|
Address: |
|
The
Britannia Stadium |
|
Stanley
Matthews Way |
| Stoke-On-Trent |
| ST4
4EG |
|
Telephone: |
|
01782 -
592222 |
| Ground
Capacity: |
| 28,218
(all-seated) |
| Official
Website: |
| www.stokecityfc.com |
| Unofficial
Websites: |
|
Potters
Underground
The
Oatcake
Stoke
City Mad!
|
| How
to get there: |
|
By Car: North/South/West:
M6 to J15. Take the A500 to Stoke-on-Trent then the A50 to
Derby/Uttoxeter (the Britannia Stadium is signposted and visible on the sky-line to the right). Once on the A50 drive past the stadium on the right to the first exit and come back down the westbound carriageway of the A50.
East:
A50 from M1 all the way to Stoke-on-Trent. Stadium to the left. Please note: on a
match day, there are special parking restrictions on the official stadium car parks and supporters will NOT be able to use the official club car parks without a special pass.
By Rail: PEDESTRIANS can also link up with the new footway from the towpath which runs along the Trent and Mersey canal. Supporters can walk from Heron Cross (Grove Road) and Hollybush
(Highfield Drive) to the stadium, along a footway/cycleway, but pedestrians coming from Heron Cross should be aware that they must cross the A50 at Heron Cross using the footbridge as a 1.8m high fence prevents crossing the road any further down. There is NO PEDESTRIAN ACCESS along the busy A500 or A50 roads.
Finally, pedestrians can walk to the stadium along Stanley Matthews Way running up from Trentham Road (A5035).
Pedestrians can walk to the Britannia Stadium on a matchday from Stoke using existing footpaths along the bridge over the A500, which lead to the incinerator access road, to link up with the
footway/cycleway (and the bridge over the canal and railway line) to the stadium.
By Rail: THE
nearest rail station is Stoke-On-Trent and transportation for away supporters arriving by train can be arranged but must be organised in advance by the visiting club. Supporters arriving by train can take a two-minute walk to Glebe Street in Stoke where buses run to the stadium at regular intervals. By Bus: REGULAR
match day shuttle services run to and from the stadium from nearby Stoke town
centre. Parking: MATCH
DAY parking is available for away supporters on the SOUTH car park, access from Trentham Road only (see directions below) at a charge of £5. These tickets must be bought in advance from the club ticket office. There is no payment on the gate. The South car park is open from 11am for an afternoon match and 4pm for a night match. Directions: North/South/West for South Car Park: M6 junction 15, take the A500 Stoke-on-Trent then at the first exit, take the A34 to Stone and follow signs for
Trentham. At the next roundabout, turn left onto Trentham Road (A5035) and carry on until you reach the traffic signalised junction which sits on the southern entrance to Stanley Matthews Way. East: A50 to Stoke-on-Trent. Leave the A50 and turn into Trentham Road (A5035). Stay on Trentham Road until you reach the traffic signalised junction which sits on the southern entrance to Stanley Matthews Way. |
| Other
than the football...: |
|
STOKE-ON-TRENT is a
unique Great British City made up of six separate towns;
Tunstall, Burslem, Hanley (the City Centre), Stoke, Fenton
and Longton - affectionately known as "THE
POTTERIES."
Home to the world's greatest pottery manufacturers, the City
boasts visitor centres, ceramic museums and factory shops,
plus excellent leisure and entertainment facilities.
The City is ideally
placed in the Heart of England for a day out or weekend
away.
Famously
known and recognised as the centre of the ceramic world, The
Potteries has a rich heritage of time-honoured skills and
traditions on display for all to see in its visitor centres,
museums and on factory tours. The great names of English
china are all here - Wedgwood, Spode, Royal Doulton,
Portmeirion and Aynsley are just a few of the manufacturers
opening their doors through visitor centres and factory
tours.
 |
|
Alton
Towers.
|
If you're
thirsty for adventure and action-packed fun then you'll be
spoilt for choice with the multitude of attractions in and
around Stoke-on-Trent. Stoke-on-Trent is the nearest city to
Alton Towers, just a short drive away. Here you can
experience the magic of the UK's premier theme park, which
will be spinning into 2004 with its new family coaster -
Spinball Whizzer - rotating through 360° at 60km per hour,
you'd be flippin' crazy to miss it! Why not extend your stay
and 'soak it up' in Europe's first water park hotel - Splash
Landings - featuring Cariba Creek water park, an integrated
'watertainment' zone. Alton Towers is open daily from
5th April to 2nd November.
 |
|
Water
World.
|
Festival
Park in the City Centre abounds with leisure and
entertainment facilities for the whole family including a
multi-screen cinema and rapid fire fun with laser guns at
Quasar. New for 2004 is an alpine roller coaster at the ski
centre, which propels visitors on a nerve-tingling downhill
toboggan run. For a wet and wild day out there's Waterworld,
the UK's number Churnet Valley steam railways or explore the
Trent & Mersey and Caldon Canals. A short drive out of
the City will take you to the breathtaking scenery of the
Staffordshire Moorlands and Peak District, which is the
perfect backdrop for walking, cycling, pony trekking, rock
climbing and hang gliding.
