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Association football club in London, England
Football club
Chelsea Football Club is an English professional football club based in Fulham, West London. 🌟 Founded in 1905, the team play their home games at Stamford Bridge.[5] The club competes in the Premier League, the 🌟 top division of English football. It won its first major honour, the League championship, in 1955. The club won the 🌟 FA Cup for the first time in 1970, their first European honour, the Cup Winners' Cup, in 1971, and became 🌟 the third English club to win the Club World Cup in 2024.
Chelsea is one of five clubs to have won 🌟 all three pre-1999 main European club competitions, and the only club to have won all three major European competitions twice. 🌟 They are also the only London club to have won the Champions League and the Club World Cup.[6] Domestically, the 🌟 club has won six league titles, eight FA Cups, five League Cups, and four FA Community Shields. Internationally, they have 🌟 won the UEFA Champions League, the UEFA Europa League, the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and the UEFA Super Cup twice 🌟 each, and the FIFA Club World Cup once since their inception. In terms of overall trophies won, Chelsea is the 🌟 fourth-most successful club in English football.
The club has rivalries with neighbouring teams Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur, and a historic rivalry 🌟 with Leeds United. In terms of club value, Chelsea is the eighth-most-valuable football club in the world (as of 2024 🌟 ), worthR$3.10 billion, and is the eighth-highest-earning football club in the world.[7][8]
History
Founding and early years
The first Chelsea team in September 🌟 1905
In 1904, Gus Mears acquired the Stamford Bridge athletics stadium in Fulham with the aim of turning it into a 🌟 football ground. An offer to lease it to nearby Fulham F.C. was turned down, so Mears opted to found his 🌟 own club to use the stadium. As there was already a team named Fulham in the borough, the name of 🌟 the adjacent borough of Chelsea was chosen for the new club; names like Kensington FC, Stamford Bridge FC and London 🌟 FC were also considered.[9] Chelsea F.C. was founded on 10 March 1905 at The Rising Sun pub (now The Butcher's 🌟 Hook),[1][10] opposite the present-day main entrance to the ground on Fulham Road, and were elected to the Football League shortly 🌟 afterwards.
Chelsea won promotion to the First Division in their second season, and yo-yoed between the First and Second Divisions in 🌟 its early years. The team reached the 1915 FA Cup final, where they lost to Sheffield United at Old Trafford, 🌟 and finished third in the First Division in 1920, the club's best league campaign to that point.[11] Chelsea had a 🌟 reputation for signing star players[12] and attracted large crowds. The club had the highest average attendance in English football in 🌟 ten separate seasons[13] including 1907–08,[14] 1909–10,[15] 1911–12,[16] 1912–13,[17] 1913–14[18] and 1919–20.[19][20] They were FA Cup semi-finalists in 1920 and 1932 🌟 and remained in the First Division throughout the 1930s, but success eluded the club in the inter-war years.
Modernisation and the 🌟 first league championship
Chart showing the progress of Chelsea's league finishes from 1906 to the present
Former Arsenal and England centre-forward Ted 🌟 Drake was appointed manager in 1952 and proceeded to modernise the club. He removed the club's Chelsea pensioner crest, improved 🌟 the youth set-up and training regime, rebuilt the side with shrewd signings from the lower divisions and amateur leagues, and 🌟 led Chelsea to their first major trophy success – the League championship – in 1954–55. The following season saw UEFA 🌟 create the European Champions' Cup, but after objections from The Football League, Chelsea were persuaded to withdraw from the competition 🌟 before it started.[21][22] Chelsea failed to build on this success, and spent the remainder of the 1950s in mid-table. Drake 🌟 was dismissed in 1961 and replaced by player-coach Tommy Docherty.
Docherty built a new team around the group of talented young 🌟 players emerging from the club's youth set-up, and Chelsea challenged for honours throughout the 1960s, enduring several near-misses. They were 🌟 on course for a treble of League, FA Cup and League Cup going into the final stages of the 1964–65 🌟 season, winning the League Cup but faltering late on in the other two.[23] In three seasons the side were beaten 🌟 in three major semi-finals and were FA Cup runners-up. Under Docherty's successor, Dave Sexton, Chelsea won the FA Cup in 🌟 1970, beating Leeds United 2–1 in a final replay. The following year, Chelsea took their first European honour, a UEFA 🌟 Cup Winners' Cup triumph, with another replayed win, this time over Real Madrid in Athens.
Redevelopment and financial crisis
The late 1970s 🌟 through to the '80s was a turbulent period for Chelsea. An ambitious redevelopment of Stamford Bridge threatened the financial stability 🌟 of the club,[24] star players were sold and the team were relegated. Further problems were caused by a notorious hooligan 🌟 element among the support, which was to plague the club throughout the decade.[25] In 1982, at the nadir of their 🌟 fortunes, Chelsea were acquired by Ken Bates from Mears' great-nephew Brian Mears, for the nominal sum of £1. Bates bought 🌟 a controlling stake in the club and floated Chelsea on the AIM stock exchange in March 1996 although by now 🌟 the Stamford Bridge freehold had been sold to property developers, meaning the club faced losing their home.[27] On the pitch, 🌟 the team had fared little better, coming close to relegation to the Third Division for the first time, but in 🌟 1983 manager John Neal put together an impressive new team for minimal outlay. Chelsea won the Second Division title in 🌟 1983–84 and established themselves in the top division with two top-six finishes, before being relegated again in 1988. The club 🌟 bounced back immediately by winning the Second Division championship in 1988–89.
