Blackburn Rovers Football Club is an English Premier League football club based in the town of Blackburn, Lancashire. The club was established in 1875, and in 1888 became a founder member of The Football League. In 1890 Rovers moved to its permanent home at Ewood Park. Until the formation of the Premier League in 1992, the majority of the club's success was pre-1930 when they won the league and FA Cup on several occasions.
In 1992, Blackburn were promoted to the new Premier League a year after being taken over by local steel baron Jack Walker, who installed Kenny Dalglish as manager. Three years after winning promotion Blackburn were league champions, having spent millions of pounds on players like Alan Shearer and Chris Sutton. But the title winning team was quickly split up and in 1999 Blackburn were relegated. They were promoted back to the Premiership two years later, just after Jack Walker's death, and have been in the top flight ever since. During this time they have qualified for the UEFA Cup three times, once as League Cup winners and twice as the Premiership's sixth-placed team.
The club's Latin motto "Arte et labore" means "by skill and labour".
The first match played by Blackburn Rovers took place in Church, Lancashire on 18 December, 1875 -- and was a 1-1 draw. Although the make-up of the team was not recorded it is generally thought to be: Thomas Greenwood (goal), Jack Baldwin, Fred Birtwistle, (full-backs), Arthur Thomas, J. T. Sycelmore (half-backs), Walter Duckworth, John Lewis, Thomas Dean, Arthur Constantine, Harry Greenwood, Richard Birtwistle (forwards), in a 2-2-6 formation.
At the time, the club had no ground of its own and no gate receipts. The only income came from members' subscriptions, which totalled £2 8s 0d during the first season.
During the 1876-1877 season, Rovers finally gained a ground of its own by renting a piece of farmland at Oozehead, on the west side of town facing Preston New Road. The ground was little more than a meadow with a pool in the middle that had to be covered with planks and turf when playing, but it did allow the club to collect gate receipts totalling 6s 6d for the season. Occasional games were also played at Pleasington cricket ground.
Subsequently Blackburn Rovers rented Alexandra Meadows, the home of the East Lancashire Cricket Club , for their matches. The inaugural game at Alexandra Meadows was played against Partick Thistle, the most prestigious club Rovers had played until then. The result was a 2-1 win for Blackburn, with two goals from Richard Birtwistle.
On 28 September, 1878, Blackburn Rovers became one of 23 clubs to form the Lancashire Football Association. On 1 November, 1879 the club played in the F.A. Cup for the first time, beating the Tyne Association Football Club 5-1. Rovers were eventually put out of the competition in the third round after suffering a heavy 6-0 defeat by Nottingham Forest.
Controversy erupted during 1880 when the club used players not from Blackburn to fill in for unavailable team members — this violated what, at the time, was considered an important principle of the LFA. The situation became worse at the start of the 1881 season when a Darwen player transferred to Blackburn Rovers. The move caused a great deal of bitterness between the clubs and local populations. Accusations of professionalism began to fly, with Darwen accusing Blackburn Rovers of offering the player in question, Fergie Suter, improved terms. However, Suter had initially moved to Darwen from Scotland and given up his trade as stonemason to play for the club. So the professional/amateur divide was already blurred. Nevertheless, subsequent matches between Blackburn Rovers and Darwen were fractious affairs both on and off the pitch. The teams were drawn against each other in the fourth round of the Lancashire Cup, and the clubs refused to agree on a date for the match. As a result the LFA ejected both teams from the competition. This type of controversy would only be resolved five years later in 1885 with the legalisation of professionalism.
During the 1881-1882 season, the club continued to rent the facilities at Alexandra Meadows, but began to look towards a move elsewhere. As the leading club in the area, it was felt that Rovers needed its own ground. A ground was leased at Leamington Street and £500 was spent on a new grandstand capable of seating 600-700 spectators. Boards were placed around the pitch to help prevent a repeat of the crowd troubles with Darwen, and a large ornate entrance arch was erected bearing the name of the club and ground.
On 25 March, 1882 the club won through to the final of the F.A. Cup against the Old Etonians. Blackburn Rovers was the first provincial team to reach the final, but the result was a 1-0 defeat by the Old Etonians. There was no repeat of the previous season's success during the 1882-1883 season, when Rovers suffered a bitter defeat 1-0 at the hands of Darwen in the second-round. Local rivals Blackburn Olympic went on to be the first provincial team to actually win the F.A. Cup. Rovers finally won the F.A. Cup on 29 March, 1884 at the Kennington Oval, with a 2-1 victory over the Scottish team Queen's Park F.C. The same teams played the F.A. Cup final again the next season, with Blackburn Rovers again emerging victorious, with a 2-0 score. Rovers repeated this success yet again the next season, winning the final against West Bromwich Albion. For this three-in-a-row of F.A. Cup victories, the club was awarded a specially commissioned silver shield and given the unique privilege of displaying the club crest on its corner flags.
