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Tranmere Rovers Football Club are a professional association football club based in Birkenhead, Merseyside, England. The team competes in Template:English football updater, the fourth level of the English football league system.
Founded in 1884 as Belmont Football Club, they adopted their current name in 1885. Tranmere's regular kit is an all-white strip with blue, or occasionally blue and green trim which have been their main colours since 1962. The club moved to its current home, Prenton Park, in 1912. In 1995, the ground had a major redevelopment in response to the Taylor Report. It now seats 16,567 in four stands: the Main Stand, the Kop, the Johnny King Stand and the Cowshed.
Tranmere played in regional leagues until they were invited to become a founder member of Football League Third Division North in 1921. They finished as champions for the 1937–38 season, though were relegated out of the Second Division the following year. They dropped into the Fourth Division in 1961, before winning promotion back to the third tier at the end of the 1966–67 season. Relegation in 1975 was followed by an immediate promotion in 1975–76 under the stewardship of manager John King, and this time they survived for just three seasons in the third tier until being relegated once again in 1979. During the 1980s, they were beset by financial problems and, in 1987, went into administration. However John King returned to manage the club for a second spell and guided Rovers to promotion in 1988–89, which they followed up by winning the Associate Members' Cup in 1990 and then promotion out of the play-offs in 1991.
The 1990s would prove to be the most successful period in the club's history as Tranmere remained in the second tier, and came close to reaching the Premier League with three consecutive play-off campaigns at the start of the decade. Under King's successor, John Aldridge, Tranmere experienced a number of cup runs, most notably reaching the 2000 League Cup final. They were finally relegated in 2001 and then spent 13 seasons in the third tier, before back-to-back relegations saw them drop out of the Football League after an 94-year stay. Tranmere spent three seasons in the National League and then returned to the third tier of the Football League via successive play-off campaigns in 2018 and 2019. They were demoted from League One in 2020 after clubs voted to end the season early due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
HistoryEdit
Formative yearsEdit
Tranmere Rovers were, initially, formed as Belmont Football Club when the football arms of two cricket clubs – Lyndhurst Wanderers and Belmont – came together in 1884.Template:Close paraphrasing inline<ref name="official site history" /><ref name="TheCowsheds History" /> On 15 November 1884, they won their first game 4–0 against Brunswick Rovers. This was a friendly match, as there were no leagues until 1888.<ref name="TheCowsheds History" /> Under the presidency of James McGaul,Template:Close paraphrasing inline the team had a successful inaugural season, losing only one of their fifteen matches. An unrelated, disbanded side had played under the name "Tranmere Rovers Cricket Club (Association football section)" in 1881–82. On 16 September 1885, before their second season began, Belmont F.C. adopted this name Tranmere Rovers.Template:Failed verificationTemplate:Primary source inline<ref name="official site history" /> Tranmere is historically a large village that was subsumed within the later expansion of the town of Birkenhead.Template:Synthesis inline<ref name=GENUKI>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Tranmere played their first matches at Steeles Field in Birkenhead.<ref name="official site history" /> In 1887, they bought Ravenshaws Field from Tranmere Rugby Club. In 1895, their ground was renamed Prenton Park, although it was 25 years later that the team moved into the current stadium of the same name.Template:Synthesis inline<ref name="TheCowsheds History" /> Tranmere first wore a kit of blue shirts, white shorts and blue socks. In 1889 they adopted orange and maroon shirts, but in 1904 returned to wearing their original kit.<ref name="historicalkits" />
In 1886, Tranmere entered their first competition: the Liverpool and District Challenge Cup; in 1889, they entered the West Lancashire League. They joined the Combination, a much stronger league, in 1897,Template:Failed verification and won the championship in 1908.Template:Clarify<ref name="combination" /> In 1910, continuing their movement through the leagues, they entered the Lancashire Combination and in 1912 they showed their ambition by moving to the present Prenton Park site, with an 800-seat stand.Template:Primary source inline<ref name="TheCowsheds History" /> Tranmere won the Lancashire Combination Championship in 1914,<ref name="Lancashire combination" /> and Stan Rowlands became the first Tranmere player to receive an international cap when he was selected to play for Wales.Template:When<ref name="TheCowsheds History" /><ref name="Wales 0-2 England" />
Rovers continued to play throughout the First World War, although their players were criticised for avoiding military service, despite being employed in the local shipyards.Template:Close paraphrasing inline<ref name="TheCowsheds History" />
Inter-war yearsEdit
Following the expulsion of Leeds City Reserves in 1919, Tranmere were able to enter the Central League.Template:Failed verification Their timing was excellent as the following season, four Central League clubs – including Tranmere – were invited to join the new Division Three North.Template:Failed verification On 27 August 1921, as founder members of the division,Template:Failed verification<ref name="1921-22" /> they won their first Football League match 4–1 against Crewe Alexandra at Prenton Park.Template:Failed verification<ref name="official site history" /> At this time the team were managed by Bert Cooke, who did so for 23 years in total, the club record for longest serving manager.Template:Primary source inline<ref name="managers" />
