West Bromwich Albion FC profile picture

West Bromwich Albion FC

Home Of The Baggies!

About Me

I decided to start this website up a few months ago when I realised that myspace did not have a site dedicated to the best team in the world.
Since then, I've recieved more and more friend requests from fellow baggies fans, who wish to share their opinions about the albion on this site.
I try to keep the league table up to date, and leave some other things on here to keep you momentarily interested. If anyone has any ideas about what else to put on here then feel free to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and I'll see what I can do.

My Interests

The Coca-Cola Football League Championship Table:

Pl Po
1 Watford 7 16
2. Charlton 7 14
------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------
3 WEST BROM 7 13
4 Bristol C 7 13
5 Stoke 7 12
6 Burnley 6 11
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7 Coventry 6 11
8 Barnsley 7 11
9 Blackpool 7 10
10 Wolves 7 10
11 S'thorpe 7 10
12 Plymouth 7 9
13 C'chester 7 8
14 Palace 7 8
15 Sheff U 7 8
16 Cardiff 7 8
17 Hull 7 8
18 S'hampton 7 7
19 Ipswich 5 7
20 Norwich 7 7
21 Leicester 6 6----------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------
22 Preston 7 5
23 QPR 6 3
24 Sheff Wed 7 3
General details
Ground Capacity: 27877
Year Formed: 1878
Manager: Tony Mowbray
Club address:
The Hawthorns
West Bromwich Albion FC
The Hawthorns
West Bromwich
West Midlands
B71 4LF
League Honours
Level 1 (Premiership, First Division, Football League)
Champions 1919/1920
Runners-up 1924/1925, 1953/1954
Level 2 (Championship, League Division One, Second Division) Champions 1901/1902, 1910/1911 Runners-up 1930/1931, 1948/1949, 2001/2002, 2003/2004
Past Chairmen:
Sir Bert Millichip (1974-1983)
Sid Lucas (1983-1988)
John Silk (1988-1992)
Trevor Summers (1992-1994)
Tony Hale (1994-2000)
Paul Thompson (2000-2002)
Jeremy Peace (2002-
Previous Managers:
Louis Ford, (1890 - 1892)
Henry Jackson, (1892 - 1894)
Edward Stephenson, (1894 - 1895)
Clement Keys, (1895 - 1896)
Frank Heaven, (1896 - 1902)
Fred Everiss, (1902 - 1948)
Jack Smith, (1948 - 1952)
Jesse Carver, (1952)
Vic Buckingham, (1952 - 1959)
Gordon Clark, (1959 - 1961)
Archie Macaulay, (1961 - 1963)
Jimmy Hagan, (1963 - 1967)
Alan Ashman, (1967 - 1971)
Don Howe, (1971 - 1975)
Johnny Giles, (1975 - 1977)
Ronnie Allen, (1977)
Ron Atkinson, (1978 - 1981)
Ronnie Allen, (1981 - 1982)
Ron Wylie, (1982 - 1984)
Johnny Giles, (1984 - 1985)
Nobby Stiles, (1985 - 1986)
Ron Saunders, (1986 - 1987)
Ron Atkinson, (1987 - 1988)
Brian Talbot, (1988 - 1991)
Bobby Gould, (1991 - 1992)
Osvaldo Ardiles, (1992 - 1993)
Keith Burkinshaw, (1993 - 1994)
Alan Buckley, (1994 - 1997)
Ray Harford, (1997)
Denis Smith, (1997 - 1999)
Brian Little, (1999 - (2000)
Gary Megson, (2000 - 2004).
Bryan Robson, (2004 - 2006)
Tony Mowbray, (2006 - current)
Poll
Previous Poll Results
Fixtures

Sat 11/08 A Burnley 2-1
Tue 14/08 H Bournemouth (LC) 1-0
Sat 18/08 H Preston 2-0
Sat 25/08 A Sheff U 1-0

Sat 1/09 H Barnsley 2-0
Sat 15/09 H Ipswich 4-0
Tue 18/09 A Bristol C 1-1
Sat 22/09 A Scunthorpe 2-3
Sun 30/09 H Qpr

Tue 2/10 H Stoke
Sat 6/10 A S'Hampton
Sat 20/10 A Colchester
Tue 23/10 H Blackpool
Sat 27/10 H Norwich

Sat 3/11 A Watford
Tue 6/11 H Sheff W
Mon 12/11 A Coventry
Sun 25/11 H Wolves
Tue 27/11 A Plymouth