After a long-running legal battle, Bates reunited the stadium freehold 🌟 with the club in 1992 by doing a deal with the banks of the property developers, who had been bankrupted 🌟 by a market crash.[28] In the mid-1990s Chelsea fan and businessman Matthew Harding became a director and loaned the club 🌟 £26 million to build the new North Stand and invest in new players.[29] Chelsea's form in the new Premier League 🌟 was unconvincing, although they did reach the 1994 FA Cup final. The appointment of Ruud Gullit as player-manager in 1996 🌟 began an upturn in the team's fortunes. He added several top international players to the side and led the club 🌟 to their first major honour since 1971, the FA Cup. Gullit was replaced by Gianluca Vialli, whose reign saw Chelsea 🌟 win the League Cup, the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and the UEFA Super Cup in 1998, and the FA Cup 🌟 in 2000. They also mounted a strong title challenge in 1998–99, finishing four points behind champions Manchester United, and made 🌟 their first appearance in the UEFA Champions League. Vialli was sacked in favour of Claudio Ranieri, who guided Chelsea to 🌟 the 2002 FA Cup final and Champions League qualification in 2002–03.
2003–2024: Abramovich era
"I don't want to throw my money away 🌟 but it's really about having fun and that means success and trophies." —Roman Abramovich, in an interview with the BBC 🌟 following the takeover.[30]
With the club facing an apparent financial crisis,[31] Bates unexpectedly sold Chelsea F.C. in June 2003 for £60 🌟 million.[32] In so doing, he reportedly recognised a personal profit of £17 million on the club he had bought for 🌟 £1 in 1982 (his stake had been diluted to just below 30% over the years). The club's new owner was 🌟 Russian oligarch and billionaire Roman Abramovich, who also took on responsibility for the club's £80 million of debt, quickly paying 🌟 some of it. Sergei Pugachev alleged Chelsea was bought on Putin's orders, an allegation Abramovich has denied.[33] Bates mentioned that 🌟 Abramovich was in talks to buy Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur before he bought Chelsea in a deal sealed in 🌟 a day.[34]
Over £100 million was spent on new players, but Ranieri was unable to deliver any trophies,[35] and was replaced 🌟 by José Mourinho.[36] Under Mourinho, Chelsea became the fifth English team to win back-to-back league championships since the Second World 🌟 War (2004–05 and 2005–06),[37] in addition to winning an FA Cup (2007) and two League Cups (2005 and 2007). After 🌟 a poor start to the 2007–08 season, Mourinho was replaced by Avram Grant,[38] who led the club to their first 🌟 UEFA Champions League final, which they lost on penalties to Manchester United. The club did not turn a profit in 🌟 the first nine years of Abramovich's ownership, and made record losses of £140m in June 2005.[39]
I am a fan of 🌟 special nature. I'm excited before every single game. The trophy at the end is less important than the process itself. 🌟 —Abramovich discussing two trophy-laden years at Chelsea (2006).[40]
In 2009, under caretaker manager Guus Hiddink, Chelsea won another FA Cup.[41] In 🌟 2009–10, his successor Carlo Ancelotti led them to their first Premier League and FA Cup Double, also becoming the first 🌟 English top-flight club to score 100 league goals in a season since 1963.[42] In 2012, Roberto Di Matteo led Chelsea 🌟 to their seventh FA Cup,[43] and their first UEFA Champions League title, beating Bayern Munich 4–3 on penalties, the first 🌟 London club to win the trophy.[44] The following year the club won the UEFA Europa League,[45] making them the first 🌟 club to hold two major European titles simultaneously and one of five clubs to have won the three main UEFA 🌟 trophies.[46] Mourinho returned as manager in 2013 and led Chelsea to League Cup success in March 2024,[47] and the Premier 🌟 League title two months later.[48] Mourinho was sacked after four months of the following season after a poor start.[49]
In November 🌟 2012, Chelsea announced a profit of £1.4 million for the year ending 30 June 2012, the first time the club 🌟 had made a profit under Abramovich's ownership.[39][50] This was followed by a loss in 2013 and then their highest ever 🌟 profit of £18.4 million for the year to June 2014.[51] In 2024 Chelsea announced a record after-tax profit of £62 🌟 million.[52]
In 2024, under new coach Antonio Conte, Chelsea won their sixth English title and the following season won their eighth 🌟 FA Cup.[53] In 2024 Conte was sacked after a fifth-place finish and replaced with Maurizio Sarri,[54][55] under whom Chelsea reached 🌟 the League Cup final, which they lost on penalties to Manchester City[56] and won the Europa League for a second 🌟 time, beating Arsenal 4–1 in the final. Sarri then left the club to become manager of Juventus and was replaced 🌟 by former Chelsea player Frank Lampard.[57]
