A.F.C. Bournemouth

For the non-League club, see Bournemouth F.C.
AFC Bournemouth
Full name AFC Bournemouth
Nickname(s) The Cherries, Boscombe
Short name AFCB
Founded 1899 (1899) (as Boscombe FC)
Ground Dean Court
Ground Capacity 11,464[1]
Owner Maxim Demin
Chairman Jeff Mostyn
Manager Eddie Howe
League Premier League
2015–16 Premier League, 16th
Website Club home page

AFC Bournemouth is a professional association football club based in Bournemouth, Dorset, that plays in the Premier League, the top tier of the English football league system. Formed in 1890 as Boscombe St. John's Institute F.C., the club was reformed in 1899 as Boscombe F.C.. They changed to Bournemouth and Boscombe Athletic F.C. in 1923, before settling on their current name in 1972. Nicknamed The Cherries, since 1910 Bournemouth have played their home games at Dean Court. Their home colours are red and black striped shirts, with black shorts and socks.

AFC Bournemouth have won the second and third tiers of English football, and were twice runners up of the fourth tier. They have also won the Football League Trophy, and the Football League Third Division South Cup.

Currently managed by Eddie Howe, the 2015–16 season was AFC Bournemouth's first ever in England's top division.

History

Boscombe F.C.

Although the exact date of the club's foundation is not known, there is proof that it was formed in the autumn of 1899 out of the remains of the older Boscombe St. John's Lads' Institute F.C.[2] The club was originally known as Boscombe F.C.. The first president was Mr. J. C. Nutt.[3]

In their first season, 1899–1900, Boscombe F.C. competed in the Bournemouth and District Junior League. They also played in the Hants Junior Cup. During the first two seasons, they played on a football pitch in Castlemain Avenue, Pokesdown. From their third season, the team played on a pitch in King's Park. In the 1905–06 season, Boscombe F.C. graduated to senior amateur football.[4]

In 1910, the club was granted a long lease upon some wasteland next to Kings Park as the clubs football ground by President J. E. Cooper-Dean. With their own ground, named Dean Court after the benefactor, the club continued to thrive and dominated the local football scene. Also in 1910, the club signed their first professional football player B. Penton.

Around about this time, the club obtained their nickname "The Cherries," with two foremost tales on how the club gained the nickname. First, because of the cherry-red striped shirts that the team played in and, perhaps less plausible, because Dean Court was built adjacent to the Cooper-Dean estate, which, it is erroneously assumed, encompassed numerous cherry orchards.

For the first time, during the 1913–14 season, the club competed in the FA Cup. The club's progress, however, was halted in 1914 with the outbreak of World War I, and Boscombe F.C. returned to the Hampshire League.

In 1920, the Third Division was formed and Boscombe were promoted to the Southern League, finding moderate success.

Bournemouth and Boscombe Athletic Football Club

To make the club more representative of the district, the name was changed to Bournemouth and Boscombe Athletic Football Club in 1923. During the same year, the club was elected to the Football League to fill the vacancy left by Stalybridge Celtic's resignation. The first league match was at Swindon Town on 25 August 1923, which Bournemouth lost 3–1. The first league game at Dean Court was also against Swindon, where Bournemouth gained their first league point after a 0–0 draw.

Initially, Bournemouth struggled in the Football League but eventually established themselves as a Third Division club. Bournemouth and Boscombe Athletic Football Club remain on the records as the longest continuous members of the Third Division.

As a league club, Bournemouth had to wait until after the Second World War before winning their first trophy. This was accomplished as they beat Walsall in the Third Division (South) Cup in the final at Stamford Bridge.

AFC Bournemouth

Under manager John Bond, the club adopted the more streamlined AFC Bournemouth name in 1972. At the same time, the club adopted a new badge as a symbol of the club's progress. The stripes in the background were based on the club shirt, while in the foreground is the profile of a player heading the ball, in honour of Dickie Dowsett, a prolific scorer for the club in the 1950s and 1960s.[5]

Their red and black kit, introduced in 1971, was based on the Milan strip. This was the era of Ted MacDougall, a prolific goalscorer who, in an FA Cup tie in November 1971, scored nine goals in an 11–0 win against Margate.

Late 20th century

Chart of yearly table positions of Bournemouth in the League.

The club recorded a famous victory over holders Manchester United in the FA Cup in January 1984, while they were managed by Harry Redknapp.[6][7]

Redknapp took Bournemouth into the second tier of the English league for the first time in their history as Third Division champions in 1987. After comfortably surviving in their first season in Division Two, Bournemouth made a serious challenge for promotion to the top-flight in the 1988–89 season; they ultimately fell away after a poor run late in the season, but their eventual finish of 12th place remained their highest-ever in the Football League until the 2013–14 season.