Sat 1/12 A C'Palce
Tue 4/12 H Coventry
Sat 8/12 A Leicester
Sat 15/12 H Charlton
Sat 22/12 A Stoke
Wed 26/12 H Bristol C
Sat 29/12 H Scunthorpe

Tue 1/01 A Ipswich
Sat 12/01 A Hull
Sat 19/01 H Cardiff
Tue 29/01 A Preston

Sat 2/02 H Burnley
Sat 9/02 A Barnsley
Tue 12/02 H Sheff U
Sat 16/02 A Cardiff
Sat 23/02 H Hull

Sat 1/03 H Plymouth
Tue 4/03 A Sheff W
Sat 8/03 A Wolves
Tue 11/03 H C'Palace
Sat 15/03 H Leicester
Sat 22/03 A Charlton
Sat 29/03 H Colchester

Sat 5/04 A Blackpool
Sat 12/04 H Watford
Sat 19/04 A Norwich
Sat 26/04 H S'hampton

Sun 4/05 A QPRHighlightsWest Brom vs IpswichWest Brom vs Bristol City

I'd like to meet:


..
Create Your Own Countdown



This layout is from WhateverLife History:
West Bromwich Albion Are The Greatest Football Team In The World
West Bromwich Albion are one of the oldest and proudest names in English football, and one of a select group of clubs to have won all three major domestic honours. The club formed in 1879 as West Bromwich Strollers, reverting to the familiar Albion a year later, and in 1888 joined their neighbours Aston Villa and Wolverhampton Wanderers among the original 12 members of the Football League.
That year saw them reach the FA Cup Final for the third season running and, after losing the previous two, beat Preston to take the trophy for the first time. The Cup was won again in 1892, but Albion suffered a period of decline at the turn of the century, spending the period 1904-12 in the Second Division.
Sandy McNab, West Bromwich Albion Albion returned to the top flight just before World War One – and, captained by the England captain Jesse Pennington, won the League Championship in the first season after the conflict, finishing nine points clear of Burnley and scoring 104 goals. The club have gone close to repeating the feat several times since – they were runners-up in 1925 and 1954, and finished third in 1979, but it has been in the Cup competitions that Albion have traditionally shone.
In 1931, they achieved the so-far unique "double" of winning promotion and the FA Cup in the same year, beating Birmingham City 2-1 in the Final with both goals scored by one of the club’s all-time great centre-forwards, W.G. Richardson. But The Baggies again failed to maintain their momentum, and in 1938 slipped back into Division Two.
They returned to the top flight soon after the Second World War, and maintained their status for 24 years (1949-73) during which the FA Cup was won on two more occasions – for a fourth time in 1954 and for a fifth in 1968. The 1954 season saw Albion come close to winning the League and Cup double, but they faltered during the closing stages and finished behind their local rivals Wolverhampton Wanderers. But Albion had the considerable compensation of beating Preston North End in the Cup Final, with Ronnie Allen netting twice in a 3-2 win.
The 50s proved to be a golden era of attractive football at The Hawthorns – Allen scored 208 First Division goals (1950-61), and later went on to manage the club twice. He formed a deadly strike partnership with Johnny Nicholls as Albion enjoyed some stunning wins, including a remarkable 7-3 victory at Newcastle United in 1953. It was also the era of Ray Barlow, Joe Kennedy, Jack Vernon, Stan Rickaby and Len Millard, most of them full internationals.
Jeff Astle , West Bromwich Albion The 60s saw the emergence of two of Albion’s all-time great goalscorers – Jeff Astle and Tony Brown. The two England internationals were rarely off the scoresheet as Albion made Wembley their second home, reaching the League Cup Finals of 1967 and 1970, and winning the FA Cup for a fifth time in 1968 when Astle’s extra time winner saw off Everton. That proved to be Albion’s tenth and last FA Cup Final appearance to date, though they were beaten Semi-Finalists in 1969, 1978 and 1982. The Baggies also completed a full set of domestic honours in 1966 when they won the League Cup in a two-legged Final against West Ham United.
A decline set in during the early 70s and the club lost its top flight status in 1973, but returned three years later under the guidance of player-manager Johnny Giles. The club quickly re-established itself in the top flight, and under Giles, Ronnie Allen and then Ron Atkinson played some sparkling football, finishing third in 1979 and fourth in 1981. This was a new era of entertainment at The Hawthorns, with the "Three Degrees" of Cyrille Regis, Laurie Cunningham and Brendon Batson starring as the first high-profile trio of black players in the domestic game. They were backed up by a number of England internationals – among them Bryan Robson and Derek Statham – as Albion went close to, but never quite, managed to clinch a major trophy. But "Bomber" Brown continued through to the early 80s, breaking every scoring record in the club’s history during a remarkable 20 year career at The Hawthorns.