In 1924, local boy Dixie Dean made his debut aged 16 years 355 days. He played 30 games for Rovers, scoring 27 goals, before being transferred to Everton for £3,000.Template:Close paraphrasing inline<ref name="official site history" /> In the 1927–28 season, Dean scored a record 60 League goals for Everton.<ref name="goal records" /> After Dean's departure, several talented young players also left for Division One clubs, leading to Cooke's reputation as a shrewd businessman.<ref name="bishop 98" /> Among those sold was Pongo Waring who – having scored six goals in the 11–1 victory over Durham City – went to Aston Villa for £4,700. As of 2010, Waring retains the record of scoring most goals for Villa in a single season.<ref name="TheCowsheds History" />
In 1934, an FA Cup tie between Rovers and Liverpool was watched at Anfield by 61,036 fans, then a record crowd for a game involving Rovers.Template:Close paraphrasing inline<ref name="official site history" /> One year later, Bunny Bell netted 57 goals during the 1933–34 season, and nine goals in the 13–4 Boxing Day 1935 victory over Oldham Athletic.Template:Failed verification<ref name="indy festive feats" /> As of 2011, the aggregate of 17 goals in one game remained a league record.<ref name="goal records" />
During this same period, Tranmere made several appearances in the Welsh Cup, reaching the final on two occasions.Template:Citation needed In 1934, they lost 3–0 to Bristol City in a replay, after a 1–1 draw.Template:Citation needed The following season, they went one better by beating local rivals Chester 1–0 to win their first silverware since joining the Football League.Template:Failed verification
Rovers won their first championship in the Football League in 1938, with victory in Division Three North, and, hence, promotion to Division Two for the first time.Template:Close paraphrasing inline<ref name="official site history" /><ref name="1937-38" /> It is still Rovers's only championship in the Football League.Template:When However, they were relegated the next season, winning six matches – the record for the worst performance of any team in Division Two.Template:Additional citation needed<ref name="1938-39" />
Creation of the SuperwhitesEdit
Prenton Park emerged from the Second World War largely unscathed.Template:Failed verification Tranmere rejoined the peacetime Football League in Division Three North, and stayed there until the 1958 restructuring of the football league's lower divisions.Template:Failed verificationTemplate:Close paraphrasing inline Manager Peter Farrell<ref name="managers" /> led Tranmere to finish 11th in the final season of the Northern Section, securing a place in the new national Division Three, where they were, again, founder members.Template:Failed verification<ref name="1957-58" /> The final match against Wrexham, also fighting for a place in the higher league, attracted a crowd of 19,615, which, as of 2010, remained the highest ever attendance at a Prenton Park league match.Template:Additional citation needed<ref name="TheCowsheds History" />
In 1961, Tranmere's inspirational captain Harold Bell left the club. Bell had been picked in the first game after the Second World War in the 1946 season, and did not miss a match until he was dropped on 30 August 1955, a total of 459 consecutive appearances for a British team, a record which held until 2011.Template:Failed verification<ref name="appearances" /> Rovers certainly missed their captain,Template:Tone inlineTemplate:According to whom and were relegated to Division Four for the first time in 1961.Template:Additional citation needed<ref name="1960-61" />
The club brought in Dave Russell as manager,<ref name="managers" /> and Russell made some changes. Tranmere had worn a kit of blue shirts, white shorts and blue socks since 1904 – the same colours as local rivals, Division One club Everton. Russell introduced an all-white strip to set the teams apart; these have been Tranmere's usual colours since.Template:Failed verificationTemplate:Close paraphrasing inline<ref name="historicalkits" /> Russell also developed a successful youth policy which included England international Roy McFarland among its graduates.Template:Synthesis inlineTemplate:Close paraphrasing inline<ref name="official site history" /> Russell guided Rovers back to Division Three in 1967,<ref name="1966-67" /> a year before a new 4,000-seater main stand was opened, and Rovers reached the fifth round of the FA Cup for the first time.Template:Failed verification<ref name="FA Cup Archive" /> Three years later the club's record attendance at Prenton Park was established as 24,424 supporters witnessed Rovers draw 2–2 with Stoke City in the FA Cup.Template:Close paraphrasing inline<ref name="official site history" />
In 1972, Ron Yeats was installed as player-manager.<ref name="managers" /> He strengthened Tranmere's connections with local rivals Liverpool by recruiting several former teammates such as Ian St John, and bringing in Bill Shankly in a consultancy role.Template:Close paraphrasing inline<ref name="TheCowsheds History" /> This team saw one of the most memorable Rovers results of all time when, in a League Cup tie in 1973, Tranmere beat First Division Arsenal 1–0 at their former Highbury home.Template:Synthesis inline<ref name="league cup" /> However, Tranmere returned to the Fourth Division in 1975.<ref name="1974-75" /> The following decade was among the bleakest times in the club's history, with the team usually in the lower reaches of the Fourth Division, beset by financial problems, and attaining crowds of less than 2,000.Template:Better source needed<ref name="TheCowsheds History" />
In 1979, Steve Mungall joined Tranmere from Motherwell.Template:Citation needed He went on to make more than 500 league appearances for Rovers in a 17-year period.Template:Failed verification This spell saw Rovers rise up the league and make several appearances at Wembley.Template:Synthesis inlineTemplate:Primary source inline He remained with the club, on the coaching staff, until October 2000, when he left to pursue business interests.<ref name="mungall ends era" />