On 5 May 1990, the final day of the 1989–90 season, Leeds United had the chance to win the Second Division and gain promotion into the First Division by beating Bournemouth at Dean Court. Some United fans had already caused trouble in the town during the morning and the atmosphere was tense as Leeds won the match by a single goal. Combined with the results of other matches, this meant that Leeds were promoted while Bournemouth were relegated. The violence and destruction by visitors to Bournemouth continued over the holiday weekend, causing more than £1 million worth of damage and injury to opposing fans and police officers.[8] The town's Daily Echo newspaper reported that "spectators, including many young children, had to run to safety as missiles were hurled and riot police waded in to control the crowds."[8] The matter was raised in Parliament by one of the town's MPs. Financially, the Leeds trouble affected the club for more than a decade, as Bournemouth were prevented by local police from staging home games on Bank Holidays (traditionally a popular day for football) until a game against Shrewsbury Town on 21 April 2003.

Redknapp remained at the club for two more seasons, both of which ended with the club falling three points short of the play-offs. However, mounting financial pressures caused him to resign his position at the end of the 1991–92 season, and he subsequently rejoined former club West Ham United as a coach. He was replaced by Tony Pulis, who built a much cheaper squad that could only manage two consecutive 17th-place finishes before Pulis walked out of the club, blaming financial pressures much as his predecessor had done.

Bournemouth went the first few months of the 1994–95 season without a permanent manager in place, and a dreadful start saw them bottom of the table for much of the first half of the season. Despite a minor upturn in form when Mel Machin was appointed as manager, they looked highly unlikely to survive, given that there were five relegation spots in Division Two for that season due to league reconstruction. However, a late run of form combined with collapses by relegation rivals Cambridge United and Plymouth Argyle saw them survive on the last day of the season by just two points.

Machin ultimately remained in charge for six years, most of which were marked by unremarkable mid-table finishes. The 1998–99 season proved to be arguably the highlight of his tenure, with the club making a serious play-off challenge for most of the season, but ultimately falling short and finishing seventh. However, a drop to 16th place in the 1999–2000 season followed by a bad start to the following season saw Machin removed from his position and given the role of director of football.

Early 21st century

Former AFC Bournemouth crest

Sean O'Driscoll was promoted from the coaching staff in place of Mel Machin at the start of the 2000–01 season. In O'Driscoll's first season as manager, Bournemouth narrowly missed out on the Division Two playoffs, but were relegated a year later in the new stadium. The board kept faith in O'Driscoll and they were rewarded with promotion via the Division Three playoffs in 2002–03. The club became the first to score five goals at the Millennium Stadium when they beat Lincoln City 2–5 in the 2002–03 Division Three play-off final with goals from Steve Fletcher, Carl Fletcher (2), Stephen Purches and Garreth O'Connor. Under O'Driscoll, Bournemouth narrowly missed out on the play-offs for the 2003–04 and 2004–05 seasons, and just avoided relegation in the 2005–06 season.

Long-serving player James Hayter scored the fastest league hat-trick in English Football League history during the 2003–04 season. The Cherries were leading 3–0 against Wrexham thanks to goals from Stephen Purches, Warren Cummings and Warren Feeney when Hayter was brought onto the field as a substitute. With 86 minutes gone, Hayter managed to net three goals in the space of two minutes and 17 seconds, making the final score 6–0 to Bournemouth.

In September 2006, with the team in eighth in the League, Sean O'Driscoll left to become manager of Doncaster Rovers. He was replaced by Kevin Bond.

In February 2008, Bournemouth were forced into administration, suffering a ten-point deduction which put them in relegation trouble. Bournemouth had debts of around £4 million and almost went out of business completely.[9] The off-field uncertainty continued throughout the season, with only one, ultimately unsuccessful, bid for the club accepted,[10] and the club ended the season being relegated to League Two.

Ahead of the 2008–09 season, the team's future in the Football League was put into doubt when the league threatened to block Bournemouth's participation in League Two, due to problems with the team's continuing administration and change in ownership. It ordered both Bournemouth and Rotherham United to demonstrate that they could fulfil all of their fixtures and find a way out of administration,[11] eventually allowing the club to compete with a 17-point penalty for failing to follow the Football League insolvency rules. The new company was also ordered to pay unsecured creditors the amount offered at the time of the original C.V.A. (around ten pence in the pound) within two years.[12]

Early into the season, manager Bond was sacked and was replaced by former player Jimmy Quinn, who would himself leave the club only a few months later.[13] Former player Eddie Howe took over as manager with the club still ten points adrift at the bottom of the league and initially on a caretaker basis, becoming the youngest manager in the Football League at the age of 31.[14]

At the end of 2008, it was announced that local businessman Adam Murry had completed the purchase of 50% of the club's shares from previous chairman Paul Baker. However, in January 2009, Murry missed the deadline to buy Baker's shares.[15]

In the final home game of the 2008–09 season, the Cherries guaranteed their Football League status by beating Grimsby Town 2–1 with a winning goal ten minutes from time by Bournemouth legend Steve Fletcher, sparking wild celebrations after a fairytale ending to "The Great Escape." They finished their troubled season with their best away win in 30 years with a 0–4 victory at Morecambe.

