkeeper Albert Iremonger played for the club Legend among Notts County supporters it has been said he had hands like the claws of a JCB and was a seven foot tall monster 16 The club suspended all fixtures during the 1941 42 season after Meadow Lane was hit by enemy bombing 17 Two golden ages 1945 1987 Edit In the 1946 47 season the ground was used temporarily by Nottingham Forest after the River Trent flooded both Meadow Lane and the City Ground 18 Forest again used Meadow Lane in 1968 after fire destroyed the main stand at the City Ground 19 The golden age of the club came just after the end of the Second World War 6 County stunned the footballing world by signing Tommy Lawton from Chelsea for a then record fee of 20 000 17 equivalent to 832 500 in 2021 20 Lawton s arrival increased crowds by over 10 000 One incident during this period saw 10 000 fans locked outside the ground In the 1949 50 season Notts County clinched the Third Division South championship 21 Crowds averaged 35 000 as The Magpies held off Nottingham Forest in a thrilling championship race 6 As the 1950s drew to a close Nottingham Forest replaced Notts County as the city s biggest club After the 1957 58 season the two clubs did not play each other again in a League match for 16 years until 26 December 1973 22 Jimmy Sirrel amp Jack Wheeler statue at Meadow Lane The Magpies struggled during the 1960s being on the brink of financial ruin and striving to avoid the indignity of having to apply for re election to the league citation needed This situation continued until Jack Dunnett a local member of parliament took control of the club 23 He appointed Jimmy Sirrel a charismatic Scot who had once played for Celtic as manager in November 1969 23 In the 1970 71 season County clinched the Fourth Division title in record breaking style remaining unbeaten at Meadow Lane 24 Two seasons later Notts County was again promoted this time to Division Two 25 Sirrel departed for Sheffield United in October 1975 but returned two years later citation needed He completed the remarkable transformation of Notts County in May 1981 citation needed He had turned The Magpies from Fourth Division strugglers to a top division side in little over a decade ending an absence of 55 years from the top flight 6 This achievement was with the same chairman Jack Dunnett and trainer Jack Wheeler throughout the decade citation needed In one of the most famous moments in the club s modern history Notts County visited newly crowned champions Aston Villa on the opening day of the 1981 82 season The Villa team had paraded their 1980 81 League Championship trophy to an expectant crowd before kickoff but against all odds County came away with a 1 0 victory After surviving relegation at the end of the season Sirrel became the club s general manager with his assistant Howard Wilkinson taking over as manager citation needed County survived relegation a little more comfortably the following season but Wilkinson was tempted away by the manager s job at his boyhood club Sheffield Wednesday and the board recruited former Wigan Athletic manager Larry Lloyd to replace him Despite a good run to the quarter finals of the FA Cup where they were knocked out by eventual winners Everton the club had a poor league campaign that ultimately resulted in their relegation citation needed This poor form continued into the following season resulting in Lloyd s dismissal with the club bottom of the Second Division Richie Barker took over as manager but failed to improve the club s fortunes and was dismissed after less than six months in charge citation needed Jimmy Sirrel took charge of the team once again and while the club s form improved it came too late and County suffered their second successive relegation citation needed After two decent but unremarkable finishes in the Third Division Sirrel finally retired in 1987 bringing to a close one of the most successful and memorable periods in Notts County s history citation needed Chasing the Premier League 1987 1995 Edit Sirrel was replaced by John Barnwell who nearly steered the club to automatic promotion in the season that followed but a late stumble meant they had to settle for the play offs where they lost to eventual winners Walsall citation needed The team failed to repeat their form the following season and instead found themselves battling relegation to the Fourth Division resulting in Barnwell being dismissed just before Christmas citation needed In late 1988 a new manager arrived Neil Warnock had previously led Scarborough into the Football League as champions of the Football Conference At the end of his first full season Warnock had led Notts County to promotion back to Division Two The club anthem The Wheelbarrow song originated during this season stemming from the club s historic first game at Wembley Stadium in a 2 0 win over Tranmere Rovers A famous 1 0 victory over Manchester City in the FA Cup booked them a place in the quarter final which they lost to eventual winners Tottenham Hotspur Notts County also booked their second successive visit to Wembley and their second successive promotion The Magpies defeated Brighton amp Hove Albion 3 1 in front of 60 000 spectators 25 000 of which were Notts County fans The following season was disappointing seeing Notts County relegated from the top flight after just one season back there Their first game of that season was a visit to Manchester United at Old Trafford where they lost 2 0 However they did manage to hold Manchester United to a 1 1 draw in