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The history ofSheffield Wednesday F.C., an Englishfootball club fromSheffield, dates back to the club's establishment in 1867. The club would see early regional success followed by a rocky transition to professionalism. Although it has spent the majority of itsFootball League years in the top flight, its position within the league has varied from the very top to almost slipping to the fourth tier.
The club has won fourEnglish League titles, threeFA Cups, oneLeague Cup and oneFA Community Shield.

The club was initially acricket team namedThe Wednesday Cricket Club after the day of the week on which they played their matches. The footballing side of the club was established to keep the team together and fit during the winter months. SWFC was born on the evening of Wednesday 4 September 1867 at a meeting at theAdelphi Hotel in Sheffield. The formation was announced two days later with the following statement in theSheffield Independent newspaper:
Even at this first meeting it became apparent that football would soon come to eclipse the cricketing side of the club. The formation of the football club came within a decade of the first football club in the world,Sheffield F.C., being formed.Hallam F.C. was set up shortly afterwards and by 1867 Association football was becoming very popular. The Wednesday played their first football match in October 1867 against the Mechanics Club atNorfolk Park, a game which they won by three goals and fourrouges to nil.[2]
By 1 February 1868 Wednesday were playing their first competitive football match as they entered theCromwell Cup, a four-team competition for newly formed clubs sponsored by Oliver Cromwell, the manager of the localTheatre Royal. They went on to win the cup, beating Cromwell's own team, The Garrick Club 1–0 after extra time in the final atBramall Lane. The match has its own place in history with Wednesday being the scorers in the first recorded instance of a "golden goal" although the term was not used at the time.[3]
Wednesday were joined by the Clegg brothers,Charles andWilliam in 1870. Charles became the club's first international player when he played in the very first international on 30 November 1872.[4] William represented the Wednesday in the next international on 8 March 1873.[5] Both players would go on to be associated with the club for the rest of their lives. Although it would be Charles who became most heavily involved in football eventually rising to become president and chairman ofthe Football Association.[4] Both the Cleggs received knighthoods in later life.
In 1876 Wednesday were joined byJames Lang. The directors of the club had seen him playing for Glasgow against theSheffield FA representative side. He was subsequently invited to come to Sheffield and play for the club and given a job, working in a silversmiths owned by one of the directors, which involved no formal duties. This is now acknowledged as the first case of professionalism in the game.[6]
Sheffield's first annual tournament, theSheffield FA Challenge Cup, was inaugurated in 1876 and won by Wednesday who beat Heeley, their chief rivals at the time, in the final 4–3 afterextra time. They would go on to also win the firstWharncliffe Cup in 1879. By this time Wednesday had become the dominant force in local football.[7]

In 1879 a number of Wednesday players were involved in a team referred to asThe Zulus.[8] The team was set up to raise funds for the families of victims of theZulu War. They toured the north of England and Scotland but after allegations that the players were being paid, a practice that was illegal at the time, the team was forced to disband by theSheffield FA in 1882.
In the summer of 1882, after a season in which The Wednesday reached the semifinals of theFA Cup, the cricket and football teams split permanently, and by the end of 1925 the cricket team had disbanded. In the 1880s Wednesday became a permanent fixture in the FA Cup as they attempted to move away from local competitions, however in the1886–87 season Wednesday did not meet the deadline for entry and a revolt by several of their most skilful players followed.
Several players, all involved in the earlier Zulus controversy, temporarily left the club to play for a local works team which had managed to submit its entry on time. Later in the season the same players threatened to walk out permanently and set up a professional club called Sheffield Rovers. Wednesday's president at the time, John Holmes, was against the club turning professional, but under the immense pressure of the possibility of losing his star players he entered into talks with the rebels, eventually offering professional terms. At the meeting called to set up Sheffield Rovers, one of the rebel players, Tom Cawley, argued that Wednesday should be given one final chance and the football club duly turned professional on 22 April 1887. The initial wages were fiveshillings for home fixtures and seven shillings and sixpence for away games.

