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{{Short description|Association football club in England}}
{{Football club infobox |
clubname = Bristol City|
{{For|the women's football club|Bristol City W.F.C.}}
{{redirect|Bristol City|the city itself|Bristol}}
image = [[image:Bristol_City_badge.gif|Bristol City badge]] |
{{Use British English|date=May 2013}}
fullname = Bristol City Football Club |
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2020}}
nickname = The Robins|
{{Infobox football club
founded = 1897 |
ground = [[Ashton Gate]], <br>[[Bristol]] |
| nickname = The Robins, [[Cider]] Army
| ground = [[Ashton Gate (stadium)|Ashton Gate]]
capacity = 21,497 |
| capacity = 27,000
chairman = [[Stephen Lansdown]] |
| current = 2024–25 Bristol City F.C. season
manager = {{flagicon|England}} [[Gary Johnson (footballer)|Gary Johnson]]|
| clubname = Bristol City
league = [[Football League Championship|The Championship]] |
| image = Bristol_City_crest.svg
season = [[2006-07 in English football|2006-07]] |
| image_size = 185px
position = [[Football League One|League One]], 2nd<br>(promoted) |
| fullname = Bristol City Football Club
pattern_la1=|pattern_b1=|pattern_ra1=_whiteshoulders|
| founded = {{start date and age|1894}}
leftarm1=CC0000|body1=CC0000|rightarm1=CC0000|shorts1=FFFFFF|socks1=FFFFFF|
| owner = [[Steve Lansdown]]
pattern_la2=_shouldersonwhite|pattern_b2=_thinsidesonwhite|pattern_ra2=_shouldersonwhite|
| chairman = Jon Lansdown
leftarm2=333333|body2=333333|rightarm2=333333|shorts2=333333|socks2=333333|
| mgrtitle = Head Coach
| manager = [[Liam Manning]]
| league = {{English football updater|BristolC}}
| season = {{English football updater|BristolC2}}
| position = {{English football updater|BristolC3}}
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| website = {{URL|https://www.bcfc.co.uk/|bcfc.co.uk}}
}}
}}


'''Bristol City Football Club''' is one of two [[football (soccer)|football]] league clubs in [[Bristol|Bristol, England]], (the other being [[Bristol Rovers]]). They were promoted to the Championship on 5th May 2007. Their ground is called [[Ashton Gate|Ashton Gate Stadium]], located in the south-western portion of the City. [[Gary Johnson (footballer)|Gary Johnson]] has been the team's manager since [[23 September]] [[2005]], succeeding [[Brian Tinnion]].
'''Bristol City Football Club''' is a professional [[association football|football]] club based in [[Bristol]], England. The team compete in the {{English football updater|BristolC}}, the second level of the [[English football league system]].


Founded in 1894, the club competed in the [[Southern Football League|Southern League]] and [[Western Football League|Western League]], being crowned Western League champions in 1897–98. They were admitted into the [[English Football League|Football League]] in 1901 and won the [[Football League Second Division|Second Division]] in 1905–06. They finished second in the [[Football League First Division|First Division]] the following season, three points behind champions [[Newcastle United F.C.|Newcastle United]], and went on to lose to [[Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United]] in the [[1909 FA Cup final]]. Relegated in 1911, they dropped to the third tier in 1922, though would claim the [[Football League Third Division South|Third Division South]] title in 1922–23 and again in 1926–27. They were returned to the third tier in 1932, remaining there until they won the Third Division South again in 1954–55. Having been relegated in 1960, Bristol City won promotion from the third tier in 1964–65 and then from the second tier in 1975–76. They played four seasons in the top-flight before being relegated in three consecutive seasons by 1982.
The Bristol City kit for the 2006-7 season was produced by sports brand '[[Puma AG|Puma]]'. Home colours for 2006-7 are the traditional red shirts and white shorts, which have returned after several years of all red kits. The away kit is white with gunmetal grey shorts, and a black third kit is also available. In the past a variety of away combinations have been used, particularly white shirts and black shorts, but yellow, green-and-purple, all black, all white and "champagne gold" have also been seen in recent years. The club's nickname is "the Robins", and a [[European Robin|robin]] featured on the club's badge from 1976 to 1994. Official club merchandise, including replica kits, still has a label showing a robin. A recent attempt by the club to alter the club's badge was abandoned after the club was criticised fiercely by fans. Many supporters still choose to sport the club's old Robin and suspension bridge badge.


Bristol City spent just two seasons in the [[Football League Fourth Division|Fourth Division]] and went on to win the [[EFL Trophy|Associate Members' Cup]] (Football League Trophy) in [[1986 Associate Members' Cup final|1986]]. Promoted out of the Third Division in 1989–90, the club were relegated in 1995 and again in 1999 after another promotion in 1997–98. Bristol City won the Football League Trophy again in [[2003 Football League Trophy final|2003]], and were promoted from [[EFL League One|League One]] in 2006–07. Relegated after six seasons in the [[EFL Championship|Championship]], they won the Football League Trophy for a third time in [[2015 Football League Trophy final|2015]] on their way to the 2014–15 League One title, and have remained in the Championship since that promotion.
Bristol City reached the 1909 F.A Cup final where they lost to Manchester United, but they did win the Welsh Cup - despite being an English team - in 1934. In 1907 they finished runners-up in the league, which is their highest-ever final position.


They have played their home games at [[Ashton Gate Stadium|Ashton Gate]] since moving from [[St John's Lane]] in 1904. The club's home colours are red and white, and their nickname is The Robins—a [[European robin|robin]] featured on the club's badge from 1976 to 1994 and from 2019 onwards. Their main rivals are [[Bristol Rovers F.C.|Bristol Rovers]], with whom they contest the [[Bristol derby]], and [[Cardiff City F.C.|Cardiff City]], with whom they contest the cross-border [[Severnside derby]].
In 1982, Bristol City became the first English team to suffer three successive relegations and just before falling into the Fourth Division they almost went out of business. But a takeover deal saved them from going under, and by 1990 they were back in the Second Division. Another relegation followed in 1995, when City finished second from bottom in the new Division Two, and a return to that division three years later lasted just one season. Most of their seasons between 1999 and 2006 were spent challenging for promotion in the upper half of the division.


==History==
Bristol City currently play at Ashton Gate stadium in the Bedminster area of the city of Bristol, which has an all-seater capacity of more than 20,000. There have been plans, if the need arises, for expansion work to be carried out at their current ground. There have also been proposals to build a new stadium, the first option being a 36,000-seat stadium at Hengrove Park. In 2002, the local council was looking at possible sites for a new 40,000-seat stadium which would house both City and Rovers, but these plans were scrapped and it is widely accepeted that this would not have been welcomed by the majority of supporters from both clubs. Ashton Gate's current capacity is larger than most other League One grounds, and it is still to be seen if the attendance figures in the Championship would require further expansion to the ground.


===Early years and early successes (1894–1922)===
==Honours==
The club was founded in 1894 as Bristol South End and changed their name to Bristol City on adopting professionalism three years later when they were admitted into the Southern League. Finishing as runners-up in three of the first four seasons, in 1900 the club amalgamated with local Southern League rivals [[Bedminster F.C.]], who had been founded as Southville in 1887. Bristol City joined the [[English Football League|Football League]] in 1901 when they became only the third club south of Birmingham (following in the footsteps of [[Arsenal F.C.|Woolwich Arsenal]] and [[Luton Town F.C.|Luton Town]]) to perform in the competition. Their first game in the Football League was on 7 September 1901 at [[Bloomfield Road]], when [[Blackpool F.C.|Blackpool]] were beaten 2–0.<ref>Calley, Roy (1992). ''Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887–1992'', Breedon Books Sport</ref>
The team played in the [[FA Cup]] final, losing 1 - 0 to [[Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United]] at [[Crystal Palace National Sports Centre|Crystal Palace]], [[London]], on [[April 26]] [[1909]], and won the [[Welsh Cup]] in 1934, defeating [[Tranmere Rovers F.C.|Tranmere Rovers]] 3 - 0.


{{Quote box
Their highest finishing position in the League was in the 1906-07 season when the team were runners-up to [[Newcastle United F.C.|Newcastle]] in [[Football League First Division|Division 1]].
|quote=A scheme has been informally approved by the parties interested for the amalgamation of the Bristol City and Bedminster Association Football Clubs. The leading conditions are that the name and colours of Bristol City shall be retained, that matches shall be played alternately on the ground of each club for one season, and that five directors shall be nominated by each club. This should lead to Bristol securing one of the strongest teams in the south.
|source=''Gloucestershire Echo'', 12 April 1900.<ref>{{cite news |title=Sporting Gossip |work=[[Gloucestershire Echo]] |date=12 April 1900 |access-date=15 December 2015 |url=http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000320/19000412/057/0003 |via=[[British Newspaper Archive]] |url-access=subscription }}</ref> The announcement of the merger between Bristol City and Bedminster.
|align=right
|width=40%
}}
Winning the Second Division Championship with a record number of points when they became the first club in Football League history to win 30 league games in a season (out of 38 played) as well as equalling [[Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United]]'s achievement of the previous season in winning 14 consecutive games (a record until 2018, also accomplished by [[Preston North End F.C.|Preston North End]] in 1950–51). Nicknamed the Bristol Babe at this time, they finished as runners-up in their inaugural First Division campaign (1906–07) as the only southern club to finish in the top two prior to World War I.


In 1909 they won through to their only FA Cup final, though they were somewhat fortunate that a last-gasp spot-kick saved them from defeat in the semi-final versus [[Derby County F.C.|Derby County]] at [[Stamford Bridge (stadium)|Stamford Bridge]]. In the final at the [[Crystal Palace National Sports Centre#FA Cup Finals (1895–1914)|Crystal Palace]] (now the National Sports Centre) Bristol City lost to Manchester United 1–0. After a five-season stay in the top flight, despite winning 1–0 at [[Newcastle United F.C.|Newcastle]] at the start of the 1910–11 campaign, failure to beat [[Everton F.C.|Everton]] in the season's finale brought City's first-ever taste of relegation and it was to be 65 years before top-flight status would be regained.<ref>Bristol City The Early Years 1894–1915 by David Woods published by Desert Island Books 2004; The Bristol Babe by David Woods published by Yore Publications 1994; Bristol City The Complete Record 1894–1987 by David Woods with Andrew Crabtree published by Breedon Books 1987; David Woods the Official Bristol City Club Historian.</ref>
Minor honours include: [[Football League Second Division|Second Division]] champions 1905-06; [[Football League Third Division South|Third Division South]] champions three times; [[Football League Trophy|Associate Members' Cup]] winners 1985-86 (as Freight Rover Trophy); [[Football League Trophy]] ; Third Division runners-up to Bristol Rovers in 1989-90, after being beaten 3-0 at Twerton Park; winners 2002-3 (as LDV Vans Trophy); [[Anglo-Scottish Cup]] winners 1977-78.


Bristol City would then go on to stay in Division 2 until three years after the First World War had ended, and in that time they reached the semi-finals of the [[1919–20 FA Cup]] before being beaten 2–1 by [[Huddersfield Town A.F.C.|Huddersfield Town]] and finished third in the Second Division in the [[1920–21 Football League|1920–21 season]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.worldfootball.net/schedule/eng-fa-cup-1919-1920-halbfinale/0/|title=FA Cup 1919/1920 – Semi-finals|website=worldfootball.net|date=12 June 2023 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://melaman2.com/premierleague/championship/1920-21_english-football-league.html|title=Millennium 1920–21 English Football League Season & Lower Division Tables|first=Michael|last=Appert|website=melaman2.com}}</ref> However, in the next season they were relegated to the Third Division South.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://melaman2.com/premierleague/championship/1921-22_english-football-league.html|title=Millennium 1921–22 English Football League Season & Lower Division Tables|first=Michael|last=Appert|website=melaman2.com}}</ref>
==History==
The club was founded in 1897, when Bristol South End F.C. turned professional and changed its name to Bristol City. In 1900 the club merged with local rivals Bedminster F.C., who had been founded as Southville in 1887. The side joined [[the Football League]] in 1901. They first entered Division 1 in 1906 as [[Football League Second Division|Division 2]] champions, and as newcomers became known as the "Bristol Babe", a nickname that would last into the thirties. They were runners-up in their first season in the top flight, but couldn't match this performance again, and were relegated in 1911. They would not return for sixty-five years.


===The yo-yo era (1922–65)===
The 1920s were a rocky time as City bounced between the Second Division and the Southern Section of the Third Division. By the 1930s they had slumped into the lower division, and stayed that way until the Second World War. Harry Dolman became chairman in 1949, a post he would hold for over 30 years. An engineer who had bought out the firm he worked for, he designed the first set of floodlights installed at Ashton Gate in the early 1950s. The late 1950s were a better time for City, with a five year stay in the Second Division, a league they returned to for a further spell in 1965. In 1967 [[Alan Dicks]] was appointed manager, and he eventually led them back to the top division in 1976 when they were runners-up in the Second Division - ending a 65-year absence from the top flight.
[[File:BristolCityFC League Performance.svg|thumb|right|Chart of yearly table positions of Bristol City in the Football League]]


The 1920s were a rocky time as City bounced between the Second Division and the Southern Section of the Third Division. The season after City were relegated, they achieved promotion back to the Second Division, before being relegated back to the Southern Section of the Third Division again the following season. After successive high finishes in the league, they were promoted again in 1926–27. However, by the 1930s they had slumped into the lower division and stayed that way until over 10 years after the Second World War. During this stay in the Third Division South, they won the [[Welsh Cup]] in 1934, beating Tranmere Rovers in the final. However, in the same year they also suffered their biggest ever league defeat, a 9–0 loss to [[Coventry City F.C.|Coventry City]] The 1937–38 season was the most successful season for City since they were relegated to the Third Division, coming second in the league and reaching the final of the [[Football League Third Division South Cup|Third Division South Cup]], before losing 6–2 to Reading on aggregate.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/fanzone/club-history/potted-history/|title=Club Legends|website=Bristol City|access-date=6 February 2018|archive-date=7 February 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180207010658/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/fanzone/club-history/potted-history/|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://fchd.info/cups/div3scupsummary.htm|title=Football Club History Database – Football League Division Three South Cup Summary|website=fchd.info}}</ref> They then came eighth in the Third Division South in the final full season before the war, in which the Grandstand of Ashton Gate was destroyed by a German air raid.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2010/nov/10/blitz-football-grounds-bomb-damage|title=Memories of the Blitz bombers and a damaging time for sport|first=Frank|last=Keating|date=10 November 2010|website=The Guardian}}</ref>
Surviving just four seasons in the top division and only managing a peak of 13th position in the 1978-79 season, they were relegated in 1980 and after three successive demotions went bankrupt and were only able to continue playing under the ownership of a new company, BCFC (1982) plc, because eight highly-paid senior players (the "Ashton Gate Eight") accepted redundancy.


In 1946–47, City recorded a record league win by beating [[Aldershot F.C.|Aldershot]] 9–0, although despite [[Don Clark (footballer)|Don Clark]] scoring 36 goals in the League, City failed to get promoted that season. [[Harry Dolman]] became chairman in 1949, a post he would hold for over 30 years. An engineer who had bought out the firm he worked for, he designed the first set of floodlights installed at Ashton Gate in the early 1950s. The late 1950s were a better time for City, with a five-year stay in the Second Division, a league they returned to for a further spell in 1965.
City's stay in the basement was short - just two years - since when they have remained in the middle two divisions of the League structure. The late 1990s were a period of instability for the club, with five managers in four seasons. [[Danny Wilson (footballer)|Danny Wilson]] was appointed as manager in June 2000, but left by mutual consent in June 2004 after successive seasons of finishing third but narrowly failing to win the play-offs. Long-serving City midfielder [[Brian Tinnion]] became player-manager in his place and led the team to a place just outside the play-offs in his first season.