the return game at Meadow Lane just after the turn of the year as United began a dismal second half of the season which ultimately cost them the league title County s relegation came shortly after the sale of strikers Paul Rideout and Tommy Johnson which raked in nearly 2million in total and contributed towards a 5million stadium revamp which saw Meadow Lane rebuilt on three sides shortly afterwards 26 With the introduction of the Premier League County were relegated from the old Division One to the new Division One Warnock was dismissed in January 1993 and was succeeded by Mick Walker Walker successfully averted a second consecutive relegation citation needed The Magpies narrowly missed the play offs for promotion to the Premiership citation needed The season is most remembered for a 2 1 victory over archrivals Nottingham Forest in which Charlie Palmer scored the winning goal with just four minutes remaining Notts had led for much of the game until Forest got a free kick from which they equalised Notts fans were reluctantly resigning themselves to a draw when Palmer headed in the winner This was all the more remarkable because he only scored 4 goals in his whole career The game has become a celebrated event among Notts County fans who have dubbed 12 February the anniversary of the game Sir Charlie Palmer Day and Charlie Palmer has been referred to as Sir Charlie by Notts fans ever since 27 In March 1994 Notts County lost the Anglo Italian Cup final to Brescia 28 Walker was surprisingly sacked in September 1994 citation needed This event triggered a dramatic decline in the club s fortunes that has persisted to the present Notts won the Anglo Italian Cup at Wembley in March 1995 but ended the season relegated to Division Two with Walker Russell Slade Howard Kendall and Steve Nicol each taking control of the team at different times throughout the season before the club appointed yet another manager Colin Murphy after the season ended 29 Mixed fortunes 1995 2008 Edit County made another visit to Wembley Stadium in the 1996 play off final but missed the chance of a return to Division One with a 2 0 defeat to Bradford City 30 The following season ranks among the club s worst as they managed just seven victories all season and finished in the bottom position of the league table 31 Relegation to the league s basement division happened just six years after promotion to the top flight However success followed relegation under Sam Allardyce 32 The Magpies secured the Division Three title in March 1998 by a record margin of seventeen points 33 They became the first side since World War II to win promotion in mid March with six games still remaining 34 Logo used from 2002 to 2009 Allardyce left in October 1999 to join his old team Bolton Wanderers 35 In September 2003 Notts County faced the real possibility of dissolution 36 Crippling debts and an increasingly impatient Football League board combined to leave the future of the league s oldest club in doubt 36 However the considerable efforts of a group of local businessmen and the club s supporters helped save the club from extinction 37 But despite new ownership the club were unable to avoid relegation back to the bottom division in 2004 38 In a similar circumstance as their relegation in 1992 due to the rebranding of the Football League County went from Division Two to League Two citation needed Ian Richardson replaced Gary Mills as manager in November 2004 39 Richardson managed to guide the club away from the relegation zone and held the manager s job until the end of the season when Gudjon Thordarson became the club s sixth manager in five years 40 The 2005 06 season began well for the Magpies they won or drew their first seven league games and were top of the table in September 41 But their form dropped and they escaped relegation only on the final day of the season with a 2 2 draw against Bury whilst Oxford United lost and went down 42 The Magpies 21st place in League Two and 89th place overall was the lowest position the club had ever finished and at the end of the season both the chairman and the manager left a long standing youth squad programme was ended and many of the first team players were out of contract or nearing contract maturity citation needed Former assistant manager Steve Thompson was appointed as manager and he led the team to a 13th place division finish in 2006 07 citation needed The following season started with poor results including early exits from the League Cup and the EFL Trophy and Thompson was sacked in October 2007 to be replaced by Ian Charlie McParland citation needed However the team s poor form continued and safety from relegation was only secured in the penultimate match of the season citation needed The 2009 10 season Edit The logo used during the 2009 10 season In June 2009 it was announced that County were in talks on a takeover by Munto Finance a Middle Eastern consortium owned by Qadbak Investments and represented by Nathan and Peter Willett Speculated by the British media and supported in part by various press releases the club were believed to be given multimillion pound backing and were linked during the takeover s initial planning stages with the Qatari royal family by British tabloids However the latter claim was denied by the family 43 The supporters trust which owned the majority 60 share in the club voted in favour of the takeover 44 On 14 July 2009 the takeover was confirmed with Peter Trembling being appointed as executive chairman 45 A week later former England