The move to professionalism led to the team building their own stadium rather than playing at venues such asBramall Lane orSheaf House whose owners took a share of the "gate". They leased some land by the railway tracks near Queen's Road from theDuke of Norfolk and in 1887 built theOlive Grove ground. They named it so because an olive farm was bulldozed in order to build it[6]
In 1889, when their first application to jointhe Football League was rejected, the club became founder members of theFootball Alliance of which they were the first champions in a season that they also reached the 1890 FA Cup Final, losing 6–1 toBlackburn Rovers atThe Oval. They finished the following season bottom of the Alliance but recovered to finish in fourth place in the final Alliance season.[9] The following season they were elected to Division 1 of the Football League when it was increased from 14 to 16 clubs, topping the poll with 10 votes. They won the FA Cup in 1896, beatingWolverhampton Wanderers by a 2–1 scoreline at Crystal Palace.
In a strong decade Wednesday won the league twice in the1902–03 and1903–04 seasons and the FA Cup again in 1907, beatingEverton, again atCrystal Palace by two goals to one. After this a relatively fallow period was to be suffered for another two decades.
In 1929 the club officially changed its name from The Wednesday Football Club to Sheffield Wednesday Football Club under the stewardship of managerRobert Brown.[10] However the name Sheffield Wednesday dates back as far as 1883: the former ground at Olive Grove had the name Sheffield Wednesday painted on the stand roof.
The team rose to the top of English football once again in the1928–29 season. They had almost been relegated inthe previous season but with 17 points in the last 10 matches the team pulled off the great escape, rising from bottom to 14th. Consecutive titles in the next two seasons started a run that would see the team finishing lower than third only once until 1935. The period was topped off with the team winning the FA cup for the third time in the club's history in1935 under managerBilly Walker.
The 50s saw Wednesday unable to consistently hold on to a position in the top flight. After being promoted back up in 1950, they were relegated a total of three times. Each time would see them bounce back up by winning theSecond Division the following season. The decade ended on a high note with the team finally finishing in the top half of the First Division for the first time since World War 2. In 1958, they were the first team to play Manchester United after theMunich air disaster, an FA Cup tie, which they lost 3–0.
This led to a decade of successfully remaining in the First Division, which included a cup run to the FA cup final in 1966. Off the field the club was embroiled in theBritish betting scandal of 1964 where three of their players,Peter Swan,David Layne andTony Kay, were accused ofmatch fixing andbetting against their own team. The three were subsequently convicted and, on release from prison, banned from football for life.
Wednesday were relegated at the end of the1969–70 season, starting arguably the darkest period in the club's history. After going into freefall they spent 5 seasons in theThird Division and the club almost suffered relegation to the Fourth Division in 1976, but a revival over the next few seasons under first,Jack Charlton and then,Howard Wilkinson, saw them reach the First Division in 1984.
Under the management of Wilkinson, Sheffield Wednesday won promotion to theFirst Division at the end of the 1983–84 season and would remain at this level for all but one of the next sixteen seasons. They finished fifth in the league at the end of the 1985–86 season and only missed out on a UEFA Cup place because English teams were banned from European competitions due to theHeysel Stadium disaster at this time.
Wednesday's lack of ambition at that time resulted in Wilkinson leaving in September 1988 to take charge ofLeeds United who were aSecond Division club at the time. Within four seasons, he had taken them to the league title. No English manager has won the top English division since.
Meanwhile, Sheffield Wednesday replaced Wilkinson with his former assistantPeter Eustace in what proved to be a disastrous appointment. He was at the helm for just four months before being sacked to make way for formerWest Bromwich Albion managerRon Atkinson, who had lifted two FA Cups withManchester United.
Wednesday's on field woes paled into insignificance in April 1989 when 97Liverpool supporters were unlawfully killed in a crush at the Leppings Lane end of the ground in an FA Cup semi-final hosted by the club. TheHillsborough disaster remains an indelible stain on the club's history and to this day is a source of deep shame for older supporters.