In Lampard's first season he guided Chelsea to fourth place in the Premier League and 🌟 reached the FA Cup final, losing 2–1 to Arsenal.[58] Lampard was dismissed in January 2024 and replaced with Thomas Tuchel.[59][60]
Players 🌟 of Chelsea celebrating their first FIFA Club World Cup title (2024) after beating Brazilian side Palmeiras in the final
Under Tuchel, 🌟 Chelsea reached the FA Cup final, losing 1–0 to Leicester City, and won their second UEFA Champions League title with 🌟 a 1–0 win over Manchester City in Porto.[61] The club subsequently won the 2024 UEFA Super Cup for the second 🌟 time by defeating Villarreal 6–5 in a penalty shootout, after it had ended 1–1 in Belfast after extra time,[62] and 🌟 the 2024 FIFA Club World Cup (the first for the club) in Abu Dhabi after beating Brazilian Palmeiras 2–1.[63]
On 18 🌟 April 2024, Chelsea announced it would be joining a new European Super League, a league competition comprising the biggest European 🌟 clubs.[64] After a backlash from supporters, the club announced their withdrawal days later.[65] The club opted against furloughing their non-matchday 🌟 staff during the COVID-19 pandemic, with the decision reportedly coming from Abramovich himself. Chelsea, one of the first clubs to 🌟 help the National Health Service, lent the club-owned Millennium Hotel for the NHS staff.[66]
"[Chelsea] have been a success machine for 🌟 the last 10–20 years. That doesn't just come with money, we've seen at Manchester United and Arsenal where they've put 🌟 billions into the team and not had the success that Chelsea have had. Chelsea can feel comfortable that they'll have 🌟 rich owners, but will they have football-smart owners? Because that's what Abramovich has been. —Gary Neville on Abramovich's legacy.[67]
Amidst financial 🌟 sanctions leveled at Russian oligarchs by Western governments in response to the 2024 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Abramovich stated on 🌟 26 February that he would hand over the stewardship of Chelsea to the trustees of the Chelsea Foundation.[68] The trustees 🌟 did not immediately agree, due to legal concerns regarding the rules of the Charity Commission for England and Wales.[69] A 🌟 week later, Abramovich wrote-off the £1.5 billion the club owed him, and put the club up for sale, pledging to 🌟 donate net proceeds from it to the victims of the war in Ukraine.[70][71]
On 10 March 2024, the British government announced 🌟 sanctions on Abramovich with Chelsea allowed to operate under a special license until 31 May.[72][73] In the following weeks, reports 🌟 emerged of Abramovich's involvement in brokering a peace deal between Ukraine and Russia and securing safe evacuation corridors in besieged 🌟 Ukrainian cities.[74][75] An American government official revealed that the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy had requested that the US government not 🌟 levy sanctions against Abramovich given his importance to war relief efforts.[76]
2024–present: BlueCo era
We're all in – 100% – every minute 🌟 of every match. Our vision as owners is clear: we want to make the fans proud. —Todd Boehly, addressing the 🌟 press after the takeover.[77]
On 7 May 2024, Chelsea confirmed that terms have been agreed for a new ownership group, led 🌟 by Todd Boehly, Clearlake Capital, Mark Walter and Hansjörg Wyss, to acquire the club. The group was later known as 🌟 BlueCo.[78] The UK government approved the £4.25bn takeover,[79] ending Abramovich's 19-year ownership of the club.[80] Bruce Buck, who served as 🌟 chairman since 2003, was replaced by Boehly,[81] while long-serving club director and de facto sporting director Marina Granovskaia left,[82] as 🌟 did Petr Čech from the role of technical and performance advisor.[83]
Chelsea won six of the first 11 games of the 🌟 2024–23 season, but only five of the remaining 27. The club scored a record-low 38 goals across the entire season 🌟 and finished in the bottom half of the table for the first time since 1995–96.[84]
League history
L1 = Level 1 of 🌟 the football league system; L2 = Level 2 of the football league system
Stadium
Chelsea have only had one home ground, Stamford 🌟 Bridge, where they have played since the team's foundation. The stadium was officially opened on 28 April 1877 and for 🌟 the next 28 years it was used by the London Athletic Club as an arena for athletics meetings. In 1904 🌟 the ground was acquired by businessman Gus Mears and his brother Joseph, who had also purchased nearby land (formerly a 🌟 large market garden) with the aim of staging football matches on the now 12.5 acre (51,000 m2) site.[85] Stamford Bridge 🌟 was designed for the Mears family by the noted football architect Archibald Leitch, who had also designed Ibrox, Craven Cottage 🌟 and Hampden Park.[86] Most football clubs were founded first, and then sought grounds in which to play, but Chelsea were 🌟 founded for Stamford Bridge.