manager Sven Goran Eriksson was announced as the club s new director of football 6 46 having been persuaded by convicted fraudster Russell King to join Notts County 47 On 28 July 2009 the club unveiled a new logo 48 The biggest headlines of the summer were made with the signings of England international defender Sol Campbell and of goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel Schmeichel a future Denmark international and Premier League winner had just been released by Manchester City and dropped a full three divisions to accept a five year contract with County Campbell 34 moved from Premier League Portsmouth where he had been an FA Cup winner just eight months previously but played only one game for County before walking out citing false promises 49 Schmeichel remained for the whole season travelling with the squad to away games by private jet but was never paid by the club claiming in hindsight it was all a farce and I knew something was wrong but I didn t care because I just wanted to play football 50 On 20 October 2009 the League announced that County s owners had met its fit and proper persons regulations and that while their structure was complicated and featured both offshore entities and discretionary trusts it had provided extensive disclosure to the League on their ownership structure 51 The League also stated that public disclosure of their ownership structure was a matter for the club 51 McParland parted company with the club in October 2009 with Notts fifth in League Two and 4 points from the top of the table youth team manager Michael Johnson and assistant manager Dave Kevan were installed as joint caretaker managers citation needed On 27 November 2009 The Guardian revealed that the league had reopened inquiries into the ownership of Notts County 52 The League chairman Brian Mawhinney confirmed that the club had been sent a series of questions relating to its ownership structure 52 On 12 December 2009 Peter Trembling purchased the club from Munto Finance for a nominal fee 53 Hans Backe Eriksson s former assistant at Manchester City was given the job of manager in October 2009 He signed a three year deal and stated his intent to get the club promoted to League One but resigned two months later after just nine games in charge 54 Ray Trew bought the club in February 2010 55 after it had been served with two winding up petitions from HM Revenue and Customs due to demands for a late PAYE payment of around 500 000 56 After two months without a permanent manager Steve Cotterill was given the Notts County job until the end of the 2009 2010 season in February 2010 57 58 Cotterill led the club to the League Two title after a 5 0 away win against the already relegated Darlington 59 becoming the third club to win the fourth tier of English football three times A month after winning the title Cotterill stated that he would not be renewing his contract at Meadow Lane Falling out of the Football League 2010 Edit A succession of short term managers were able to keep the club afloat in League One Ex Notts County player Craig Short replaced Cotterill as Manager but was relieved of duties on 24 October 2010 60 Paul Ince took over in October 2010 61 then Martin Allen in April 2011 62 Keith Curle in February 2012 Chris Kiwomya in March 2013 after a short caretaker spell 63 and Shaun Derry in November 2013 64 Derry was able to turn the team s fortunes around and avoid relegation thanks to a 1 1 draw away at Oldham Athletic on the final day of the 2013 14 season 65 In March 2015 following Derry and assistant manager Greg Abbott s sackings they were relegated to League Two 66 Ricardo Moniz joined on a three year contract 67 but lasted only until 29 December 2015 68 Jamie Fullarton s reign was even shorter appointed in January 2016 on a three and a half year contract 69 but sacked in March after 12 games 70 during which time Ray Trew stepped down as chairman Mark Cooper was Fullarton s temporary replacement with the contract to be made permanent if a certain undisclosed amount of points total was achieved 71 but on 7 May Cooper left the club of his own volition 72 Later that month John Sheridan left Oldham Athletic to become manager on a three year contract 73 Sheridan was sacked in January 2017 for gross misconduct following his verbal assaults and threats against match officials during the club s 2 0 home defeat by Wycombe Wanderers in December 74 75 On 7 January 2017 Notts County set a new club record of 10 successive defeats On 12 January 2017 Alan Hardy completed the takeover of the club from Ray Trew 76 and appointed Kevin Nolan as manager followed in August 2018 by Harry Kewell 77 Kewell left the club On 13 November 2018 to be replaced by Neal Ardley 78 79 On 27 January 2019 with County bottom of League Two Hardy officially put the club up for sale 80 though not before attracting the attention of the FA for accidentally including a picture of his penis in a screenshot posted to Twitter 81 On 4 May 2019 following a 3 1 defeat away at Swindon Town Notts County was relegated from the English Football League for the first time in their 157 year history In the summer the club was sold to Danish businessmen Alexander and Christoffer Reedtz 82 The Danish Football Radar ownership 2019 Edit In the 2019 20 season Notts County came within 90 minutes of regaining their Football League status at the first attempt but lost 3 1 to Harrogate Town on 2 August 2020 in the National League play off final held behind closed doors at Wembley Stadium 83 In the 2020 