Another relegation to Division Four in 1979<ref name="1978-79" /> put the club in financial difficulties.Template:Citation needed Debts mounted throughout the 1980s, with insolvency forestalled through a series of friendly fixtures, contributions from fans and a £200,000 loan from Wirral Council.Template:Failed verification This partnership proved an enduring one, as Wirral's logo still appeared on the shirts until 2011.Template:Synthesis inlineTemplate:Failed verification<ref name="wirral" /> In July 1984, the club was sold to a Californian attorney, making Tranmere one of the first English clubs to be bought by a foreign owner.Template:Additional citation needed<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Nonetheless, in 1987, the club went into administration.Template:Citation needed
Johnny King eraEdit
Local businessman Peter Johnson took over control and ownership.Template:Close paraphrasing inline<ref name="official site history" /> This proved to be a turning point in Tranmere's history, the club under his ownership experiencing by far the most successful period in its history, in which manager John King took the team from the bottom of Division Four to the brink of English football's top league.Template:Failed verificationTemplate:Primary source inline<ref name="managers" /> King's first task was to avoid the team finishing bottom of Division Four, which would have resulted in their relegation from the football league. Safety was guaranteed in the last game of the season, with a 1–0 home win over Exeter City on the last day of the season.<ref name="TheCowsheds History" />
The first full season (1987–88) of King's second managerial spell in charge saw Tranmere make their first appearance at Wembley Stadium, when a good mid-season run of form saw them qualify for the Football League Centenary Tournament. Tranmere defeated Division One clubs Wimbledon and Newcastle United, before losing on penalties to eventual winner Nottingham Forest.<ref name="wembley" /> The following season, King guided Tranmere to promotion as Division Four runner-up.<ref name="1988-89" /> Their final game played to secure promotion was against Crewe Alexandra, with both teams needing a point to gain promotion.Template:Citation needed The first half was contested as usual, but, in the second half, with the score at 1–1, neither team targeted the goal of the other, leading to combined celebrations when the game had concluded.Template:Citation needed Earlier that season, they had won several games in the League Cup, including against Division One Middlesbrough, in between wins against fellow Division Four club Stockport County and Division 3 club Blackpool, ultimately losing to Bristol City of Division 3.<ref name="league cup" />
At the end their first season in Division Three, Tranmere almost secured promotion to Division 2, losing 2–0 in the play-off final to Notts County,<ref name="1989-90" /> a week after Tranmere's 2–1 victory over Bristol Rovers at Wembley Stadium in the final of the Leyland DAF Trophy had secured the club's first trophy.Template:Failed verification<ref name="football league trophy" /> The form of striker Ian Muir was key to Tranmere's success during this period. He joined the club in 1985, and scored 180 goals in eleven seasons. He became the club's record scorer, and, in 2012, the first inductee to their hall of fame.<ref name="Ian Muir" /> Fellow hall of fame member John Morrissey joined the club in 1986.Template:Failed verification The winger spent 14 seasons at the club, making 585 appearances.<ref name="John Morrissey" />
In the 1990–91 season, Tranmere won promotion to Division Two for the first time since the 1930s, with a 1–0 play-off win over local rivals Bolton Wanderers.Template:Additional citation needed<ref name="1990-91" /> Once again, Rovers made an appearance in the Leyland DAF Trophy final, this time losing 3–2 to Birmingham City.<ref name="football league trophy" /> This made the play-off victory over Bolton Wanderers Tranmere's fourth appearance in a Wembley Stadium final in just over a year.Template:Citation needed
In summer 1991, former Liverpool player John Aldridge joined Tranmere Rovers, signing from Spanish club Real Sociedad for a fee of £250,000; he would remain on the club's payroll for the next 10 years, scoring 170 times to put him behind only Ian Muir in the all-time scoring charts.Template:Failed verification<ref name="official site history" /><ref name="John Aldridge" /> Aldridge also received 30 caps for the Republic of Ireland, and was the first Tranmere player to score at a World Cup.<ref name="John Aldridge" /> In 1993, Scotland international Pat Nevin joined the team, forming a four-man attack alongside Aldridge, Malkin and Morrissey.Template:Failed verificationTemplate:Close paraphrasing inline<ref name="Pat Nevin" /> In three successive seasons, Tranmere reached the play-off semi-finals, missing out on promotion to the newly formed Premier League through defeat to Swindon Town in 1993,<ref name="1992-93" /> Leicester City in 1994,<ref name="1993-94" /> and Reading in 1995.<ref name="1994-95" /> 1994 also saw Tranmere progress to the League Cup semi-final, where they faced Aston Villa over two legs. The home leg was won 3–1 by Tranmere, with Villa scoring their only goal in the 94th minute. The score in the away leg was 2–1 in favour of Villa until the 88th minute when Villa scored again to win the game 3–1, so the match went to extra-time and penalties. With Tranmere one kick away from the final, Mark Bosnich saved Liam O'Brien's sudden death penalty, and Tranmere eventually lost 5–4.
A reconstructed Prenton Park was opened in March 1995, with the all-seater stadium then holding just under 17,000 supporters. In April 1996, with Rovers struggling for form in the league, chairman Frank Corfe appointed John Aldridge as player-manager, and King was "moved upstairs" to become Director of football. They finished the 1995–96 campaign in 13th position.