Under the stewardship of chairmanDave Richards, the 1990s became the most successful and exciting period in Wednesday's history since the 1930s. In Atkinson's first full season as manager, 1989–90, Sheffield Wednesday finished 18th in the First Division and were relegated ongoal difference, despite the acquisition of the talented midfielderJohn Sheridan and the fact they had pulled towards mid-table at one stage of the season. They regained promotion at the first attempt but the real highlight of the season was aLeague Cup final victory over Atkinson's old club,Manchester United. Sheridan scored the only goal of the game, which delivered the club's first major trophy since their FA Cup success of 1935. Atkinson moved toAston Villa shortly after promotion was achieved, and was replaced by the 37-year-old strikerTrevor Francis. Wednesday finished third in the First Division in the 1991–92 season, their highest League finish since1960–61, to book their place in the UEFA Cup and becoming a founder member of the newFA Premier League.
1992–93 was one of the most eventful seasons in the club's history. They finished seventh in the Premier League and reached the finals of both the FA Cup and the League Cup, but were on the losing side toArsenal in both games, with the FA Cup final going to a replay that was only settled in the last minute of extra time.Chris Waddle was votedFootball Writers' Association Footballer of the Year, and the strike partnership ofDavid Hirst andMark Bright was one of the most effective in the country. Francis was unable to achieve further success at the club, and two seasons later he was sacked, despite the club never having finished lower than 13th during his tenure. His successor was the formerLuton Town,Leicester City andTottenham Hotpsur managerDavid Pleat.
Pleat's first season as Sheffield Wednesday manager was frustrating, as they finished 15th in the Premiership despite having an expensive line-up which includedMarc Degryse,Dejan Stefanović andDarko Kovačević, who all had only short spells at the club. An excellent start to the 1996–97 season saw the Owls top the Premiership after winning their first four games, and David Pleat was theManager of the Month for August 1996, but the club failed to mount a serious title challenge and they faded to finish seventh. Pleat was sacked the following November with the club struggling in the Premiership, and Ron Atkinson briefly returned to steer the Owls clear of relegation.
At the end of the 1997–98 season, Atkinson's short-term contract was not renewed and Sheffield Wednesday turned to theBarnsley bossDanny Wilson as their new manager after being given the backword by bothGerard Houllier andWalter Smith who joinedLiverpool andEverton respectively.[citation needed] Wilson's first season brought a slight improvement as they finished 12th in the Premiership. However, an expensive squad includingBenito Carbone,Wim Jonk and the Italian firebrandPaolo Di Canio failed to live up to its wage bill and matters came to a head when Di Canio was sent off against Arsenal and pushed the referee to the ground on his way off, resulting in an eleven-match ban from which he never returned. Wilson was sacked in March 2000 with relegation looking certain, following a disastrous season in which Wednesday had been hammered 8–0 byNewcastle United the previous September. His assistantPeter Shreeves took temporary charge but was unable to escape relegation.
Peter Shreeves remained at Sheffield Wednesday for the 2000–01 season as assistant to their new managerPaul Jewell. But Jewell was unable to mount a promotion challenge and he was sacked the following February with the Owls hovering just above the Division One relegation zone. Shreeves was given a permanent contract to take charge of the first team and he guided them to a 17th-place finish. After another bad start in 2001–02, he handed the reins over to assistantTerry Yorath. Wednesday finished just two places above the Division One relegation zone and the only bright spot of the season was a run to the semifinals of the League Cup.
Yorath resigned in October 2002 after Wednesday made a terrible start to the 2002–03 season, and in cameHartlepool managerChris Turner – a former Owls goalkeeper – as his successor. Turner made a big effort to rejuvenate the side and there were some impressive results during the final weeks of the season, but a failure to beatBrighton in the penultimate game of the season condemned them to relegation.