21 season which was also their second consecutive season in the National League they finished in 5th place and beat Chesterfield 3 2 in the quarter final of the promotion play offs 84 However they lost 4 2 to Torquay United in the semi finals in extra time 85 In the 2021 22 season they again finished fifth in the League but were knocked out by Grimsby Town in the quarter final 86 In the 2022 23 season they finished second in the League with 107 points surpassing the previous league record for points in a season but finishing behind Wrexham In the play off semi final they beat Boreham Wood coming from two goals down to equalise in stoppage time before securing their win with a goal in the final minute of extra time 87 In the 2023 National League play off final County won promotion to the League Two by defeating Chesterfield at Wembley Stadium 88 The match finished 2 2 after extra time with Notts County winning the subsequent penalty shootout 4 3 88 Kit and badge EditNotts County s first known colours were amber and black hooped shirts dating from the 1870s This was followed by short spells playing in amber then chocolate and blue halves In 1890 the club adopted black and white striped shirts and have played in these colours for most of the rest of their history 89 Juventus F C shirts Edit The Italian football club Juventus derived its famous black and white striped kits from Notts County Juventus have played in black and white striped shirts and with white or sometimes black shorts since 1903 Originally they played in pink shirts with a black tie which only occurred due to the wrong shirts being sent to them The father of one of the players made the earliest shirts but continual washing faded the colour so much that in 1903 the club sought to replace them 90 Juventus asked one of their team members Englishman John Savage if he had any contacts in England who could supply new shirts in a colour that would better withstand the elements He had a friend who lived in Nottingham who being a Notts County supporter shipped out the black and white striped shirts to Turin 91 Juve have worn the shirts ever since considering the colours to be aggressive and powerful 91 On 8 September 2011 to mark the opening of their new stadium in Turin Juventus invited Notts County for an historic exhibition match After a spectacular opening ceremony referencing Juve s history the game ended 1 1 with goals from Luca Toni and Lee Hughes both coming in the second half 92 93 Stadium Edit View from Notts County s home ground Meadow Lane in 2007 1862 1863 Park Hollow The Park Estate 1863 1873 Meadows Cricket Ground 1873 1877 Trent Bridge Cricket Ground 1877 1878 Beeston Cricket Ground 1880 1894 Castle Ground 1894 1910 Trent Bridge Cricket Ground 1910 present Meadow LaneThe club initially played at Park Hollow in the grounds of the old Nottingham Castle 94 In December 1864 the decision was made to play games against outside opposition and it was decided that the club needed to find a bigger venue After playing at several grounds including the Castle Ground the Magpies settled at Trent Bridge Cricket Ground in 1883 94 However when Trent Bridge was in use for cricket Notts played matches at the Castle Ground or Nottingham Forest s Town Ground 94 The club moved to their current ground Meadow Lane in 1910 It currently has an all seated capacity of 19 841 for Football League games The record attendance is 47 310 who watched Notts lose 1 0 to York City in the FA Cup sixth round on 12 March 1955 95 Supporters and rivalries EditSee also Nottingham derby The Notts County Supporters Trust were the majority shareholders in the club between 2006 and 2009 When the club went into administration in 2003 and looked to be going out of business the money to keep it in business was only found a week before the Football League s deadline During this time the supporters decided to form a supporters trust In 2006 the trust eventually took control of Notts County Football Club buying the club from Haydn Green In 2009 members of the trust voted to accept a takeover bid from Munto Finance with Peter Trembling named as Chairman The group saw Sven Goran Eriksson come in as Director of Football and Sol Campbell as a player The club has a very large overseas following with a large number of overseas fans mostly from Italy and Hungary despite its relative lack of silverware it was reported the number was one of the highest in The Football League 96 97 Famous supporters include television and theatre writer William Ivory 98 musician Jake Bugg who sponsored the club in 2017 99 MP Kenneth Clarke 100 although he supports Forest as well and infamously mass murderer serial killer Harold Shipman 101 100 102 Notts County view their main rivals as neighbours Nottingham Forest However during recent stints in the lower levels of the Football League rivalry has increased with Nottinghamshire neighbours Mansfield Town Other clubs sharing local rivalries with Notts County are Derby County Lincoln City Leicester City and Chesterfield Honours Editsource 103 104 League Second Division Championship level 2 1896 97 1913 14 1922 23 1991 play off Third Division League One level 3 1930 31 1949 50 1990 play off Fourth Division League Two level 4 1970 71 1997 98 2009 10National league level 5 2023 play off Cup FA Cup1893 94 Runners up 1890 91Anglo Italian Cup1995Notts Senior Cup 111884 85 1899 1900 1900 01 1902 03 1910 11 1911 12 1924 25 1928 29 1933 34 1934 35 1935 36Club records Edit Highest attendance 47 310 vs York City FA Cup 6th