===Back among the elite (1966–80)===
The summer of 2005 saw a major rebuilding of the squad, bringing in the Premiership strikers [[Marcus Stewart]] (who supported City as a boy) and [[Michael Bridges]]. Three games into the 2005-2006 season City were one of only two clubs in the entire league without a goal; the drought ended abruptly in their fourth game, with three goals in the first quarter hour of a 4-2 victory over [[Port Vale F.C.|Port Vale]]. Results remained poor, however, and Tinnion resigned as manager after a 7-1 thrashing by [[Swansea City A.F.C.|Swansea]]. He was replaced by [[Gary Johnson (footballer)|Gary Johnson]], who was lured from west country neighbours [[Yeovil Town F.C.|Yeovil Town]]. A club record of nine successive defeats was brought to an end with a 2-0 victory at home to Huddersfield on 10 December. Since then, a continuous run of only three defeats in sixteen games was capped with City beating [[Gillingham F.C.|Gillingham]] 6-0, with defender [[Louis Carey]] scoring a brace. This was City's largest league win since late 1969, and was an encouraging sign of things to come.
In 1967, [[Alan Dicks]] was appointed manager, and things gradually began to improve, with promotion to the First Division in 1976, ending a 65-year exile from the top flight.


Between 1975 and 1981 City were regular participants in the [[Anglo-Scottish Cup]], winning the trophy in 1977–78, beating Hibernian in the semi-finals, and winning 3–2 on aggregate in the final against St Mirren (managed at the time by a relatively new manager, Alex Ferguson). St Mirren had their revenge two seasons later, with an aggregate 5–1 victory over City to become the only Scottish team to win the trophy.
The 2006/2007 season started poorly for City. After a win over [[Scunthorpe United F.C.|Scunthorpe]] on the first day of the season, a run of four successive defeats had the crowd calling for Johnson's head. The club also sold young prodigy [[David Cotterill]] to [[Wigan Athletic F.C.|Wigan]] just one hour before the transfer window shut. However, City didn't seen to miss him as they went on to win 6 out of their next 7 games, firing them into the top 6 of League 1. An undefeated run of 11 league games, from late November until the last game in January, put City on top of the league and promotion seemed a real possibility. City also put together an impressive [[FA Cup]] run, being knocked out in the 4th round on penalties after a replay in which they held [[Premier League|Premiership]] side [[Middlesbrough F.C.|Middlesbrough]] to a 2-2 draw in both ties. They knocked out [[Football League Championship|Championship]] side [[Coventry City F.C.|Coventry City]] in the 3rd round.


City's second stint in the top flight was less successful than the club's first, with thirteenth position in 1979 being their highest finish during this era. Stars of this era included [[Peter Cormack]], [[Geoff Merrick]], [[Tom Ritchie]], [[Clive Whitehead]], [[Gerry Gow]], [[Trevor Tainton]] and [[Jimmy Mann (footballer)|Jimmy Mann]].
Bristol City FC secured a place in the Championship for the first time in nine years for the 2007/08 season, after winning 3-1 against [[Rotherham United|Rotherham]] with two goals by [[David Noble (footballer)|David Noble]] and one by [[Alex Russell]]


===Financial difficulties and revival (1980–2000)===
Bristol are favourites for the drop next year, and will have a lot of work to do to ensure survival. A full squad overhaul and new fans are a must.
In 1980, the City team went back to the Second Division in the first of three relegations, their debt mounted and their financial losses increased, with two successive relegations following. Thus, in 1982, they fell into the [[Football League Fourth Division|Fourth Division]], and were declared bankrupt. A new club was formed<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/fanzone/club-history/potted-history/|title=Club Legends|website=Bristol City|access-date=10 May 2018|archive-date=7 May 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180507100228/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/fanzone/club-history/potted-history/|url-status=dead}}</ref> and BCFC (1982) Ltd acquired the club's player contracts. The highly paid senior players Julian Marshall, [[Chris Garland]], [[Jimmy Mann (footballer)|Jimmy Mann]], [[Peter Aitken]], [[Geoff Merrick]], [[David Rodgers]], [[Gerry Sweeney]] and [[Trevor Tainton]], who became known as the 'Ashton Gate Eight', each accepted termination of his contract for half the amount due. The club's previous owners had failed to pay its debts to many local businesses. The resulting ill will towards the club made it difficult for the new owners to obtain credit.


City spent two seasons in the Fourth Division before winning promotion under [[Terry Cooper (footballer, born 1944)|Terry Cooper]] in 1984. They consolidated themselves in the Third Division during the latter part of the 1980s, and in 1990 Cooper's successor [[Joe Jordan (footballer)|Joe Jordan]] achieved promotion as Third Division runners-up to local rivals Bristol Rovers.
==Kit 2006/2007 Season==

At the beginning of the 2006/2007 season Bristol City signed a 4 year deal with [[Puma AG|Puma]] to produce their kits. Before the season started fans were allowed to vote on a combination of shirts, shorts and socks. The fans voted to return to red shirts with white shorts after several seasons playing in all red. As well as the white and gunmetal grey away kits, they also have a third black kit of which only 250 replicas were made.
There was a tragedy for the club, however, in that promotion campaign. In March 1990, two months before the club sealed promotion, striker [[Dean Horrix]] was killed in a car crash barely two weeks after joining the club, and having played three league games for them.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.royals.org/deano.html|title=Hob Nob Anyone? – Reading FC – The Royals – Articles}}</ref>
{|

|{{Football kit
Jordan moved to [[Heart of Midlothian F.C.|Heart of Midlothian]] in September 1990, and his successor [[Jimmy Lumsden]] remained in charge for 18 months before making way for [[Denis Smith (footballer, born 1947)|Denis Smith]]. Smith's first signing was the 20-year-old [[Arsenal F.C.|Arsenal]] striker [[Andy Cole]]. He was sold to Newcastle United in February 1993 and later played for Manchester United, where he collected five [[Premier League]] titles, two [[FA Cup]]s and the [[UEFA Champions League|European Cup]].
| pattern_la =

| pattern_b =
Meanwhile, City remained in the new [[Football League First Division|Division One]] (no longer the Second Division after the creation of the Premier League in 1992) and Smith moved to [[Oxford United F.C.|Oxford United]] in November 1993. His successor was [[Russell Osman]]. In January 1994 Osman led City to a shock 1–0 victory over [[Liverpool F.C.|Liverpool]] at [[Anfield]] in a third round replay in the FA Cup, a result that would cause the Liverpool manager at the time, [[Graeme Souness]], to resign. Osman was sacked within a year of taking charge.
| pattern_ra =_whiteshoulders

| leftarm = CC0000
Joe Jordan was brought back to [[Ashton Gate stadium|Ashton Gate]] in September 1994, but was unable to prevent relegation to Division Two.
| body = CC0000

| rightarm = CC0000
Jordan remained at the helm for two seasons after City's relegation, but left in March 1997 after failing to get them back into Division One. Former Bristol Rovers manager [[John Ward (footballer, born 1951)|John Ward]] took over, and achieved promotion in 1998 as Division Two runners-up. But City struggled back in Division One, and Ward stepped down in October 1998 to be succeeded by [[Benny Lennartsson]], their first non-British manager. City were relegated in bottom place and Lennartsson was dismissed in favour of [[Gillingham F.C.|Gillingham]]'s [[Tony Pulis]], who lasted six months before leaving to take over at Portsmouth. During his time at Ashton Gate he was manager of perhaps the worst City side since the one that completed a hat-trick of successive relegations almost 20 years earlier.
| shorts = FFFFFF

| socks = FFFFFF
Coach Tony Fawthrop took over until the end of the season, when [[Danny Wilson (footballer, born 1960)|Danny Wilson]] was appointed. Wilson was arguably the most prominent manager to take charge of a City side since [[Denis Smith (footballer, born 1947)|Denis Smith]], as he had guided [[Barnsley F.C.|Barnsley]] to promotion to the Premier League in 1997 and [[Sheffield Wednesday F.C.|Sheffield Wednesday]] to a 12th-place finish in 1999.
| title = Home Kit

}}
===21st century===
|{{Football kit
In the early 2000s Bristol City were regular Division Two play-off contenders during Wilson's spell as manager. They just missed out on the play-offs in 2002, finishing 7th. The following year, Wilson almost took them to automatic promotion, finishing 3rd and winning the [[Football League Trophy]] in Cardiff in 2003. The taste of the play-offs was bitter though, losing to rivals [[Cardiff City F.C.|Cardiff City]] 1–0 on aggregate in the semi-final. In 2004, they finished in 3rd place again, and this time they reached the play-off final, but lost to [[Brighton & Hove Albion F.C.|Brighton & Hove Albion]]. He was sacked within days and replaced by veteran player [[Brian Tinnion]].
| pattern_la = _shouldersonwhite

| pattern_b = _thinsidesonwhite
City just failed to make the play-offs in Tinnion's first season as manager, finishing seventh, and he stepped down in September 2005 after a poor start to the season. [[Yeovil Town F.C.|Yeovil Town]] manager [[Gary Johnson (footballer, born 1955)|Gary Johnson]] was recruited as his successor in September 2005. Johnson led Bristol City to a 9th-place finish.
| pattern_ra = _shouldersonwhite

| leftarm = 696969
[[File:Ashton Gate invasion.jpg|thumb|Pitch invasion at [[Ashton Gate stadium|Ashton Gate]] after securing promotion in 2007]]
| body = 696969

| rightarm = 696969
In the [[2006–07 Football League|2006–07 season]], Bristol City finally achieved the elusive promotion that had evaded them in their 8 years in the third tier. Promotion to the Championship was confirmed on the final day of the season with a 3–1 win against already relegated [[Rotherham United F.C.|Rotherham United]], securing the runners-up place in the division and resulting in automatic promotion.
| shorts = 696969

| socks = 696969
After a good start in the Championship, City established themselves as real contenders, sitting in 3rd place at Christmas. By the start of March, City were top of the Championship, making an improbable second successive promotion a possibility. However, a poor run ended City's chances of an automatic promotion place but qualified for the play-offs with a 4th-place finish, their highest finish since 1980. City overcame [[Crystal Palace F.C.|Crystal Palace]] 4–2 on aggregate to progress to the play-off final at Wembley Stadium, where they were beaten 1–0 by [[Hull City A.F.C.|Hull City]].
| title = Away Kit

}}
After a poor start in the first half of the 2008–09 season, City recovered after Christmas, peaking at 4th place in late February. After a lot of draws, the season eventually petered out and City finished the season in tenth place. The [[2009–10 in English football|2009–10 season]] saw some good results in the autumn, but heavy defeats by local rivals Cardiff City (0–6) and [[Doncaster Rovers F.C.|Doncaster Rovers]] (2–5) in early 2010 led to much dissatisfaction amongst fans,<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.thisisbristol.co.uk/bristolcity/news/Race-Bristol-City-Gary-Johnson-s-successor/article-1923578-detail/article.html|title=Race is on to find Bristol City Gary Johnson's successor|work=Bristol Evening Post|location=Bristol|publisher=Bristol News and Media|date=18 March 2010|access-date=18 March 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130505092648/http://www.thisisbristol.co.uk/bristolcity/news/Race-Bristol-City-Gary-Johnson-s-successor/article-1923578-detail/article.html|archive-date=5 May 2013}}</ref> and Johnson left the club on 18 March 2010.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0,,10327~1997573,00.html |title= Gary Johnson Leaves City |work= Bristol City F.C. |date= 18 March 2010 |access-date= 18 March 2010 |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://archive.today/20100322190221/http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0,,10327~1997573,00.html |archive-date= 22 March 2010 |df= dmy-all}}</ref> Assistant manager [[Keith Millen]] took charge as caretaker manager, and led a series of good results, resulting in a second successive tenth-place finish.
|{{Football kit

| pattern_la = _shouldersonblack
[[Steve Coppell]] became manager in 2010<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0,,10327~2031194,00.html|title=Coppell New City Boss|publisher=Bristol City FC|access-date=22 April 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100426010334/http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0%2C%2C10327~2031194%2C00.html|archive-date=26 April 2010}}</ref> but resigned after just two matches.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/b/bristol_city/8908308.stm|title= Steve Coppell quits as Bristol City manager|work=BBC Sport|publisher=BBC|date=12 August 2010|access-date=14 January 2013}}</ref><ref name="BBC-Coppel-Resign">{{Cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/b/bristol_city/8908308.stm |title= Steve Coppell quits as Bristol City manager
| pattern_b = _thinsidesonblack
|work=BBC Sport |publisher=BBC |last=Staff |date=12 August 2010 |access-date=12 August 2010}}</ref> Longtime assistant manager [[Keith Millen]] was announced as Coppell's successor<ref name="BBC-Coppel-Resign"/><ref>{{Cite news |url=http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0,,10327~2119553,00.html |title=Keith Millen Appointed City Boss |work=Bristol City Football Club |access-date=12 August 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120324015413/http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0%2C%2C10327~2119553%2C00.html |archive-date=24 March 2012 }}</ref> and City fell to a 15th-place finish in [[2010–11 Football League Championship|2010–11]]. After a poor start to the [[2011–12 Football League Championship|2011–12 season]], Millen left the club in October 2011.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/15149287.stm |title=Keith Millen axed as Bristol City manager |work=BBC Football |access-date=3 October 2011 |date=3 October 2011}}</ref>
| pattern_ra = _shouldersonblack

| leftarm = FFFFFF
[[Derek McInnes]] was appointed next, but after a promising start, City fell into the relegation zone, eventually surviving in 20th place, their worst since promotion in 2007. This steady decline would continue and after a poor start to the 2012–13 season, McInnes was sacked in January 2013 with City bottom of the Championship. He was replaced by [[Sean O'Driscoll]], the club's fifth head coach in three years,<ref>{{cite news|last=Staff|title=Sean O'Driscoll: Bristol City appoint ex-Nottingham Forest boss|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/21010274|access-date=14 January 2013|newspaper=BBC News|date=14 January 2013}}</ref> but City were relegated to League One after six seasons in the Championship. O'Driscoll left with the team 22nd in League One.
| body = FFFFFF

| rightarm = FFFFFF
[[Steve Cotterill]] joined the club when Bristol City were second bottom of League One.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/25189059 |title=Steve Cotterill: Bristol City appoint ex-Forest boss as manager |publisher=BBC Sport |date=3 December 2013 |access-date=9 September 2023}}</ref> Cotterill guided the club to a 12th-place finish.<ref name="FCHD"/> Bristol City were promoted back to the Championship after securing the [[2014–15 Football League One|League One]] title in 2014–15, their first league title since [[1954–55 Football League|1955]]. In their last home game, against [[Walsall F.C.|Walsall]], they finished the season with an 8–2 win.<ref name="Walsall">{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/32471191 |title=Bristol City 8–2 Walsall |author=Brendon Mitchell |publisher=BBC Sport |date=3 May 2015 |access-date=9 September 2023}}</ref> Bristol City finished the season with 99 points,<ref name="Walsall"/> the most points in a single season in the club's history, and 5 losses. In the same season, they also won the [[2014–15 Football League Trophy|Football League Trophy]] after a win over Walsall, which finished 2–0 and their third league trophy, a record held by the club for having the most wins in that competition.
| shorts = 000000

| socks = 000000
Despite huge success in the previous season, the club struggled on their return to the second tier. Steve Cotterill was relieved of his duties in January 2016 after a poor run of form which had seen Bristol City slip to 22nd in the Championship table. [[Lee Johnson (footballer)|Lee Johnson]], former player and son of former manager, [[Gary Johnson (footballer, born 1955)|Gary Johnson]], was appointed as Bristol City's new head coach on 6 February 2016.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/article/lee-johnson-appointed-new-head-coach-2941479.aspx|title=BCFC.co.uk: Lee Johnson Appointed New Head Coach|access-date=29 July 2016|archive-date=15 June 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160615181057/http://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/article/lee-johnson-appointed-new-head-coach-2941479.aspx|url-status=dead}}</ref> Bristol City eventually finished in 18th place.<ref name="FCHD"/>
| title = Third Kit

