History The origin of the Formation of Hull City AFC

In 2007-08, they reached promotion to the top of English football for the first time in their history by winning the Championship play-off final at Wembley Stadium. The top of their standings is in 2013-14, when they finish 16th in the standings, a season in which they also reach the FA Cup final.

Hull City played at home at KCOM Stadium, having moved there in 2002 after 56 seasons at Boothferry Park. Hull traditionally plays black and yellow, often with striped shirt designs, therefore their nickname, The Tigers. For detailed season statistics, see Hull City AFC season list.

HISTORY OF HULL CITY 


The Hull City Association Football Club was founded in June 1904. Previous attempts to find a football club proved difficult due to dominance in the city of rugby league teams like Hull FC and Hull Kingston Rovers. The Club was unable to apply for the Football League membership for the 1904-05 season and only played in a friendly match, the first of which drew 2-2 with Notts County on 1 September 1904 with 6,000 in attention.

The first match of football was in the FA Cup, drawing 3-3 with Stockton on 17 September, but they were eliminated after losing 4-1 on September 22. After a dispute with landlords on Boulevard, Hull City moved to Anlaby Road Cricket Ground. After playing 44 friendly matches the previous season, Hull City finally went into the Second Division Football League for the 1905-06 season.

Other teams competing in the league that season include the likes of Manchester United and Chelsea, as well as rivals Yorkshire Barnsley, Bradford City and Leeds City. Hull beat Barnsley 4-1 at home in their first game and finished the season in fifth place.

Hull City and Grimsby Town are two professional teams licensed to play league football on Christmas Day because of the demands of fish trade, but the tradition has now disappeared after the dramatic reduction of their trawling fleets in recent years. The following season, a new land was built for Hull City across the street from the cricket pitch.

Still under Ambrose Langley's leadership, Hull continued to finish consistently at the top of the table. They approached the promotion in the 1909-10 season, noting what would be their highest result until they matched it in 2008.

Hull finished third, second in second place Oldham Athletic, lost promotion on average target of 0 , 29 from a target. Hull regularly finished at the top of the table before the First World War, but after the war the team finished in the bottom half in seven seasons of eleven, culminating in relegation to the Third Division of Utarapada in 1930.

MIDDLE OF THE 20TH CENTURY

Hull's biggest achievement in the cup competition until 2014 was in 1930, when they reached the FA Cup semi-final. The running cup saw Hull defeat the eventual champions of Second and Third Divisions; Blackpool and Plymouth Argyle respectively.

They were then eliminated from Manchester City, to meet Newcastle United in the quarter-finals. The first game at St James' Park finished a 1-1 draw, but in Hull's replay beat Newcastle 1-0. The semi-final match against Arsenal took place at Elland Road in Leeds, the game ended 2-2, and was brought to a replay in Birmingham.

Arsenal knock Hull atVilla Park, the game ended 1-0. After the Second World War, the club moved to another new land, Boothferry Park. In the 1948-49 season, run by former England international Raich Carter, Hull won the Northern Division III championship. "Yo-yoing" between the second and third tier of English football, Hull City underwent promotion season from Third Division to Division II again in 1959 and 1966, winning the Third Division in the last season.

Hull also became the first team in the world to come out of the cup competition on penalties, beaten by Manchester United in the Watney Cup semifinals on August 1, 1970. In the early 1980s, Hull City was in the Fourth Division, and the financial collapse led to the curator.

Don Robinson took over as chairman and appointed Colin Applet as a new manager. Both had previously held an equal role with Scarborough without a league. Promotion to the Third Division followed in 1983, with a young team featuring international international players Brian Marwood in the future, future England manager Steve McClaren, forward Billy Whitehurst, and Les Mutrie's top scorer.

When Hull City missed promotion with one goal the following season, Appleton went on to manage Swansea City.

DOWN IN THE 20TH CENTURY END 

Hull reached the Second Division in 1985 under the pema manager in. In the Hull season 1995-96 was relegated to the Third Division. Brian Horton. They stayed there for the next six years before finally going down in 1991, when the club's manager was Terry Dolan.

Hull finished 14th in the Third Division in the 1991-92 season, meaning they will compete in the new Division II the following season. In their first season in the rebranded division, Hull almost dodged another degradation, but the council remained confident in Dolan and in the next two seasons they reached the finish in the middle of the class.

Financial difficulties hampered City's progress, as key players like Alan Fettis and Dean Windass had to be sold to fend off the closing orders. In 1997 the club was bought by former tennis player David Lloyd, who fired Dolan as manager and replaced him with Mark Hateley after Hull could only finish in 17th place in the standings.

Hull league form continues to deteriorate to the extent that relegation to the Sepakbol Conference is looking for real possibilities. Lloyd sold the club in November 1998 to a consortium based in South Yorkshire, but retained possession of Boothferry Park. Hateley left in November 1998, with the club at the foot of the table.

He was replaced by 34-year-old veteran Warren Joyce, who steered the club to a safe with reserve games. Hull City fans call this season "The Great Escape". Despite this achievement, Joyce was replaced in April 2000 by the more experienced Brian Little.

Despite being locked down from Boothferry Park by court officials and facing possible liquidation, Hull qualified for the Third Division playoffs in the 2000-01 season, losing in the semi-finals to Leyton Orient. The board's boardroom retirement by Leeds United's former commercial director Paul Pearson has reduced the club's precarious financial situation and all fears of closure are halted.