The City
now boasts internationally acclaimed Visitor Centres at
Royal Doulton, Spode and Wedgwood, all offering craft
demonstrations, factory tours, stunning museum collections
and exciting shopping opportunities.
Visit the
original home of the Royal Doulton figure at the Royal
Doulton Visitor Centre in Burslem; the birthplace of fine
bone china at the Courtyards at Spode in Stoke and discover
the history and traditions of Wedgwood at the Wedgwood
Visitor Centre. Several other factories such as Moorcroft
and Aynsley also offer factory tours and no visit would be
complete without a look at one of the City's ceramic
museums.
 |
|
The
Potteries Shopping Centre.
|
Stoke-on-Trent
City Centre (Hanley) now offers a quality shopping
experience, and is a vibrant and lively entertainment centre.
Dominated
by The Potteries Shopping Centre, the City Centre has all
the high street names, plus many unique independent
retailers and a large, busy indoor market. The other five
towns of Stoke-on-Trent also have indoor and outdoor markets
and local shops, each town having its own distinct
atmosphere. Freeport Talke Outlet Mall, on the outskirts of
the City, has discount designer outlets selling everything
from big name fashion brands to kitchenware.
Why not take time to browse in the antique and bric a brac
markets and shops in Stoke-on-Trent and the nearby towns of
Leek and Newcastle-under-Lyme.
As the
home town of Robbie Williams, Stoke-on-Trent is guaranteed
to entertain you. The Cultural Quarter which opened in 1999
in the heart of the City Centre has brought top class
entertainment with the re-opening of the Regent Theatre and
the Victoria Hall.
World
famous orchestras, top rock bands, comedy stars, major
musicals, opera and ballet productions can all now be seen
in Stoke-on-Trent. Alongside existing venues, the New Vic
Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent Repertory Theatre and the Mitchell
Memorial Theatre, the City can now offer the best of both
professional and amateur productions.
The
Cultural Quarter has numerous restaurants and bars where you
can enjoy a pre-show supper or drink, and a wide range of
clubs cater for various age groups where you can dance the
night away.
Multi-screen
cinemas can be found at Festival Park and Newcastle-under-Lyme.
If you
want a pre-match beer, there are a distinct lack of pubs
near to the ground as it is built away from other buildings.
Therefore I would recommend that you grab a drink on the way
into Stoke, which is probably advisable.
It is not recommended that any visiting supporters drink in
Stoke for safety reasons, however they are usually welcome
at the Staffordshire Knott in Handford (from Junction 15 of
the M6, take the A500 towards Stoke and the pub is near to
the junction with the A34). Otherwise there is a bar at the
back of the away end, but this can get very busy.
There
is a Holiday Inn and Harvester Pub next to the ground. Car
parking in the Harvester car park costs
£3. Also close to the stadium is a Power
League complex that also has a bar, which also allows in
away fans, shows SKY television and you can even park in
their car park for £4. Further afield is The Plough Motel on Campbell Road, closer to the old Victoria Ground than the Britannia.
Just across the way from the Plough is the Gardeners Retreat and small numbers of away fans sometimes use this pub.
Whilst Kevin McPadden the landlord of the Potters Bar adds;
'We are prepared to offer our hospitality to all visiting
teams en-route to the Britannia Stadium. We have a full menu
of food and drinks available all day, children are welcome
in a designated area, coaches welcome by appointment. The
pub in Meir Park is approximately six minutes drive from the
Britannia Stadium and is located on the A50 Uttoxeter/Stoke
road. For further details please telephone 01782 - 395649
and ask for Kevin or Pat'.
If you want something
to eat, again, the Harvester is recommended. Like any pub, though, it can only handle so many people at one time and large numbers of away fans streaming off coaches and trying to descend in one go are likely to be
disappointed, as well as discouraged.
In that case, the stadium is geared up to pretty well meeting your needs.
The new Power League Centre is also adjacent to the stadium and football fans are welcomed. They do drinks and other snacks and also have parking facilities.
The usual burgers, chips, hot dogs etc. can be bought from one of the plentiful snack bars within the visitors' stand enclosure.
In Stoke town centre itself there are many small cafes with very reasonably priced menus, but again be advised that away fans in the town centre are strongly discouraged.