}}
In the [[2016–17 EFL Championship|2016–17 season]], City were only just able to accumulate enough points to ensure survival at the end of the season. Lee Johnson remained at the helm for the following season, again making a positive early start. At the midpoint of the season, after 24 league games,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Bristol City - Transfer League |url=https://www.transferleague.co.uk/bristol-city/english-football-teams/bristol-city-transfers |access-date=2024-01-28 |website=www.transferleague.co.uk}}</ref> they sat second in the [[EFL Championship|Championship]], whilst also knocking out [[Premier League]] opposition in [[Watford F.C.|Watford]], [[Stoke City F.C.|Stoke City]], [[Crystal Palace F.C.|Crystal Palace]] and [[Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United]] to reach the semi-finals of the [[2017–18 EFL Cup|League Cup]].<ref name="FCHD"/><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/42334221 |title=Bristol City 2–1 Manchester United |author=Brendon Mitchell |publisher=BBC Sport |date=20 December 2017 |access-date=9 September 2023}}</ref> However, City would eventually finish in 11th place.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/43938863 |title=Bristol City 2–3 Sheffield United |work=BBC Sport |date=6 May 2018 |access-date=11 February 2019}}</ref>

Bristol City ended the 2018–19 season in 8th.<ref name="FCHD">{{cite web|url=https://www.fchd.info/BRISTOLC.HTM |title=Bristol City |publisher=Football Club History Database |access-date=9 September 2023}}</ref> The battle for the last play-off spot came down to the final day, before [[Derby County F.C.|Derby County]] managed to win their final game and clinch it.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/48081772 |title=Hull City 1–1 Bristol City |work=BBC Sport |date=6 May 2018 |access-date=11 February 2019}}</ref> From March to June, the 2019–20 season was suspended due to the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]. Despite again challenging for the play-offs during the season, Johnson was sacked on 4 July 2020 after a run of just one win in 10 league matches.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/lee-johnson-relieved-of-head-coach-role/ |title=Lee Johnson relieved of head coach role|date=4 July 2020 }}</ref> His long-time assistant, [[Dean Holden]], was appointed as his replacement on 10 August 2020.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/53722079 |title=Dean Holden: Bristol City confirm head coach appointment |publisher=BBC Sport |date=10 August 2020 |access-date=9 September 2023}}</ref> After suffering six straight defeats in all competitions, Holden was dismissed on 16 February 2021 after just six months in charge.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/56092622|title=Bristol City sack head coach Holden|date=17 February 2021|work=BBC Sport}}</ref> He was replaced by [[Nigel Pearson]].<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/56154183|title=Bristol City appoint Pearson as manager|date=22 February 2021|work=BBC Sport}}</ref>

On 29 October 2023, Pearson was sacked with Bristol City 15th in the Championship following a run of 5 losses in 7 games.<ref>{{cite web|title=Nigel Pearson sacked by Bristol City: Results far from only issue behind veteran manager's departure |url=https://www.skysports.com/football/news/11095/12996039/nigel-pearson-sacked-by-bristol-city-results-far-from-only-issue-behind-veteran-bosses-departure |website=Sky Sports |publisher=Sky Sports |access-date=14 February 2024}}</ref> Despite the poor form, Pearson had overseen year on year points increases in his time at the club and many fans felt he has been undermined by a loss of key players such as Alex Scott and a lack of reinvestment in the playing squad.{{citation needed|date=July 2024}}

On 7 November 2023, [[Liam Manning]] was appointed as the new head coach of Bristol City, joining from [[Oxford United F.C.|Oxford United]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Liam Manning appointed Head Coach |url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/city-men-news/liam-manning-appointed-bristol-city-head-coach |website=Bristol City |access-date=14 February 2024}}</ref>

==Club identity==
{{Commons|Bristol City F.C. kits}}
Bristol City have played in red and white since the 1890s, occasionally also including black.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.historicalkits.co.uk/Bristol_City/Bristol_City.htm|title=Bristol City|publisher=historicalkits.co.uk|access-date=20 May 2008}}</ref> The away kit is more variable. It is traditionally white, but has also featured black or yellow. Other colours featured have included green and a purple and lime combination, the latter of which has become a fan favourite.

* The club's current crest is a modernised version of the Robin which has long ties to the fans and the club.
* The club's previous crest was a simplified version of the [[coat of arms]] of the city of Bristol.
* The club's mascots are Red and Robyn, replacing Scrumpy the [[European robin|robin]] who had been the club's mascot from 2005 until 2022.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.flickr.com/photos/34517490@N00/2952027137/|title=Bristol City mascot|date=18 September 2008|publisher=flikr|access-date=22 December 2008}}</ref>
* The club has a long association with West Country band [[The Wurzels]]: "One for the Bristol City", written for the club in 1976, is the run-out song at Ashton Gate, while their 1960s hit "Drink Up Thy Zider" is played after home wins.

About halfway through the 2007–08 season Bristol City manager [[Gary Johnson (footballer, born 1955)|Gary Johnson]] said in an interview that he hoped the team could get the whole ground bouncing.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/leagues/championship/4743236/Bristol-City-bounce-up-to-fourth.html|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120912161940/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/leagues/championship/4743236/Bristol-City-bounce-up-to-fourth.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=12 September 2012|title=Bristol City bounce up to fourth|work=[[The Daily Telegraph]]|date=21 February 2009|last=Haylett|first=Trevor|access-date=20 January 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.thisisbristol.co.uk/bristolcity/news/want-Bristol-City-fans-shake-foundations-Madejski-says-Johnson/article-710231-detail/article.html|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120913082445/http://www.thisisbristol.co.uk/bristolcity/news/want-Bristol-City-fans-shake-foundations-Madejski-says-Johnson/article-710231-detail/article.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=13 September 2012|title=I want Bristol City fans to shakefoundations of Madejski says Johnson|work=[[Bristol Evening Post]]|publisher=Bristol News and Media|date=18 February 2009|access-date=20 January 2010}}</ref> City supporters took this rallying cry on board and began to sing "Johnson says bounce around the ground" to the tune of [[Yellow Submarine (song)|Yellow Submarine]], while continually bouncing up and down. The first game at which it was sung was in an away match against [[Southampton F.C.|Southampton]] at [[St Mary's Stadium]], and it was also sung at away at [[Queen's Park Rangers F.C.|Queen's Park Rangers]] in February. When Bristol City fans travelled to London to play [[Charlton Athletic F.C.|Charlton Athletic]] on 4 March 2008, the visiting fans, using the rail network to return home, adapted the song to "Bounce Around the Train". Since then, it has become an often used chant at [[Ashton Gate stadium]] by the fans.{{citation needed|date=January 2020}} It was also sometimes used by supporters of Gary Johnson's former side [[Northampton Town F.C.|Northampton Town]], primarily at away matches. When Gary Johnson's son, [[Lee Johnson (footballer)|Lee Johnson]] returned to his former club in 2016 as their new manager, he stated that he wished to inherit the chant and keep the fans singing it.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/article/lets-get-the-gate-bouncing-johnson-2945705.aspx|title=Let's get the Gate bouncing – Johnson|first=Adam|last=Baker|access-date=9 February 2016|archive-date=11 September 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160911083407/http://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/article/lets-get-the-gate-bouncing-johnson-2945705.aspx|url-status=dead}}</ref>

===Shirt sponsors===
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
|-
!Period
!Kit supplier
!Kit sponsor
|-
|1976–1981
|[[Umbro]]
|''None''
|-
|1981–1982
|rowspan=2|Coffer Sports
|Park Furnishers
|-
|Feb 1982
|rowspan=4|Hire-Rite
|-
|1982–1983
|Lynx
|-
|Aug–Dec 1983
|[[Umbro]]
|-
|Dec 1983–1990
|rowspan=2|[[Bukta]]
|-
|1990–1992
|rowspan=2|Thorn Security
|-
|1992–1993
|rowspan=3|{{not a typo|Nibor}}
|-
|1993–1994
|Dry Blackthorn Cider
|-
|1994–1996
||Auto Windscreens
|-
|1996–1998
|[[Lotto Sport Italia|Lotto]]
|rowspan=2|Sanderson
|-
|1998–1999
|rowspan=2|[[Uhlsport]]
|-
|1999–2000
|rowspan=3|DAS
|-
|2000–2002
|[[Admiral Sportswear|Admiral]]
|-
|2002–2005
|rowspan=2|TFG Sports
|-
|2005–2006
|rowspan=2|Bristol Trade Centre
|-
|2006–2008
|rowspan=2|[[Puma (brand)|Puma]]
|-
|2008–2010
|rowspan=2|DAS
|-
|2010–2011
|rowspan=3|[[Adidas]]
|-
|2011–2012
|RSG (Home)<br />Bristol City Community Trust (Away)
|-
|2012–2014
|[[Blackthorn Cider|Blackthorn]]
|-
|2014–2016
|rowspan=3|Bristol Sport
|RSG
|-
|2016–2018
|Lancer Scott
|-
|2018–2020
| Dunder
|-
|2020–2022
|rowspan=2|[[Hummel International|Hummel]]
| MansionBet
|-
|2022–2023
|rowspan=3|Huboo
Digital NRG<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/city-partner-with-dnrg/ | title=🤝 City partner with DNRG | date=4 July 2022 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.digitalnrg.co.uk/bristol-city/ | title=DNRG X Bristol City FC &#124; Partnership }}</ref>
|-
|2023–present
|[[O'Neills]]
|}
|}

During the season they have also worn black shorts and/or socks with the home shirt to further avoid colour clashes.
==Stadium==
{|
Bristol City have played at [[Ashton Gate Stadium]] in the south-west of Bristol, just south of the [[River Avon, Bristol|River Avon]], since moving from [[St John's Lane]] in 1904. The ground currently has an all-seated capacity of 27,000.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ashtongatestadium.co.uk/|title=Conference venue and events hire|website=Ashton Gate}}</ref> It was the home of [[Bedminster F.C.|Bedminster]] until the 1900 merger, and the merged team played some games there the following season, but it did not become the permanent home of Bristol City until 1904.
|{{Football kit

| pattern_la =
In the past plans were considered for expansion work to be carried out at Ashton Gate. There were also proposals to build a new 36,000-seat stadium at [[Hengrove]] Park. This was turned down in a local referendum in December 2000.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bristol.gov.uk/committee/2001/ua/ua000/0126_4.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/http://www.bristol.gov.uk/committee/2001/ua/ua000/0126_4.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live |title=Hengrove Park- Football Stadium Referendum December 2000 |work=Bristol City Council |access-date=18 December 2008 }}{{dead link|date=March 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> In 2002, the local council was looking at possible sites for a new 40,000-seat stadium which would house both City, [[Bristol Rovers F.C.|Rovers]] and [[Bristol Bears|Bristol Rugby]], but these plans were scrapped and it is widely accepted that this would not have been welcomed by the majority of supporters from all clubs.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/2519157.stm |date=27 November 2002 |title=Bristol super-stadium plan collapses |work=BBC |access-date=18 December 2008 }}</ref> Ashton Gate's current capacity is an average size for [[Football League Championship|Championship]] grounds; however, in November 2007 the club announced plans to relocate to a new 30,000-capacity [[Bristol City Stadium|stadium]] in [[Ashton Vale]]. Plans were also in place to increase capacity to 42,000 had England's 2018 World Cup bid been successful.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0,,10327~1178896,00.html |title=Bristol City Announce New Stadium |publisher=Birmingham City F.C. |date=29 November 2007 |access-date=19 May 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120208062010/http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0%2C%2C10327~1178896%2C00.html |archive-date=8 February 2012 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/AshtonValeIndex/0,,10327,00.html|title=New Stadium at Ashton Vale|publisher=Bristol City F.C.|date=29 November 2008|access-date=22 December 2008|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081217110548/http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/AshtonValeIndex/0,,10327,00.html|archive-date=17 December 2008}}</ref>{{update inline|date=August 2022}}
| pattern_b =

| pattern_ra =_whiteshoulders
The South stand opened for the 2015–16 season, with the existing Williams stand being demolished and replaced by the Lansdown stand in 2016. A new partly-artificial Desso pitch was laid and the current Dolman stand refurbished. A [[safe standing]] area was added to the south-east corner of the ground (roughly analogous to the old East End) in 2021.
| leftarm = CC0000

| body = CC0000
A state-of-the-art training facility became operational in 2020. The Robins High Performance Centre is at Failand a short distance from [[Ashton Gate Stadium]].
| rightarm = CC0000

| shorts = 000000
===Gallery===
| socks = 000000
<gallery>
| title = Alternate Home Kit 1
File:Ashtongateatyeo.JPG|Atyeo Stand
}}
File:Ashtongatecardiff.JPG|Bristol City v. Cardiff City&nbsp;– 15 March 2009
|{{Football kit
File:Ashton Gate & Bridge.jpg|Ashton Gate with [[Clifton Suspension Bridge]] in the background
| pattern_la =
File:Ashtongateflags.JPG|An example of the flags used by the "Ultras" in the Wedlock Stand (The Eastend)
| pattern_b =
File:Ashtongatecharlton.JPG|View from the home section of the Wedlock Stand
| pattern_ra = _whiteshoulders
File:Ashtongateeastend.JPG|Inside the Wedlock Stand against fierce rivals, [[Cardiff City]]
| leftarm = CC0000
File:Ashton Gate Stadium (daytime).jpg|The ground lying empty prior to hosting a concert.
| body = CC0000
</gallery>
| rightarm = CC0000

| shorts = FFFFFF
==Rivalries==
| socks = 000000
{{Further|Bristol derby|Severnside derby}}
| title = Alternate Home Kit 2

}}
Bristol City's traditional rivals are [[Bristol Rovers F.C.|Bristol Rovers]]. The clubs have met 105 times, with the first meeting in 1897. Bristol City have the most wins on 43. However, the clubs have not been in the same league for a number of years; they were last in the same division in the [[2000–01 Football League|2000–01 season]]. Since then, they have only met three times; in the two-legged southern final of the 2006–07 [[EFL Trophy|Football League Trophy]], which Rovers won 1–0 on aggregate, and in the first round of the 2013–14 Johnstone's Paint Trophy, which City won 2–1 at Ashton Gate.

City's other main rivals are [[Cardiff City F.C.|Cardiff City]], who play in nearby [[Cardiff]]. Despite being a local derby, it crosses the [[England–Wales border|Wales–England border]], making it one of the few international club derbies in the United Kingdom. The two clubs have been at similar levels in recent years, being in the same division for 10 of the last 16 seasons. This has meant frequent meetings in the league including in the semi-finals of the [[Football League One play-offs#2003|2003 Second Division play-offs]].