The 1885-1886 season was the birth of the legal professional footballer, and Blackburn Rovers spent £615 on player wages for the season. Despite the new professionalism, it was a disappointing season for the club — an unusually high number of defeats would culminate in Rovers losing its three-year grip on the F.A. Cup when it lost 2-0 in the second round to the Scottish club Renton on 4 December, 1886 at the Leamington Street ground. Further defeats followed in the other major cups that season.
Blackburn Rovers again reached the F.A. Cup final on 29 March, 1890 at the Kennington Oval. The club claimed the trophy, for the fourth time, by beating Sheffield Wednesday a hefty 6-1 — with left forward William Townley scoring three goals and becoming the first player to achieve a hat-trick in the F.A. Cup final. The summer of 1890 brought yet another significant event in the history of Blackburn Rovers with the decision to move again. The choice of new home was Ewood Park, and it remained the club's home for the next century or more.
Ewood Park was built in 1882, the idea of four local businessmen, and it had hosted a number of sporting events. In 1890 Blackburn Rovers purchased the ground and spent a further £1000 on refurbishments to bring it up to standard. The first match was played on 13 September, 1890 against Accrington, with a 0-0 draw result.
The 1890-1891 season saw Blackburn Rovers win the F.A. Cup for fifth time against Notts County F.C. with a 3-1 victory — but this success marked beginning of a downturn in the fortunes of the club, and a long lean period would follow. During the 1896-1897 season the club stayed in the first division only as the result of a decision to increase the number of teams. The season did, however, mark the beginning of Bob Crompton's 50-year association with the club, both as a player and eventually as an F.A. Cup winning manager.
The final years of the 19th century brought little success for Blackburn Rovers and several narrow escapes from relegation.
Blackburn made headlines in the summer of 1992 by paying an English record fee of £3.5million for the 22-year-old Southampton and England centre forward Alan Shearer. Other expensive signings during the 1992-93 season included Chelsea defender Graeme Le Saux, Middlesbrough winger Stuart Ripley and Coventry striker Kevin Gallacher. An impressive Blackburn side remained in the title challenge for most of the season before finishing fourth in the final table, that season not quite enough for UEFA Cup place. Still, it was a remarkable comeback in the top flight after an absence of almost 30 years. Leeds midfielder David Batty and Southampton goalkeeperTim Flowers were two key signings who helped Blackburn progress in 1993-94 and finish Premiership runners-up to Manchester United. Blackburn broke the English transfer fee record again a few weeks later when paying Norwich City £5million for 21-year-old striker Chris Sutton. Sutton's prolific striking partnership with Alan Shearer would be dubbed the "SAS", a pun on "Sutton and Shearer" and the elite British special forces unit the SAS.
Blackburn made a poor start to the 1995-96 season, and found themselves in the bottom half for most of the first half of the season. Rovers also struggled in the Champions League and finished bottom of their group with just 4 points. A 7-0 victory over Nottingham Forest on the day of the official opening of the redeveloped Ewood Park and a 4-1 win over Rosenborg (including a 9 minute Mike Newell hattrick) were two highlights of an otherwise disappointing season. Alan Shearer was instrumental again, becoming the first striker to score more than 30 Premiership goals in three successive season. Blackburn improved as the season went on, finishing seventh in the Premiership and narrowly missing out on a UEFA Cup place. Shearer was sold to hometown club Newcastle United for a then world record fee of £15million in the summer of 1996, and Blackburn were unable to find a suitable replacement.
A terrible start to the 1996-97 Premiership campaign saw Harford resign in late October with the club bottom of the division, having failed to win any of their first ten games. Relegation looked a real possibility, just two seasons after winning the league. But caretaker manager Tony Parkes turned the club's fortunes around and they eventually finished in a secure 13th place in the final table.
On 16 December 1996 with Rovers hovering above the relegation zone, it was announced at an Ewood Park press conference that Sven-Göran Eriksson had signed an "unconditional contract" with Rovers to take over as manager at the end of the season on 1 July 1997 when his contract with Italian Serie A club U.C. Sampdoria expired. The Swede had already visited Ewood Park and the club training facilities at Brockhall as well as sending representatives to watch Rovers' Premiership clashes on his behalf.p.32, Lancashire Evening Telegraph, Monday 16 December 1996
The signing of such a high-profile manager (Eriksson had won the UEFA Cup, Portuguese Championship and Coppa Italia with previous clubs) was seen as a coup for Rovers. "We set out our stall to bring in a top man with experience of football on the continent if possible and we believe we have done just that" commented club chairman Robert Coar, "Sven's reputation is widely acknowledged across Europe and it is a major coup for hom to agree to come to Blackburn from Serie A in Italy".ibid.