round 12 March 1955Highest gate receipts 277 781 25 vs Manchester City FA Cup 4th round 30 January 2011Record League victory 11 1 vs Newport County Division Three South 15 January 1949Record Cup victory 15 0 vs Rotherham Town FA Cup 1st round 24 October 1885Most League points 2 for a win 69 Division Four 1970 71Most League points 3 for a win 107 National League 2022 23Most League goals 117 National League 2022 23Highest scorer in one season Macaulay Langstaff 42 National League 2022 23All time top scorer League Les Bradd 125 1967 78Fastest goal 6 seconds Barrie Jones 31 March 1962All time most appearances League Albert Iremonger 564 1904 26Youngest player League Tony Bircumshaw 16 years and 54 days 3 April 1961Longest league unbeaten run 25 24 September 2022 25 February 2023 19 wins 6 draws Most consecutive away league games without defeat 19 28 February 2012 26 December 2012As of the 2018 19 season Notts County had played more league games 4 986 than any other English team although following relegation to the National League this has subsequently been superseded by Preston North End 105 106 League history Edit Further information List of Notts County F C seasons 1888 1893 Division 1 L1 1893 1897 Division 2 L2 1897 1913 Division 1 L1 1913 1914 Division 2 L2 1914 1920 Division 1 L1 1920 1923 Division 2 L2 1923 1926 Division 1 L1 1926 1930 Division 2 L2 1930 1931 Division 3 S L3 1931 1935 Division 2 L2 1935 1950 Division 3 S L3 1950 1958 Division 2 L2 1958 1959 Division 3 L3 1959 1960 Division 4 L4 1960 1964 Division 3 L3 1964 1971 Division 4 L4 1971 1973 Division 3 L3 1973 1981 Division 2 L2 1981 1984 Division 1 L1 1984 1985 Division 2 L2 1985 1990 Division 3 L3 1990 1991 Division 2 L2 1991 1992 Division 1 L1 1992 1995 Division 1 L2 1995 1997 Division 2 L3 1997 1998 Division 3 L4 1998 2004 Division 2 L3 2004 2010 League Two L4 2010 2015 League One L3 2015 2019 League Two L4 2019 2023 National League L5 2023 League Two L4 L1 Level 1 of the football league system L2 Level 2 of the football league system L3 Level 3 of the football league system L4 Level 4 of the football league system L5 Level 5 of the football league system Seasons spent at Level 1 of the football league system 30 Seasons spent at Level 2 of the football league system 37 Seasons spent at Level 3 of the football league system 34 Seasons spent at Level 4 of the football league system 18 Seasons spent at Level 5 of the football league system 4With a total of 14 promotions and 17 relegations 107 no club has moved between the divisions of the Football League on more occasions than Notts County Promotion years 1897 1914 1923 1931 1950 1960 1971 1973 1981 1990 1991 1998 2010 2023Relegation years 1893 1913 1920 1926 1930 1935 1958 1959 1964 1984 1985 1992 1995 1997 2004 2015 2019 Most appearances Edit Name Career Appearances1 Albert Iremonger 1904 26 6012 Brian Stubbs 1968 80 4863 Pedro Richards 1974 86 4854 David Needham 1965 77 4715 Don Masson 1968 82 4556 Les Bradd 1967 78 4427 Percy Mills 1927 39 4348 Billy Flint 1908 26 4088 David Hunt 1977 87 40810 Dean Yates 1985 95 394Most goals Edit Name Career Goals1 Les Bradd 1967 78 1372 Tony Hateley 1958 63 1970 72 1143 Jackie Sewell 1946 51 1044 Tommy Lawton 1947 52 1035 Tom Keetley 1929 33 986 Don Masson 1968 82 977 Tom Johnston 1948 57 938 Ian McParland 1980 89 909 Harry Daft 1885 95 8110 Mark Stallard 1999 2004 2005 7910 Trevor Christie 1979 84 7910 Gary Lund 1987 95 79Players EditCurrent squad Edit As of 23 May 2023 108 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 Sam Slocombe2 DF ENG Richard Brindley4 DF SCO Kyle Cameron captain 5 DF WAL Connell Rawlinson6 MF IRL Jim O Brien8 MF ENG Sam Austin9 FW ENG Macaulay Langstaff10 MF MLT Jodi Jones11 MF FRA Aaron Nemane12 GK IRL Tiernan Brooks15 DF ENG Aden Baldwin No Pos Nation Player16 DF ALB Geraldo Bajrami18 MF ENG Matt Palmer19 FW ENG Cedwyn Scott20 FW POR Ruben Rodrigues21 DF ENG Tobi Adebayo Rowling22 FW ENG Luther Munakandafa23 DF ZIM Adam Chicksen24 MF ENG John Bostock26 FW JAM Junior Morias31 DF ENG Lucien Mahovo33 MF ENG Charlie GillPlayers of the season Edit As voted for by supporters of the club 109 Year Winner1965 George Smith1966 Brian Bates1967 Alex Gibson1968 Keith Smith1969 Don Masson1970 David Needham1971 Brian Stubbs1972 Les Bradd1973 Roy Brown1974 Don Masson1975 Bill Brindley1976 Ray O Brien1977 Arthur Mann1978 Mick Vinter1979 Eric McManus Year Winner1980 David Hunt1981 Don Masson1982 Iain McCulloch1983 Radojko Avramovic1984 John Chiedozie Trevor Christie1985 Pedro Richards1986 Tristan Benjamin1987 Dean Yates1988 Geoff Pike1989 Chris Withe1990 Phil Turner1991 Craig Short1992 Steve Cherry1993 Dave Smith Year Winner1994 Phil Turner1995 Shaun Murphy1996 Shaun Murphy1997 Matt Redmile1998 Gary Jones1999 Ian Richardson Darren Ward2000 Alex Dyer2001 Mark Stallard2002 Danny Allsopp2003 Mark Stallard2004 Ian Richardson2005 Ian Richardson2006 David Pipe2007 Mike Edwards Year Winner2008 Kevin Pilkington2009 Matt Hamshaw2010 Neal Bishop2011 Ben Davies2012 Alan Judge2013 Gary Liddle2014 Alan Sheehan2015 Roy Carroll2016 Jon Stead2017 Robert Milsom2018 Matthew Tootle2019 Kane Hemmings2020 Connell Rawlinson 110 2021 Ruben Rodrigues2022 Matt Palmer Year Winner2023 Macaulay LangstaffFurther information List of Notts County F C playersClub management EditCoaching staff Edit Position StaffHead coach Luke WilliamsAssistant coach Ryan HarleyFirst team assistant George Lawtey 111 Goalkeeping coach Tom WealAcademy manager Dave PlantPerformance analyst Joao AlvesLast updated 25 August 2022Source Staff