You can search and book hotels located right
near to Stoke City's Britannia Stadium by clicking HERE.
|
|
A Hatter and
a Potter - Chris Kamara |
 |
| Chris
Kamara. |
ALTHOUGH
Chris Kamara was born and raised in Middlesborough,
he joined south coast side Portsmouth
from school and, after coming up through the ranks, made his
League debut, coincidentally against the Hatters, in
September 1975 at Fratton Park.
For the record we won 2-0!
After
a couple of seasons at Pompey, he moved to Swindon
Town for £20,000 and enjoyed four years at the County
Ground before transferring to Brentford
where he made 152 league appearances, scoring 28 goals.
He
then returned to Swindon
in August 1985 and moved in quick succession to Stoke
City and Leeds
United for increasingly higher transfer fees.
Obviously he matured with age!
After
finding himself out of the side at Elland Road, after
helping Howard Wilkinson’s side back into the top flight,
he came south again – this time to Kenilworth Road in
November 1991 for a fee of £150,000.
He joined a Hatters side struggling to avoid
relegation and was ever-present as we failed at the last.
In the
following season, he was one of a few players dropped after
a terrible 1-4 home defeat by Grimsby
Town and after loan spells at Middlesborough
and Sheffield
United, he eventually joined the Blades on a free
transfer in the summer of 1993.
Moving
on a year later to Bradford
City, he hung up his boots soon after and then had a
spell as manager at Valley Parade and also as boss of Stoke
City. He is
now a pundit for Sky Sports. Due
to the fact that he badmouthed the Hatters after leaving the
club on loan (and then had to eat humble pie on his return),
he enjoys a less than happy relationship with Luton Town
supporters.
|
|
The Club and The Ground
ONE of the oldest clubs in
Britain, Stoke City have a long and rich history and have boasted
some of the greatest players English football has ever seen, most
notably the late, great Sir Stanley Matthews. However, some sporadic
decisions from the club's owners have, in the past, resulted in
turmoil at the club.
The stadium opened in 1997
and looks imposing from afar, as it is perched on a hill with
hardly any buildings around it. It looks good when lit up at
night. A vast improvement on the old Victoria Ground which has now
sadly been demolished. It is a fair sized stadium comprising three
separate stands, one of which extends half way around the ground.
I'm a great fan of grounds which are totally enclosed, so it is a
shame that this new ground has three open corners. Internally, I
found the stadium a bit lacking in character, however I'm sure
this will develop in time. In one corner of the ground next to the
away end is a large electric scoreboard. Tim Green adds; 'Behind
the Boothen End there are three statues of the legendary former
player Sir Stanley Matthews, which were unveiled by Kevin Keegan'.
The club also have an unusual looking blue coloured mascot by the
name of 'Pottermus', obviously this is what happens to a hippo
that visits the Potteries!
Hatters fans are housed in
the separate Big AM (South) Stand at one
end of the ground, where up to 4,800 supporters can be
accommodated. The facilities and view of the action from this
stand are good. I was personally quite disappointed with the
inside of the ground, it has this kind of 'McStadium' feel i.e. I
could have been in Middlesbrough's
stadium of a few years back and not really noticed much
difference. Listen out though for the Stoke
anthem 'Delilah' being sung by the home fans, they can still give
a great rendition of that Tom Jones classic song. It is
worth bearing mind though that the Stoke
fans are passionate about their club and this can make for an
intimidating atmosphere, so it is best to keep colours covered
around the ground.
Ground Guide courtesy
of the excellent Internet
Football Ground Guide.
History
- Stoke City Football Club
STOKE CITY are down in most record books as
being the second oldest League side in the world and though they
have not been particularly good achievers in their time they have
nevertheless been one of the most prominent names in English
football.
It is recorded that Stoke Football Club were
formed in 1863, by former pupils of the Charterhouse School, thus
making them the second oldest league club in existence, behind Notts
County who were formed in 1862. Stoke's early days were taken
up playing friendly matches against other local sides, though it
seems that the rules of the game would vary from match to match
with different opponents wishing to play to different codes, which
usually ranged somewhere between soccer and rugby. In one of these
friendly matches Stoke are recorded as having beaten local side
Mow Cop 26-0!
Having previously played on 'Sweetings
Field', Stoke moved to our present home, the Victoria Ground, in
March 1878 when they merged with the Stoke Victoria Cricket Club.
Stoke's unbroken run of 118 years at the Victoria Ground is a
British record for a league club being located at one ground.
There had been some debate as to whether Scottish club Dumbarton
held the record at their Boghead ground. However, about a year ago
we received correspondence from the Dumbarton Programme editor who
conformed that Stoke held the record.
Stoke's first truly competitive match came
on 10th November 1883 when they played 'Manchester' at home in the
1st Qualifying Round of the FA Cup where they were beaten 2-1 by
the visitors. Three years later Stoke recorded a 10-0 win over
Welsh side Caernarfon Wanderers at the same stage of the same
competition. For some reason though this victory is ignored by
Stoke historian's, who still count the 10-3 victory against West
Bromwich Albion in 1937 as being as "Record
Victory"!