Starting with an open bowl-like design and one grandstand with seating, Stamford Bridge had an original capacity 🌟 of around 100,000, making it the second biggest stadium in England after Crystal Palace.[85] The early 1930s saw the construction 🌟 of a terrace on the southern part of the ground with a roof that covered around 20% of the stand. 🌟 As the roof resembled that of a corrugated iron shed, the stand eventually became known as the "Shed End", although 🌟 it is unknown who first coined this name. From the 1960s, it became known as the home of Chelsea's most 🌟 loyal and vocal supporters.[85] In 1939, another small seated stand was added, the North Stand, which remained until its demolition 🌟 in 1975.[85]
In the early 1970s, the club's owners announced a modernisation of Stamford Bridge with plans for a state-of-the-art 50,000 🌟 all-seater stadium.[85] Work began in 1972 but the project was beset with problems and ultimately only the East Stand was 🌟 completed; the cost brought the club close to bankruptcy. The freehold was sold to property developers and the club were 🌟 under threat of eviction from the stadium.[85] Following a long legal battle, it was not until the mid-1990s that Chelsea's 🌟 future at Stamford Bridge was secured and renovation work resumed.[85] The north, west and southern parts of the ground were 🌟 converted into all-seater stands and moved closer to the pitch, a process completed by 2001. The East Stand was retained 🌟 from the 1970s development. In 1996, the north stand was renamed the Matthew Harding stand, after the club director and 🌟 benefactor who was killed in a helicopter crash earlier that year.[87]
Chelsea vs. West Bromwich Albion at Stamford Bridge on 23 🌟 September 1905; Chelsea won 1–0.
When Stamford Bridge was redeveloped in the Bates era many additional features were added to the 🌟 complex including two Millennium & Copthorne hotels, apartments, bars, restaurants, the Chelsea Megastore, and an interactive visitor attraction called Chelsea 🌟 World of Sport. The intention was that these facilities would provide extra revenue to support the football side of the 🌟 business, but they were less successful than hoped and before the Abramovich takeover in 2003 the debt taken on to 🌟 finance them was a major burden on the club. Soon after the takeover a decision was taken to drop the 🌟 "Chelsea Village" brand and refocus on Chelsea as a football club. However, the stadium is sometimes still referred to as 🌟 part of "Chelsea Village" or "The Village".
The Stamford Bridge freehold, the pitch, the turnstiles and Chelsea's naming rights are now 🌟 owned by Chelsea Pitch Owners, a non-profit organisation in which fans are the shareholders. The CPO was created to ensure 🌟 the stadium could never again be sold to developers. As a condition for using the Chelsea FC name, the club 🌟 has to play its first team matches at Stamford Bridge, which means that if the club moves to a new 🌟 stadium, they may have to change their name.[88] Chelsea's training ground is located in Cobham, Surrey. Chelsea moved to Cobham 🌟 in 2004. Their previous training ground in Harlington was taken over by QPR in 2005.[89] The new training facilities in 🌟 Cobham were completed in 2007.[90]
Aerial view of present-day Stamford Bridge
Stamford Bridge hosted the FA Cup Final from 1920 to 1922,[91] 🌟 has held 10 FA Cup Semi-finals (most recently in 1978), ten FA Charity Shield matches (the last in 1970), and 🌟 three England international matches, the last in 1932; it was also the venue for an unofficial Victory International in 1946.[92] 🌟 The 2013 UEFA Women's Champions League Final was played at Stamford Bridge as well.[93] The stadium has also been used 🌟 for a variety of other sports. In October 1905 it hosted a rugby union match between the All Blacks and 🌟 Middlesex,[94] and in 1914 hosted a baseball match between the touring New York Giants and the Chicago White Sox.[95] It 🌟 was the venue for a boxing match between world flyweight champion Jimmy Wilde and Joe Conn in 1918.[96] The running 🌟 track was used for dirt track racing between 1928 and 1932,[97] greyhound racing from 1933 to 1968, and Midget car 🌟 racing in 1948.[98] In 1980, Stamford Bridge hosted the first international floodlit cricket match in the UK, between Essex and 🌟 the West Indies.[99] It was also the home stadium of the London Monarchs American Football team for the 1997 season.[100]