directory Managerial history Edit As of 13 May 2023Name Nat From To Days incharge RecordP W D L Win by committee 112 1862 1913 Albert Fisher secretary manager 1913 1927 R C White Fisher s absence due to WW1 1917 1919 Horace Henshall secretary manager 1927 1934 Charlie Jones 1934 1935 David Pratt 1935 1935 Percy Smith 1935 1936 Jimmy McMullan 1936 1937 Harry Parkes 1938 1938 J R Tony Towers 1939 1942 Frank Womack 1942 1943 Frank Buckley 1944 1946 Arthur Stollery 1946 1949 Eric Houghton 1949 1953 George Poyser 1953 1957 Frank Broome caretaker 1957 1957 Tommy Lawton 7 May 1957 1 July 1958 44 13 6 25 0 29 55Ernie Coleman caretaker 1958 1958 Frank Hill 1958 1961 Ernie Coleman 1961 1963 Eddie Lowe 1963 1965 Tim Coleman 1965 1965 Jack Burkitt 1966 1967 Andy Beattie February 1967 September 1967 22 5 3 14 0 22 73Billy Gray 1967 1968 Jack Wheeler 1968 1969 Jimmy Sirrel 1969 1975 291 139 72 80 0 47 77Ronnie Fenton 1975 1977 90 35 24 31 0 38 89Jimmy Sirrel 1977 1982 180 61 57 62 0 33 89Howard Wilkinson 1982 1983 49 19 8 22 0 38 78Larry Lloyd 1983 1984 66 19 15 32 0 28 79Richie Barker 1984 1985 27 5 6 16 0 18 52Jimmy Sirrel 1985 1987 110 46 32 32 0 41 82John Barnwell 1987 1988 74 28 23 23 0 37 84Neil Warnock 5 January 1989 14 January 1993 1 470 205 90 45 70 0 43 90Mick Walker 14 January 1993 14 September 1994 608 82 31 19 32 0 37 80Russell Slade September 1994 January 1995 23 6 5 12 0 26 09Howard Kendall 12 January 1995 1 April 1995 79 15 4 4 7 0 26 67Steve Nicol 20 January 1995 5 June 1995 136 20 4 7 9 0 20 00Colin Murphy 5 June 1995 23 December 1996 567 83 33 24 26 0 39 76Sam Allardyce 16 January 1997 19 October 1999 1 006 145 56 39 50 0 38 62Gary Brazil 23 October 1999 June 2000 34 10 9 15 0 29 41Jocky Scott 28 June 2000 10 October 2001 469 71 28 19 24 0 39 44Gary Brazil 10 October 2001 7 January 2002 89 20 4 6 10 0 20 00Bill Dearden 7 January 2002 6 January 2004 730 103 30 27 46 0 29 13Gary Mills 9 January 2004 4 November 2004 301 40 10 11 19 0 25 00Ian Richardson Caretaker 4 November 2004 17 May 2005 194 34 11 9 14 0 32 35Gudjon Thordarson 17 May 2005 12 June 2006 391 50 13 16 21 0 26 00Steve Thompson 12 June 2006 16 October 2007 491 65 21 19 25 0 32 31Ian McParland 18 October 2007 12 October 2009 725 103 28 31 44 0 27 18Dave Kevan Michael Johnson Caretakers 13 October 2009 27 October 2009 14 2 1 1 0 0 50 00Hans Backe 27 October 2009 15 December 2009 49 7 2 3 2 0 28 57Dave Kevan caretaker 15 December 2009 23 February 2010 70 11 6 3 2 0 54 55Steve Cotterill 23 February 2010 27 May 2010 93 18 14 3 1 0 77 78Craig Short 1 July 2010 24 October 2010 115 18 8 1 9 0 44 44Paul Ince 27 October 2010 3 April 2011 158 29 10 6 13 0 34 48Carl Heggs caretaker 3 April 2011 11 April 2011 8 2 0 0 2 00 0 00Martin Allen 11 April 2011 18 February 2012 313 43 16 10 17 0 37 21Keith Curle 20 February 2012 2 February 2013 348 51 23 14 14 0 45 10Chris Kiwomya 2 February 2013 27 October 2013 267 34 9 9 16 0 26 47Steve Hodge caretaker 27 October 2013 6 November 2013 10 2 1 0 1 0 50 00Shaun Derry 6 November 2013 23 March 2015 502 77 26 14 37 0 33 77Paul Hart Mick Halsall caretakers 23 March 2015 7 April 2015 15 3 0 3 0 00 0 00Ricardo Moniz 7 April 2015 29 December 2015 266 34 11 8 15 0 32 35Mick Halsall Richard Dryden caretakers 29 December 2015 10 January 2016 12 1 0 0 1 00 0 00Jamie Fullarton 10 January 2016 19 March 2016 69 12 3 1 8 0 25 00Mark Cooper 20 March 2016 7 May 2016 48 10 3 2 5 0 30 00John Sheridan 27 May 2016 2 January 2017 220 32 8 6 18 0 25 00Alan Smith caretaker 3 January 2017 12 January 2017 10 1 0 0 1 00 0 00Kevin Nolan 12 January 2017 26 August 2018 591 84 35 23 26 0 41 67Steve Chettle Mark Crossley caretakers 26 August 2018 1 September 2018 6 1 0 0 1 00 0 00Harry Kewell 31 August 2018 13 November 2018 74 14 3 4 7 0 21 43Steve Chettle caretaker 13 November 2018 27 November 2018 15 4 1 2 1 0 25 00Neal Ardley 113 28 November 2018 24 March 2021 855 108 46 29 33 0 42 59Ian Burchnall 25 March 2021 27 May 2022 428 70 36 14 20 0 51 43Luke Williams 14 June 2022 Present 51 34 13 4 0 66 67References Edit a b c Notts County FC Club history Retrieved 19 May 2023 The opening of the Nottingham Football Club commenced on Tuesday last at Cremorne Gardens A aide was chosen by W Arkwright and Chas Deakin A very spirited game resulted in the latter scoring two goals and two rouges against one and one The Nottingham Guardian from 28 November 1862 Notts County Football Club now universally recognised as the world s oldest Football League club was formed in 1862 Official formation followed two years later as the Notts Foot Ball Club REGULATORY AND APPEALS COMMITTEE PDF Committee nottinghamcity gov uk 3 July 2017 Retrieved 16 October 2018 New owners deliver first message to Notts County fans 26 July 2019 Board structure confirmed Notts County F C 30 July 2019 Retrieved 23 July 2021 Notts County Plaque for hugely significant meeting BBC News 18 June 2018 Retrieved 19 May 2023 a b c d e f g Williams Richard 26 November 2012 Happy 150th to Notts County a very decent football club The Guardian Retrieved 10 July 2016 Wain Paul 2004 Notts County A Pictorial History Uxbridge London Yore Publications p 8 ISBN 978 0 9547830 3 7 Portal Sheffieldfc com Sheffield F C Retrieved 10 July 2016 Club Affiliations Notts County England Football Online Retrieved 11 July 2016 The Magpies Keith Warsop page 31 ISBN 0 86023 214 X Notts County 1888 1889 Table Final Table Statto Organisation Archived from the original on 11 July 2016 Notts County 1890 1891 Table Final Table Statto Organisation Archived from the original