Other clubs have been seen as 'third rivals' by the fans and media. [[Swindon Town F.C.|Swindon Town]] are seen by many as rivals, nicknamed 'Swindle' by City fans. This rivalry was most recently relevant in the [[2014–15 Football League One|2014–15 season]], when the two clubs were rivals for promotion to the Championship. [[Plymouth Argyle F.C.|Plymouth Argyle]] have also previously been considered rivals despite a distance of over 100 miles. The rivalry was especially relevant in the 2000s when the two clubs were the highest-ranking [[West Country]] clubs for a number of years, and meetings were seen as a decider of the 'Best in the West'. [[Swansea City A.F.C.|Swansea City]], [[Newport County F.C.|Newport County]], [[Cheltenham Town F.C.|Cheltenham Town]] and even [[Yeovil Town F.C.|Yeovil Town]] have previously been mentioned as rivals, but very rarely. However, during a fixture between Bristol City and Swansea City on 2 February 2019 at Ashton Gate, fighting took place between Bristol City and Swansea City fans resulting in a rivalry flaring up between the two sets of fans.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.walesonline.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/shocking-bristol-city-vs-swansea-15774450|title=Shocking footage emerges of fans brawling at Bristol vs Swansea City|first=Katie|last=Sands|date=4 February 2019|website=walesonline}}</ref>

==Records and statistics==
* '''Record League victory'''&nbsp;– 9–0 ''v.'' [[Aldershot F.C.|Aldershot]] (28 December 1946)
* '''Record FA Cup victory'''&nbsp;– 11–0 ''v.'' [[Chichester City United F.C.|Chichester City]] (5 November 1960)
* '''Record League defeat'''&nbsp;– 0–9 ''v.'' [[Coventry City F.C.|Coventry City]] (28 April 1934)
<!--*'''Record FA Cup defeat''' – 0-6 ''v.'' [[Preston North End F.C.|Preston North End]] (January 1897) -->
* '''Highest attendance'''&nbsp;– 43,335 ''v.'' [[Preston North End F.C.|Preston North End]] (16 February 1935)
* '''Highest attendance (at any ground)'''&nbsp;– 86,703 ''v.'' [[Hull City A.F.C.|Hull City]] Championship play-off final&nbsp;– Wembley Stadium&nbsp;– (24 May 2008)
* '''Most League appearances'''&nbsp;– 597, [[John Atyeo]] (1951–66)
* '''Most League goals scored'''&nbsp;– 314, [[John Atyeo]] (1951–66)
* '''Most goals scored (overall)'''&nbsp;– 351, [[John Atyeo]] (1951–66)<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/Records/0,,10327~484747,00.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090215055735/http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/Records/0%2C%2C10327~484747%2C00.html|url-status=dead|title=All-time leading goalscorers&nbsp;– official site|archive-date=15 February 2009}}</ref>
* '''Most capped player'''&nbsp;– [[Billy Wedlock]], 26 caps, [[England national football team|England]]
* '''Most goals scored in a season'''&nbsp;– 36, Don Clark (1946–47)
* '''Record transfer fee paid'''&nbsp;– £8&nbsp;million to [[Chelsea F.C.|Chelsea]] for [[Tomáš Kalas]] (July 2019)
* '''Record transfer fee received'''&nbsp;– £25&nbsp;million from [[AFC Bournemouth|Bournemouth]] for [[Alex Scott (footballer, born 2003)|Alex Scott]] (August 2023)<ref>{{Cite news |last=Fisher |first=Ben |date=2023-08-10 |title=Bournemouth seal £25m deal to sign Alex Scott from Bristol City |language=en-GB |work=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/2023/aug/10/bournemouth-alex-scott-bristol-city-sign-25m |access-date=2023-10-31 |issn=0261-3077}}</ref>
* '''Record sequence of League wins'''&nbsp;– 14; 9 September 1905&nbsp;– 2 December 1905&nbsp;– This was a joint league record until 2017.
* '''Record sequence of League defeats'''&nbsp;– 8; 10 December 2016&nbsp;– 21 January 2017
* '''Record sequence of unbeaten League matches'''&nbsp;– 24; 9 September 1905&nbsp;– 10 February 1906
* '''Record sequence without a League win'''&nbsp;– 21; 16 March 2013&nbsp;– 22 October 2013
* '''Record points total for a Season'''&nbsp;– 99pts; [[2014–15 Football League One]]

===League history===
Source:<ref name="FCHD"/>

Note: The numbers in parentheses are the level of football for that season.
* 1897–1901: [[Southern Football League|Southern League]] Division One (3)
* 1901–1906: [[Football League Second Division]] (2)
* 1906–1911: [[Football League First Division]] (1)
* 1911–1922: Football League Second Division (2)
* 1922–1923: [[Football League Third Division]] (3)
* 1923–1924: Football League Second Division (2)
* 1924–1927: Football League Third Division (3)
* 1927–1932: Football League Second Division (2)
* 1932–1955: Football League Third Division (3)
* 1955–1960: Football League Second Division (2)
* 1960–1965: Football League Third Division (3)
* 1965–1976: Football League Second Division (2)
* 1976–1980: Football League First Division (1)
* 1980–1981: Football League Second Division (2)
* 1981–1982: Football League Third Division (3)
* 1982–1984: [[Football League Fourth Division]] (4)
* 1984–1990: Football League Third Division (3)
* 1990–1995: Football League Second Division / Football League First Division (rebranding after the [[Premier League]] came into existence) (2)
* 1995–1998: Football League Second Division (3)
* 1998–1999: Football League First Division (2)
* 1999–2007: Football League Second Division / [[EFL League One|Football League One]] (rebranded) (3)
* 2007–2013: [[EFL Championship|Football League Championship]] (2)
* 2013–2015: Football League One (3)
* 2015–present: Football League/EFL Championship (2)

===Most appearances===
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
!#
!Name
!Career
!Appearances
|-
|1
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Louis Carey]]
|1995–2004; 2005–2014
|646
|-
|2
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[John Atyeo]]
|1951–1966
|645
|-
|3
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Trevor Tainton]]
|1967–1982
|581
|-
|4
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Brian Tinnion]]
|1993–2005
|551
|-
|5
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Tom Ritchie]]
|1972–1981; 1983–1985
|504
|-
|6
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Gerry Sweeney]]
|1971–1981
|490
|-
|7
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Rob Newman (footballer)|Rob Newman]]
|1981–1991
|483
|-
|8
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Gerry Gow]]
|1969–1981
|445
|-
|9
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Geoff Merrick]]
|1967–1982
|433
|-
|10
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Scott Murray (footballer, born 1974)|Scott Murray]]
|1997–2003; 2004–2009
|427
|}
|}
The front of the shirt has the badge of the kits main sponsor Bristol Trade Centre. The back of the shirt is sponsored by [[Blackthorn Cider]].


Most club appearances including substitute appearances in all competitions (excluding Gloucestershire Cup). Updated 29 December 2013.
==Current squad==
Note: On 29 December 2013, Louis Carey broke Bristol City's appearance record when he came on as a substitute in the 4–1 win over Stevenage. He overtook [[John Atyeo]] after 47 years and is now the club's all-time top appearance maker.
As of [[01 May]] [[2007]].
===Most goals===
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
!#
!Name
!Career
!Goals
|-
|1
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[John Atyeo]]
|1951–1966
|351
|-
|2
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Tom Ritchie]]
|1969–1981, 1982–1984
|132
|-
|3
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Arnold Rodgers]]
|1949–1956
|111
|-
|4
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Jimmy Rogers (footballer)|Jimmy Rodgers]]
|1950–1956, 1958–1962
|108
|-
|5
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Alan Walsh (footballer)|Alan Walsh]]
|1984–1989
|99
|-
|6
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Scott Murray (footballer, born 1974)|Scott Murray]]
|1997–2003, 2004–2009
|91
|-
|7
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Tot Walsh]]
|1924–1928
|91
|-
|8
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[John Galley]]
|1967–1972
|90
|-
|9
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Brian Clark (footballer, born 1943)|Brian Clark]]
|1960–1966
|89
|-
|10
|align="left"|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Sam Gilligan]]
|1904–1910
|87
|}


Correct as of 29 July 2018.<ref name="Bristol City All Time Topscorers">{{cite web| title = All Time Top scorers| url = https://www.bcfc.co.uk/fanzone/club-history/all-time-goalscorers/| publisher = Bristol City F.C.| access-date = 29 July 2018| archive-date = 29 July 2018| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180729200625/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/fanzone/club-history/all-time-goalscorers/| url-status = dead}}</ref>
{{Football squad start}}
{{football squad player|no=1|nat=Brazil|pos=GK|name=[[Adriano Basso]]}}
{{football squad player|no=2|nat=England|pos=MF|name=[[Bradley Orr]]}}
{{football squad player|no=3|nat=England|pos=DF|name=[[Craig Woodman]]}}
{{football squad player|no=4|nat=England|pos=DF|name=[[Liam Fontaine]]}}
{{football squad player|no=5|nat=England|pos=DF|name=[[Jamie McCombe]]}}
{{football squad player|no=6|nat=Scotland|pos=DF|name=[[Louis Carey]]}} ([[Captain (football)|Captain]])
{{football squad player|no=7|nat=Scotland|pos=MF | name=[[Scott Murray (footballer)|Scott Murray]]}}
{{football squad player|no=8|nat=England|pos=MF|name=[[David Noble (footballer)|David Noble]]}}
{{football squad player|no=9|nat=England|pos=FW|name=[[Steve Brooker]]}}
{{football squad player|no=10|nat=England|pos=FW|name=[[Phil Jevons]] }}
{{football squad player|no=11|nat=Seychelles|pos=FW|name=[[Kevin Betsy]] }}
{{football squad player|no=14|nat=England|pos=MF|name=[[Cole Skuse]]}}
{{football squad player|no=15|nat=Nigeria|pos=FW|name=[[Enoch Showunmi]]}}
{{football squad player|no=16|nat=Ireland|pos=DF|name=[[Richard Keogh]]}}
{{football squad mid}}
{{football squad player|no=17|nat=England|pos=MF|name=[[Alex Russell]]}}
{{football squad player|no=18|nat=Scotland|pos=MF|name=[[Jamie McAllister]]}}
{{football squad player|no=19|nat=Northern Ireland|pos=FW|name=[[Andy Smith (footballer)|Andy Smith]]}}
{{football squad player|no=22|nat=England|pos=GK |name=[[Chris Weale]]}}
{{football squad player|no=23|nat=England|pos=MF |name=[[Brian Wilson (footballer)|Brian Wilson]]}}
{{football squad player|no=26|nat=England|pos=FW |name=[[Jennison Myrie-Williams]]}}
{{football squad player|no=27|nat=England|pos=MF|name=[[Frankie Artus]]}}
{{football squad player|no=28|nat=Wales|pos=DF|name=[[James Wilson (footballer)|James Wilson]]}}
{{football squad player|no=29|nat=England|pos=MF|name=[[Danny Wring]]}}
{{football squad player|no=30|nat=Wales|pos=MF|name=[[Dean Grubb]]}}
{{football squad player|no=32|nat=England|pos=GK|name=[[Sean Thomas (footballer)|Sean Thomas]]|other=on loan from [[Queens Park Rangers F.C.|QPR]]}}
{{football squad player|no=33|nat=England|pos=MF|name=[[Lee Johnson (footballer)|Lee Johnson]]}}
{{football squad player|no=40|nat=England|pos=GK|name=[[Lee Ballard (footballer)|Lee Ballard]]}}
{{football squad end}}


===Out on loan===
==Players==
{{football squad start}}
{{football squad player|no=20|nat=Wales|pos=DF|name=[[David Partridge]]|other=on loan to [[Swindon Town F.C.|Swindon Town]]}}
{{football squad player|no=25|nat=England|pos=FW|name=[[Elliot Benyon]]|other=on loan to [[Crawley Town F.C.|Crawley Town]]}}
{{football squad player|no=24|nat=England|pos=DF|name=[[Shaun Lamb]]|other=on loan to [[Forest Green Rovers F.C.|Forest Green]]}}
{{football squad end}}


==Famous players==
===First-team squad===
{{updated|9 January 2025}}<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/teams/mens-first-team/ |title=Men's First Team |website=Bristol City FC |access-date=23 August 2024}}</ref>
{{fs start}}
{{fs player|no=1|nat=IRL|pos=GK|name=[[Max O'Leary]]}}
{{fs player|no=2|nat=SCO|pos=DF|name=[[Ross McCrorie]]}}
{{fs player|no=3|nat=ENG|pos=DF|name=[[Cameron Pring]]}}
{{fs player|no=4|nat=SCO|pos=DF|name=[[Kal Naismith]]}}
{{fs player|no=6|nat=ENG |pos=MF |name=[[Max Bird]]}}
{{fs player|no=7|nat=JAP |pos=FW |name=[[Yu Hirakawa]]|other=on loan from [[FC Machida Zelvia|Machia Zelvia]]}}
{{fs player|no=8|nat=ENG|pos=MF|name=[[Joe Williams (footballer, born 1996)|Joe Williams]]}}
{{Fs player|no=9|nat=FRA|pos=FW|name=[[Fally Mayulu]]}}
{{Fs player|no=10|nat=ENG|pos=MF|name=[[Scott Twine]]}}
{{fs player|no=11|nat=ALB|pos=MF|name=[[Anis Mehmeti]]}}
{{fs player|no=12|nat=IRL|pos=MF|name=[[Jason Knight (footballer)|Jason Knight]] |other=[[Captain (association football)|captain]]}}<ref>{{cite web|last=Morgan|first=Ryan|url= https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/knight-named-city-captain/ |title=Knight named City captain|website=Bristol City F.C.|date=2 August 2024|access-date=2 August 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240803061244/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/knight-named-city-captain/|archive-date=3 August 2024|url-status=live}}</ref>
{{fs player|no=14|nat=KEN|pos=DF|name=[[Zak Vyner]]}}
{{fs player|no=15|nat=IRL|pos=DF|name=[[Luke McNally]]}}
{{fs player|no=16|nat=ENG|pos=DF |name=[[Robert Dickie (footballer)|Rob Dickie]]}}
{{Fs mid}}
{{fs player|no=17|nat=IRL|pos=MF|name=[[Mark Sykes (footballer)|Mark Sykes]]}}
{{fs player|no=18|nat=ENG|pos=MF|name=[[Ayman Benarous]]}}
{{fs player|no=19|nat=ENG|pos=DF|name=[[George Tanner (English footballer)|George Tanner]]}}
{{fs player|no=20|nat=ENG|pos=FW|name=[[Sam Bell (footballer, born 2002)|Sam Bell]]}}
{{fs player|no=21|nat=BER|pos=FW|name=[[Nahki Wells]]}}
{{fs player|no=23|nat=FRA|pos=GK|name=[[Stefan Bajic (footballer, born 2001)|Stefan Bajić]]}}
{{fs player|no=24|nat=ENG|pos=DF|name=[[Haydon Roberts]]}}
{{fs player|no=27|nat=ENG|pos=FW|name=[[Harry Cornick]]}}
{{fs player|no=29|nat=ENG|pos=MF |name=[[Marcus McGuane]]}}
{{Fs player|no=30|nat=IRL|pos=FW|name=[[Sinclair Armstrong]]}}
{{fs player|no=32|nat=WAL |pos=GK|name=[[Lewis Thomas (footballer, born 1997)|Lewis Thomas]]}}
{{fs player|no=40|nat=ENG |pos=MF|name=[[George Earthy]]|other=on loan from [[West Ham United F.C.|West Ham United]]}}
{{fs player|no=|nat=ITA |pos=FW |name=[[Ephraim Yeboah]]}}
{{fs end}}