Stoke turned professional in 1885 and three
years later in 1888 they were invited to be one of the twelve
clubs that were to form the inaugural 'Football League' - a
professional league which would see each side play each other home
and away, with two points for a win and one for a draw, and which
would provide the blueprint for the hundreds of other league
set-ups worldwide.
Given the turbulent nature of Stoke's
history it's hardly surprising that there should be controversy
about when the club was originally formed. In recent years Wade
Martin, probably the leading authority on the history of
Stoke City, has expressed his belief, after much research, that
the formation of the club as we know it today actually took place
in 1868 and not in 1863 as we had led to believe for so long.
Wade has produced much evidence to back up
his claims and it's not easy to mount an effective argument
against his case. However, there are a few people who don't go
along with his version of events and have produced some evidence
of their own. It's not as persuasive as Wade's and perhaps we'd
just like to believe it more? For their part the club can't seem
to make up their minds. The two club shops sell merchandise
bearing the date "1863", the club's own letterheads
carry the same date, but the official match day programme puts the
clubs formation down as "1868"!?
For our part we prefer to go with the 1863
date. It's a date that we have grown up with and there's always
that niggling doubt in our minds as to why more people, who would
have been old enough to remember the clubs' origins, did not make
a case for the date of 1868 in books and magazines from the turn
of the century when 1863 was being put down as the year in which
Stoke were formed? A flimsy reason for clinging so fiercely to a
date for sure, but still reason enough for us. The rest of you
will need to make up your own minds!
Stoke's introduction to league football was
hardly spectacular as they managed to finish bottom of the table
for the first two seasons, thus becoming the world's first
recipients of the "wooden spoon". This poor showing led
to them being voted out of the league in 1890, with their place
being taken by Sunderland. However, an immediate championship
success in the "Alliance" league saw Stoke voted back
into the league after a one season absence when it was decided to
expand the set-up from twelve to fourteen clubs.
Even given this second chance Stoke hardly
set the footballing world alive with their achievements and though
they improved slightly they never threatened to make any impact at
the top of the table. After sixteen years more of loitering with
intent to be relegated to the Second Division (formed in 1892)
Stoke finally did just that in 1907. After one season of mid-table
"respectability" in the Second Division a financial
crisis saw Stoke resign their place in the Football League. It was
a terrible affair with Stoke changing their minds when it was too
late and thus condemning themselves to the relative obscurity of
football in the Birmingham League and Southern League.
It took eight years of tireless work from
Stoke officials and friends to get the club re-elected back into
the Football League but when they did finally regain their place
in 1915 they were thwarted by the outbreak of the Great War. It
would not be until 1919 that Stoke would finally play again at
League level, after an absence of 11 years!
Having found their way back into the big
time Stoke wasted little time in getting back into the top
division. In 1922, just three years after regaining league status,
Stoke were promoted back to the First Division. Unfortunately,
this rise back to prominence in the English game lasted just one
disappointing season as Stoke suffered relegation at the first
attempt. Worse was to follow and three years later Stoke found
themselves dumped into the recently created Third Division
(North). However, this massive set-back proved to be a thankfully
temporary one.
In recognition of Stoke-on-Trent's newly
bestowed status as a city, Stoke decided to add "City"
to their name, thus becoming Stoke City. In their first season
under this new name they raced away with the 3rd Division title at
the first attempt and, after six seasons of progress back in
Division Two, finally made it back into the 1st Division in 1933
when they finished as champions of the 2nd Division This time they
were to stay there much longer.
If Stoke's progress in the top division was
not spectacular then it was certainly steady. They established
themselves as a respectable first division side, even finishing as
high as 4th in 1936. With players such as Freddie Steele and the
emerging Stanley Matthews were making quite a name for themselves
and this fact was no better highlighted than when over 84,000
spectators turned up at Maine Road to see an FA Cup tie between Manchester
City and Stoke City - a figure that still remains a record for
an English game outside of Wembley Stadium! It was during this
time that Stoke recorded their highest ever league win when they
thrashed West Brom 10-3 in February and also their highest ever
attendance at the Victoria Ground for the visit of Arsenal
just six weeks later when 51,380 paid to watch.
With things going so well for Stoke the
Second World War could not have come at a worse time. By the time
the tragic conflict was resolved the players had been robbed of
seven of the best years of their careers and while it was the same
for every club and every player there was always that feeling that
it had robbed Stoke of their best chance of success.