2000 and beyondEdit
In the 1999–2000 season, despite severe financial constraints,Template:Failed verification victories over two Premiership sides (West Ham United, Sunderland, followed by First Division club Fulham) led, not only to a place in the sixth round of the FA Cup,<ref name="FA Cup Archive" /> but also, to a place in the 2000 Football League Cup final against Leicester City – the first time in the club's history that Rovers had reached a major final.Template:Failed verification Matt Elliott scored Leicester's opening goal, before Tranmere's Clint Hill was sent off for a second bookable offence. Despite being reduced to ten men, David Kelly equalised; however, Elliot scored Leicester's second goal three minutes later, and Tranmere lost the match 2–1.<ref name="league cup 2000" /> This was the last League Cup game held at the original Wembley stadium.<ref name="TheCowsheds History" />
In 2000, the all-white kit was reintroduced and is still used in 2014.Template:Relevance inlineTemplate:Failed verification<ref name="historicalkits" /> That season, Tranmere Rovers had another cup competition run, beating local Premier League rival Everton 3–0 at Goodison Park,<ref name="Tranmere shame Everton" /> then Southampton 4–3 (after being 0–3 down),<ref name="Tranmere comeback stuns Saints" /> before exiting after a loss to another local rival, Premier League club Liverpool.<ref name="Liverpool cling on to beat Tranmere" /> However, Tranmere Rovers struggled during league matches that season; Aldridge quit as manager before Tranmere's relegation to Division Two ended a spell of ten years in Division One.Template:Additional citation needed<ref name="Aldridge walks out on Rovers" />
The club hired Brian Little as manager in 2003.<ref name="managers" /><ref name="Tranmere appoint Little" /> He took Rovers to a play-off semi-final in 2004–05, and a best ever 6th round replay in the 2004 FA Cup, where they lost to eventual finalists, Millwall.Template:Failed verification At the end of the 2005–06 season, Little left the club and was replaced by former player Ronnie Moore.<ref name="managers" /><ref name="Moore appointed as Tranmere boss" /> In Moore's three seasons in charge, the club finished 9th, 11th and 7th, narrowly missing out on qualification for in the play-offs in his final season.Template:Failed verification<ref name="football league" /> Moore was sacked in 2009, with former England winger John Barnes, whose only previous domestic managerial experience was with Celtic 10 years earlier, replacing him.Template:Failed verification<ref name="managers" /><ref name="Barnes confirmed as Tranmere boss" /> It was during Barnes's time as manager that long-serving kitman, Mark Trevor, ended his 12-year "Labour of Love", washing the kit of his local team. Having been at the club since 1997, he washed his last kit in August 2009, ahead of the club's home game against Charlton Athletic.<ref name="Trevors final wash" /> Barnes's term as manager lasted considerably less time, and it was a five months before long-serving club physiotherapist Les Parry was given temporary charge.<ref name="managers" /><ref name="Tranmere sack Barnes and McAteer" /><ref name="Les Parry Extends Contract as Manager" /> Rovers finished the season in 19th place in League One, avoiding relegation on the final day of the season, thanks to a 3–0 victory at Stockport County.<ref name="Stockport 0 - 3 Tranmere" /> In June 2010, Parry was given the manager's job on a permanent basis.<ref name="Les Parry Extends Contract as Manager" /> He was sacked on 4 March 2012, after a 1–0 defeat by Chesterfield left the club only one point above the relegation zone,<ref name="Tranmere Rovers sack manager Les Parry"/> and replaced by Ronnie Moore for the remainder of the season.<ref name="Club Statement" /> Moore won six of his thirteen games in charge at the end of the season, guiding Tranmere to a mid-table position, as they finished the season in the top half for the first time in severalTemplate:Quantify years.Template:Failed verification<ref name="Tranmere 2011/12 Results"/> In April 2012, Moore signed a new one-year deal with Tranmere, keeping him at the club until the end of the 2012–13 season.<ref name="Moore extends contract" />
Towards the end of the 2013–14 season, Moore admitted breaking the Football Association's betting rules, and Tranmere sacked him when the club were just clear of the relegation zone.Template:Close paraphrasing inline<ref name="Tranmere Rovers sack manager after betting breach" /> Assistant John McMahon took over as caretaker manager,Template:Failed verification but Tranmere were relegated to League Two in the final gameof the season on the final day of the season.<ref name="Tranmere Rovers 1-2 Bradford City" /> Rob Edwards was subsequently appointed as new manager.<ref name="Rob Edwards appointed as new manager" />
On 11 August 2014, it was announced that former player and Football Association chief executive Mark Palios and his wife Nicola were taking a controlling interest in the club from outgoing chairman Peter Johnson. Mark Palios would become executive chairman of the club, with Johnson becoming its honorary president.<ref>"Mark Palios: Tranmere taken over by ex-FA chief and wife", BBC News, 11 August 2014 Template:Webarchive. retrieved 11 August 2014</ref><ref>"Tranmere Rovers Football Club Delighted To Announce New Owners", TRFC, 11 August 2014 Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 11 August 2014</ref>
After a poor start to the season, the home loss to Plymouth Argyle on 11 October 2014 saw Tranmere in last place in the Football League for the first time since 27 August 1987 after they had lost their first two matches of that season.Template:Failed verification<ref>"Football League Division Four /1987/88 /points table", ESPN.co.uk Template:Webarchive. retrieved 18 October 2014</ref> Edwards was sacked as manager on 13 October.<ref name="edwards sacked">Template:Cite news</ref> Mickey Adams took over a week later, with the aim of saving the club from relegation to the Conference.Template:Citation needed However, on 25 April 2015, after another defeat to Plymouth Argyle in the reverse fixture, Tranmere were relegated, ending their 94-year stay in the Football League.<ref>"Plymouth 3–2 Tranmere", BBC Sport, 25 April 2015 Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 25 April 2015</ref>