==== Out on loan ====
;Australia
{{fs start}}
*{{flagicon|Australia}} [[Luke Wilkshire]]
{{fs player|no=5|nat=ENG|pos=DF|name=[[Robert Atkinson (footballer, born 1998)|Robert Atkinson]]|other=at [[Portsmouth F.C.|Portsmouth]] until 31 May 2025}}<ref>{{cite news|last=Morgan|first=Ryan |title=Rob Atkinson to join Portsmouth on loan|url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/rob-atkinson-to-join-portsmouth-on-loan/|access-date=3 January 2025|website=Bristol City FC |date=3 January 2025|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250103173514/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/rob-atkinson-to-join-portsmouth-on-loan/|archive-date=3 January 2025|url-status=live}}</ref>
;Bermuda
{{fs player|no=22|nat=ENG|pos=MF|name=[[Taylor Gardner-Hickman]]|other=at [[Birmingham City F.C.|Birmingham City]] until 31 May 2025}}<ref>{{cite news|last=Morgan|first=Ryan |title=Gardner-Hickman joins Birmingham on loan |url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/city-men-news/gardner-hickman-moves-to-birmingham/|access-date=23 August 2024 |website=Bristol City FC |date=23 August 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240823102157/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/city-men-news/gardner-hickman-moves-to-birmingham/|archive-date=23 August 2024|url-status=live}}</ref>
*{{flagicon|Bermuda}} [[Shaun Goater]]
{{Fs player|no=26|nat=ENG |pos=FW |name=[[Josh Stokes]]|other=at [[Cambridge United F.C.|Cambridge United]] until 31 May 2025}}<ref>{{cite news|last=Morgan|first=Ryan|title=Stokes joins Cambridge on loan|url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/stokes-joins-cambridge-on-loan/|access-date=21 August 2024 |website=Bristol City FC |date=21 August 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240821130436/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/stokes-joins-cambridge-on-loan/|archive-date=21 August 2024|url-status=live}}</ref>
;England
{{fs player|no=|nat=CAN |pos=DF |name=[[Jamie Knight-Lebel]]|other=at [[Crewe Alexandra F.C.|Crewe Alexandra]] until 31 May 2025}}<ref>{{cite news|last=Morgan|first=Ryan|title=Knight-Lebel joins the Alex on loan|url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/knight-lebel-joins-the-alex-on-loan/|access-date=24 June 2024 |website=Bristol City FC |date=24 June 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240624151617/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/knight-lebel-joins-the-alex-on-loan/|archive-date=24 June 2024|url-status=live}}</ref>
*{{flagicon|England}} [[John Atyeo]]
{{fs player|no=|nat=ENG |pos=FW |name=[[Seb Palmer-Houlden]]|other=at [[Dundee F.C.|Dundee]] until 31 May 2025}}<ref>{{cite news|last=Morgan|first=Ryan|title=Palmer-Houlden joins Dundee on loan|url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/palmer-houlden-joins-dundee-on-loan/|access-date=21 June 2024 |website=Bristol City FC |date=21 June 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240621175036/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/palmer-houlden-joins-dundee-on-loan/|archive-date=21 June 2024|url-status=live}}</ref>
*{{flagicon|England}} [[Gus Caesar]]
{{fs end}}
*{{flagicon|England}} [[Andy Cole]]
*{{flagicon|England}} [[Norman Hunter]]
*{{flagicon|England}} [[Steve McClaren]]
*{{flagicon|England}} [[Brian Tinnion]]
*{{flagicon|England}} [[Billy Wedlock]]
;Nigeria
*{{flagicon|Nigeria}} [[Ade Akinbiyi]]
;Poland
*{{flagicon|Poland}} [[Dariusz Dziekanowski|Dariusz 'Jacki' Dziekanowski]]
;Scotland
*{{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Gerry Gow]]
*{{flagicon|Scotland}} [[David Moyes]]


===Under 21 squad===
;Former Youth Products Currently in the Premiership
{{updated|9 January 2025}}


{{fs start}}
*{{flagicon|England}} [[Leroy Lita]] ([[Reading F.C.]])
{{fs player|no=31|nat=ENG |pos=MF |name=[[Elijah Morrison]]}}
*{{flagicon|England}} [[Liam Rosenior]] ([[Fulham F.C.]])
{{fs player|no=33|nat=ENG |pos=DF |name=Josh Campbell-Slowey}}
*{{flagicon|Wales}} [[David Cotterill]] ([[Wigan Athletic F.C.]])
{{fs player|no=34|nat=ENG |pos=DF |name=[[Joseph James (footballer)|Joseph James]]}}
*{{flagicon|England}} [[Scott Golbourne]] ([[Reading F.C.]])
{{fs player|no=35|nat=ENG |pos=FW |name=Leo Pecover}}
{{fs player|no=39|nat=ENG |pos=MF |name=Billy Phillips}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=WAL |pos=GK |name=Josey Casa-Grande}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=ENG |pos=DF |name=Zach Ali}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=ENG |pos=DF |name=Taine Anderson}}
{{fs player|no=|nat=GER|pos=DF|name=Raphael Araoye}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=ENG |pos=DF |name=Archie Taylor}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=WAL |pos=DF |name=Callum Wood}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=ENG |pos=MF |name=Tommy Backwell}}
{{fs mid}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=ENG |pos=MF |name=Kai Churchley}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=ENG |pos=MF |name=Callum Hewlett}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=ENG |pos=MF |name=Jed Meerholz}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=IRL |pos=MF |name=[[Adam Murphy]]}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=ENG |pos=MF |name=Raekwon Nelson}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=ENG |pos=MF |name=[[Marley Rose (footballer)|Marley Rose]]}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=WAL |pos=MF |name=[[Omar Taylor-Clarke]]}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=ENG |pos=FW |name=Tim Ap Sion}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=ENG |pos=FW |name=Brandon Bak}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=ENG |pos=FW |name=Luke Skinner}}
{{fs player|no= |nat=ENG |pos=FW |name=[[Olly Thomas]]}}
{{fs end}}


===Notable players===
==Managers==
'''Former players'''
* [[Sam Hollis]] (1897-99)
* Bob Campbell (1899-1901)
* [[Sam Hollis]] (1901-05)
* Harry Thickett (1905-10)
* [[Sam Hollis]] (1911-13)
* [[George Hedley]] (1913-17)
* Jack Hamilton (1917-19)
* Joe Palmer (1919-21)
* [[Alex Raisbeck]] (1921-29)
* Joe Bradshaw (1929-32)
* Bob Hewison (1932-49)
* Bob Wright (1949-50)
* Pat Beasley (1950-58)
* Peter Doherty (1958-60)
* Fred Ford (1960-67)
* [[Alan Dicks]] (1967-80)
* [[Bobby Houghton]] (1980-82)
* [[Roy Hodgson]] (1982)
* [[Terry Cooper]] (1982-88)
* [[Joe Jordan (footballer)|Joe Jordan]] (1988-90)
* Jimmy Lumsden (1990-92)
* [[Denis Smith (football manager)|Denis Smith]] (1992-93)
* [[Russell Osman]] (1993-94)
* [[Joe Jordan (footballer)|Joe Jordan]](1994-97)
* [[John Ward (football manager)|John Ward]] (1997-98)
* Benny Lennartsson (1998-99)
* [[Tony Pulis]] (1999)
* Tony Fawthrop (2000)
* [[Danny Wilson (footballer)|Danny Wilson]] (2000-04)
* [[Brian Tinnion]] (2004-05)
* [[Gary Johnson (footballer)|Gary Johnson]] (September 2005-Present)


For a list of all Bristol City players with a Wikipedia article, see [[:Category:Bristol City F.C. players]].
==Ashton Gate==
Bedminster merged with Bristol City in 1900; for a further list of all [[Bedminster F.C.|Bedminster]] players with articles see [[:Category:Bedminster F.C. players]].
{{main|Ashton Gate}}


====Player of the Year====
[[Image:Ashton_gate.JPG|200px|right|thumb|Ashton Gate Stadium]]


{| class="wikitable"
Bristol City play at [[Ashton Gate]] in the south-west of Bristol, just south of the [[River Avon, Bristol|River Avon]]. The ground has an all-seated capacity of about 21,500, with an effective capacity (depending on how many away tickets are allocated, and how they are segregated) of around 19,100. It was the home of Bedminster F.C. until the 1900 merger, and the merged team played some games there the following season, but it did not become the permanent home of Bristol City until [[1904]].
|-
!Year
!Winner
!Po.
!Ref.
|-
|1970–71||{{flagicon|England}} [[Gerry Sharpe (footballer)|Gerry Sharpe]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer">{{cite web|title=Club Records – Bristol City|url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/fanzone/club-history/club-records/|website=Bristol City F.C.|access-date=28 April 2024|archive-date=25 July 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220725204026/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/fanzone/club-history/club-records/|url-status=dead}}</ref>
|-
|1971–72||{{flagicon|England}} [[Geoff Merrick]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1972–73||{{flagicon|Wales}} [[John Emanuel]]||[[Midfielder (association football)|MF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1973–74||{{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Gerry Gow]]||[[Midfielder (association football)|MF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1974–75||{{flagicon|England}} [[Gary Collier (footballer)|Gary Collier]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1975–76||colspan="2"|{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} The whole squad<!---John Emanuel (Wales), John Shaw, Donnie Gillies, etc (Scot.) --->||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1976–77||{{flagicon|England}} [[Norman Hunter (footballer)|Norman Hunter]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1977–78||{{flagicon|England}} [[Norman Hunter (footballer)|Norman Hunter]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1978–79||{{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Gerry Gow]]||[[Midfielder (association football)|MF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1979–80||{{flagicon|England}} [[Geoff Merrick]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1980–81||{{flagicon|England}} [[Kevin Mabbutt]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1981–82|| colspan="2"| No award||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1982–83||{{flagicon|England}} [[Glyn Riley]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1983–84||{{flagicon|Wales}} [[Howard Pritchard]]||[[Midfielder (association football)|MF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1984–85||{{flagicon|England}} [[Alan Walsh (footballer)|Alan Walsh]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1985–86||{{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Bobby Hutchinson]]||[[Midfielder (association football)|MF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1986–87||{{flagicon|England}} [[Rob Newman (footballer)|Rob Newman]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1987–88||{{flagicon|England}} [[Alan Walsh (footballer)|Alan Walsh]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1988–89||{{flagicon|England}} [[Keith Waugh]]||[[Goalkeeper (association football)|GK]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1989–90||{{flagicon|England}} [[Bob Taylor (footballer, born 1967)|Bob Taylor]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1990–91||{{flagicon|England}} [[Andy Llewellyn]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1991–92||{{flagicon|England}} [[Martin Scott (English footballer)|Martin Scott]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1992–93||{{flagicon|England}} [[Andy Cole]]||[[Striker (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1993–94||{{flagicon|England}} [[Wayne Allison]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1994–95||{{flagicon|England}} [[Matt Bryant (footballer)|Matt Bryant]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1995–96||{{flagicon|England}} [[Martin Kuhl]]||[[Midfielder (association football)|MF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1996–97||{{flagicon|England}} [[Shaun Taylor]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1997–98||{{flagicon|England}} [[Shaun Taylor]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1998–99||{{flagicon|Nigeria}} [[Ade Akinbiyi]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|1999–2000||{{flagicon|England}} [[Billy Mercer (footballer, born 1969)|Billy Mercer]]||[[Goalkeeper (association football)|GK]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|2000–01||{{flagicon|England}} [[Brian Tinnion]]||[[Midfielder (association football)|MF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|2001–02||{{flagicon|England}} [[Matt Hill (footballer)|Matt Hill]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|2002–03||{{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Scott Murray (footballer, born 1974)|Scott Murray]]||[[Midfielder (association football)|MF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|2003–04||{{flagicon|Northern Ireland}} [[Tommy Doherty]]||[[Midfielder (association football)|MF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|2004–05||{{flagicon|England}} [[Leroy Lita]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|2005–06||{{flagicon|England}} [[Steve Brooker]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2006–07 Bristol City F.C. season|2006–07]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Jamie McCombe]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2007–08 Bristol City F.C. season|2007–08]]||{{flagicon|Brazil}} [[Adriano Basso]]||[[Goalkeeper (association football)|GK]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2008–09 Bristol City F.C. season|2008–09]]||{{flagicon|Nigeria}} [[Dele Adebola]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2009–10 Bristol City F.C. season|2009–10]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Cole Skuse]]||[[Midfielder (association football)|MF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2010–11 Bristol City F.C. season|2010–11]]||{{flagicon|Ghana}} [[Albert Adomah]]||[[Midfielder (association football)|MF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2011–12 Bristol City F.C. season|2011–12]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Jon Stead]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2012–13 Bristol City F.C. season|2012–13]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Tom Heaton]]||[[Goalkeeper (association football)|GK]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2013–14 Bristol City F.C. season|2013–14]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Sam Baldock]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2014–15 Bristol City F.C. season|2014–15]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Aden Flint]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2015–16 Bristol City F.C. season|2015–16]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Aden Flint]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2016–17 Bristol City F.C. season|2016–17]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Tammy Abraham]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2017–18 Bristol City F.C. season|2017–18]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Bobby Reid (footballer, born 1993)|Bobby Reid]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2018–19 Bristol City F.C. season|2018–19]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Adam Webster (footballer, born 1995)|Adam Webster]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2019–20 Bristol City F.C. season|2019–20]]||{{flagicon|Senegal}} [[Famara Diédhiou]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2020–21 Bristol City F.C. season|2020–21]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Dan Bentley (footballer)|Dan Bentley]]||[[Goalkeeper (association football)|GK]]||<ref name="scorer"/>
|-
|[[2021–22 Bristol City F.C. season|2021–22]]||{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Andreas Weimann]]||[[Forward (association football)|FW]]||<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/weimann-scoops-four-awards/ |title=Weimann scoops four awards |website=Bristol City F.C. |date=28 April 2022 |access-date=9 November 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220428220649/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/weimann-scoops-four-awards/|archive-date=28 April 2022|url-status=live}}</ref>
|-
|[[2022–23 Bristol City F.C. season|2022–23]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Alex Scott (footballer, born 2003)|Alex Scott]]||[[Midfielder (association football)|MF]]||<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/all-the-winners-from-the-city-awards-dinner/ |title=All the winners from the City awards dinner |website=Bristol City F.C. |date=5 May 2023 |access-date=9 November 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230506171521/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/all-the-winners-from-the-city-awards-dinner/|archive-date=6 May 2023|url-status=live}}</ref>
|-
|[[2023–24 Bristol City F.C. season|2023–24]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Robert Dickie (footballer)|Rob Dickie]]||[[Defender (association football)|DF]]||<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/video/interviews/award-winner-dickie-on-rotherham-win/|title=Award-winner Dickie on Rotherham win|website=Bristol City F.C. |date=27 April 2024|access-date=28 April 2024|archive-date=28 April 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240428161003/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/video/interviews/award-winner-dickie-on-rotherham-win/|url-status=live}}</ref>
|}


====Top league scorer====
The '''EastEnders''' at the south-east end of the ground is the traditional home fans' end. However since 1994 it has controversially housed visiting fans. During the late 1990s, it was named the '''Database Computers stand (geeks)''' and then '''[[Blackthorn Cider|Blackthorn]] Wedlock stand'''. It has since acquired a new name, the '''Micra Wedlock Stand.'''