THE RISE OF THE 21TH CENTURY

The new chairman hijacked funds to the club, allowing Little to rebuild the team. Hull occupied the Third Division promotion and play-off spot for most of the 2001-02 season, but Little departed two months before the end of the season and Hull slipped to 11th place under his successor Jan Mølby.

Hull started the 2002-03 season with a number of defeats, seeing degradation look more likely than promotion, and Mølby was sacked in October when Hull crouched fifth from bottom in the league. Peter Taylor was named the new manager of Hull and in December 2002, just two months after his appointment, Hull moved to the new 25,400 seater KC Stadium after 56 years at Boothferry Park. At the end of season Hull finished 13th.

NAME CHANGED 

In August 2013, the owner of Assem Allam announces that the club has been re-registered as "Hull City Tigers Ltd.," and that the team will be marketed as "Hull City Tigers," removing "Association Football Club" which has been part of the name since the formation of the club in 1904.

Deputy chairman Ehab Allam said "AFC" will remain in the club badge for the 2013-14 season, but was later removed. In response, a spokesman for the English Premier League said: "We have not been informed of the changes on behalf of the real club, they will still be known as Hull City as far as the Premier League is concerned when results or fixtures are published." According to his leadership, in 2014, the club will be called "Hull Tigers," because, as he says, "in marketing, the shorter the stronger name," while "Association Football Club" makes its name too long.

Allam states that he does not like the word "City", because it is too "common" and "bad identity", because it is associated with other clubs, like Leicester City, Bristol City and Manchester City. He told David Conn of The Guardian that "within a few years many clubs will follow and rename them to something more interesting and I will prove that I am a leader," adding that if he is the owner of Manchester City he will change their name become " Allam confirmed the name change as part of his plan to create an additional "source of income" for the club, after Hull City Council refused to sell it as stadium-free land so he could expand, as he stated, "sports park" on its website. refused to sell in sequence, as they stated, "to preserve the annual Hull Fair held in adjacent parking lots."

After the collapse of the negotiations, Allam stated: "I have 30 million pounds to spend on the club's infrastructure, to increase the stadium by 10,000 and to have commercial activities around the stadiums - cafeterias, shops, supermarkets - to have all this to create psuccess for the club so that in the future can be self-financing and not depend on me. "He asked rhetorically," Why do not I die tomorrow? " The support group declared the rejection of the name change. Bernard Noble, chairman of Hull City's official support club said that he was disappointed, although he agreed Allam had saved the club from liquidation and that it was "his club". Blogger Rick Skelton called his name a "futile exercise" and said, "Allam's statement that the name 'Hull City' is irrelevant and too general, just as disgusting use of English as his new name for the club."

Before the first home game of the season on 24 August 2013, a group of supporters moved to protest the name change, and unfurled a banner that read, "Hull City AFC: club not brand". Allam rejected complaints from fans, stating " In a commentary published on December 1, 2013 in The Independent in response to the songs and banners supporting "City Till (sic) We Die", Allam said, "They can die as fast as they want, as long as they leave the club. just want to watch good football. "Supporters responded with the song" We're Hull City, we'll die when we want it "in the home game that day against Liverpool.

Manager Steve Bruce credited the controversy for creating a "fantastic atmosphere" but added, "I have to talk to him because I do not think he understands what history and tradition mean." However, Bruce also said that, since Allam's money has been invested in the club, "If he thinks Hull Tigers is the way forward we should respect him." On 11 December 2013, a spokesman for Hull City announced that the club has officially applied to the Football Association to be renamed "Hull Tigers" from 2014-15 and beyond.

The FA Council, which has "absolute discretion" in deciding whether to approve the plan or not, declared the next day that it would follow a "consultation process" with stakeholders, "including club support groups."

STADION HULL CITY 


Between 1904 and 1905, Hull City played their home game on the Boulevard. This land is used by Hull on a contract that allows them to use it when not in use for the Rugby League, at a cost of £ 100 per year. Hull built their own land, Anlaby Road, which opened in 1906.

With the threat of railway routing through the Anlaby Road road, the club believes that they need to secure their future by owning their own land They negotiate a deal for the land between Boothferry Road and North Road on in 1929, funded by a £ 3,000 loan from the FA.

Due to the club's financial difficulties, there was no work that lasted for three years, and the construction then ceased until 1939. That year a proposal to build a new multi-purpose sports stadium at the venue temporarily halted the club's plans to move but now the club's failed plan decided to continue the development of the stalled site, in anticipation of a move to a new stadium in 1940.

However, the outbreak of war, meant redevelopment again stalled, as the site was taken over by the Home Guard. During the Second World War, Anlaby Road was damaged by enemy bombings, the cost of repairs was in the region of 1,000 pounds. The Cricket Club served notice to stop at the same time, and in 1943, the lease term was officially over. Hull was forced to return to the Boulevard Ground from 1944 to 1945 due to the poor condition of the planned stadium at Boothferry Road.

The new stadium finally opened with the revised name Boothferry Park on August 31, 1946. Hull City, along with one of the city's rugby league teams, Hull FC, moved to the newly built KC Stadium in 2002. The KC stadium was named "Best Ground" at the 2006 Football League Awards.

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