Non-League yearsEdit
Gary Brabin was appointed as manager on 5 May 2015.<ref>"Gary Brabin: Tranmere Rovers appoint new manager", BBC Sport, 5 May 2015 Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 6 May 2015</ref> It was a season of ups and downs,Template:Tone inline with poorer home form than away form.Template:Citation needed It took a whileTemplate:Vague for Rovers to adjust to life in the non-league, with erratic form during the season.Template:Failed verification<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Tranmere finished sixth, one place outside the play-off zone, in Gary Brabin's first season.Template:Citation needed
Tranmere started the 2016–17 season well, ranking at the top of the non-league table at the end of August, after which Brabin received an award for manager of the month.Template:Primary source inline<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Form later dipped which resulted in one goal scored in the next four games, with a 1–0 defeat to Sutton United resulting in Brabin being sacked on 18 September 2016.Template:Failed verification<ref name="tranmererovers.co.uk">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Assistant manager, ex-Southport boss Paul Carden took over on an interim basis.Template:Citation needed On 6 October 2016, former Tranmere player Micky Mellon was appointed permanent manager.<ref>"Micky Mellon named Tranmere Rovers manager after Shrewsbury Town departure", BBC Sport, 7 October 2016. Template:Webarchive Retrieved 23 November 2017</ref> His first game in charge was against cross-border rivals Wrexham, and ended with a 2–0 victory for Tranmere.<ref>"Tranmere Rovers 2–0 Wrexham", BBC Sport, 8 October 2016. Template:Webarchive Retrieved 23 November 2017</ref> Despite a 2nd-place finish and a club record 95-point haul, this still was not enough to gain automatic promotion back to the league.Template:Additional citation needed<ref>"Vanarama National League 2016/17 Standings", Flash Scores, 29 April 2017. Template:Webarchive Retrieved 23 November 2017</ref> Tranmere faced Aldershot Town in the play-offs. A goal from James Norwood and a brace from Cole Stockton in the first leg away at the Recreation Ground saw Rovers take a 3–0 lead back to Prenton Park for the second leg, which ended in a 2–2 draw, Norwood and Stockton once again on the scoresheet. This gave Tranmere a 5–2 aggregate win and their first Wembley appearance in 17 years.Template:Additional citation needed<ref>"Tranmere Rovers 2–2 Aldershot Town (agg: 5–2)", BBC Sport, 6 May 2017. Template:Webarchive Retrieved 23 November 2017</ref><ref>"Aldershot Town 0–3 Tranmere Rovers", BBC Sport, 3 May 2017. Template:Webarchive Retrieved 23 November 2017</ref> Tranmere lost 3–1 in the 2017 National League play-off final the 3–1 to Forest Green Rovers.Template:Additional citation needed<ref>"Tranmere Rovers 1–3 Forest Green Rovers", BBC Sport, 14 May 2017. Template:Webarchive Retrieved 23 November 2017</ref><ref>"GOAL! Connor Jennings With A Superb Strike At Wembley", YouTube, 17 May 2017. Retrieved 23 November 2017</ref>
Tranmere's 2017–18 season got off to a poor start, with 3 wins from the first 12 games.Template:Citation needed Tranmere slipped to 18th in the table, their lowest ever league position.Template:Additional citation needed<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> A spectacular winter turnaround saw Tranmere move into the play-off spots, where they remained for the rest of the season. This turnaround included a record-breaking run of 9 consecutive home league wins. This record-breaking stint was ended in February by a 4–1 defeat to eventual title winner Macclesfield Town.Template:Failed verification<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Tranmere responded to this defeat by winning 8 out of their next 9 games, finishing the season as National League runners-up for the second time in as many years, qualifying for the play-offs.Template:Citation needed In the play-off semi-final, Tranmere met Ebbsfleet United at home. Tranmere came from behind twice to take the game to extra time before prevailing 4–2 after extra time, a result which sent Tranmere to Wembley Stadium for the National League play-off final.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> On 12 May 2018, a crowd of 16,306 were at Wembley for the final against Boreham Wood. Tranmere were 2–1 victors, their first trophy in 27 years, and were promoted back to the Football League.Template:Additional citation needed<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Return to the Football LeagueEdit
Under the chairmanship of Mark Palios and the management of Micky Mellon, Tranmere played in League Two for the 2018–19 season, finishing 6th and thereby reaching the play-offs. On 25 May 2019, Tranmere secured back-to-back promotions, beating Newport County 1–0 at Wembley Stadium. They did so with a goal from Connor Jennings in the 119th minute, thus securing their spot in League One for the 2019–20 season.<ref>League Two Playoff Final: Newport 0, Tranmere 1, BBC Sport, 25 May 2019 Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 25 May 2019</ref>
By March 2020, the team were within the relegation zone, but with a game in hand on their nearest rivals and on a run of three successive victories. The cancellation of fixtures due to the COVID-19 pandemic meant that the season could not be completed, and a vote was taken by League One clubs on 9 June to resolve promotion and relegation issues on a points per game (PPG) basis. This meant that Tranmere would be demoted to League Two for the 2020–21 season. Club chairman Mark Palios said that the decision was unfair and that he was considering legal action as a result. He also announced that 20 members of staff would have to be made redundant.<ref>Mike McGrath and James Ducker, "Tranmere consider legal action against EFL after relegation results in 20 redundancies", Telegraph, 10 June 2020 Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 12 June 2020</ref><ref>Josh Fordham, "Tranmere owner Mark Palios 'white hot with anger' as League One season ends in relegation, questions why Charlton can fight for survival but they can't", TalkSport, 10 June 2020 Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 12 June 2020</ref>