The 🌟 previous owner Abramovich and the club's then executive board determined that a larger stadium is necessary in order for Chelsea 🌟 to stay competitive with rival clubs who have significantly larger stadia, such as Arsenal and Manchester United.[101] Owing to its 🌟 location next to a main road and two railway lines, fans can only enter Stamford Bridge via the Fulham Road, 🌟 which places constraints on expansion due to health and safety regulations.[102] The club have consistently affirmed their desire to keep 🌟 Chelsea at their current home,[103][104] but have nonetheless been linked with a move to various nearby sites, including the Earls 🌟 Court Exhibition Centre, Battersea Power Station and the Chelsea Barracks.[105] In October 2011, a proposal from the club to buy 🌟 back the freehold to the land on which Stamford Bridge sits was voted down by Chelsea Pitch Owners shareholders.[106] In 🌟 May 2012, the club made a formal bid to purchase Battersea Power Station, with a view to developing the site 🌟 into a new stadium,[107] but lost out to a Malaysian consortium.[108] The club subsequently announced plans to redevelop Stamford Bridge 🌟 into a 60,000-seater stadium,[109] and in January 2024 these plans were approved by Hammersmith and Fulham council.[110] However, on 31 🌟 May 2024, the club released a statement saying that the new stadium project had been put on hold indefinitely, citing 🌟 "the current unfavourable investment climate."[111]
In July 2024, it was reported that the club's new owner Todd Boehly had appointed American 🌟 architect Janet Marie Smith to oversee the renovation of the stadium.[112]
Identity
Crest
Chelsea has had four main crests, which all underwent minor 🌟 variations. The first, adopted when the club was founded, was the image of a Chelsea Pensioner, the army veterans who 🌟 reside at the nearby Royal Hospital Chelsea. This contributed to the club's original "pensioner" nickname, and remained for the next 🌟 half-century, though it never appeared on the shirts. When Ted Drake became Chelsea manager in 1952, he began to modernise 🌟 the club. Believing the Chelsea pensioner crest to be old-fashioned, he insisted that it be replaced.[113] A stop-gap badge which 🌟 comprised the initials C.F.C. was adopted for a year. In 1953, the club crest was changed to an upright blue 🌟 lion looking backwards and holding a staff. It was based on elements in the coat of arms of the Metropolitan 🌟 Borough of Chelsea[114] with the "lion rampant regardant" taken from the arms of then club president Viscount Chelsea and the 🌟 staff from the Abbots of Westminster, former Lords of the Manor of Chelsea. It also featured three red roses, to 🌟 represent England, and two footballs.[113] This was the first Chelsea crest to appear on the shirts, in the early 1960s. 🌟 In 1975, a heraldic badge was granted by the College of Arms to the English Football League for use by 🌟 Chelsea. The badge took the form of the familiar lion and staff encircled by a blue ring but without lettering 🌟 and without the red roses and red footballs (blazoned as "A lion rampant reguardant azure supporting with the forepaws a 🌟 crozier or all within an annulet azure").[115] In 1986, with Ken Bates owner of the club, Chelsea's crest was changed 🌟 again as part of another attempt to modernise and because the old rampant lion badge could not be trademarked.[116] The 🌟 new badge featured a more naturalistic non-heraldic lion, in white and not blue, standing over the C.F.C. initials. This lasted 🌟 for the next 19 years, with some modifications such as the use of different colours, including red from 1987 to 🌟 1995, and yellow from 1995 until 1999, before the white returned.[117] With the new ownership of Roman Abramovich, and the 🌟 club's centenary approaching, combined with demands from fans for the popular 1950s badge to be restored, it was decided that 🌟 the crest should be changed again in 2005. The new crest was officially adopted for the start of the 2005–06 🌟 season and marked a return to the older design, used from 1953 to 1986, featuring a blue heraldic lion holding 🌟 a staff. For the centenary season this was accompanied by the words '100 Years' and 'Centenary 2005–2006' on the top 🌟 and bottom of the crest respectively.[118]
Colours
c. 1912 )[119] Chelsea's first home colours (1905 –
Chelsea have always worn blue shirts, although 🌟 they originally used the paler eton blue, which was taken from the racing colours of then club president, Earl Cadogan, 🌟 and was worn with white shorts and dark blue or black socks.[120] The light blue shirts were replaced by a 🌟 royal blue version in around 1912.[121] In the 1960s Chelsea manager Tommy Docherty changed the kit again, switching to blue 🌟 shorts (which have remained ever since) and white socks, believing it made the club's colours more modern and distinctive, since 🌟 no other major side used that combination; this kit was first worn during the 1964–65 season.[122] Since then Chelsea have 🌟 always worn white socks with their home kit apart from a short spell from 1985 to 1992, when blue socks 🌟 were reintroduced.