Before the start of season 2003–04, local nightclub and casino owner,Dave Allen swapped his directorship role with Geoff Hulley to become chairman. Turner was optimistic of an immediate return to Division One, but this was not to be. Wednesday finished 2003–04 in 16th place in Division Two, with the lowest goals tally in the division (48). It was the lowest ebb of the club's history, rivalled only by the 1975–76 season, where Wednesday finished in 20th place in the same division with the same number of points as in the 2003–04 season. Turner was sacked after a poor start to the 2004–05Coca-Cola League One campaign, and replaced by formerPlymouth andSouthampton managerPaul Sturrock.

Sturrock revitalised Sheffield Wednesday's fortunes and they finished fifth in League One at the end of the 2004–05 season, qualifying for the promotion playoffs. They defeatedBrentford 3–1 on aggregate in the semifinals, moving them into the playoff final on 29 May 2005 at theMillennium Stadium. 41,000 Wednesdayites descended onCardiff for what was the biggest game in twelve years for the club. They weren't to be disappointed as the Owls took a 1–0 lead throughJon-Paul McGovern on the stroke ofhalftime. However,Hartlepool fought back and took a 2–1 lead with 20 minutes of the game remaining. Sturrock made a brave triple substitution bringing on 18-year-old strikerDrew Talbot and the Owls' top scorer of the season,Steve MacLean (who had been out injured for the previous three months and had not kicked a ball). They combined with 10 minutes left as the Owls levelled the game 2–2. Talbot was adjudged to have been pushed down inside the box and Sheffield Wednesday were awarded a controversial penalty, which also resulted in the dismissal of Hartlepool player Westwood. MacLean duly slotted home the resultant penalty. They went on to win 4–2 after extra time, goals fromGlenn Whelan andDrew Talbot, achieving promotion to the Championship.
On 17 April 2006, Sheffield Wednesday retained their place in the Championship with two matches remaining, with a 2–0 away win atBrighton, condemning Brighton,Millwall andCrewe to the drop in the process.[11] Wednesday went on to finish the season in 19th place, 10 points clear of the relegation zone. They were statistically the best supported team in the Championship; their average home league attendance of 24,853 marginally beat newly relegatedNorwich with 24,833.
Despite having been awarded a new four-year contract just five weeks earlier, Sturrock was sacked after a slow start to the2006–07 season. His replacement was the formerScunthorpe United bossBrian Laws. Wednesday finished the season ninth in theFootball League Championship, just four points short of the playoffs.
On 25 June 2007, theRiver Don burst its bank duringa period of severe weather in the area, and the whole ground was flooded with several feet of water. The changing rooms, restaurants and kitchens and boardroom were all flooded, as well as the shop; many local houses were also affected. The club and ground remained closed for the rest of June. On 6 July, the club issued a statement confirming that the pitch would be ready in time for a pre-seasonfriendly match againstBirmingham City on 4 August.[12]
A disastrous start of six consecutive league defeats meant the club spent the2007–08 season battling against relegation and went into the final match of the season againstNorwich City knowing that defeat could send them down. After conceding first, a 4–1 victory in front of 36,208 spectators brought much needed relief. This was the Football League's highest attendance of the season and provided a fitting stage forDion Dublin's final game. He received a standing ovation from all parts of the ground when substituted in the 66th minute.
Season2008–09 saw Wednesday's first Sheffield derby win double in 95 years and a mid-table finish brought fresh hope for the coming season. But after a run of poor results, Laws left the club by mutual consent in December 2009. He was replaced in January by the formerPreston North End bossAlan Irvine. Irvine won the JanuaryChampionship Manager of the Month award, but the form was not sustained and the club was relegated after failing to beatCrystal Palace in front of 37,121 on the final day of the season.
The relegation triggered the resignation of chairmanLee Strafford. Stepping into the breach was former Wednesday player and manager Howard Wilkinson, making it clear that this would be an interim measure. In July and September 2010 winding up petitions instigated by HMRC were successfully fought off but in November 2010 a third winding up order threatened the club's existence. The High Court's patience was clearly wearing thin but CEO Nick Parker succeeded in securing a stay of execution afterDeputy Prime Minister andSheffield Hallam MP,Nick Clegg, helped persuade the club's main creditor, theCo-operative Bank, to grant more time to find a buyer.Shortly afterwards,Leicester City chairmanMilan Mandarić agreed to purchase the club. The purchase was completed the following month after anExtraordinary General Meeting of Wednesday's shareholders during which 99.7% of shareholders voted to sell the company to Mandarić's UK Football Investments for £1. Mandarić agreed to settle the club's outstanding debts as part of the deal and stepped down as chairman of Leicester City. For the first time in the club's history, the whole of the share base was now controlled by a single entity.