With the team back in League Two, Mike Jackson was named as manager of Tranmere on 18 July 2020.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He was sacked on 31 October 2020.<ref>TRFC Club Statement, 31 October 2020 Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 31 October 2020</ref> Keith Hill succeeded temporary manager Ian Dawes on 21 November 2020.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He was sacked on 11 May 2021, after the side reached the play-offs, but before the play-off matches had started.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Morecambe defeated Tranmere in the play-off semi-final.<ref>"Morecambe booked a first EFL play-off final as they held Tranmere to a 1-1 draw to complete a 3-2 aggregate win.", BBC News, 23 May 2021 Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 24 May 2021</ref> At the end of May 2021, Tranmere announced that Micky Mellon was returning to the club as manager, having spent the season apart in charge of Dundee United.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Despite a strong start to the season,Template:Failed verification Tranmere sacked Mellon on 19 March 2023, following results that included a total of six wins since mid-October 2022.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Dawes oversaw seven games as caretaker manager before being appointed the permanent manager, but Tranmere sacked him in early September 2023 after six consecutive defeats; Tranmere appointed their technical director Nigel Adkins as interim manager.<ref name="BBC-10Sep2023">Template:Cite news</ref> Adkins was appointed permanent manager on 2 November 2023, signing a contract until the end of 2025–26 season.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> On 26 February 2025, Adkins left Tranmere by mutual agreement following a ten-game winless run in the league which culminated in a home defeat to Accrington Stanley which left Tranmere two points above the relegation zone. He was replaced by assistant manager Andy Crosby until the end of the season.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Colours and crestEdit
Belmont F.C., the forerunners of today's Rovers, wore blue shirts and white shorts, as did the early Rovers, until a radical change in 1889, when a combination of maroon and orange shirts and navy blue shorts was introduced to "dazzle" their opponents in the West Lancashire League.<ref name="colours" /> These were abandoned in 1904 in favour of the earlier blue and white colours which have, in some form or other, remained until the present day.Template:Failed verification<ref name="historicalkits" /><ref name="colours" /> In 1962, Dave Russell introduced a white strip with blue trim, saying "Tranmere Rovers should have a specific identity of its own, so on Merseyside there's now Liverpool's Red, Everton's blue and Tranmere's white".Template:Clarify<ref name="colours" /> Since then, the team have worn varying combinations of blue and white, moving back towards a more predominantly white kit in 2000.Template:Failed verification<ref name="historicalkits" />Template:Better source needed<ref name="beautiful history" /> The team's colours are reflected in their nickname of the "Superwhites".Template:Failed verification<ref name="superwhites" />
Tranmere first introduced a badge on their shirt in 1962, wearing the coat of arms of the borough of Birkenhead, along with adopting their motto "Ubi fides ibi lux et robur", meaning "Where there is faith there is light and strength".Template:Better source needed<ref name="beautiful history" /><ref name="heraldry" /> The crest was replaced in 1972 by a monogram, and, in 1981, by a simplified blue and white shield.Template:Failed verification In 1987, a complex <ref name="historicalkits" /> heraldic crest was introduced, adapting the Birkenhead crest through the inclusion of a football and a TRFC logo.Template:Synthesis inline The simpler badge was adopted in 1997,<ref name="historicalkits" /> and modified slightly in 2009 to mark the club's 125-year anniversary.<ref name="125 years" /> The blue and white crest incorporated simplified elements of the Birkenhead civic coat of arms: the crosier and lion originally formed part of the Birkenhead Priory seal; the oak tree was a symbol of the Tranmere Local Board; the star or starfish represents Bebington; the two lions represent Oxton; and the crescents may represent the Laird family.Template:Close paraphrasing inline<ref>Civic Heraldry: Birkenhead County Borough Council Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 23 September 2016</ref>
For the 2021–22 season, Tranmere reverted to their pre-1997 badge.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
StadiumEdit
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Rovers played their first matches at Steeles Field in Birkenhead but, in 1887, they bought a new site from Tranmere Rugby Club.Template:Synthesis inline<ref name="official site history" /> The ground was variously referred to as the "Borough Road Enclosure", "Ravenshaw's Field" and "South Road".<ref name="A-Z Prenton" /> The name "Prenton Park" was adopted in 1895 as a result of a suggestion in the letters page of the Football Echo.<ref name="A-Z Prenton" /> Because the land was required for housing and a school, Tranmere were forced to move and the name went with them. The present Prenton Park was opened on 9 March 1912.<ref name="A-Z Prenton" /><ref name="inglis" /> There were stands (also known as bleachers) on both sides of the pitch, a paddock and three open terraces, the general format which remained until 1994.Template:Close paraphrasing inline<ref name="official site Prenton Park"/>
Many improvements to the ground were driven by changes in legislation. The biggest change of all took place during 1994 and 1995. The Taylor Report suggested that all stadia in the top two divisions of English football should no longer permit standing. The club's response was to redevelop three sides of the ground with entirely new all-seater stands created – the Borough Road Stand (now the Johnny King Stand), the Cowshed and the new Kop, in addition to the existing Main Stand.Template:Failed verification<ref name="official site Prenton Park"/> Capacity in the ground thus increased from 14,200<ref name="A-Z Prenton" /> to the 16,567 of today.<ref name="official site Prenton Park" /> On 11 March 1995, having been built at a cost of £3.1 million, the new ground was officially opened.<ref name="TheCowsheds History"/>