Chelsea's away colours are usually all yellow or all white with blue trim. More recently, the club have had 🌟 a number of black or dark blue away kits which alternate every year.[123] As with most teams, they have also 🌟 had some more unusual ones. At Docherty's behest, in the 1966 FA Cup semi-final they wore blue and black stripes, 🌟 based on Inter Milan's kit.[124] In the mid-1970s, the away strip was a red, white and green kit inspired by 🌟 the Hungarian national side of the 1950s.[125] Other away kits include an all jade strip worn from 1986 to 1989, 🌟 red and white diamonds from 1990 to 1992, graphite and tangerine from 1994 to 1996, and luminous yellow from 2007 🌟 to 2008.[123] The graphite and tangerine strip has appeared in lists of the worst football kits ever.[126]
Songs and fan chants
The 🌟 song "Blue is the Colour" was released as a single in the build-up to the 1972 League Cup Final, with 🌟 all members of Chelsea's first team squad singing; it reached number five in the UK Singles Chart.[127] The song has 🌟 since been adopted by a number of other sports teams around the world, including the Vancouver Whitecaps (as "White is 🌟 the Colour")[128] and the Saskatchewan Roughriders (as "Green is the Colour").[129]
Chelsea released the song "No One Can Stop Us Now" 🌟 in 1994 for reaching the 1994 FA Cup Final. It reached number 23 in the UK Singles Chart.[130] In the 🌟 build-up to the 1997 FA Cup Final, the song "Blue Day", performed by Suggs and members of the Chelsea squad, 🌟 reached number 22 in the UK chart.[131] In 2000, Chelsea released the song "Blue Tomorrow". It reached number 22 in 🌟 the UK Singles Chart.[130]
At matches, Chelsea fans sing chants such as "Carefree" (to the tune of "Lord of the Dance", 🌟 whose lyrics were probably written by supporter Mick Greenaway),[132][133] "Ten Men Went to Mow", "We All Follow the Chelsea" (to 🌟 the tune of "Land of Hope and Glory"), "Zigga Zagga", and the celebratory "Celery". The latter is often accompanied by 🌟 fans throwing celery at each other, although the vegetable was banned inside Stamford Bridge after an incident involving midfielder Cesc 🌟 Fàbregas at the 2007 League Cup Final.[134] Popular fan chants include, "Super Chelsea", "Super Frank" (dedicated to all-time leading goal 🌟 scorer Frank Lampard), "We love you Chelsea" and "Come on Chelsea". There also some situation specific or team specific chants 🌟 meant to rile up opposition teams, managers or players.[135]
Support
Chelsea fans at a match against Tottenham Hotspur, on 11 March 2006
Chelsea 🌟 is among the most widely supported football clubs in the world.[136][137] It has the sixth-highest average attendance in the history 🌟 of English football,[138] and regularly attract over 40,000 fans to Stamford Bridge; they were the seventh best-supported Premier League team 🌟 in the 2013–14 season, with an average gate of 41,572.[139] Chelsea's traditional fanbase comes from all over the Greater London 🌟 area including working-class parts such as Hammersmith and Battersea, wealthier areas like Chelsea and Kensington, and from the home counties. 🌟 There are also numerous official supporters clubs in the United Kingdom and all over the world.[140] Between 2007 and 2012, 🌟 Chelsea were ranked fourth worldwide in annual replica kit sales, with an average of 910,000.[141] As of 2024, Chelsea has 🌟 118.9 million followers on social media, the fourth highest among football clubs.[142]
During the 1970s and 1980s in particular, Chelsea supporters 🌟 were associated with football hooliganism. The club's "football firm", originally known as the Chelsea Shed Boys, and subsequently as the 🌟 Chelsea Headhunters, were nationally notorious for football violence, alongside hooligan firms from other clubs such as West Ham United's Inter 🌟 City Firm and Millwall's Bushwackers, before, during and after matches.[143] The increase of hooligan incidents in the 1980s led chairman 🌟 Ken Bates to propose erecting an electric fence to deter them from invading the pitch, a proposal that the Greater 🌟 London Council rejected.[144]
Since the 1990s, there has been a marked decline in crowd trouble at matches, as a result of 🌟 stricter policing, CCTV in grounds and the advent of all-seater stadia.[145] In 2007, the club launched the Back to the 🌟 Shed campaign to improve the atmosphere at home matches, with notable success. According to Home Office statistics, 126 Chelsea fans 🌟 were arrested for football-related offences during the 2009–10 season, the third highest in the division, and 27 banning orders were 🌟 issued, the fifth-highest in the division.[146]
Rivalries
Chelsea have long-standing rivalries with North London clubs Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur.[147][148] A strong rivalry 🌟 with Leeds United dates back to several heated and controversial matches in the 1960s and 1970s, particularly the 1970 FA 🌟 Cup Final.[149] More recently a rivalry with Liverpool has grown following repeated clashes in cup competitions.[150][151] Chelsea's fellow West London 🌟 sides Brentford, Fulham and Queens Park Rangers are also considered rivals, less so in recent times as matches have only 🌟 taken place intermittently due to the clubs often being in separate divisions.[152]
A 2004 survey by Planetfootball found that Chelsea fans 🌟 consider their main rivalries to be with (in descending order): Arsenal, Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester United. In the same survey, 🌟 fans of Arsenal, Fulham, Leeds United, QPR, Tottenham, and West Ham United named Chelsea as one of their three main 🌟 rivals.[153] In a 2008 poll conducted by the Football Fans Census, Chelsea fans named Liverpool, Arsenal and Manchester United as 🌟 their most disliked clubs. In the same survey, "Chelsea" was the top answer to the question "Which other English club 🌟 do you dislike the most?"[154] A 2012 survey, conducted among 1,200 supporters of the top four league divisions across the 🌟 country, found that many clubs' main rivals had changed since 2003 and reported that Chelsea fans consider Tottenham to be 🌟 their main rivals, above Arsenal and Manchester United. Additionally, fans of Arsenal, Brentford, Fulham, Liverpool, Manchester United, QPR, Tottenham and 🌟 West Ham identified Chelsea as one of their top three rivals.[155]
Additionally, Chelsea have domestic rivalries with Crystal Palace, Manchester City, 🌟 Manchester United, Millwall and West Ham United, as well as international rivalries against Barcelona and Bayern Munich.