Tony Brown, West Bromwich Albion Albion’s decline began in 1981 when Atkinson departed for Manchester United and quickly took the heart of Albion’s midfield by signing Robson and Remi Moses. Despite Semi-Final appearances in both Cups in 1982, playing fortunes dipped and in 1986 they were relegated from the top flight after the worst season in the club’s history, winning just four games.
The situation was to worsen – as gates declined, Albion slipped still further, being humiliated 4-2 at home by non-league Woking in the FA Cup in 1991 and ending the season being relegated to Division Three for the first time in the club’s history. It took two years for The Baggies to escape, winning promotion back to the re-named First Division in 1993 after beating Port Vale 3-0 in the Play-Off Final at Wembley – the club’s first appearance there since 1970.
Several years of struggle – and in 2001, a new chairman Paul Thompson and a new manager Gary Megson found a winning formula, and the Baggies reached the promotion play-offs, only to lose to Bolton. But a year later, in a thrilling race with Wolverhampton Wanderers, The Baggies won seven and drew one of their last eight games to clinch promotion at the expense of their local rivals.
Albion began 2002 back in the top flight for the first time in 16 years – the status they have generally enjoyed for most of their illustrious history.
However in 2003 West Brom were rellegated back to the first division finishing 19th but next season they bounced back getting promoted again as runners up.
In 2004 Gary Megson parted company with West Brom and Bryan Robson took over. At Christmas we looked destined for relegation again suffering defeat after defeat including 4-0 against Blues but a magical revival including a 4-1 away win at charlton sparked "The great Escape" and despite still being bottom of the league with 90 minutes of the season left to play and 45 minutes left, we managed to survive with a 2-0 win against Portsmouth, Making us the first premiership club ever to avoid relegation and being bottom at Christmas.
However season after we failed to avoid the drop and were relegated along with Midlands rivals Birmingham.
The 06-07 season saw the arrival of Tony Mowbray and his style of attracive attacking footbal which created an exciting season and led us to the playoff final where we lost 1-0 to Derby county at the new Wembley Stadium
Don't you wish you were all albion fans?..
1. Dean Kiely Goalkeeper
2. Carl Hoefkens Defender
3. Paul Robinson Defender
4. Leon Barnett Defender
5. Neil Clement Defender
6. Curtis Davies Defender
7. Robert Koren Midfielder
8. Jonathan Greening Midfielder
9. Nathan Ellington Sriker
10. Craig Beattie Striker
11. Zoltan Gera Midfielder
12. Richard Chaplow Midfielder
13. Luke Steele Goalkeeper
14. Martin Albrectsen Defender
15. Sherjill MacDonald Striker
16. Jared Hodgkiss Defender
18. Shelton Martis Defender
19. John Hartson Striker
20. Filipe Teixeira Midfielder
21. Kevin Phillips Striker
22. Stuart Nicholson Striker
23. Tininiho Defender
24. Ronnie Wallwork Midfielder
25. Bostjan Cesar Defender
26. Pedro Pele Defender
27. James Morrison Midfielder
29. Chris Brunt Midfielder
31. Luke Daniels Goalkeeper
32. David Worrall Midfielder

Music:

The Lord Is My Shephard

Movies:

The Great Escape

Television:

Soccer Am, Sky Sports News, The Championship

Books:

The Albion Programme

Heroes:

Jeff Astle, Tony Brown, Bob Taylor, Gary Megson

My Blog

Best Albion Team

Hi,     I was doing some thinking over the weekend after that fantastic win against Derby (match report to come later), and I was wondering which players would make the best ever albion...
Posted by West Bromwich Albion FC on Mon, 04 Dec 2006 04:11:00 PST

West Brom 3 Burnley 0

It was back to winning ways for West Brom after a series of bad results. Jason Koumas opened the scoring after just five minutes latching onto Nathan Ellington's pass. And Ellington turned from p...
Posted by West Bromwich Albion FC on Sat, 18 Nov 2006 11:49:00 PST

West Brom v Wolves

West Bromwich Albion 3 Wolverhampton Wanderers 0:Tony Mowbray's reign as West Brom manager got off to a flying start with a comprehensive win in the Black Country derby against Wolves. Jonathan Greeni...
Posted by West Bromwich Albion FC on Sat, 18 Nov 2006 11:11:00 PST