It was hoped that the signing of Eriksson would usher in a new era of success after the continuing difficulties following Ray Harford's dissapointing tenure as manager. "Not only do I want us to be a top club in this country, I want European football to be the norm for us", said club owner Jack Walker. "If we get support as high as we want it and the public back us in every way they can then we could even consider * the Walkersteel Stand".p.32, Lancashire Evening Telegraph, Tuesday 17 December 1996
Eriksson's move to Lancashire would not come to fruition, however. The Swede later opted to stay in Italy to enable him to spend time with his children following a divorce. He would instead go on to join Lazio in 1997, with whom he would later win the Italian Championship and UEFA Cup Winners' Cup.
(captain)
No players currently on loan
| Date | Ground |
|---|---|
| 1876-77 | Oozehead Ground |
| 1877-78 | Pleasington Cricket Ground |
| 1878-81 | Alexandra Meadows |
| 1881-90 | Leamington Road |
| 1890-present | Ewood Park |
| Date | Honour |
|---|---|
| 1884,1885,1886,1890,1891,1928 | FA Cup winners |
| 1882,1960 | FA Cup runners-up |
| 2002 | League Cup winners |
| 1987 | Full Members Cup winners |
| 1912 | Charity Shield winners |
| 1882,1883,1884,1885,1896,1901, 1902,1904,1907,1909,1911, 1945,1983,1985,1987,1989 | Lancashire Cup winners |
| 1994-95 | Premier League champions |
| 1993-94 | Premier League runners-up |
| 1911-12, 1913-1914 | League division 1 (now Premier League) champions |
| 2000-01 | League division 1 (now the Championship) runners-up |
| 1938-39 | League division 2 (now the Championship) champions |
| 1957-58 | League division 2 runners-up |
| 1974-75 | League division 3 (now League One) champions |
| 1979-80 | League division 3 runners-up |
| Position | Frequency |
|---|---|
| 15th | 7 times |
| 6th | 5 |
| 4th | 5 |
| 8th | 4 |
| 9th | 4 |
| 10th | 4 |
| 12th | 4 |
| 14th | 4 |
| 16th | 4 |
| 1st | 3 |
| 3rd | 3 |
| 7th | 3 |
| 5th | 2 |
| 11th | 2 |
| 13th | 2 |
| 17th | 2 |
| 22nd | 2 |
| 2nd | 1 |
| 18th | 1 |
| 19th | 1 |
| 20th | 1 |
| 21st | 1 |
Along with Chelsea and Aston Villa, Blackburn Rovers have, over the years, finished the season in every league position.
| Period | Manager |
|---|---|
| 1884-1896 | Thomas Mitchell |
| 1896-1903 | J Warmsley |
| 1903-1925 | R B Middleton |
| 1922-1926 | Jack Carr |
| 1926-1930 | Bob Crompton |
| 1931-1936 | Arthur Barritt |
| 1936-1938 | Reg Taylor |
| 1938-1941 | Bob Crompton |
| 1944-1947 | Eddie Hapgood |
| 1947 | Will Scott |
| 1947-1949 | Jack Bruton |
| 1949-1953 | Jackie Bestall |
| 1953-1958 | Johnny Carey |
| 1958-1960 | Dally Duncan |
| 1960-1967 | Jack Marshall |
| 1967-1970 | Eddie Quiqley |
| 1970-1971 | Johnny Carey |
| 1971-1973 | Ken Furphy |
| 1974-1975 | Gordon Lee |
| 1975-1978 | Jim Smith |
| 1978 | Jim Iley |
| 1978-1979 | John Pickering |
| 1979-1981 | Howard Kendall |
| 1981-1986 | Bobby Saxton |
| 1987-1991 | Don Mackay |
| 1991-1995 | Kenny Dalglish |
| 1995-1997 | Ray Harford |
| 1997-1998 | Roy Hodgson |
| 1998-1999 | Brian Kidd |
| 1999-2000 | Tony Parkes |
| 2000-2004 | Graeme Souness |
| 2004- | Mark Hughes |
1875 establishments | English football clubs | Blackburn Rovers F.C. | Sport in Lancashire | Blackburn | FA Premier League | Football League Founder Members | FA Premier League clubs
Blackburn Rovers FC | Blackburn Rovers | Blackburn Rovers Football Club | Blackburn Rovers Athletic Football Club | Blackburn Rovers F.C. | Blackburn Rovers FC | ブラックバーン・ローヴァーズ | Blackburn Rovers FC | Blackburn Rovers | Blackburn Rovers FC | Blackburn Rovers F.C. | Blackburn Rovers FC | Blackburn Rovers FC | Blackburn Rovers F.C. | 布莱克本足球俱乐部
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