{| class="wikitable"
The '''Williams Stand''',. on the south-west side, which includes the directors' box and press box, was built in 1958. The Williams stand also contains the premier seating.
|-
!Year
!Winner
!Goals
|-
|1996–97||{{flagicon|Bermuda}} [[Shaun Goater]]||23
|-
|1997–98||{{flagicon|Bermuda}} [[Shaun Goater]]||17
|-
|1998–99||{{flagicon|Nigeria}} [[Ade Akinbiyi]]||19
|-
|1999–2000||{{flagicon|England}} [[Tony Thorpe]]||13
|-
|2000–01||{{flagicon|England}} [[Tony Thorpe]]||19
|-
|2001–02||{{flagicon|England}} [[Tony Thorpe]]||16
|-
|2002–03||{{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Scott Murray (footballer, born 1974)|Scott Murray]]||19
|-
|2003–04||{{flagicon|England}} [[Lee Peacock]]||14
|-
|2004–05||{{flagicon|England}} [[Leroy Lita]]||24
|-
|2005–06||{{flagicon|England}} [[Steve Brooker]]||16
|-
|[[2006–07 Bristol City F.C. season|2006–07]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Phil Jevons]]||11
|-
|[[2007–08 Bristol City F.C. season|2007–08]]||{{flagicon|Jamaica}} [[Darren Byfield]]||8
|-
|[[2008–09 Bristol City F.C. season|2008–09]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Nicky Maynard]]||11
|-
|[[2009–10 Bristol City F.C. season|2009–10]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Nicky Maynard]]||20
|-
|[[2010–11 Bristol City F.C. season|2010–11]]||{{flagicon|Jersey}} [[Brett Pitman]]||13
|-
|[[2011–12 Bristol City F.C. season|2011–12]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Nicky Maynard]]||8
|-
|[[2012–13 Bristol City F.C. season|2012–13]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Steve Davies (footballer, born 1987)|Steve Davies]]||13
|-
|[[2013–14 Bristol City F.C. season|2013–14]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Sam Baldock]]||24
|-
|[[2014–15 Bristol City F.C. season|2014–15]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Aaron Wilbraham]]||18
|-
|[[2015–16 Bristol City F.C. season|2015–16]]||{{flagicon|Ivory Coast}} [[Jonathan Kodjia]]||19
|-
|[[2016–17 Bristol City F.C. season|2016–17]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Tammy Abraham]]||23
|-
|[[2017–18 Bristol City F.C. season|2017–18]]||{{flagicon|England}} [[Bobby Decordova-Reid|Bobby Reid]]||19
|-
|[[2018–19 Bristol City F.C. season|2018–19]]||{{flagicon|Senegal}} [[Famara Diédhiou]]||12
|-
|[[2019–20 Bristol City F.C. season|2019–20]]||{{flagicon|Senegal}} [[Famara Diédhiou]]||11
|-
|[[2020–21 Bristol City F.C. season|2020–21]]||{{flagicon|Bermuda}} [[Nahki Wells]]||9
|-
|[[2021–22 Bristol City F.C. season|2021–22]]||{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Andreas Weimann]]||22
|-
|[[2022–23 Bristol City F.C. season|2022–23]]||{{flagicon|Bermuda}} [[Nahki Wells]]||11
|-
|[[2023–24 Bristol City F.C. season|2023–24]]||{{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Tommy Conway]]||9
|}


==Club officials==
The '''Dolman Stand''', which lies opposite The Williams Stand, was built in 1970. The stand contains a lot of wooden seats, many of which were set to be replaced with more modern plastic seating before the start of the 2006/07 season. Delays have meant that this change has not yet commenced.
'''Management'''
{{updated|20 February 2024}}<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/teams/men-staff/|title=Men’s Staff|website=Bristol City FC |access-date=20 February 2024}}</ref>
*Head Coach: [[Liam Manning]]
*Assistant Head Coach: [[Chris Hogg]]
*First Team Coach Analyst: [[James Krause (footballer)|James Krause]]
*Goalkeeping Coach: [[Pat Mountain]]
*Head of Medical: Paul Tanner<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/city-men-news/head-of-medical-appointed/|title=Head of Medical appointed|website=Bristol City FC |date=19 June 2024|access-date=21 June 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240620054113/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/city-men-news/head-of-medical-appointed/|archive-date=20 June 2024|url-status=live}}</ref>
*Head of Communications: Sheridan Robins<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/head-of-communications-appointed/|title=Meet our Head of Sports Science|website=Bristol City FC |date=21 June 2024|access-date=21 June 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240621185118/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/news/head-of-communications-appointed/|archive-date=21 June 2024|url-status=live}}</ref>
*Head of Sports Science: Andy Kavanagh<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/video/interviews/meet-our-head-of-sports-science/|title=Head of Communications appointed|website=Bristol City FC |date=8 July 2024|access-date=8 July 2024}}</ref>
*Head of Athletic Performance: Derrick Bonsu
*International Scout: [[Kalifa Cissé]]


===Managerial history===
The most recent addition to the stadium is the '''Atyeo Stand''' at the north-west end, which was built in 1994 to replace an open terrace, and contains new dressing rooms and a large gymnasium.The Atyeo has in recent years become a stand which seems to cater for a more family orientated supporter.
{| class="wikitable"
|-
!Name
!Period<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bcfc.co.uk/fanzone/club-history/all-time-managers/ |title=All-Time Managers |publisher=Bristol City |access-date=24 February 2019 |archive-date=24 February 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190224231318/https://www.bcfc.co.uk/fanzone/club-history/all-time-managers/ |url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.soccerbase.com/teams/team.sd?team_id=376&comp_id=2&teamTabs=managers |title=Bristol City Manager History |website=Soccerbase |access-date=7 January 2024}}</ref>
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Sam Hollis]]
|1897–1899
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Robert Campbell (football manager)|Robert Campbell]]
|1899–1901
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Sam Hollis]]
|1901–1905
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Harry Thickett]]
|1905–1910
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Frank Bacon (football manager)|Frank Bacon]]
|1910–1911
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Sam Hollis]]
|1911–1913
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[George Hedley (footballer, born 1876)|George Hedley]]
|1913–1917
|-
|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Jock Hamilton]]
|1917–1919
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Joe Palmer (football manager)|Joe Palmer]]
|1919–1921
|-
|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Alex Raisbeck]]
|1921–1929
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Joe Bradshaw (football manager)|Joe Bradshaw]]
|1929–1932
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Bob Hewison]]
|1932–1949
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Bob Wright (Scottish footballer)|Bob Wright]]
|1949–1950
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Pat Beasley]]
|1950–1958
|-
|{{Flagicon|NIR}} [[Peter Doherty (footballer)|Peter Doherty]]
|1958–1960
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Fred Ford (football manager)|Fred Ford]]
|1960–1967
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Alan Dicks]]
|1967–1980
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Bobby Houghton]]
|1980–1982
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Roy Hodgson]]
|1982
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Terry Cooper (footballer, born 1944)|Terry Cooper]]
|1982–1988
|-
|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Joe Jordan (footballer)|Joe Jordan]]
|1988–1990
|-
|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Jimmy Lumsden]]
|1990–1992
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Denis Smith (footballer, born 1947)|Denis Smith]]
|1992–1993
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Russell Osman]]
|1993–1994
|-
|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Joe Jordan (footballer)|Joe Jordan]]
|1994–1997
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[John Ward (footballer, born 1951)|John Ward]]
|1997–1998
|-
|{{Flagicon|SWE}} [[Benny Lennartsson]]
|1998–1999
|-
|{{Flagicon|WAL}} [[Tony Pulis]]
|1999
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} Tony Fawthrop
|2000
|-
|{{Flagicon|NIR}} [[Danny Wilson (footballer, born 1960)|Danny Wilson]]
|2000–2004
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Brian Tinnion]]
|2004–2005
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Gary Johnson (footballer, born 1955)|Gary Johnson]]
|2005–2010
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Steve Coppell]]
|2010
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Keith Millen]]
|2010–2011
|-
|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Derek McInnes]]
|2011–2013
|-
|{{Flagicon|IRE}} [[Sean O'Driscoll]]
|2013
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Steve Cotterill]]
|2013–2016
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Lee Johnson (footballer)|Lee Johnson]]
|2016–2020
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Dean Holden]]
|2020–2021
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Nigel Pearson]]
|2021–2023
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Liam Manning]]
|2023–Present
|}


==Bristol City Women's==
Ashton Gate has also played host to many big music concerts in recent years. They have had such stars as [[Rod Stewart]], [[Bryan Adams]], [[Elton John]], [[Neil Diamond]], [[The Who]] and [[Ronan Keating]].
{{Main|Bristol City W.F.C. (1990s)}}
The women's team was formed in 1990 supported by the club's community officer, Shaun Parker. Their greatest achievement was reaching the semi-finals of the [[FA Women's Cup]] in 1994 and winning promotion to the [[FA Women's Premier League National Division|Premier League]] under Manager Jack Edgar in 2004. Following the decision by the FA to fund only one centre of excellence in Bristol, the two senior teams were disbanded in June 2008 and the girls' youth side merged with the [[South Gloucestershire and Stroud College|Bristol Academy W.F.C.]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0,,10327~1035029,00.html|title=WOMEN'S TEAM TO FOLD|publisher=Birmingham City F.C.|date=19 June 2008|access-date=22 December 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090124015412/http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0,,10327~1035029,00.html|archive-date=24 January 2009|url-status=dead}}</ref> The majority of the senior players, with coach Will Roberts, moved to the [[University of Bath]] in summer 2008 and now play as AFC TeamBath Ladies in the [[South West Combination Women's Football League]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.teambath.com/?p=3523|title=Bristol City Ladies to get new lease of life at TeamBath|publisher=Team Bath|access-date=22 December 2008|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071107043154/http://www.teambath.com/?p=3523|archive-date=7 November 2007}}</ref>


==Famous fans==
==Honours==
Sources:<ref name="FCHD"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.11v11.com/teams/bristol-city/tab/honours/ |title=Bristol City football club honours |website=11v11 |access-date=7 January 2024}}</ref>
Famous fans of Bristol City include:
* [[Jenson Button]] - [[Formula One|F1]] Driver.
* [[Gareth Chilcott]] - Former [[Bath Rugby|Bath]] and [[England national rugby union team|England]] [[Rugby Union]] player.
* [[John Cleese]] - Comedian who has starred in [[Monty Python]] and [[Fawlty Towers]].
* [[Justin Lee Collins]] - Comedian.
* [[Mark Dudbridge]] - Professional darts player.
* [[Dominic Mohan]] - Journalist.
* [[Jonathan Pearce]] - Football Commentator.
* [[Tony Robinson]] - actor who starred in [[Blackadder]] and presenter of [[Time Team]].
* [[Marcus Trescothick]] - [[Somerset County Cricket Club|Somerset]] and [[England cricket team|England]] cricketer.
* [[The Wurzels]] - [[Somerset]] based band.


'''League'''
== Trivia ==
*[[Football League Second Division|Second Division]] (level 2)
**Champions: [[1905–06 Football League|1905–06]]
**2nd place promotion: [[1975–76 Football League|1975–76]]
*[[Football League Third Division|Third Division South]] / [[Football League Third Division|Third Division]] / [[Football League Second Division|Second Division]] / [[EFL League One|League One]] (level 3)
**Champions: [[1922–23 Football League|1922–23]], [[1926–27 Football League|1926–27]], [[1954–55 Football League|1954–55]], [[2014–15 Football League One|2014–15]]
**2nd place promotion: [[1964–65 Football League|1964–65]], [[1989–90 Football League|1989–90]], [[1997–98 Football League|1997–98]], [[2006–07 Football League|2006–07]]
*[[Football League Fourth Division|Fourth Division]] (level 4)
**4th place promotion: [[1983–84 Football League|1983–84]]
*[[Western Football League|Western League]]
**Champions: [[1897–98 Western Football League|1897–98]]


'''Cup'''
The BBC comedy show [[Only Fools and Horses]] features a block of flats called '''Nelson Mandela House'''. These are intended to be in Peckham, London, but the flats used for filming are in fact right next to the Ashton Gate ground in Bristol.
*[[FA Cup]]
**Runners-up: [[1908–09 FA Cup|1908–09]]
*[[EFL Trophy|Associate Members' Cup / Football League Trophy]]
**Winners: [[1985–86 Football League Trophy|1985–86]], [[2002–03 Football League Trophy|2002–03]], [[2014–15 Football League Trophy|2014–15]]
**Runners-up: [[1986–87 Football League Trophy|1986–87]], [[1999–2000 Football League Trophy|1999–2000]]
*[[Welsh Cup]]
**Winners: [[1933–34 Welsh Cup|1933–34]]
*[[Anglo-Scottish Cup]]
**Winners: [[1977–78 Anglo-Scottish Cup|1977–78]]

==See also==
* [[Ruch Radzionków]] - a Polish football club with a similar identity, nicknamed {{lang|pl|Cidry}}.


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}

{{cite book
| last = Woods
| first = David M.
| title = The Bristol Babe: The First 100 Years of Bristol City F.C.
| publisher = Yore Publications
| date = 1994
| location = Harefield, Middlesex
| id = ISBN 187442795X }}


==External links==
==External links==
{{Commons category}}
* [http://www.bcfc.co.uk/ Official website] (requires registration)
* {{Official website}}{{BBC football info|BBClinkname=bristol-city}}
* [http://www.otib.co.uk/ Fans' forum]
* [http://www.bristolcityst.org.uk/ Bristol City Supporters Trust]

{{Football League One}}


[[Category:Bristol City F.C.]]
{{Bristol City F.C.}}
{{EFL Championship}}
[[Category:English football clubs]]
[[Category:Sport in Bristol]]
{{Sport in Bristol}}
{{Authority control}}
[[Category:Football (soccer) clubs established in 1897]]


[[de:Bristol City]]
[[Category:Bristol City F.C.| ]]
[[Category:1894 establishments in England]]
[[es:Bristol City Football Club]]
[[Category:Association football clubs established in 1894]]
[[fr:Bristol City Football Club]]
[[Category:Football clubs in Bristol]]
[[lb:Bristol City FC]]
[[Category:Football clubs in England]]
[[nl:Bristol City FC]]
[[Category:Southern Football League clubs]]
[[no:Bristol City FC]]
[[Category:English Football League clubs]]
[[pl:Bristol City F.C.]]
[[Category:EFL Trophy winners]]
[[pt:Bristol City Football Club]]
[[Category:United League (football)]]
[[sv:Bristol City FC]]
[[zh:布里斯托尔城足球俱乐部]]

Latest revision as of 16:52, 9 January 2025

Bristol City
Full nameBristol City Football Club
Nickname(s)The Robins, Cider Army
Founded1894; 131 years ago (1894)
GroundAshton Gate
Capacity27,000
OwnerSteve Lansdown
ChairmanJon Lansdown
Head CoachLiam Manning
LeagueEFL Championship
2023–24EFL Championship, 11th of 24
Websitebcfc.co.uk
Current season

Bristol City Football Club is a professional football club based in Bristol, England. The team compete in the EFL Championship, the second level of the English football league system.

Founded in 1894, the club competed in the Southern League and Western League, being crowned Western League champions in 1897–98. They were admitted into the Football League in 1901 and won the Second Division in 1905–06. They finished second in the First Division the following season, three points behind champions Newcastle United, and went on to lose to Manchester United in the 1909 FA Cup final. Relegated in 1911, they dropped to the third tier in 1922, though would claim the Third Division South title in 1922–23 and again in 1926–27. They were returned to the third tier in 1932, remaining there until they won the Third Division South again in 1954–55. Having been relegated in 1960, Bristol City won promotion from the third tier in 1964–65 and then from the second tier in 1975–76. They played four seasons in the top-flight before being relegated in three consecutive seasons by 1982.

Bristol City spent just two seasons in the Fourth Division and went on to win the Associate Members' Cup (Football League Trophy) in 1986. Promoted out of the Third Division in 1989–90, the club were relegated in 1995 and again in 1999 after another promotion in 1997–98. Bristol City won the Football League Trophy again in 2003, and were promoted from League One in 2006–07. Relegated after six seasons in the Championship, they won the Football League Trophy for a third time in 2015 on their way to the 2014–15 League One title, and have remained in the Championship since that promotion.

They have played their home games at Ashton Gate since moving from St John's Lane in 1904. The club's home colours are red and white, and their nickname is The Robins—a robin featured on the club's badge from 1976 to 1994 and from 2019 onwards. Their main rivals are Bristol Rovers, with whom they contest the Bristol derby, and Cardiff City, with whom they contest the cross-border Severnside derby.

History

[edit]

Early years and early successes (1894–1922)

[edit]

The club was founded in 1894 as Bristol South End and changed their name to Bristol City on adopting professionalism three years later when they were admitted into the Southern League. Finishing as runners-up in three of the first four seasons, in 1900 the club amalgamated with local Southern League rivals Bedminster F.C., who had been founded as Southville in 1887. Bristol City joined the Football League in 1901 when they became only the third club south of Birmingham (following in the footsteps of Woolwich Arsenal and Luton Town) to perform in the competition. Their first game in the Football League was on 7 September 1901 at Bloomfield Road, when Blackpool were beaten 2–0.[1]

A scheme has been informally approved by the parties interested for the amalgamation of the Bristol City and Bedminster Association Football Clubs. The leading conditions are that the name and colours of Bristol City shall be retained, that matches shall be played alternately on the ground of each club for one season, and that five directors shall be nominated by each club. This should lead to Bristol securing one of the strongest teams in the south.

Gloucestershire Echo, 12 April 1900.[2] The announcement of the merger between Bristol City and Bedminster.

Winning the Second Division Championship with a record number of points when they became the first club in Football League history to win 30 league games in a season (out of 38 played) as well as equalling Manchester United's achievement of the previous season in winning 14 consecutive games (a record until 2018, also accomplished by Preston North End in 1950–51). Nicknamed the Bristol Babe at this time, they finished as runners-up in their inaugural First Division campaign (1906–07) as the only southern club to finish in the top two prior to World War I.

