Formed: 1886
Nickname: The Gunners
UEFA club competition honours (runners-up in brackets)• European Champion Clubs' Cup: (2006)
• UEFA Cup: (2000)
• UEFA Cup Winners' Cup: 1994; (1980), (1995)
• UEFA Super Cup: (1994)
• UEFA Cup: (2000)
• UEFA Cup Winners' Cup: 1994; (1980), (1995)
• UEFA Super Cup: (1994)
Domestic honours (most recent triumph in brackets)• League title: 13 (2004)
• FA Cup: 10 (2005)
• League Cup: 2 (1993)
• FA Cup: 10 (2005)
• League Cup: 2 (1993)
History•
Arsenal began life as a team of munitions workers from the Royal
Arsenal munitions factory in Woolwich, south-east London – hence their
nickname, the Gunners. In 1913 the club's owner, entrepreneur Henry
Norris, took the club across the Thames to Highbury and a wider
supporter catchment area. There the team adopted its current name having
previously been called Dial Square FC, Royal Arsenal FC and Woolwich
Arsenal FC.
• Their pedigree was established in the 1920s under
the great moderniser Herbert Chapman, and although he died suddenly in
1934, Arsenal continued to enjoy success. Between 1930 and 1938, the
Gunners claimed five league titles and two FA Cups.
• Consistent
success deserted them until the late 1960s, when former club
physiotherapist Bertie Mee built a team capable of winning the
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup in 1970 and the domestic league and cup double a
year later.
• George Graham, a stalwart in that double-winning
lineup, returned Arsenal to the forefront of the English game in the
late 1980s. His defensively stout team won the league in 1988/89 and
1990/91, before lifting the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1993/94.
•
Arsenal's reputation as dour but effective changed radically with the
arrival of little-known French manager Arsène Wenger in October 1996.
Putting the accent on fluid, attacking football, 'Le Professeur' led the
Gunners to three Premier League crowns and four FA Cup wins, not least
guiding the so-called 'Invincibles' through an unbeaten Premier League
campaign in 2003/04. Wenger also took the club to their first UEFA
Champions League final in 2005/06, and masterminded the move from
Highbury to their current stadium.
Club recordsMost appearances: David O'Leary (722)
Most goals: Thierry Henry (214)
Record victory: 12-0 on two occasions, most recently at home against Loughborough AFC (Second Division, 12 March 1900)
Record defeat: Loughborough AFC 8-0 Arsenal (Second Division, 12 December 1896)
Most goals: Thierry Henry (214)
Record victory: 12-0 on two occasions, most recently at home against Loughborough AFC (Second Division, 12 March 1900)
Record defeat: Loughborough AFC 8-0 Arsenal (Second Division, 12 December 1896)
* Last updated 1 June 2011
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