On the field, the club was failing to make its mark in League One and Irvine was replaced byGary Megson, son of former Owls captainDon Megson, and twice previously a player for the club. Megson failed to salvage the season and the club ended in a disappointing 15th place, lower than when he had taken over.
Season 2011–12 marked the start of a change in the club's fortunes but, after a late dip in form, Megson was controversially replaced by formerCardiff City managerDave Jones despite having just led Wednesday to what proved to be a season defining Sheffield derby win and with the club lying in third place. Jones carried on Megson's good work and completed the season unbeaten with ten wins and two draws, picking up two consecutiveLeague One Manager of the Month awards. The final match of the season againstWycombe Wanderers attracted 38,082 spectators to Hillsborough to watch Wednesday achieve the victory needed to finish second in the division, clinching promotion at the expense of local rivalsSheffield United who subsequently lost an epic penalty shoot-out in the promotion playoff final toHuddersfield Town at Wembley.
With one of the lowest playing budgets in the Championship,2012–13 season was one of survival and, with judicious loan signings, Jones steered the club to an 18th-place finish in one of the toughest Championship seasons in history with fourth bottom clubBarnsley needing 55 points to survive.
With no appreciable improvement in the budget,2013–14 season was again proving to be a struggle and, with only one league win and the club second bottom, Jones was sacked at the start of December. CoachStuart Gray was named caretaker manager and, after a good run of results, was finally given the job permanently. The length of contract remained confidential and, with a departure from club tradition, Gray was given the job title of head coach. For the third consecutive season Wednesday finished in a higher league position than the previous season.
Season 2014–15 was preceded by a story in the French newspaper,L'Equipe, of the imminent takeover of Wednesday byHafiz Mammadov, an Azerbaijani industrialist and effective owner ofRC Lens. With the Sheffield public hungry for news, Mandarić, perhaps unwisely, confirmed the takeover before its completion and announced a shirt sponsorship deal with the supposed new ownership. Mammadov subsequently failed to fulfil his legal obligations within the terms of the takeover agreement and Mandarić called time on the deal, instructing the club's lawyers accordingly. Embarrassingly, shirts had already been sold with the logo 'Azerbaijan Land of Fire' and the club decided to continue with the shirt sponsorship deal for the season, insisting that the deal was independent of the failed takeover.
On 29 January 2015 the club announced that an agreement had been reached between Mr Mandarić's UKFI Limited and Thai businessman MrDejphon Chansiri to acquire 100% of the club's shareholding. At a press conference on 2 March 2015 Mr Chansiri, whose familyhas a controlling interest in theThai Union Frozen Group,announced that he had purchased the club for £37.5m and was aiming for promotion to the Premier League by 2017, the club's 150th anniversary.
Season 2014–15 ended with the club improving its league position for the fourth consecutive season despite a very poor home campaign in which only 16 league goals were scored. The final home game of the season saw a wretched defeat at the hands of Yorkshire rivalsLeeds United, contrasting sharply with the previous season's 6–0 victory. Many felt that the home form was the catalyst for Stuart Gray's departure from the club in June 2015 and the appointment ofCarlos Carvalhal, a widely travelled but largely unknown Portuguese coach. Carvalhal became Wednesday's first ever overseas manager/coach.
After a patchy start, season 2015–16 culminated in a creditable 6th-place finish which represented a fifth consecutive improvement in league position. Wednesday somewhat luckily defeated the playoff favouritesBrighton & Hove Albion in the two legged semi-final but suffered a 1–0 defeat at the hands of Yorkshire rivalsHull City in the final, the club's first visit to the new Wembley.
