The club was founded as an amateur side in 1878 and were
known as Ipswich A.F.C. until 1888 when they merged with Ipswich Rugby Club to
form Ipswich Town Football Club. In
their amateur status they won a number of regional competitions and the Suffolk
Amateur League in the 1921-22, 1929-30, 1932-33 and 1933-34 before turning
professional and joining the Southern League in 1936, which they one in their
first season (might be best if we go back there the way things are going :-/!!). The club endured mixed fortunes until the
arrival of Alf Ramsey (he of England
manager fame) in August 1955, who took them to the top level of English
football in 1961 and the league title in 1962.
Sir Alfs departure in 1963 to manage England
was the start of a period of decline in fortunes. Bobby Robson arrived in 1969 and led Ipswich
to two major trophies (1978 FA Cup and 1981 UEFA Cup) and several seasons in
top flight European football. At their
peak Ipswich boasted internationals introducing the
Dutch pair Arnold Mühren and Frans Thijssen to add flair to a team that
featured British internationals including John Wark, Terry Butcher and Paul
Mariner, and beat Man Utd 6-0 (we’ll ignore the Premiership record defeat, 9–0,
at Man Utd). George Burley led the club
to 3 consecutive promotion playoffs (defeated in all), finally returned to the
Premiership in 2000 after coming from behind to beat Barnsley 4–2 in the last
Division One playoff final at Wembley (watched in Ringwood pub with Leeds and
Portsmouth). Ipswich finished fifth place in their 1st season —being pipped by Liverpool
on the last day of the season for a place in the Champions League. Consolation
was a UEFA Cup place and FA Premier League Manager of the Year Award for Burley
Some random facts
·
Ipswich became one of the
first clubs to implement the use of goal nets, in 1890….and their still getting
plenty of use!!
·
Sir Alf Ramsey and Sir Bobby Robson were both Ipswich’s
and England’s
most successful managers
·
The playing surface at Portman
Road is highly regarded and has been voted best
pitch in the league on a number of occasions…..now if only we, and not most of
the opposition, could take advantage of that this season.
·
Ipswich's record home
attendance is 38,010 for a 6th round FA Cup match Vs Leeds on 8 March 1975.
·
A number of Ipswich
players featured alongside Sylvester Stallone and Pelé in the 1981 prisoner of
war film Escape to Victory, including John Wark, Russell Osman, Robin Turner,
Laurie Sivell and Kevin O'Callaghan. Other Ipswich
Town players stood in for actors in
the football scenes—Kevin Beattie for Michael Caine, and Paul Cooper for
Sylvester Stallone.
·
In theses days of frequent manager sackings Ipswich
left it as late as 1990 before John Duncan became their first sacking….recent
years have redressed that balance!!!
·
The nickname ‘The Tractor Boys’ - acquired during
their 1st appearance in the Premier League because of the agricultural links to
the area. When they played Birmingham
City, the opposition fans sang “no
noise from the Tractor Boys” during a routine win, and soon their own
supporters began using the name to refer to themselves as they jovially
highlighted the club’s lack of glamour compared to their more illustrious
opponents.
Did they introduce nets because so many balls were getting lost behind the goal?
ReplyDeleteGood job you started using nets otherwise Ipswich would have lost a few balls yesterday.
ReplyDelete