Attendances at the ground have fluctuated over its hundred-year history. Around 8,000 visitors watched the first game at the stadium, as Tranmere beat Lancaster Town 8–0.Template:Failed verification<ref name="ATTENDANCES" /> Prenton Park's largest-ever crowd was 24,424 for a 1972 FA Cup match between Tranmere and Stoke City.<ref name="football ground guide" /> Average attendances for home games between 2008 and 2011 ranged from above 5,000 to under 6,000.<ref name="ATTENDANCES" />
Supporters and rivalriesEdit
Tranmere Rovers had an average home attendance of 6,552 during the 2018–19 season, making them the 4th best supported club in League Two and 42nd in The Football League as a whole.Template:Citation needed The club has a number of supporters' groups, including the Tranmere Rovers Supporters Trust; in 2010, the trust raised £12,500 for the club to sign Andy Robinson on loan.Template:Primary source inline<ref name="les aid" /> In 2011, they raised £200,000 and planned to purchase a controlling interest in Tranmere.Template:Failed verification<ref name="TRST takeover" /> TSB (Tranmere Stand Boys) is the hooligan firm associated with the club.Template:Clarify<ref name="ave-it" /> Tranmere Rovers have been the subject of an independent supporters' fanzine Give Us an R since the 1990s.Template:Additional citation needed<ref name="GUAR" />
Despite being geographically closest to Everton and Liverpool, Tranmere's time in the lower leagues has meant that they have rarely met either club and have built up traditional rivalries with near neighbours Wrexham, Chester, and Southport, the latter two of which are now non-league clubs.Template:Synthesis inlineTemplate:Failed verificationTemplate:Better source needed<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> According to a survey entitled 'The League of Love and Hate' conducted in August 2019, Tranmere fans listed the more distant Bolton Wanderers and Oldham Athletic as their biggest rivals, followed by Everton, Liverpool and Crewe Alexandra, although the results were open to debate as the census does not contain non-league clubs.Template:Failed verificationTemplate:Synthesis inline<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Tranmere also had a fierce rivalry with Wallasey-based near neighbour New Brighton, until that club failed to be re-elected to the Football League in 1951.Template:Better source needed<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
As of the end of the 2022–23 season, Tranmere had met the following teams most times in the Football League:Template:Failed verification<ref name="league records" />
Opponents | P | W | D | L | W% |
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Crewe Alexandra
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Hartlepool United
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Rochdale
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Stockport County
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Halifax Town
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Wrexham
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Chesterfield
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Bradford City
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Darlington
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Southport
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Tranmere Rovers LadiesEdit
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Tranmere Rovers Ladies Football Club were founded in 1990.<ref name="history" /> Based in the Wirral, they are affiliated with the men's team,Template:Failed verification<ref name="history" /> and play home games at Villa Park, the home of Ashville F.C., in Wallasey.Template:Clarify<ref name="ground" /> Between 1996 and 2004 they competed in the FA Premier League National Division,<ref name="history" /><ref name="2004 table" /> then the top tier of the English women's football pyramid. Since 2011, they have played in the North West Regional League, Premier Division.Template:Additional citation needed<ref name="2012 table" /> As of the start of the 2011–12 season, they have won the Cheshire Cup a record 11 times.Template:Failed verification<ref name="cheshire cup" />
PlayersEdit
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First-team squadEdit
Template:Updated<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Template:Fs start Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs mid Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs end
Former playersEdit
As part of the club's 125th anniversary celebrations in 2010, a hall of fame was announced, initially honouring seven former players and managers: Ian Muir, John Aldridge, John King, Ray Mathias, Steve Mungall, John Morrissey, and Pat Nevin.Template:Additional citation needed<ref name="Hall of Fame" /> Harold Bell holds the record for the most consecutive league appearances for a British team. He was picked for the first game after the Second World War in the 1946–47 season and did not miss a match until 30 August 1955, a total of 401 consecutive matches in the Third Division North.Template:Additional citation needed<ref name="Bell record" />
OfficialsEdit
Coaching staffEdit
Template:Updated<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Position | Name |
---|---|
Manager | Andy Crosby |
Assistant Manager | Vacant |
Goalkeeping Coach | Joe Murphy |
First Team Coach | Andy Parkinson |
Player Development Manager | Alan Morgan |
Physiotherapist | Karly Bland |
Sports Scientist | Mark Cowan |
Chief Scout | Ollie Knight |
Performance Analyst | Kevin Mulligan |
ManagersEdit
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By the start of the 2024–25 season, the club had employed 40 managers. The first man to hold this position was Bert Cooke, appointed in 1912.<ref name="managers" /> He oversaw the club's entry into the Football League,Template:Failed verification<ref name="1921-22" /> and remained in charge for 23 years, the longest spell of any manager at the club.Template:Additional citation needed<ref name="managers" /> Major changes were not seen until businessman Dave Russell took over in 1961.Template:Citation needed His introductions included the team's current all-white kit<ref name="historicalkits" /> and regularly arranged floodlit home fixtures on Friday evenings rather than the usual Saturday afternoon.Template:Failed verification<ref name="WSC" /> Rock band and Tranmere fans Half Man Half Biscuit described the practice in their song "Friday Night And The Gates Are Low".<ref name="hmhb1" /><ref name="hmhb2" />
