Coventry City Football Club, otherwise known as the Sky Blues due to the traditional colour of their strip (which itself is sky blue in honour of the sky blue cloth traditionally made in the city). They currently play in the Coca-Cola Championship. They are currently managed by Micky Adams, who was appointed on January 21 2005 following the departure of Peter Reid.
Between 1967 and 2001, they were continuously members of the top division although they never finished higher than sixth. Their only major trophy came in 1987 when they beat Tottenham Hotspur 3-2 to win the F.A Cup.
Famous players to have worn a Sky Blue shirt include Steve Ogrizovic, Brian Kilcline, Dion Dublin, Gary McAllister and Peter Ndlovu.
Famous managers to have taken charge of a Coventry side include Ron Atkinson, Gordon Strachan, Gary McAllister, Peter Reid, Phil Neal, Bobby Gould, Terry Butcher, John Sillett (manager of the 1987 F.A Cup winning side) and Jimmy Hill.
From 1899 to 2005, Coventry City played at Highfield Road. During the 1980s it became the first all-seater stadium in English football, but by the end of the following decade the club's directors decided it was time to build a bigger stadium and chose on a site in the Foleshill area of the city. Their new home - the Ricoh Arena - was opened in August 2005.
Coventry City were originally known as 'the Bantams' (a nickname shared with Bradford City before adopting their sky blue identity in the early 1960s. Coventry were first called the Bantams in December 1908 after the local newspaper noted that they were one of the few clubs who did not have a nickname. Being the lightweights of the Southern League, the Bantams was suggested and stuck with the press and supporters. (They remained as the 'Bantams' until the summer of 1962 when Jimmy Hill re-christened them the 'Sky Blues' and the club switched to an all sky blue kit.)
In the same season Coventry City went eleven games (equivalent to 997 minutes of football) without scoring a single goal, a feat which is believed to still be a league record. In contrast, in April 1934 Coventry recorded their largest ever league victory, 9-0 against Bristol City FC. This tally included five goals from cult City striker Clarrie Bourton, who still holds the record for the number of goals scored in one season (50).
The introduction of a new continental-style all sky blue kit (making Coventry the first team to play in matching shorts and shirts) and the new nickname the 'Sky Blues' in 1962 was the start of a revolution at Coventry City, aided by investment by chairman Derrick Robins. They had won promotion from the Fourth Division in 1959 and, basking in the success of England's legendary win the 1966 World Cup, finished the 1966-67 season as Division Two Champions, under the management of Jimmy Hill.
Hill's revolutionary touch saw him introduce special sky blue trains to away matches, pre-game and half-time entertainment (pre-dating Sky Television by almost 30 years), supplied young fans with soft drinks and snacks, and even penned the club's signature anthem "The Sky Blue Song" (sung to the tune of the Eton Boating Song). Jimmy himself, riding a white horse, could often be seen dodging the young men employed to serve hot bovril to the fans from insulated backpacks, around the edge of the pitch. Controversially, Jimmy Hill resigned from the club on the eve of the team's First Division debut to move into a career in television.
In 1970 Coventry scored one of the most famous goals in the history of the game. In their home game against Everton FC, City were awarded a free-kick on the edge of the Toffee's penalty area. Willie Carr proceeded to grip the ball between his ankles before flicking it up into the air behind him for Ernie Hunt to volley it over a bewildered Everton wall and into the top corner. Though the 'Donkey kick' was allowed to stand, the F.A. banned the technique on the grounds that it constituted a 'double-touch' of the ball. Aside from changing the laws of the game, the goal also won the Match of the Day 'Goal of the Season' competition.
Jimmy Hill returned as Managing Director in 1974 and contunued to reform the game. In 1975 Derek Robins retired as chairman, emigrating to South Africa, to be replaced by Jimmy Hill. In 1981 he transformed Highfield Road into the country's first all-seater stadium under the slogan "You can't be a hooligan sitting down.". However, the idea backfired when away fans tore the seats out to use them as missiles. The stands were reinstated and Hill left the club again a few years later. The stadium also gained the first electronic scoreboard, flashing in scores from around the country.
Coventry City have a reputation for 'innovative' kit designs. The club's chocolate brown 'egg timer' away shirt of the late '70's regularly tops polls for the worst kit in football league history, a fact that has since given it cult status in the game. It still stands as the only brown shirt in English football history. The club re-issued replicas of the shirts in 2000 in response to increased interest in vintage shirts.
The 1981-1982 season saw the club banned from wearing their home shirts during televised games. Under advertising regulations, teams were not permitted to display sponsors names on their shirts (this ban was lifted for the 1983-84 season). Coventry had just announced the football league's first club sponsorship deal, and so to work around the ban Jimmy Hill tried to have the club renamed 'Coventry Talbot' to highlight the partnership with the locally-based car manafacturer. When this failed he commissioned a club home shirt onto which the Talbot 'T' symbol was boldly integrated into the design, which was promptly banned for televised games.