Records and statistics
Chelsea's highest 🌟 appearance-maker is ex-captain Ron Harris, who played in 795 competitive games for the club between 1961 and 1980.[156] Five other 🌟 players made more than 500 appearances for the club: Peter Bonetti (729; 1959–79), John Terry (717; 1998–2024), Frank Lampard (648; 🌟 2001–2014), John Hollins (592; 1963–1975 and 1983–1984), and César Azpilicueta (508; 2012–2024).[157] With 103 caps (101 while at the club) 🌟 for England, Lampard is Chelsea's most capped international player. Every starting player in Chelsea's 57 games of the 2013–14 season 🌟 was a full international – a new club record.[158]
Lampard is Chelsea's all-time top goalscorer, having scored 211 goals in 648 🌟 games (2001–2014);[156] he passed Bobby Tambling's longstanding record of 202 in May 2013.[159] Eight other players have also scored over 🌟 100 goals for Chelsea: George Hilsdon (1906–1912), George Mills (1929–1939), Roy Bentley (1948–1956), Jimmy Greaves (1957–1961), Peter Osgood (1964–1974 and 🌟 1978–1979), Kerry Dixon (1983–1992), Didier Drogba (2004–2012 and 2014–2024), and Eden Hazard (2012–2024). Greaves holds the club record for the 🌟 most goals scored in one season (43 in 1960–61).[160] While a Chelsea player, Greaves also became the youngest ever player 🌟 to score 100 goals in the English top-flight, at 20 years and 290 days.[161]
Chelsea's biggest winning scoreline in a competitive 🌟 match is 13–0, achieved against Jeunesse Hautcharage in the Cup Winners' Cup in 1971.[162] The club's biggest top-flight win was 🌟 an 8–0 victory against Wigan Athletic in 2010, which was matched in 2012 against Aston Villa.[163] Chelsea's biggest loss was 🌟 an 8–1 reverse against Wolverhampton Wanderers in 1953.[164][165] The club's 21–0 aggregate victory over Jeunesse Hautcharage in the UEFA Cup 🌟 Winners' Cup in 1971 is also a record in European competition.[166] Officially, Chelsea's highest home attendance is 82,905 for a 🌟 First Division match against Arsenal on 12 October 1935. However, an estimated crowd of over 100,000 attended a friendly match 🌟 against Soviet team Dynamo Moscow on 13 November 1945.[167][168]
In January 2011 Chelsea broke the British transfer record to sign Fernando 🌟 Torres for £50 million; the record stood until 2014
From 20 March 2004 to 26 October 2008, Chelsea went a record 🌟 86 consecutive league matches at home without defeat, beating the previous record of 63 matches unbeaten set by Liverpool between 🌟 1978 and 1980.[169][170] Chelsea hold the English record for the fewest goals conceded during a league season (15), the highest 🌟 number of clean sheets overall in a Premier League season (25) (both set during the 2004–05 season),[171] and the most 🌟 consecutive clean sheets from the start of a league season (6, set during the 2005–06 season).[172] Chelsea is the only 🌟 Premier League side to have won its opening nine league games of the season, doing so in 2005–06.[173][174] From 2009 🌟 to 2013, Chelsea were unbeaten in a record 29 consecutive FA Cup matches (excluding penalty shoot-outs).[175]
On 25 August 1928, Chelsea, 🌟 along with Arsenal, became the first club to play with shirt numbers, in their match against Swansea Town.[176] They were 🌟 the first English side to travel by aeroplane to a domestic away match, when they visited Newcastle United on 19 🌟 April 1957,[177] and the first First Division side to play a match on a Sunday, when they faced Stoke City 🌟 on 27 January 1974. On 26 December 1999, Chelsea became the first British side to field an entirely foreign starting 🌟 line-up (no British or Irish players) in a Premier League match against Southampton.[178] In May 2007, Chelsea were the first 🌟 team to win the FA Cup at the new Wembley Stadium, having also been the last to win it at 🌟 the old Wembley.[179] They were the first English club to be ranked No. 1 under UEFA's five-year coefficient system in 🌟 the 21st century.[180] They were the first Premier League team, and the first team in the English top flight since 🌟 1962–63, to score at least 100 goals in a single season, reaching the milestone during the 2009–10 season.[42] Chelsea is 🌟 the only London club to have won the UEFA Champions League.[181][182] Upon winning the 2012–13 UEFA Europa League, Chelsea became 🌟 the first English club to win all four UEFA club trophies and the only club to hold the Champions League 🌟 and the Europa League at the same time.[183]
Chelsea have broken the record for the highest transfer fee paid by a 🌟 British club three times. Their £30.8 million purchase of Andriy Shevchenko from A.C. Milan in June 2006 was a British 🌟 record until surpassed by the £32.5 million paid by Manchester City for Robinho in September 2008.[184][185] The club's £50 million 🌟 purchase of Fernando Torres from Liverpool in January 2011[186] held the record until Ángel Di María signed for Manchester United 🌟 in August 2014 for £59.7 million.[187] The club's £71 million purchase of Kepa Arrizabalaga in August 2024 remains a world 🌟 record fee paid for a goalkeeper.[188]