Season 2016–17 ended in disappointment despite Wednesday improving their league position for the sixth consecutive season. Defeat in the playoffs at the semifinal stage by eventual winnersHuddersfield Town signalled criticism in some quarters of the marked change in playing style from the previous season. After much confusion over Carlos Carvalhal's future due to conflicting press reports it was announced that he would remain in charge for the coming season although the length of his contract was not disclosed.
A disappointing start to season 2017–18 led to Carlos Carvalhal leaving the club on Christmas Eve, reviving painful memories ofDerek Dooley's departure 44 years earlier. Carvalhal's replacement wasJos Luhukay, a Dutchman of Indonesian heritage who had achieved three promotions to the GermanBundesliga. His first match in charge was a derby atBramall Lane against high flyingSheffield United, but against all expectations and despite having a man sent off, the team achieved its first clean sheet of the season.
Results were mixed under Luhukay and in season 2018–19, after a particularly poor run, he was sacked in December. His replacement was the experiencedSteve Bruce with four promotions to the Premier League as manager under his belt. After Wednesday agreed to allow Bruce to conclude a family holiday, he eventually took over the reins in February 2019 after sterling work byLee Bullen as caretaker, his second spell in the role. This time, Bruce's job title was team manager, a welcome change which hinted at more control over signings than that enjoyed by his immediate predecessors. Wednesday finished the season strongly and the new season was keenly anticipated, but the club was rocked by the resignation of Bruce and his coaching staff days before its start.
Yet again, Bullen successfully stepped into the breach as caretaker, and formerSwansea City andBirmingham City manager,Garry Monk was next to take the hot seat in September 2019. Wednesday entered the second half of season 2019–20 in the play-off positions but facing a possible points deduction after being charged by theEFL with financial irregularities over the purchase of the stadium by Mr Chansiri. The club's form dipped significantly as 2020 progressed, with only 2 wins in 14 games before the suspension of the season in March 2020, due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. The season restarted in June, and the team's form didn't improve, with Wednesday losing 5 of their last 7 games to finish a disappointing 16th, down from 3rd on Christmas Day.
The threat of the points deduction hanging over the club finally materialised, as on 31 July 2020, the EFL stated that the club would start the upcoming 2020–21 season with a 12-point deficit. This was later reduced on appeal to 6 points on 4 November but with the club still second bottom of the division, Garry Monk was sacked on 9 November and replaced by the formerStoke City manager, WelshmanTony Pulis, five days later. After only ten games in charge, Pulis was replaced by theDoncaster Rovers managerDarren Moore on 1 March 2021. However, the 6 points deduction proved decisive, and Wednesday were relegated to League One after failing to beatDerby County on the last day of the season.
Despite a mixed start, a strong second half to the 2021–22 season saw Moore guide the Owls to the League One playoffs only to be eliminated bySunderland who went on to secure promotion to the Championship after a four-year absence.
In season 2022–23 Wednesday set club records for number of points (96), longest unbeaten run (23 games) and number of clean sheets (24). They also set an EFL record in the playoff semifinal by overcoming the largest first leg deficit (four goals) to win on penalties and secured promotion atWembley Stadium by beatingSouth Yorkshire rivalsBarnsley 1–0 in front of 74,292.
Before the start of season 2023–24, Darren Moore controversially left the club by mutual consent and was replaced by SpaniardXisco Muñoz. The worst start to a season in the club’s history (two points from 10 games) saw Muñoz replaced by formerGermany assistant managerDanny Röhl in his first appointment as a team boss. Despite having been in the bottom three for practically the whole season, Röhl led the club to safety on the final day at the expense ofBirmingham City who had at one stage been 16 points clear of Wednesday.
Season 24/25 saw Wednesday achieve a finish in the top half of the table despite having the second worst home points tally in the division. The on-field progress was overshadowed by end-of-season financial chaos resulting in EFL sanctions in the form of transfer restrictions and Danny Röhl leaving the club. On 24 October 2025 the club was placed in administration bringing an ignominious end to the Chansiri era.[13]