In June 2009, a consortium including Adam Murry finally took over AFC Bournemouth. The consortium included Jeff Mostyn, former vice-chairman Steve Sly, Neill Blake and former Dorchester Town chairman Eddie Mitchell.

Howe's first full season in charge brought success as Bournemouth finished second in League Two to earn promotion with two games to spare. Howe subsequently left the club for Burnley during the following season; his successor, another former Bournemouth player, Lee Bradbury, led Bournemouth to the League One play-offs. The two-legged semi-final against Huddersfield Town finished 3–3 after extra time, and Huddersfield went through the final by winning the penalty shoot-out 4–2. Bradbury was unable to lead Bournemouth to another promotion challenge in the 2011–12 Football League One, placing 11th after a season of indifferent results, and was replaced by youth team coach Paul Groves for the final games of the season.

Groves remained in charge at the start of the 2012–13 season, only to be sacked in October 2012 following a start which left the club near the bottom of the table. Eddie Howe returned as manager, and not only did he pull the club away from their early-season relegation battle, they achieved promotion to the Championship, returning to the second-tier of English football for the first time since 1990. The club also revealed a new club crest.[16] After a promising start to life in the Championship, the club was handed a fourth Round FA Cup tie with Premier League club Liverpool which ended in a 2–0 loss. Bournemouth finished their first season back in the Championship in tenth place, their highest ever position in the Football League.

On 25 October 2014, Bournemouth won 0–8 away at St. Andrew's against Birmingham City. It was the first time that the Cherries had ever scored eight goals in a league game, barring a 10–0 win over Northampton Town in September 1939 which was expunged from the records after World War II broke out the next day, and they recorded their biggest winning margin in a league fixture.[17] The club followed up this success with a 2–1 victory over Premier League side West Bromwich Albion in the League Cup, reaching the quarter-finals of the competition for the first time. Bournemouth were again drawn against Liverpool but lost 3–1. The club spent most of the 2014–15 season near the top of the table, and a 0–3 win away at Charlton Athletic on the final day of the season was enough to clinch the Championship title and a first ever promotion to the top flight of English football.[18]

Players

Bournemouth playing away to Chelsea in December 2015.

Current squad

As of 27 August 2016.[19]

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

No. Position Player
1 Poland GK Artur Boruc
2 England DF Simon Francis
3 England DF Steve Cook
4 England MF Dan Gosling
5 Netherlands DF Nathan Aké (on loan from Chelsea)
6 England MF Andrew Surman
7 England MF Marc Pugh
8 Republic of Ireland MF Harry Arter
9 England FW Benik Afobe
10 Ivory Coast FW Max Gradel
11 England DF Charlie Daniels
13 England FW Callum Wilson
14 Australia DF Brad Smith
15 England DF Adam Smith
No. Position Player
17 Norway MF Joshua King
18 England MF Lewis Cook
19 England MF Junior Stanislas
20 Republic of Ireland DF Marc Wilson
21 England GK Ryan Allsop
22 United States MF Emerson Hyndman
23 Australia GK Adam Federici
24 Scotland MF Ryan Fraser
26 England DF Tyrone Mings
28 England FW Lewis Grabban
31 France FW Lys Mousset
32 England MF Jack Wilshere (on loan from Arsenal)
33 England MF Jordon Ibe

Out on loan

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

No. Position Player
27 England FW Glenn Murray (on loan to Brighton and Hove Albion)
29 Wales DF Rhoys Wiggins (on loan to Birmingham City)
34 England MF Harry Cornick (on loan to Leyton Orient)
36 England MF Matt Butcher (on loan to Yeovil Town)
No. Position Player
38 England DF Baily Cargill (on loan to Gillingham)
40 England FW Ben Whitfield (on loan to Yeovil Town)
46 England FW Jordan Green (on loan to Newport County)
England FW Joe Quigley (on loan to Gillingham)

Development squad

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

No. Position Player
26 England MF Sam Matthews
37 England DF Corey Jordan
39 England DF Jake McCarthy
42 England DF Jack Simpson
43 England DF Callum Buckley
44 England FW Sam Surridge
45 Australia GK Jordan Holmes
No. Position Player
47 England DF Jordan Lee
50 England FW Brandon Goodship
60 Republic of Ireland GK Mark Travers
England MF Matt Worthington
Republic of Ireland FW Josh O'Hanlon
England FW Mikael Ndjoli