The end of the war saw the return of first
class football and Stoke soon to be players in a human tragedy
that is still remembered and commemorated to this day. On 9th
March 1946 they travelled to play Bolton
Wanderers in an FA Cup quarter-final match at Burnden Park. In
the euphoria that followed the end of the war thousands flocked to
watch football and this game attracted an official attendance of
65,419 - though the actual attendance may have been much, much
higher than that. Thousands of fans scrambled over fences, and
broke down gates to get in and in the inevitable crush that ensued
over 500 were injured and 33 killed.
From the despair of that human tragedy soon
followed another tale of misery for Stoke. In the 1946-47 league
season, the first after the end of the war, they performed
magnificently to put themselves within touching distance of the
highest honour in English football, the First Division League
Championship, and this despite losing the services of Stanley
Matthews who settled his long-standing differences with the club
by moving to Blackpool
two-thirds of the way through the season. Needing only to win
their last game at Sheffield
United to be sure of the title Stoke went down 2-1 and thus
handed the championship to Liverpool.
Never again have Stoke come so close to lifting that ultimate
prize and the sad truth is that we will probably never again come
that close!
After that disappointment things didn't
really get any better for Stoke. They had the distinction of often
being able to put out a first eleven comprised entirely of
Potteries born players but, commendable though that was, it was
still small consolation for the six seasons of mid-table
mediocrity and struggle that led, somewhat inevitably, to
relegation in 1953.
Initially hopes were high that Stoke might
make a quick return to the 1st Division but these were soon proved
to be unfounded. Two relatively good seasons in 54-55 and 56-57
did little to disguise the fact that the club was sinking slowly,
both in terms of league performance and stature. The threat of
promotion receded and Stoke became, to all intents and purposes, a
standard, run-of-the-mill 2nd Division side.
By the beginning of the 60s the situation at
Stoke was looking very grim indeed. Relegation seemed more
probable than promotion and apathy in the club was high, a sign of
this being the fact that in the 1960-61 season local neighbours Port
Vale actually recorded a higher average attendance than Stoke
City! New manager Tony Waddington knew that he had to act and in a
flash of inspirational brilliance he took the incredible step of
re-signing Stanley Matthews from Blackpool
in October 1961. At 46 years of age most thought that Stan was
past it and that this was nothing more than a publicity stunt.
Whether it was or it wasn't seemed to matter little to the
footballing public of The Potteries who turned up in huge numbers
to see the return of the prodigal son. A crowd of 35,974 packed
into the Victoria Ground to see his return against Huddersfield
Town (the previous home attendance had been 8,409!!!) and from
that point Stoke never looked back.
Stoke's star was now in the ascendancy and
there was a renewed purpose and direction at the club. Matthews'
first season back saw them rise from the relegation zone to finish
a creditable 8th. The 1962-63 season, Stoke's centenary year, saw
even more progress though as The Potters survived a winter-ravaged
campaign to clinch the 2nd Division Championship to book their
return to the big time after a ten year absence. The fairy tale
was complete when 48 year-old Stanley Matthews scored the goal
that clinched promotion in the deciding 2-0 victory over the
Hatters on an emotional May afternoon. Some publicity stunt!
Manager Tony Waddington set about building a
team good enough to take on the best teams in the land and using
his uncanny ability to attract ageing stars from other clubs he
did just that. Stoke may not have set the First Division alight
straightaway, but they gained a growing band of admirers for their
style. In their first season back they managed to reach the Final
of the fledgling League Cup but lost over two legs to Leicester
City. Through the 60s Stoke continued to hold their own with
all the big clubs and though major honours were never really
threatened to materialise things carried on quite satisfactorily.
Such was the prestige of the club that they even managed to sign
Gordon Banks from
Leicester City in 1967. Just one year after winning a World
Cup winners medal with his country, Gordon turned down the chance
to join Liverpool
to come to the Victoria Ground instead!
By the start of the 70s Stoke were truly on
the way to big things. In 1971 they reached the FA Cup semi-final
for the 1899 and they came within a few seconds of reaching
Wembley for the first time, only to be thwarted by an injury time
equaliser by Lucky Arsenal
who went on to win the replay. A year later Arsenal
again inflicted misery on Stoke with another FA Cup semi-final
replay win, but by then Stoke had already tasted glory and in the
process captured their first major trophy in 109 years of trying.
On 4th March 1972 they reached the final of the League Cup
(playing eleven games and defeating the likes of Manchester
United and West
Ham on the way) where they met hot favourites Chelsea
in front of the competitions first ever 100,000 attendance. Goals
from Terry Conroy and George Eastham were enough to secure a 2-1
victory and set off wild celebrations never since witnessed in The
Potteries.
That success in cup competition brought in
more money and gave Tony Waddington the finances required to buy
the players that would be needed to mount a challenge for the
championship. Between 1973 and 1976 Stoke City were undoubtedly
one of the best teams in England, playing a brand of entertaining,
attacking football that won legions of admirers and looked set to
finally bring home the biggest trophy of all. In the 1974-75
season Stoke seemed set to go all the way, but an incredible
sequence of injuries, that saw four key first team players suffer
broken legs, led to them missing out by just four points.
