Event research Birmingham City V Swansea City
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Birmingham City V Swansea City
St Andrews at Knighthead Park
Birmingham
Sep 20 Sat • 2025 • 12:30pm
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29,409
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Birmingham City V Swansea City at the St Andrews at Knighthead Park, Birmingham
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Birmingham City V Swansea City
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Wikipedia Bio
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Full name | Swansea City Association Football Club | |
---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | ||
Founded | 1912; 113 years ago (1912), as Swansea Town | |
Ground | Swansea.com Stadium | |
Capacity | 21,000[2] | |
Owner(s) | Swansea Football LLC (majority)Nigel Morris (14.04%)Swansea City Supporters Society Ltd (7.59%)[3] | |
Chief executive | Tom Gorringe | |
Head coach | Alan Sheehan | |
League | EFL Championship | |
2024–25 | EFL Championship, 11th of 24 | |
Website | swanseacity | |
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Swansea City Association Football Club (/ˈswɒnzi/ SWON-zee; Welsh: Clwb Pêl-droed Dinas Abertawe[4]) is a Welsh professional football club based in Swansea, Wales. They compete in the EFL Championship, the second tier of English football. The club was founded in 1912 as Swansea Town but changed their name in 1970 to reflect Swansea's new status as a city.[5] They have played their home matches at the Swansea.com Stadium (formerly known as the Liberty Stadium) since 2005, having previously played at the Vetch Field since their founding.
Swansea entered the Southern League in 1912 before joining the Football League in 1920. They won the Third Division South title in 1925 and 1949, but fell into the Fourth Division after relegations in 1965 and 1967. Swansea won three promotions in four seasons to reach the First Division in 1981, finishing sixth in the top flight (a club record), but were back in the Fourth Division by 1986. The club won the Third Division title in 2000 but narrowly avoided relegation to the Conference in 2003. They won their fourth league title in 2008 after winning League One.
In 2011, Swansea were promoted to the Premier League and won the League Cup two years later, qualifying for the UEFA Europa League. It was the first major trophy in the club's history; their other trophies include ten Welsh Cups, two Football League Trophies and two FAW Premier Cups. The club also qualified for the European Cup Winners' Cup seven times between 1961 and 1991. They were relegated from the Premier League in 2018, and have since played in the Championship.
Swansea's climb from the fourth division of English football to the Premier League is chronicled in the 2014 film, Jack to a King – The Swansea Story. The Swansea City Supporters' Trust owns shares in the club;[3] their involvement was hailed by Supporters Direct in 2012 as "the most high profile example of a supporters' trust in the direct running of a club".[6]
- ^ "Yr un hen stori i'r Elyrch" (in Welsh). 14 January 2017 – via www.bbc.co.uk.
- ^ "Our stadium". Swansea City Events. Retrieved 12 September 2025.
- ^ a b "Ownership statement". Swansea City. Retrieved 24 November 2024.
- ^ "Ystafell arbennig yn rhoi cyfle i bobl ag anghenion ychwanegol wylio pêl-droed byw". newyddion.s4c.cymru (in Welsh). 22 January 2025.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Our managers
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ "Swansea City fans a major influence as government encourages role of supporters' trusts". WalesOnline. 19 February 2012. Archived from the original on 16 July 2012.
Source: Wikipedia