In 1909 they won through to their only FA Cup final, though they were somewhat fortunate that a last-gasp spot-kick saved them from defeat in the semi-final versus Derby County at Stamford Bridge. In the final at the Crystal Palace (now the National Sports Centre) Bristol City lost to Manchester United 1–0. After a five-season stay in the top flight, despite winning 1–0 at Newcastle at the start of the 1910–11 campaign, failure to beat Everton in the season's finale brought City's first-ever taste of relegation and it was to be 65 years before top-flight status would be regained.[3]

Bristol City would then go on to stay in Division 2 until three years after the First World War had ended, and in that time they reached the semi-finals of the 1919–20 FA Cup before being beaten 2–1 by Huddersfield Town and finished third in the Second Division in the 1920–21 season.[4][5] However, in the next season they were relegated to the Third Division South.[6]

The yo-yo era (1922–65)

[edit]
Chart of yearly table positions of Bristol City in the Football League

The 1920s were a rocky time as City bounced between the Second Division and the Southern Section of the Third Division. The season after City were relegated, they achieved promotion back to the Second Division, before being relegated back to the Southern Section of the Third Division again the following season. After successive high finishes in the league, they were promoted again in 1926–27. However, by the 1930s they had slumped into the lower division and stayed that way until over 10 years after the Second World War. During this stay in the Third Division South, they won the Welsh Cup in 1934, beating Tranmere Rovers in the final. However, in the same year they also suffered their biggest ever league defeat, a 9–0 loss to Coventry City The 1937–38 season was the most successful season for City since they were relegated to the Third Division, coming second in the league and reaching the final of the Third Division South Cup, before losing 6–2 to Reading on aggregate.[7][8] They then came eighth in the Third Division South in the final full season before the war, in which the Grandstand of Ashton Gate was destroyed by a German air raid.[9]

In 1946–47, City recorded a record league win by beating Aldershot 9–0, although despite Don Clark scoring 36 goals in the League, City failed to get promoted that season. Harry Dolman became chairman in 1949, a post he would hold for over 30 years. An engineer who had bought out the firm he worked for, he designed the first set of floodlights installed at Ashton Gate in the early 1950s. The late 1950s were a better time for City, with a five-year stay in the Second Division, a league they returned to for a further spell in 1965.

Back among the elite (1966–80)

[edit]

In 1967, Alan Dicks was appointed manager, and things gradually began to improve, with promotion to the First Division in 1976, ending a 65-year exile from the top flight.

Between 1975 and 1981 City were regular participants in the Anglo-Scottish Cup, winning the trophy in 1977–78, beating Hibernian in the semi-finals, and winning 3–2 on aggregate in the final against St Mirren (managed at the time by a relatively new manager, Alex Ferguson). St Mirren had their revenge two seasons later, with an aggregate 5–1 victory over City to become the only Scottish team to win the trophy.

City's second stint in the top flight was less successful than the club's first, with thirteenth position in 1979 being their highest finish during this era. Stars of this era included Peter Cormack, Geoff Merrick, Tom Ritchie, Clive Whitehead, Gerry Gow, Trevor Tainton and Jimmy Mann.

Financial difficulties and revival (1980–2000)

[edit]

In 1980, the City team went back to the Second Division in the first of three relegations, their debt mounted and their financial losses increased, with two successive relegations following. Thus, in 1982, they fell into the Fourth Division, and were declared bankrupt. A new club was formed[10] and BCFC (1982) Ltd acquired the club's player contracts. The highly paid senior players Julian Marshall, Chris Garland, Jimmy Mann, Peter Aitken, Geoff Merrick, David Rodgers, Gerry Sweeney and Trevor Tainton, who became known as the 'Ashton Gate Eight', each accepted termination of his contract for half the amount due. The club's previous owners had failed to pay its debts to many local businesses. The resulting ill will towards the club made it difficult for the new owners to obtain credit.

City spent two seasons in the Fourth Division before winning promotion under Terry Cooper in 1984. They consolidated themselves in the Third Division during the latter part of the 1980s, and in 1990 Cooper's successor Joe Jordan achieved promotion as Third Division runners-up to local rivals Bristol Rovers.

There was a tragedy for the club, however, in that promotion campaign. In March 1990, two months before the club sealed promotion, striker Dean Horrix was killed in a car crash barely two weeks after joining the club, and having played three league games for them.[11]

Jordan moved to Heart of Midlothian in September 1990, and his successor Jimmy Lumsden remained in charge for 18 months before making way for Denis Smith. Smith's first signing was the 20-year-old Arsenal striker Andy Cole. He was sold to Newcastle United in February 1993 and later played for Manchester United, where he collected five Premier League titles, two FA Cups and the European Cup.

Meanwhile, City remained in the new Division One (no longer the Second Division after the creation of the Premier League in 1992) and Smith moved to Oxford United in November 1993. His successor was Russell Osman. In January 1994 Osman led City to a shock 1–0 victory over Liverpool at Anfield in a third round replay in the FA Cup, a result that would cause the Liverpool manager at the time, Graeme Souness, to resign. Osman was sacked within a year of taking charge.

Joe Jordan was brought back to Ashton Gate in September 1994, but was unable to prevent relegation to Division Two.

Jordan remained at the helm for two seasons after City's relegation, but left in March 1997 after failing to get them back into Division One. Former Bristol Rovers manager John Ward took over, and achieved promotion in 1998 as Division Two runners-up. But City struggled back in Division One, and Ward stepped down in October 1998 to be succeeded by Benny Lennartsson, their first non-British manager. City were relegated in bottom place and Lennartsson was dismissed in favour of Gillingham's Tony Pulis, who lasted six months before leaving to take over at Portsmouth. During his time at Ashton Gate he was manager of perhaps the worst City side since the one that completed a hat-trick of successive relegations almost 20 years earlier.

Coach Tony Fawthrop took over until the end of the season, when Danny Wilson was appointed. Wilson was arguably the most prominent manager to take charge of a City side since Denis Smith, as he had guided Barnsley to promotion to the Premier League in 1997 and Sheffield Wednesday to a 12th-place finish in 1999.

21st century

[edit]

In the early 2000s Bristol City were regular Division Two play-off contenders during Wilson's spell as manager. They just missed out on the play-offs in 2002, finishing 7th. The following year, Wilson almost took them to automatic promotion, finishing 3rd and winning the Football League Trophy in Cardiff in 2003. The taste of the play-offs was bitter though, losing to rivals Cardiff City 1–0 on aggregate in the semi-final. In 2004, they finished in 3rd place again, and this time they reached the play-off final, but lost to Brighton & Hove Albion. He was sacked within days and replaced by veteran player Brian Tinnion.

City just failed to make the play-offs in Tinnion's first season as manager, finishing seventh, and he stepped down in September 2005 after a poor start to the season. Yeovil Town manager Gary Johnson was recruited as his successor in September 2005. Johnson led Bristol City to a 9th-place finish.

Pitch invasion at Ashton Gate after securing promotion in 2007

In the 2006–07 season, Bristol City finally achieved the elusive promotion that had evaded them in their 8 years in the third tier. Promotion to the Championship was confirmed on the final day of the season with a 3–1 win against already relegated Rotherham United, securing the runners-up place in the division and resulting in automatic promotion.

After a good start in the Championship, City established themselves as real contenders, sitting in 3rd place at Christmas. By the start of March, City were top of the Championship, making an improbable second successive promotion a possibility. However, a poor run ended City's chances of an automatic promotion place but qualified for the play-offs with a 4th-place finish, their highest finish since 1980. City overcame Crystal Palace 4–2 on aggregate to progress to the play-off final at Wembley Stadium, where they were beaten 1–0 by Hull City.

After a poor start in the first half of the 2008–09 season, City recovered after Christmas, peaking at 4th place in late February. After a lot of draws, the season eventually petered out and City finished the season in tenth place. The 2009–10 season saw some good results in the autumn, but heavy defeats by local rivals Cardiff City (0–6) and Doncaster Rovers (2–5) in early 2010 led to much dissatisfaction amongst fans,[12] and Johnson left the club on 18 March 2010.[13] Assistant manager Keith Millen took charge as caretaker manager, and led a series of good results, resulting in a second successive tenth-place finish.

Steve Coppell became manager in 2010[14] but resigned after just two matches.[15][16] Longtime assistant manager Keith Millen was announced as Coppell's successor[16][17] and City fell to a 15th-place finish in 2010–11. After a poor start to the 2011–12 season, Millen left the club in October 2011.[18]

Derek McInnes was appointed next, but after a promising start, City fell into the relegation zone, eventually surviving in 20th place, their worst since promotion in 2007. This steady decline would continue and after a poor start to the 2012–13 season, McInnes was sacked in January 2013 with City bottom of the Championship. He was replaced by Sean O'Driscoll, the club's fifth head coach in three years,[19] but City were relegated to League One after six seasons in the Championship. O'Driscoll left with the team 22nd in League One.

Steve Cotterill joined the club when Bristol City were second bottom of League One.[20] Cotterill guided the club to a 12th-place finish.[21] Bristol City were promoted back to the Championship after securing the League One title in 2014–15, their first league title since 1955. In their last home game, against Walsall, they finished the season with an 8–2 win.[22] Bristol City finished the season with 99 points,[22] the most points in a single season in the club's history, and 5 losses. In the same season, they also won the Football League Trophy after a win over Walsall, which finished 2–0 and their third league trophy, a record held by the club for having the most wins in that competition.

Despite huge success in the previous season, the club struggled on their return to the second tier. Steve Cotterill was relieved of his duties in January 2016 after a poor run of form which had seen Bristol City slip to 22nd in the Championship table. Lee Johnson, former player and son of former manager, Gary Johnson, was appointed as Bristol City's new head coach on 6 February 2016.[23] Bristol City eventually finished in 18th place.[21]

In the 2016–17 season, City were only just able to accumulate enough points to ensure survival at the end of the season. Lee Johnson remained at the helm for the following season, again making a positive early start. At the midpoint of the season, after 24 league games,[24] they sat second in the Championship, whilst also knocking out Premier League opposition in Watford, Stoke City, Crystal Palace and Manchester United to reach the semi-finals of the League Cup.[21][25] However, City would eventually finish in 11th place.[26]

Bristol City ended the 2018–19 season in 8th.[21] The battle for the last play-off spot came down to the final day, before Derby County managed to win their final game and clinch it.[27] From March to June, the 2019–20 season was suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite again challenging for the play-offs during the season, Johnson was sacked on 4 July 2020 after a run of just one win in 10 league matches.[28] His long-time assistant, Dean Holden, was appointed as his replacement on 10 August 2020.[29] After suffering six straight defeats in all competitions, Holden was dismissed on 16 February 2021 after just six months in charge.[30] He was replaced by Nigel Pearson.[31]

On 29 October 2023, Pearson was sacked with Bristol City 15th in the Championship following a run of 5 losses in 7 games.[32] Despite the poor form, Pearson had overseen year on year points increases in his time at the club and many fans felt he has been undermined by a loss of key players such as Alex Scott and a lack of reinvestment in the playing squad.[citation needed]

On 7 November 2023, Liam Manning was appointed as the new head coach of Bristol City, joining from Oxford United.[33]

Club identity

[edit]

Bristol City have played in red and white since the 1890s, occasionally also including black.[34] The away kit is more variable. It is traditionally white, but has also featured black or yellow. Other colours featured have included green and a purple and lime combination, the latter of which has become a fan favourite.

  • The club's current crest is a modernised version of the Robin which has long ties to the fans and the club.
  • The club's previous crest was a simplified version of the coat of arms of the city of Bristol.
  • The club's mascots are Red and Robyn, replacing Scrumpy the robin who had been the club's mascot from 2005 until 2022.[35]
  • The club has a long association with West Country band The Wurzels: "One for the Bristol City", written for the club in 1976, is the run-out song at Ashton Gate, while their 1960s hit "Drink Up Thy Zider" is played after home wins.

About halfway through the 2007–08 season Bristol City manager Gary Johnson said in an interview that he hoped the team could get the whole ground bouncing.[36][37] City supporters took this rallying cry on board and began to sing "Johnson says bounce around the ground" to the tune of Yellow Submarine, while continually bouncing up and down. The first game at which it was sung was in an away match against Southampton at St Mary's Stadium, and it was also sung at away at Queen's Park Rangers in February. When Bristol City fans travelled to London to play Charlton Athletic on 4 March 2008, the visiting fans, using the rail network to return home, adapted the song to "Bounce Around the Train". Since then, it has become an often used chant at Ashton Gate stadium by the fans.[citation needed] It was also sometimes used by supporters of Gary Johnson's former side Northampton Town, primarily at away matches. When Gary Johnson's son, Lee Johnson returned to his former club in 2016 as their new manager, he stated that he wished to inherit the chant and keep the fans singing it.[38]

Shirt sponsors

[edit]
Period Kit supplier Kit sponsor
1976–1981 Umbro None
1981–1982 Coffer Sports Park Furnishers
Feb 1982 Hire-Rite
1982–1983 Lynx
Aug–Dec 1983 Umbro
Dec 1983–1990 Bukta
1990–1992 Thorn Security
1992–1993 Nibor
1993–1994 Dry Blackthorn Cider
1994–1996 Auto Windscreens
1996–1998 Lotto Sanderson
1998–1999 Uhlsport
1999–2000 DAS
2000–2002 Admiral
2002–2005 TFG Sports
2005–2006 Bristol Trade Centre
2006–2008 Puma
2008–2010 DAS
2010–2011 Adidas
2011–2012 RSG (Home)
Bristol City Community Trust (Away)
2012–2014 Blackthorn
2014–2016 Bristol Sport RSG
2016–2018 Lancer Scott
2018–2020 Dunder
2020–2022 Hummel MansionBet
2022–2023 Huboo

Digital NRG[39][40]

2023–present O'Neills

Stadium

[edit]

Bristol City have played at Ashton Gate Stadium in the south-west of Bristol, just south of the River Avon, since moving from St John's Lane in 1904. The ground currently has an all-seated capacity of 27,000.[41] It was the home of Bedminster until the 1900 merger, and the merged team played some games there the following season, but it did not become the permanent home of Bristol City until 1904.

In the past plans were considered for expansion work to be carried out at Ashton Gate. There were also proposals to build a new 36,000-seat stadium at Hengrove Park. This was turned down in a local referendum in December 2000.[42] In 2002, the local council was looking at possible sites for a new 40,000-seat stadium which would house both City, Rovers and Bristol Rugby, but these plans were scrapped and it is widely accepted that this would not have been welcomed by the majority of supporters from all clubs.[43] Ashton Gate's current capacity is an average size for Championship grounds; however, in November 2007 the club announced plans to relocate to a new 30,000-capacity stadium in Ashton Vale. Plans were also in place to increase capacity to 42,000 had England's 2018 World Cup bid been successful.[44][45][needs update]

The South stand opened for the 2015–16 season, with the existing Williams stand being demolished and replaced by the Lansdown stand in 2016. A new partly-artificial Desso pitch was laid and the current Dolman stand refurbished. A safe standing area was added to the south-east corner of the ground (roughly analogous to the old East End) in 2021.

A state-of-the-art training facility became operational in 2020. The Robins High Performance Centre is at Failand a short distance from Ashton Gate Stadium.

[edit]

Rivalries

[edit]

Bristol City's traditional rivals are Bristol Rovers. The clubs have met 105 times, with the first meeting in 1897. Bristol City have the most wins on 43. However, the clubs have not been in the same league for a number of years; they were last in the same division in the 2000–01 season. Since then, they have only met three times; in the two-legged southern final of the 2006–07 Football League Trophy, which Rovers won 1–0 on aggregate, and in the first round of the 2013–14 Johnstone's Paint Trophy, which City won 2–1 at Ashton Gate.