Key players in Coventry City's FA Cup winning team included goalkeeper Steve Ogrizovic, defender and captain Brian Kilcline, midfielders Dave Bennett and Lloyd McGrath, and strikers Cyrille Regis and Keith Houchen, who scored the famous flying header. Their manager at the time was John Sillett. The following season's opening game, the Charity Shield against Everton, saw Sillett introduce his new signing David Speedie with the quote "For too long this club has shopped at Woolworth's, from now on we'll be shopping at Harrods." City lost 1-0. However, in 1988-89, he guided Coventry to the club's second best ever league finish of seventh place in the First Division - ahead of bigger and higher-spending clubs like Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur.
Coventry narrowly avoided relegation at the end of the 1991-92 season and the club took its place in the inaugural Premier League.
Coventry had a decent start to the 1993-94 season but Gould resigned just before Christmas and his successor Phil Neal secured an 11th place finish. The following February, with Coventry battling relegation for the first time in three years, Neal was sacked. Neal's demise at the club will always be linked to his appearance in the infamous Cutting Edge television documentary "The Impossible Job" (popularly known as "Do I Not Like That?"), which followed the England team's failure to qualify for the USA '94 World Cup. Neale was an assistant to Graham Taylor, the then England manager, and the astonishingly frank and darkly comic documentary cast Taylor, Neal and fellow assistant Lawrie McMenemy in an unattractive light.
Ron Atkinson, who had achieved managerial success with West Bromwich Albion, Manchester United, Sheffield Wednesday and Aston Villa, was appointed as the new Coventry City manager in February 1995. He brought in Leeds United midfielder Gordon Strachan as his long-term replacement, as well as drafting in Aston Villa midfielder Kevin Richardson as club captain. During the 1995-96 season City's Peter Ndlovu became the first visiting player in 33 years to score a hat-trick at Anfield. Atkinson steered Coventry to Premiership survival in 1995 and 1996 before he became Director of Football in November 1996 and Strachan took over as manager.
After losing their penultimate game of the 1996-97 Premiership campaign, it looked as though Coventry's long spell in the top flight was at an end. But thanks to a win away at Tottenham on the final day of the season, and both Middlesbrough and Sunderland losing, the Sky Blues pulled off probably the most remarkable survival act in the history of the Premiership. Their defeat in the penultimate game of the season would have relegated them had it not been for a 3-point deduction imposed on Middlesbrough for postponing a December fixture against Blackburn Rovers less than 24 hours before kick-off.
Strachan guided Coventry to 11th, 15th and 14th place finishes in the Premiership over the next three seasons. Their luck finally ran out on 5 May 2001 when a 3-2 defeat at Aston Villa ended their 34-year stay in the top flight.
Midway through the 2002-03 season, McAllister's men still stood a good chance of making the Division One playoffs. But they won only one league game after the turn of 2003 and finished 20th in the final table - just two places above the drop zone. Their form in 2003-04 was slightly better but McAllister left halfway through the season to spend time with his seriously ill wife. Assistant manager Eric Black took temporary charge and kept the club well clear of the drop zone. Just before the end of the season, he was replaced by former Sunderland manager Peter Reid. This decision proved an unpopular one with the majority of the club's fans. As a protest against the decision and gesture of support for Black, fans arranged to turn up to the final game of the season against Crystal Palace in black clothing. Reid caused further anger when he worked in Portugal for the BBC during the summer of 2004, when many felt he should have been scouting and trying to improve the stretched playing squad.
Reid lasted just eight months before the club's dismal league form led to his departure and left the club looking in real danger of relegation to League One. The club's board replaced Reid with former Leicester City manager Micky Adams. Adams helped the Sky Blues stay clear of the Championship drop zone in their final season at Highfield Road before relocating to a new 32,500-seat stadium at Foleshill (later named the Ricoh Arena as part of a sponsorship deal).
In the 2005-6 season, Coventry City finished 8th in the Championship, which represented good progress from the previous season's narrow escape from relegation. The next step for Micky Adams and his men will be a challenge for promotion to the Premiership. Adams has so far achieved three promotions in his management career (one each with Fulham, Brighton and Leicester) and will be looking to achieve the same success with the Sky Blues.
On January 13 2005, the club touched off a controversy when it announced that the traditional badge would be replaced with an updated, more modern version. Fan reaction was swift and negative, and under pressure from supporters' groups the club cancelled plans to change the crest.
The Sky Blue Song!!!!!!!!!!!
Original: Lets all sing together Play up Sky Blues While we sing together We will never lose Proud Posh or Cobblers United or anyone They Shant defeat us we'l fight til' the game is won!
Present: Lets all sing together Play up Sky Blues While we sing together We will never lose Tottenham or Chelsea United or anyone They Shant defeat us we'l fight til' the game is won! City (clap, clap, clap) :repeat:
1966/1967
Old division 3 winners
1963/1964
Old division 4 Runners up
1958/1959
FA Cup winners
1986/1987
Charity Shield Runners Up
1987/1988
English football clubs | Coventry | Sport in the West Midlands | Coventry City F.C. | FA Premier League clubs
Coventry City | Coventry City Football Club | Coventry City Football Club | קובנטרי סיטי | Coventry City FC | コヴェントリー・シティ | Coventry City FC | Coventry City FC | 考文垂足球俱乐部
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