Tranmere's most successful period came at the end of the twentieth century. John King returned for his third spell at the club in 1987, having previously both played for and managed the team.Template:Failed verification<ref name="managers" /> He led them to a victory in the League Trophy,<ref name="football league trophy" /> and from the bottom of the Fourth Division to, on three occasions, reach the semi-finals in play-offs that had as their prize a promotion to the Premier League.<ref name="1992-93" /><ref name="1993-94" /><ref name="1994-95" /> Under King's replacement, John Aldridge, Tranmere appeared in the 2000 Football League Cup final.<ref name="league cup 2000" /> From 2009, they were managed by former club physiotherapist, Les Parry,<ref name="Tranmere sack Barnes and McAteer" /> until he was sacked on 4 March 2012,<ref name="Tranmere Rovers sack manager Les Parry" /> and replaced by Ronnie Moore.<ref name="Club Statement" /> In February 2014, media reports suggested Moore was under investigation by The Football Association, for breaching its rules against betting on competitions in which his club were involved.Template:Close paraphrasing inline<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Three days later, Tranmere suspended Moore,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and then sacked him on 9 April 2014, after he conceded that the FA's charges were valid.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
On 27 May 2014, the club announced that Rob Edwards had been appointed as their new manager.<ref>BBC Sport, "Tranmere Rovers appoint Rob Edwards as new manager", 27 May 2014 Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 27 May 2014</ref> Tranmere sacked Edwards on 13 October 2014.<ref name="edwards sacked"/> Moving quickly to arrest the decline which had seen Tranmere slump to the bottom of League Two, Tranmere announced former Port Vale manager Micky Adams's appointment as Edwards's successor on 16 October 2014.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He left the club by mutual consent on 19 April 2015, when the club were bottom of the league with two matches remaining.Template:Additional citation needed<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Gary Brabin, whose contract was in turn ended in September 2016, replaced Adams.Template:Additional citation needed<ref name="tranmererovers.co.uk"/> Tranmere appointed Micky Mellon as manager the following month, and he led the team to a pair of consecutive play-off final victories in the 2017–18 and 2018–19 seasons, the last of which brought a return to League One for the club.Template:Failed verification<ref name=mellon>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> After four years at Tranmere, Mellon moved to Dundee United on 6 July 2020.<ref>"Dundee United: Micky Mellon appointed as manager", BBC News, 6 July 2020. Retrieved 6 July 2020</ref>
On 18 July 2020, Mellon's former assistant manager Mike Jackson was appointed as manager, however his tenure was short-lived. After only two league wins in his first 10 games Jackson was sacked on 31 October 2020 following a 1–0 home defeat to Morecambe.Template:Additional citation needed<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Keith Hill replaced Jackson as first team manager on 21 November.<ref>Ben Reardon, "Keith Hill confirmed as new manager of Tranmere Rovers", Liverpool Echo, 21 November 2020 Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 21 November 2020</ref> Hill's first game ended in a 1–0 victory against Carlisle United.Template:Citation needed His side were top of the form table (after 20 games) in February, the team's spine spearheaded by Scott Davies, Peter Clarke, Manny Monthé, Jay Spearing, Paul Lewis and finally, James Vaughan, who is still the youngest ever Premier League goalscorer since 2005.Template:Relevance inlineTemplate:Citation needed Hill was sacked in May 2021, after the team had reached the League Two play-offs, but before the play-off matches took place. At the end of May 2021, Micky Mellon returned to Tranmere for a second spell as manager.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Full time managers are shown below (excluding caretaker managers).
HonoursEdit
Source:<ref name="honours and records" /><ref name="FCHD">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
League
- Third Division North / Third Division (level 3)
- Fourth Division / League Two (level 4)
- National League (level 5)
- Play-off winners: 2018
- The Combination
- Champions: 1907–08
- Lancashire Combination
- Champions: 1913–14
- Lancashire Combination Division Two
- Promoted: 1911–12
Cup
- Football League Cup
- Runners-up: 1999–2000
- Associate Members' Cup / Football League Trophy / EFL Trophy
- Welsh Cup
- Winners: 1934–35
RecordsEdit
- Highest league finish: 4th in First Division (level 2), 1992–93<ref name="FCHD"/>
- Best FA Cup performance: Quarter-finals, 1999–2000, 2000–01, 2003–04<ref name="FCHD"/>
- Best League Cup performance: Runners-up, 1999–2000<ref name="FCHD"/>
- Best League Trophy performance: Winners, 1989–90<ref name="FCHD"/>
- Best FA Trophy performance: Semi-finals, 2016–17<ref name="FCHD"/>
- Record win:
- 13–4, against Oldham Athletic, 26 December 1935<ref name="indy festive feats" /> The aggregate of 17 goals in one game remains a league record.<ref name="goal records" />
- 9–0 against Solihull Moors, 8 April 2017<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Record defeat:
- 1–9 against Tottenham Hotspur, FA Cup 3rd round replay, 14 January 1953<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- Highest home attendance: 24,424, against Stoke City, 5 February 1972, FA Cup<ref name="honours and records" />
- Most goals (total): Ian Muir, 180<ref name="honours and records" />
- Most goals in a season: Bunny Bell (1934–35) and John Aldridge (1991–92)Template:Failed verification<ref name="honours and records" />
- Most appearances: Ray Mathias, 637<ref name="1921-1997 data" />
ReferencesEdit
- General
- Template:Cite book Template:ASIN.
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Specific
External linksEdit
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