on 11 July 2016 Notts County 1900 1901 Table Final Table Statto Organisation Archived from the original on 11 July 2016 FA Cup Final 1891 Notts County 1925 1926 Table Final Table Statto Organisation Archived from the original on 11 July 2016 Francis Tony 8 September 2003 Tears not necessary as Notts County survive The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 27 September 2009 a b History of Meadow Lane The Magpies 1940 to 1949 Nottingham Post Nottingham 28 September 2010 Archived from the original on 11 October 2015 Retrieved 11 July 2016 Forest play at Meadow Lane Nottingham Evening Post Nottingham 23 November 1946 p 1 via British Newspaper Archive The day fire ripped through City Ground Nottingham Post Nottingham Trinity Mirror plc 10 December 2009 Archived from the original on 21 July 2016 Retrieved 21 July 2016 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Notts County 1949 1950 Table Final Table Statto Organisation Archived from the original on 16 July 2016 Brown Tony Wain Paul Warsop Keith 1996 appendix seasonal statistics The Official History of Notts County Yore ISBN 9781874427612 a b Legendary Magpies chairman to return to Notts for first time in 25 years for special event Nottingham Post Nottingham Trinity Mirror plc 19 January 2012 Retrieved 12 July 2016 permanent dead link Notts County 1970 1971 Table Final Table Statto Organisation Archived from the original on 16 July 2016 Notts County 1972 1973 Table Final Table Statto Organisation Archived from the original on 16 July 2016 Naylor Martin February 2005 Notts County 1991 92 When Saturday Comes 216 Archived from the original on 23 May 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2013 1 Archived 10 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine Slot Owen 21 March 1994 Anglo Italian Cup Final County s charge comes too late Brescia s Wembley victory The Independent Retrieved 26 March 2019 Colin Murphy The League Managers Association Retrieved 14 July 2016 Collings Tim 26 May 1996 Hamilton engineers Bradford s elevation The Independent London Independent Print Retrieved 14 July 2016 Notts County 1996 1997 Table Final Table Statto Organisation Archived from the original on 24 March 2016 Allardyce Sam 2015 Big Sam My Autobiography London Headline Publishing Group p 111 ISBN 978 1 4722 3267 0 Notts County 1997 1998 Table Final Table Statto Organisation Archived from the original on 24 March 2016 Notts County 1997 1998 Table 31 03 1998 Statto Organisation Archived from the original on 14 July 2016 Allardyce Sam 2015 Big Sam My Autobiography London Headline Publishing Group p 123 ISBN 978 1 4722 3267 0 a b County handed lifeline BBC Sport 8 September 2003 Retrieved 16 July 2016 Conn David 6 December 2003 County leave world of deals and leases to breathe again The Independent London Independent Print Limited Retrieved 16 July 2016 Notts County 2003 2004 Table Final Table Statto Organisation Archived from the original on 16 July 2016 Club Statement Notts County F C 4 November 2004 Archived from the original on 19 February 2012 Retrieved 16 July 2016 Thordarson given Notts County job BBC Sport 17 May 2005 Retrieved 16 July 2016 Notts County 2005 2006 Table 29 08 2005 Statto Organisation Archived from the original on 16 July 2016 Notts County 2 2 Bury BBC Sport 6 May 2006 Retrieved 26 March 2019 Notts County poised for takeover BBC Sport 4 June 2009 Retrieved 21 July 2009 Notts County Trust back takeover BBC Sport 30 June 2009 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Notts County takeover completed BBC Sport 14 July 2009 Retrieved 21 July 2009 Sven Goran Eriksson Joins Notts County FC Notts County F C 28 July 2009 Archived from the original on 19 February 2012 Retrieved 10 July 2016 Fraud office looks at scamming of Sven Goran Eriksson BBC News 18 April 2011 Retrieved 12 July 2016 New Club Logo Revealed Notts County F C 28 July 2009 Archived from the original on 24 July 2009 Retrieved 8 September 2011 Sven And The Football Revolution That Never Was The Sportsman 19 September 2019 Retrieved 1 September 2020 Curtis Leigh 30 May 2019 Schmeichel on mad season of Munto Eriksson and private jets NottinghamshireLive Retrieved 1 September 2020 a b Football League says Notts County owners are fit and proper persons The Guardian London 20 October 2009 Retrieved 20 October 2009 a b Scott Matt 27 November 2009 League renews inquiries into Notts County The Guardian London Retrieved 20 May 2010 Peter Trembling completes management buy out of Notts County The Guardian London 12 December 2009 Retrieved 11 July 2016 Notts County manager Hans Backe resigns from his job BBC Sport 15 December 2009 Peter Trembling Statement Notts County F C 11 February 2010 Archived from the original on 19 February 2012 Retrieved 10 July 2016 Notts County confident of heading off winding up threat BBC Sport 5 January 2010 Retrieved 10 July 2016 County appoint Cotterill Sky Sports 23 February 2010 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Cotterill named Notts County boss BBC News 23 February 2010 Retrieved 24 March 2010 Notts County Promoted After Eriksson Exit Rochdale Up New York Times 17 April 2010 Retrieved 17 April 2010 dead link Short And Kevan Relieved Of Duties Notts County F C 29 October 2010 Archived from the original on 18 March 2012 Retrieved 12 July 2016 New Manager Announced Notts County F C 28 October 2010 Archived from the original on 18 March 2012 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Allen Appointed Boss Notts County F C 11 April 2011 Archived