Unbelievably, only two seasons after agonising failure Stoke had
been relegated. A bad storm blew the roof of the old Butler Street
Stands, it wasn't insured and Stoke had to start selling off
players to bring in money. Tony Waddington lost his job as manager
after 17 years with the club and things were in a state of
terminal decline. It was as spectacular fall from grace as you
could imagine and from that time till now Stoke City have never
been quite the same.
Things looked desperate for Stoke as they
slid close to the bottom of the Second Division and even suffered
the ignominy of an FA Cup home defeat to non-league Blyth
Spartans, however the arrival of Alan Durban as manager midway
through the 1977-78 season brought about a dramatic reversal in
the club's fortunes. A year later Stoke were promoted back to the
First Division in third place (behind Crystal
Palace and Brighton)
after securing a last gasp win at Notts
County on the final day of the season. They returned, heads
held high, to rub shoulders once again with the best teams in the
country, but this time there was never any question of being up
challenging at the top. Save for a promising campaign in 1982-83
Stoke spent most of their time battling against the drop, pulling
off more than one late escape act. The most memorable of these
being a last day 4-0 against Wolves
which saved Stoke from the drop when they had looked dead and
buried at the turn of the year. As they celebrated that unlikely
reprieve it is unlikely that anybody could have foreseen the
misery that was awaiting us just around the corner.
Those who forget the past are condemned to
relive it, so it would be wrong to brush quickly over the
holocaust that was the 1984-85 season. Quite simply this was the
worst season, statistically at least, in the club's history.
Nothing went right for Stoke and their blend of young,
inexperienced players and older pros just stumbled from one defeat
to another. they did their best but their best just wasn't good
enough and anything that could go wrong did go wrong. We were
doomed by Christmas and we knew it. From a total of 46 league and
cup games Stoke managed to win only THREE (though the 2-1 win over
title-chasing Manchester
United did provide one unforgettable moment in that bleak
season) and managed to break almost every unwanted record going.
They finished the season with just seventeen points and it seems
inconceivable that that woeful total will ever be beaten!
The 1984-85 season looked like being the one
that might start a full slide down the league table, following a
route already taken by Wolves
right down to the 4th Division. Surprisingly though new manager
Mick Mills stopped the rot and on a severely limited budget
managed to get the club back on its feet. It was a remarkable
achievement but one which he simply failed to build on. Having
steadied the boat and given everybody optimism for the future he
lost his way and by 1989 the club was once again looking to be
downwardly mobile.
When Mills was finally shown the door his
successor Alan Ball promised better things but failed miserably to
deliver. He failed to save the club from relegation, despite
promises to the contrary, and in the Third Division (for only the
second time in the club's history) things got no better. By the
time the Board lost patience with him, Alan Ball had helped Stoke
City to 14th in the division - their lowest EVER league placing!
It was then that the club made an
appointment which would put the club back on its feet and see a
return to better times when Lou Macari was poached from
neighbouring Birmingham
City. In his first season in charge, Macari took Stoke to the
Third Division play-offs where they were unfortunately beaten by
Stockport County but a year later there was no mistake. The omens
in 1992-93 were good before a ball was even kicked; the formation
of the Premier League meant that the Third Division became the
Second Division and the record books showed that Stoke had been
2nd Division Champions in both 1932-33 and 1962-63, so the
sequence was there to be followed. Sure enough the sequence was
followed and Stoke enjoyed a memorable campaign, racing away with
the title.
The return to the top half of the Football
League was soon marred when Lou left to join his boyhood team Glasgow
Celtic with his place being taken by the deeply unpopular Joe
Jordan. However, Jordan's time at the Victoria Ground proved to be
as short-lived as Macari's in Glasgow and a year after he left,
Lou was back at the Victoria Ground, much to the pleasure of an
appreciative Stoke support.
Lou's return saw the the club reach the
play-offs against all the odds in 1995-96 and it seemed that, once
again, the club was on an upward curve. The play-offs may have
ended with the disappointment of an unfortunate semi-final defeat
to Leicester
City, but supporters felt that there was something there to
build on. Unfortunately, the last ever season at the Victoria
Ground was not marked by an exciting push for promotion. Instead,
an uninspired Stoke side plodded along - good occasionally, bad
all too often - into a final mid-table position. The opinion of
many supporters was that Macari had taken the team as far as he
could and maybe Macari thought that.