Club officials

Position Name
Chairman England Jeff Mostyn
Manager England Eddie Howe
Assistant Manager England Jason Tindall
First Team Coach England Simon Weatherstone
Development squad manager England Stephen Purches
Goalkeeping Coach England Neil Moss
Academy Manager England Joe Roach
Youth Team Manager Wales Carl Fletcher
Sport Scientist England Dan Hodges
Physiotherapist England Steve Hard
Head Football Analyst England Garvan Stewart
Kit Manager England Duncan Wells

[20]

Past managers

Colours & crest

The team's colours have varied slightly throughout the club's history. Starting off playing in red and white stripes, Bournemouth have also played in all-red shirts, red with white sleeves, and mostly, since 1990, in red and black stripes, similar to that of Milan.[21] A predominantly red shirt was chosen for the 2004–05 and 2005–06 seasons before a return to the stripes for the 2006–07 season due to fan demand.[22]

Since 2015 AFC Bournemouth's kit has been manufactured by JD Sports. Previously it has been made by Umbro (1974–78, 1983–86), Adidas (1978–81), Osca (1982–83), Henson (1986–87), Scoreline (1987–90), Ellgren (1990–92), Matchwinner (1993–95), Le Coq Sportif (1995–96), Patrick (1996–2000), Super League (200-01), TFG Sportswear (2001–03), Bourne Red (2003–08), Carbrini Sportswear (2008–11, 2014–15) and Fila (2011–14).

Their shirts are currently sponsored by Mansion.com. Before this, sponsors have been Reg Heynes Toyota (1980–82, 1983–85), Coopers Beers (1985–87), Canberra Homes (1987–88), Nolan (1988–89), A1 Windscreens (1990–92), Exchange & Mart (1992–93), Frizzell (1993–97), Seward (1993–2006), Focal Point (2006–08, 2011–12), Carbrini Sportswear (2008–11), and Energy Consulting (2012–15).[23]

Honours

League history

References

  1. "2015/16 Premier League Handbook" (PDF). premierleague.com. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
  2. "AFC Bournemouth History". AFC Bournemouth. Bournemouth: AFC Bournemouth. 12 May 2012. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  3. The official Handbook of Bournemouth and Boscombe Athletic Football Club; Golden Jubilee 1899–1949
  4. "AFCB Club History". 24 May 2012.
  5. "Cherries launch evolved crest". AFC Bournemouth. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
  6. Struthers, Greg (8 January 2006). "Caught in Time: Bournemouth beat Manchester United, FA Cup, 1984". The Times. London: The Times. Retrieved 17 February 2008.
  7. "8 January 1984: Bournemouth 2 Man Utd 0". The Observer. London: The Observer. 6 January 2002. Retrieved 17 February 2008.
  8. 1 2 "Bournemouth, Poole, Christchurch news, sports and jobs. Dorset and Hampshire what's on and leisure – Cherry-o Leeds!". Archive.bournemouthecho.co.uk. 5 May 2004. Archived from the original on 7 May 2010. Retrieved 17 May 2010.
  9. "Cherries go into administration". BBC News. 8 February 2008. Retrieved 17 May 2010.
  10. "3 April Press conference transcript". Afcb.premiumtv.co.uk. Retrieved 17 May 2010.
  11. Troubled League Two clubs on the brink The Guardian, 6 August 2008
  12. Bournemouth hit by 17 point penalty The Guardian, 7 August 2008
  13. QUINN AND CHERRIES PART COMPANY Bournemouth Daily Echo, 31 December 2008
  14. "Howe handed permanent role". Sky Sports. 19 January 2009. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  15. CLUB CONFIRMS BAKER BUY-OUT Bournemouth Daily Echo, 31 December 2008
  16. Bournemouth Launch New Crest Football-shirts.co.uk, 15 July 2013
  17. BBC (2014). "Managerless Birmingham City suffered a humiliating defeat as Bournemouth scored eight goals at St Andrew's.". BBC. Retrieved 25 October 2014.
  18. "GALLERY: All the incredible pictures as Cherries are crowned champions of Football League". Bournemouth Echo. Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  19. "Squad numbers: AFC Bournemouth squad numbers for the 2016/17 season". A.F.C. Bournemouth. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  20. "AFC Bournemouth Staff Profiles".
  21. Redknapp, Harry (2014). "Always Managing". p. 109. Random House
  22. "Q&A: All you need to know about AFC Bournemouth – Journalism & News from Bournemouth University". Buzz. Retrieved 2015-05-09.
  23. "AFC BOURNEMOUTH – Historical Kits". historicalkits.co.uk. Unknown. Retrieved 18 January 2016. |first1= missing |last1= in Authors list (help)
  24. Rollin, Jack (2005). Soccer at War 1939–45. p. 259. ISBN 0-7553-1431-X.

External links

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