from the original on 26 August 2012 Notts County Chris Kiwomya named permanent Magpies boss BBC Sport 27 March 2013 Retrieved 27 March 2013 Notts County name Shaun Derry as player manager BBC Sport 6 November 2013 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Oldham 1 1 Notts County BBC Sport 3 May 2014 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Shaun Derry Notts County sack manager BBC Sport 23 March 2015 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Ricardo Moniz Notts County confirm new manager BBC Sport 7 April 2015 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Notts County sack manager Ricardo Moniz and backroom staff The Guardian London 29 December 2015 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Notts County Appoint Fullarton as Manager Notts County F C 10 January 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2016 Notts County Part Company With Jamie Fullarton Notts County F C 19 March 2016 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Notts County Appoint Mark Cooper as First Team Manager Notts County F C 20 March 2016 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Notts County confirms manager Mark Cooper has left the club ITV News London ITV plc 7 May 2016 Retrieved 12 July 2016 John Sheridan Oldham Athletic boss joins Notts County on three year deal BBC Sport 27 May 2016 Retrieved 11 July 2016 John Sheridan Nottscountyfc co uk Retrieved 16 October 2018 Wilson Jeremy 16 October 2018 John Sheridan s foul mouthed rant at referee lays bare abuse at officials The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 16 October 2018 Alan Hardy completes takeover Nottscountyfc co uk Retrieved 16 October 2018 Kewell appointed manager Notts County F C Archived from the original on 31 August 2018 Retrieved 31 August 2018 Kewell leaves club Notts County F C Archived from the original on 13 November 2018 Retrieved 13 November 2018 Neil Ardley appointed manager Notts County F C 27 November 2018 Retrieved 23 July 2021 Statement from Alan Hardy Notts County owner Hardy facing FA investigation over intimate picture The Guardian 27 January 2019 Retrieved 1 September 2020 Notts County Alexander amp Christoffer Reedtz complete takeover BBC Sport 26 July 2019 Retrieved 6 February 2022 National League promotion final Harrogate Town beat Notts County 3 1 to secure place in League Two BBC Sport 2 August 2020 Retrieved 3 August 2020 Notts County 3 2 Chesterfield www bbc com 5 June 2021 Retrieved 22 September 2021 Torquay United 4 2 Notts County www bbc com 12 June 2021 Retrieved 22 September 2021 Notts County 1 2 Grimsby Town BBC 23 May 2022 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Notts County Boreham Wood Sofascore 7 May 2023 Retrieved 14 May 2023 a b Chesterfield Notts County Sofascore 13 May 2023 Retrieved 14 May 2023 Notts County Historical Kits Retrieved 7 January 2010 Juventus F C Crest and colours a b Black amp White Notts County F C official website 21 May 2007 Archived from the original on 7 September 2008 Extracts taken from the Official History of Notts County and article kindly reproduced by the Daily Mail Tie In Turin Notts County F C 9 September 2011 Archived from the original on 26 August 2012 Retrieved 9 September 2011 Williams Richard 8 September 2011 Juventus open door to new home with Notts County as starstruck guests The Guardian a b c Smith Paul amp Shirley 2005 The Ultimate Directory of English amp Scottish Football League Grounds Second Edition 1888 2005 Uxbridge UK Yore Publications p 18 ISBN 0954 783042 Club Records Notts County official website Retrieved 21 April 2014 Notts County has second largest number of overseas fans in Football League Nottingham Post Nottingham Archived from the original on 21 August 2015 Retrieved 17 June 2017 2 permanent dead link BBC Nottingham Entertainment A Picture of Nottinghamshire Bbc co uk Retrieved 16 October 2018 Jake Bugg Notts County agree shirt sponsor deal with rock star BBC Sport 15 June 2017 Retrieved 16 October 2018 a b The Notts County Miscellany by David Clayton The History Press 17 March 2017 LTD Digital Sports Group Celebrity Fan Notts County Mad Nottscounty mad co uk Retrieved 16 October 2018 Evil Beyond Belief How and Why Dr Harold Shipman Murdered 357 People by Wensley Clarkson John Blake Publishing 4 March 2005 True Crime Honours Notts County FC co uk Bygones Notts Senior Cup Finals nottinghamsport com Retrieved 23 July 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Professional Football All Time Tables 1888 89 2018 19 Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation RSSSF Retrieved 3 September 2013 Seddon Dave 14 January 2020 Preston North End hold the record for the number of league games played Lancashire Post Retrieved 6 August 2020 footballsite Notts County footballsite co uk Retrieved 4 January 2017 First team Notts County F C Retrieved 13 December 2022 Player of the year Magpieweb Archived from the original on 13 November 2011 Awards RawliEnglanded Player of the Season Notts County F C 21 August 2020 Retrieved 23 July 2021 Notts County FC Notts County staff directory The Official History of Notts County Tony Brown 1996 page 73 Preview Carlisle H External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Notts County F C Official website Notts County F C on BBC Sport Club news Recent results and fixtures Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Notts County F C amp oldid 1157182993, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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