On 4th May 1997, Stoke City played their
last-ever game at the Victoria Ground, thus ending a tenure that
began 119 years previously, the longest unbroken run at a ground
by any team in Britain. In the summer of 1997, the club moved to
the new purpose built Britannia Stadium to begin a new era in the
story of Stoke City Football Club. Chic Bates was a controversial
choice as the new manager to lead them into this chapter of their
history and the critics of this decision were proved terribly
right when Stoke were relegated at the end of the 1997-98 season.
It was a miserable season at the Britannia Stadium and supporters
were left in no doubts as to the result of their decline. A poor
(or lazy - call it what you like) managerial decision at a crucial
juncture in the club's history, coupled with an inability to
strengthen the squad at a time when top players were being sold to
pay for the stadium (though the club denied they were doing this
at the time). Relegation was a crushing blow but the writing had
been on the wall long before their fate was sealed on the final
day of the season against Manchester
City.
Brian Little was an almost universally
popular choice and few could believe the Potters had attracted
this very highly-rated manager as they sought to fight their way
out of the Second Division. The few three months under Brian
Little were terrific as The Potters soared to the top of the
Second Division table but it was all built on sand. The board
could not and would not allow the team to be properly strengthened
and Brian Little proved to be not the manager the supporters had
all been hoping for. He floundered badly as Stoke's form
nose-dived and they had to suffer some of the most humiliating
defeats ever seen in Stoke during a calamitous second half of the
1998-99 season. Few people lost too much sleep when Brian Little
resigned, for "personal reasons" at the end of the
season.
That led to the appointment of Gary Megson
shortly before the start of the 1999-2000 season. He was to be in
charge for only three months before developments at the Britannia
Stadium took an unexpected turn for the better. Megson had worked
well and achieved much in his three months in charge, and proved
wrong many of the doubters who had been disappointed at his
appointment, but he was a pawn in a much bigger game and had to
step aside for a new regime at Stoke City.
After weeks of rumours and reports, which
Stoke City fans scarcely dared to be believe to be true, the old
regime of Peter Coates and Keith Humphreys (men who were despised
by many, many Stoke City supporters) was bought out and new
Icelandic owners took charge of the club. The takeover was finally
completed on 15th November 1999, and heralded a new era at Stoke
City. A new manager came in, the former Icelandic national coach
Gudjon Thordarson, and the club finally got the financial
stability and backing it had been starved of for so very long. It
transpired that the takeover had been the idea of Gudjon
Thordarson, who had taken note of the potential of Stoke City when
he'd been at the ground to look at one of his national team
players, Larus Sigurdsson. He took the idea of buying out and
running an English football club to some money people in Iceland,
they liked the idea and the rest is history. Things started to
look up again following takeover with the side winning the Auto
Windscreens Final at Wembley in front of 75,057 spectators and
also reaching the play-offs where they were beaten in the
semi-finals by Gillingham.
A five-year plan to get into the Premiership
hasn't quite worked out as the new owners anticipated - the
collapse of the ITV Digital television deal not helping either. It
took Gudjon a total of three seasons before he finally guided The
Potters to promotion in 2001-02 - only to be surprisingly, some
would say shockingly, sacked a couple of days after a 2-0
Millennium Stadium final victory over Brentford.
His relationship with his fellow Icelandic board members had
become unworkable following reports of several bitter exchanges
and bust-ups. And so, Stoke City returned to the First Division
under the guidance of a new, young manager in the shape of Steve
Cotterill. It should have worked out but it didn't and Cotterill
turned his back on the club in the Autumn after only a couple of
months in the job - opting to become an assistant to Howard
Wilkinson at Sunderland,
immediately installing himself as one of the all-time hate-figures
in the recent history of Stoke City.
Things are never simple and they don't run smoothly at Stoke, and
with the club on the verge of announcing George Burley as a direct
replacement for Cotterill, the former Ipswich
boss got cold feet and eventually joined Derby
County instead. This left the Potters appointing Tony Pulis as
their new manager. Pulis hadn't been the most popular of choices
amongst supporters and he was also the man who had lost out to
Steve Cotterill and initially George Burley for the position.
After a shaky start, plenty of which involved clearing up the mess
left behind by Steve Cotterill, Pulis guided Stoke to First
Division safety in the second half of 2002-03, before stamping his
mark on the team in 2003-04 by taking The Potters to an 11th place
finish. After several years of struggling and slip-sliding away
Stoke are now, finally, managing to get a decent foot-hold back
onto the football ladder. Deep down Stokies have never settled for
anything less than mid-table in Division One.
However, at the end of the 2004-05 season,
Pulis was sacked by the club's Icelandic owners who decided that
they needed a foreign manager who would exploit the foreign
transfer markets. They appointed Dutchman John Boskamp as
their new boss and he immediately set about trying to change the
Potters fortunes, signing several new players, including Belgium
international Carl Hoefkens.
History courtesy of
The Oatcake.