City's other main rivals are Cardiff City, who play in nearby Cardiff. Despite being a local derby, it crosses the Wales–England border, making it one of the few international club derbies in the United Kingdom. The two clubs have been at similar levels in recent years, being in the same division for 10 of the last 16 seasons. This has meant frequent meetings in the league including in the semi-finals of the 2003 Second Division play-offs.

Other clubs have been seen as 'third rivals' by the fans and media. Swindon Town are seen by many as rivals, nicknamed 'Swindle' by City fans. This rivalry was most recently relevant in the 2014–15 season, when the two clubs were rivals for promotion to the Championship. Plymouth Argyle have also previously been considered rivals despite a distance of over 100 miles. The rivalry was especially relevant in the 2000s when the two clubs were the highest-ranking West Country clubs for a number of years, and meetings were seen as a decider of the 'Best in the West'. Swansea City, Newport County, Cheltenham Town and even Yeovil Town have previously been mentioned as rivals, but very rarely. However, during a fixture between Bristol City and Swansea City on 2 February 2019 at Ashton Gate, fighting took place between Bristol City and Swansea City fans resulting in a rivalry flaring up between the two sets of fans.[46]

Records and statistics

[edit]
  • Record League victory – 9–0 v. Aldershot (28 December 1946)
  • Record FA Cup victory – 11–0 v. Chichester City (5 November 1960)
  • Record League defeat – 0–9 v. Coventry City (28 April 1934)
  • Highest attendance – 43,335 v. Preston North End (16 February 1935)
  • Highest attendance (at any ground) – 86,703 v. Hull City Championship play-off final – Wembley Stadium – (24 May 2008)
  • Most League appearances – 597, John Atyeo (1951–66)
  • Most League goals scored – 314, John Atyeo (1951–66)
  • Most goals scored (overall) – 351, John Atyeo (1951–66)[47]
  • Most capped player – Billy Wedlock, 26 caps, England
  • Most goals scored in a season – 36, Don Clark (1946–47)
  • Record transfer fee paid – £8 million to Chelsea for Tomáš Kalas (July 2019)
  • Record transfer fee received – £25 million from Bournemouth for Alex Scott (August 2023)[48]
  • Record sequence of League wins – 14; 9 September 1905 – 2 December 1905 – This was a joint league record until 2017.
  • Record sequence of League defeats – 8; 10 December 2016 – 21 January 2017
  • Record sequence of unbeaten League matches – 24; 9 September 1905 – 10 February 1906
  • Record sequence without a League win – 21; 16 March 2013 – 22 October 2013
  • Record points total for a Season – 99pts; 2014–15 Football League One

League history

[edit]

Source:[21]

Note: The numbers in parentheses are the level of football for that season.

  • 1897–1901: Southern League Division One (3)
  • 1901–1906: Football League Second Division (2)
  • 1906–1911: Football League First Division (1)
  • 1911–1922: Football League Second Division (2)
  • 1922–1923: Football League Third Division (3)
  • 1923–1924: Football League Second Division (2)
  • 1924–1927: Football League Third Division (3)
  • 1927–1932: Football League Second Division (2)
  • 1932–1955: Football League Third Division (3)
  • 1955–1960: Football League Second Division (2)
  • 1960–1965: Football League Third Division (3)
  • 1965–1976: Football League Second Division (2)
  • 1976–1980: Football League First Division (1)
  • 1980–1981: Football League Second Division (2)
  • 1981–1982: Football League Third Division (3)
  • 1982–1984: Football League Fourth Division (4)
  • 1984–1990: Football League Third Division (3)
  • 1990–1995: Football League Second Division / Football League First Division (rebranding after the Premier League came into existence) (2)
  • 1995–1998: Football League Second Division (3)
  • 1998–1999: Football League First Division (2)
  • 1999–2007: Football League Second Division / Football League One (rebranded) (3)
  • 2007–2013: Football League Championship (2)
  • 2013–2015: Football League One (3)
  • 2015–present: Football League/EFL Championship (2)

Most appearances

[edit]
# Name Career Appearances
1 England Louis Carey 1995–2004; 2005–2014 646
2 England John Atyeo 1951–1966 645
3 England Trevor Tainton 1967–1982 581
4 England Brian Tinnion 1993–2005 551
5 Scotland Tom Ritchie 1972–1981; 1983–1985 504
6 Scotland Gerry Sweeney 1971–1981 490
7 England Rob Newman 1981–1991 483
8 Scotland Gerry Gow 1969–1981 445
9 England Geoff Merrick 1967–1982 433
10 Scotland Scott Murray 1997–2003; 2004–2009 427

Most club appearances including substitute appearances in all competitions (excluding Gloucestershire Cup). Updated 29 December 2013. Note: On 29 December 2013, Louis Carey broke Bristol City's appearance record when he came on as a substitute in the 4–1 win over Stevenage. He overtook John Atyeo after 47 years and is now the club's all-time top appearance maker.

Most goals

[edit]
# Name Career Goals
1 England John Atyeo 1951–1966 351
2 Scotland Tom Ritchie 1969–1981, 1982–1984 132
3 England Arnold Rodgers 1949–1956 111
4 England Jimmy Rodgers 1950–1956, 1958–1962 108
5 England Alan Walsh 1984–1989 99
6 Scotland Scott Murray 1997–2003, 2004–2009 91
7 England Tot Walsh 1924–1928 91
8 England John Galley 1967–1972 90
9 England Brian Clark 1960–1966 89
10 Scotland Sam Gilligan 1904–1910 87

Correct as of 29 July 2018.[49]

Players

[edit]

First-team squad

[edit]
As of 9 January 2025[50]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Republic of Ireland IRL Max O'Leary
2 DF Scotland SCO Ross McCrorie
3 DF England ENG Cameron Pring
4 DF Scotland SCO Kal Naismith
6 MF England ENG Max Bird
7 FW Japan JPN Yu Hirakawa (on loan from Machia Zelvia)
8 MF England ENG Joe Williams
9 FW France FRA Fally Mayulu
10 MF England ENG Scott Twine
11 MF Albania ALB Anis Mehmeti
12 MF Republic of Ireland IRL Jason Knight (captain)[51]
14 DF Kenya KEN Zak Vyner
15 DF Republic of Ireland IRL Luke McNally
16 DF England ENG Rob Dickie
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 MF Republic of Ireland IRL Mark Sykes
18 MF England ENG Ayman Benarous
19 DF England ENG George Tanner
20 FW England ENG Sam Bell
21 FW Bermuda BER Nahki Wells
23 GK France FRA Stefan Bajić
24 DF England ENG Haydon Roberts
27 FW England ENG Harry Cornick
29 MF England ENG Marcus McGuane
30 FW Republic of Ireland IRL Sinclair Armstrong
32 GK Wales WAL Lewis Thomas
40 MF England ENG George Earthy (on loan from West Ham United)
FW Italy ITA Ephraim Yeboah

Out on loan

[edit]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
5 DF England ENG Robert Atkinson (at Portsmouth until 31 May 2025)[52]
22 MF England ENG Taylor Gardner-Hickman (at Birmingham City until 31 May 2025)[53]
26 FW England ENG Josh Stokes (at Cambridge United until 31 May 2025)[54]
DF Canada CAN Jamie Knight-Lebel (at Crewe Alexandra until 31 May 2025)[55]
FW England ENG Seb Palmer-Houlden (at Dundee until 31 May 2025)[56]

Under 21 squad

[edit]
As of 9 January 2025

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
31 MF England ENG Elijah Morrison
33 DF England ENG Josh Campbell-Slowey
34 DF England ENG Joseph James
35 FW England ENG Leo Pecover
39 MF England ENG Billy Phillips
GK Wales WAL Josey Casa-Grande
DF England ENG Zach Ali
DF England ENG Taine Anderson
DF Germany GER Raphael Araoye
DF England ENG Archie Taylor
DF Wales WAL Callum Wood
MF England ENG Tommy Backwell
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF England ENG Kai Churchley
MF England ENG Callum Hewlett
MF England ENG Jed Meerholz
MF Republic of Ireland IRL Adam Murphy
MF England ENG Raekwon Nelson
MF England ENG Marley Rose
MF Wales WAL Omar Taylor-Clarke
FW England ENG Tim Ap Sion
FW England ENG Brandon Bak
FW England ENG Luke Skinner
FW England ENG Olly Thomas

Notable players

[edit]

Former players

For a list of all Bristol City players with a Wikipedia article, see Category:Bristol City F.C. players. Bedminster merged with Bristol City in 1900; for a further list of all Bedminster players with articles see Category:Bedminster F.C. players.

Player of the Year

[edit]
Year Winner Po. Ref.
1970–71 England Gerry Sharpe FW [57]
1971–72 England Geoff Merrick DF [57]
1972–73 Wales John Emanuel MF [57]
1973–74 Scotland Gerry Gow MF [57]
1974–75 England Gary Collier DF [57]
1975–76 United Kingdom The whole squad [57]
1976–77 England Norman Hunter DF [57]
1977–78 England Norman Hunter DF [57]
1978–79 Scotland Gerry Gow MF [57]
1979–80 England Geoff Merrick DF [57]
1980–81 England Kevin Mabbutt FW [57]
1981–82 No award [57]
1982–83 England Glyn Riley FW [57]
1983–84 Wales Howard Pritchard MF [57]
1984–85 England Alan Walsh FW [57]
1985–86 Scotland Bobby Hutchinson MF [57]
1986–87 England Rob Newman DF [57]
1987–88 England Alan Walsh FW [57]
1988–89 England Keith Waugh GK [57]
1989–90 England Bob Taylor FW [57]
1990–91 England Andy Llewellyn DF [57]
1991–92 England Martin Scott DF [57]
1992–93 England Andy Cole FW [57]
1993–94 England Wayne Allison FW [57]
1994–95 England Matt Bryant DF [57]
1995–96 England Martin Kuhl MF [57]
1996–97 England Shaun Taylor DF [57]
1997–98 England Shaun Taylor DF [57]
1998–99 Nigeria Ade Akinbiyi FW [57]
1999–2000 England Billy Mercer GK [57]
2000–01 England Brian Tinnion MF [57]
2001–02 England Matt Hill DF [57]
2002–03 Scotland Scott Murray MF [57]
2003–04 Northern Ireland Tommy Doherty MF [57]
2004–05 England Leroy Lita FW [57]
2005–06 England Steve Brooker FW [57]
2006–07 England Jamie McCombe DF [57]
2007–08 Brazil Adriano Basso GK [57]
2008–09 Nigeria Dele Adebola FW [57]
2009–10 England Cole Skuse MF [57]
2010–11 Ghana Albert Adomah MF [57]
2011–12 England Jon Stead FW [57]
2012–13 England Tom Heaton GK [57]
2013–14 England Sam Baldock FW [57]
2014–15 England Aden Flint DF [57]
2015–16 England Aden Flint DF [57]
2016–17 England Tammy Abraham FW [57]
2017–18 England Bobby Reid FW [57]
2018–19 England Adam Webster DF [57]
2019–20 Senegal Famara Diédhiou FW [57]
2020–21 England Dan Bentley GK [57]
2021–22 Austria Andreas Weimann FW [58]
2022–23 England Alex Scott MF [59]
2023–24 England Rob Dickie DF [60]

Top league scorer

[edit]
Year Winner Goals
1996–97 Bermuda Shaun Goater 23
1997–98 Bermuda Shaun Goater 17
1998–99 Nigeria Ade Akinbiyi 19
1999–2000 England Tony Thorpe 13
2000–01 England Tony Thorpe 19
2001–02 England Tony Thorpe 16
2002–03 Scotland Scott Murray 19
2003–04 England Lee Peacock 14
2004–05 England Leroy Lita 24
2005–06 England Steve Brooker 16
2006–07 England Phil Jevons 11
2007–08 Jamaica Darren Byfield 8
2008–09 England Nicky Maynard 11
2009–10 England Nicky Maynard 20
2010–11 Jersey Brett Pitman 13
2011–12 England Nicky Maynard 8
2012–13 England Steve Davies 13
2013–14 England Sam Baldock 24
2014–15 England Aaron Wilbraham 18
2015–16 Ivory Coast Jonathan Kodjia 19
2016–17 England Tammy Abraham 23
2017–18 England Bobby Reid 19
2018–19 Senegal Famara Diédhiou 12
2019–20 Senegal Famara Diédhiou 11
2020–21 Bermuda Nahki Wells 9
2021–22 Austria Andreas Weimann 22
2022–23 Bermuda Nahki Wells 11
2023–24 Scotland Tommy Conway 9

Club officials

[edit]

Management

As of 20 February 2024[61]

Managerial history

[edit]
Name Period[65][66]
England Sam Hollis 1897–1899
England Robert Campbell 1899–1901
England Sam Hollis 1901–1905
England Harry Thickett 1905–1910
England Frank Bacon 1910–1911
England Sam Hollis 1911–1913
England George Hedley 1913–1917
Scotland Jock Hamilton 1917–1919
England Joe Palmer 1919–1921
Scotland Alex Raisbeck 1921–1929
England Joe Bradshaw 1929–1932
England Bob Hewison 1932–1949
England Bob Wright 1949–1950
England Pat Beasley 1950–1958
Northern Ireland Peter Doherty 1958–1960
England Fred Ford 1960–1967
England Alan Dicks 1967–1980
England Bobby Houghton 1980–1982
England Roy Hodgson 1982
England Terry Cooper 1982–1988
Scotland Joe Jordan 1988–1990
Scotland Jimmy Lumsden 1990–1992
England Denis Smith 1992–1993
England Russell Osman 1993–1994
Scotland Joe Jordan 1994–1997
England John Ward 1997–1998
Sweden Benny Lennartsson 1998–1999
Wales Tony Pulis 1999
England Tony Fawthrop 2000
Northern Ireland Danny Wilson 2000–2004
England Brian Tinnion 2004–2005
England Gary Johnson 2005–2010
England Steve Coppell 2010
England Keith Millen 2010–2011
Scotland Derek McInnes 2011–2013
Republic of Ireland Sean O'Driscoll 2013
England Steve Cotterill 2013–2016
England Lee Johnson 2016–2020
England Dean Holden 2020–2021
England Nigel Pearson 2021–2023
England Liam Manning 2023–Present

Bristol City Women's

[edit]

The women's team was formed in 1990 supported by the club's community officer, Shaun Parker. Their greatest achievement was reaching the semi-finals of the FA Women's Cup in 1994 and winning promotion to the Premier League under Manager Jack Edgar in 2004. Following the decision by the FA to fund only one centre of excellence in Bristol, the two senior teams were disbanded in June 2008 and the girls' youth side merged with the Bristol Academy W.F.C.[67] The majority of the senior players, with coach Will Roberts, moved to the University of Bath in summer 2008 and now play as AFC TeamBath Ladies in the South West Combination Women's Football League.[68]

Honours

[edit]

Sources:[21][69]

League

Cup

See also

[edit]
  • Ruch Radzionków - a Polish football club with a similar identity, nicknamed Cidry.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Calley, Roy (1992). Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887–1992, Breedon Books Sport
  2. ^ "Sporting Gossip". Gloucestershire Echo. 12 April 1900. Retrieved 15 December 2015 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. ^ Bristol City The Early Years 1894–1915 by David Woods published by Desert Island Books 2004; The Bristol Babe by David Woods published by Yore Publications 1994; Bristol City The Complete Record 1894–1987 by David Woods with Andrew Crabtree published by Breedon Books 1987; David Woods the Official Bristol City Club Historian.
  4. ^ "FA Cup 1919/1920 – Semi-finals". worldfootball.net. 12 June 2023.
  5. ^ Appert, Michael. "Millennium 1920–21 English Football League Season & Lower Division Tables". melaman2.com.
  6. ^ Appert, Michael. "Millennium 1921–22 English Football League Season & Lower Division Tables". melaman2.com.
  7. ^ "Club Legends". Bristol City. Archived from the original on 7 February 2018. Retrieved 6 February 2018.
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