Luton Town
v
Stoke City... A
full rundown of all of the past meetings
| Home
Matches |
 |
|
Feb
|
13
|
1954
|
D2
|
L
|
0
|
1
|
17055
|
|
|
Sep
|
18
|
1954
|
D2
|
W
|
3
|
1
|
17325
|
|
|
Feb
|
23
|
1961
|
D2
|
W
|
4
|
1
|
12142
|
|
|
Nov
|
18
|
1961
|
D2
|
D
|
0
|
0
|
15163
|
|
|
Sep
|
8
|
1962
|
D2
|
D
|
0
|
0
|
6819
|
|
|
Feb
|
22
|
1975
|
D1
|
D
|
0
|
0
|
19894
|
|
|
Nov
|
19
|
1977
|
D2
|
L
|
1
|
2
|
9384
|
|
|
Feb
|
6
|
1979
|
D2
|
D
|
0
|
0
|
6462
|
|
|
May
|
2
|
1983
|
D1
|
D
|
0
|
0
|
11877
|
|
|
May
|
7
|
1984
|
D1
|
L
|
0
|
1
|
9867
|
|
|
Aug
|
25
|
1984
|
D1
|
W
|
2
|
0
|
8626
|
|
|
Nov
|
27
|
1993
|
ND1
|
W
|
6
|
2
|
7384
|
|
|
May
|
7
|
1995
|
ND1
|
L
|
2
|
3
|
8252
|
|
|
Apr
|
9
|
1996
|
ND1
|
L
|
1
|
2
|
7689
|
|
|
Mar
|
13
|
1999
|
ND2
|
L
|
1
|
2
|
5221
|
|
|
Feb
|
8
|
2000
|
ND2
|
W
|
2
|
1
|
5396
|
|
|
Apr
|
7
|
2001
|
ND2
|
L
|
1
|
2
|
6456
|
Report |
|
|
|
|
| Away
Matches |
 |
|
Sep
|
26
|
1953
|
D2
|
D
|
1
|
1
|
24083
|
|
|
Feb
|
5
|
1955
|
D2
|
D
|
0
|
0
|
21156
|
|
|
Oct
|
1
|
1960
|
D2
|
L
|
0
|
3
|
9395
|
|
|
Apr
|
7
|
1962
|
D2
|
L
|
1
|
2
|
7530
|
|
|
May
|
18
|
1963
|
D2
|
L
|
0
|
2
|
34168
|
|
|
Nov
|
16
|
1974
|
D1
|
L
|
2
|
4
|
20646
|
|
|
Apr
|
15
|
1978
|
D2
|
D
|
0
|
0
|
15546
|
|
|
Apr
|
16
|
1979
|
D2
|
D
|
0
|
0
|
19214
|
|
|
Sep
|
25
|
1982
|
D1
|
D
|
4
|
4
|
18475
|
|
|
Dec
|
10
|
1983
|
D1
|
W
|
4
|
2
|
10329
|
|
|
Apr
|
8
|
1985
|
D1
|
W
|
4
|
0
|
7108
|
|
|
May
|
8
|
1994
|
ND1
|
D
|
2
|
2
|
15893
|
|
|
Oct
|
9
|
1994
|
ND1
|
W
|
2
|
1
|
11682
|
|
|
Nov
|
4
|
1995
|
ND1
|
L
|
0
|
5
|
9349
|
|
|
Nov
|
7
|
1998
|
ND2
|
L
|
1
|
3
|
12964
|
|
|
Jan
|
8
|
2000
|
ND2
|
L
|
1
|
2
|
10016
|
|
|
Dec
|
2
|
2000
|
ND2
|
W
|
3
|
1
|
12389
|
Report |
|
|
|
|
| OTHERS
WHO HAVE BEEN A HATTER AND A POTTER |
| Name |
DOB |
First
Season |
Last
Season |
Sold
To |
League
Apps. |
League
Goals |
| Tommy
Kiernan |
20/10/18 |
1948 |
1950 |
St.
Mirren |
55
|
10
|
| Ian
Allinson |
01/10/57 |
1987 |
1988 |
Colchester
United |
32 |
3 |
| David
Oldfield |
30/05/68 |
1987
and 1995 |
1988
and 1997 |
Manchester
City and Stoke
City |
29
and 120 |
4
and 19 |
| John
Dreyer |
11/06/63 |
1988 |
1993 |
Stoke
City |
214 |
13 |
| Mick
Kennedy |
09/04/61 |
1989 |
1989 |
Stoke
City |
32 |
0 |
| Wayne
Biggins |
20/11/61 |
1994 |
1994 |
Stoke
City |
7 |
1 |
| Kofi
Nyamah |
20/06/75 |
1998 |
1998 |
Kingstonian |
0 |
0 |
| Richard
Dryden |
14/06/69 |
2000 |
2001 |
Scarborough |
23
|
0
|
|