On 12 February 2024, Chelsea became the first London club to win the FIFA Club 🌟 World Cup against Palmeiras with Kai Havertz scoring a late penalty.[189] Chelsea broke the spending record in the winter transfer 🌟 window with a £289 million spending spree on eight new signings, with the £107 million signing of Enzo Fernandez breaking 🌟 the British transfer record.[190]
Ownership and finances
Todd Boehly, chairman and one of the co-owners of Chelsea
Chelsea Football Club was founded by 🌟 Gus Mears in 1905. After his death in 1912, his descendants continued to own the club until 1982, when Ken 🌟 Bates bought the club from Mears' great-nephew Brian Mears for £1. Bates bought a controlling stake in the club and 🌟 floated Chelsea on the AIM stock exchange in March 1996. In the mid-1990s Chelsea fan and businessman Matthew Harding became 🌟 a director, and loaned the club £26 million to build the new North Stand and invest in new players.[29]
In July 🌟 2003, Roman Abramovich purchased just over 50% of Chelsea Village plc's share capital, including Bates' 29.5% stake, for £30 million 🌟 and over the following weeks bought out most of the remaining 12,000 shareholders at 35 pence per share, completing a 🌟 £140 million takeover. Other shareholders at the time of the takeover included the Matthew Harding estate (21%), BSkyB (9.9%) and 🌟 various anonymous offshore trusts.[191]
At the time of the Abramovich takeover, the club also had debts of around £100 million, which 🌟 included a 10-year £75 million Eurobond taken out in 1997 by the Bates regime to buy the freehold of Stamford 🌟 Bridge and finance the redevelopment of the stadium. The 9% interest on the loan cost the club around £7 million 🌟 a year and according to Bruce Buck, Chelsea were struggling to pay an instalment due in July 2003.[192] Abramovich paid 🌟 off some of that debt immediately, but the outstanding £36 million on the Eurobond was not fully repaid until 2008.[193] 🌟 Since then, the club had no external debt.[194]
Abramovich changed the ownership name to Chelsea FC plc, whose ultimate parent company 🌟 was Fordstam Limited, which was controlled by him.[195] Chelsea were additionally funded by Abramovich via interest free soft loans channelled 🌟 through his holding company Fordstam Limited. The loans stood at £709 million in December 2009, when they were all converted 🌟 to equity by Abramovich, leaving the club themselves debt free,[196][197] although the debt remained with Fordstam.[198]
Chelsea did not turn a 🌟 profit in the first nine years of Abramovich's ownership, and made record losses of £140m in June 2005.[39] In November 🌟 2012, Chelsea announced a profit of £1.4 million for the year ending 30 June 2012, the first time the club 🌟 had made a profit under Abramovich's ownership.[39][50] This was followed by a loss in 2013 and then their highest ever 🌟 profit of £18.4 million for the year to June 2014.[51] In 2024 Chelsea announced a record after-tax profit of £62 🌟 million.[52]
Chelsea has been described as a global brand; a 2012 report by Brand Finance ranked Chelsea fifth among football brands 🌟 and valued the club's brand value at US$398 million – an increase of 27% from the previous year, also valuing 🌟 it at US$10 million more than the sixth best brand, London rivals Arsenal – and gave the brand a strength 🌟 rating of AA (very strong).[199][200] In 2024, Forbes magazine ranked Chelsea the seventh most valuable football club in the world, 🌟 at £1.15 billion ($1.66 billion).[201] As of 2024 , Chelsea was ranked eighth in the Deloitte Football Money League with 🌟 an annual commercial revenue of £322.59 million.[202]
As of May 2024, Chelsea was ranked the eighth-most valuable club in the world 🌟 according to Forbes,[203] and also eighth according to Deloitte, with an annual commercial revenue of €493.1 million.[204]
The club's recent accounting 🌟 records highlight £26.6m they lost in compensation to former head coach Antonio Conte for sacking and to pay off his 🌟 backroom staff and the legal costs that followed.[205]
On 26 February 2024, during the Russo-Ukrainian War, Abramovich handed over "stewardship and 🌟 care" of Chelsea FC to the Chelsea Charitable Foundation.[206] Abramovich released an official statement on 2 March 2024 confirming that 🌟 he was selling the club due to the ongoing situation in Ukraine.[207] Although the UK government froze Abramovich's assets in 🌟 United Kingdom on 10 March due to his "close ties with Kremlin", it was made clear that the Chelsea club 🌟 will be allowed to operate in terms of activities which are football related.[208] On 12 March, the Premier League disqualified 🌟 Abramovich as a director of Chelsea Football Club.[209]
On 19 March 2024, there were five confirmed bids to acquire Chelsea FC: 🌟 submitted to Raine Capital which was handling the sale of the club. Some of these were a consortium led by 🌟 ex-Liverpool chairman Sir Martin Broughton, a group of investors led by the Ricketts family (among them Joe and Pete Ricketts), 🌟 Swiss and American businessmen Hansjörg Wyss and Todd Boehly, Aethel Partners headed by Portuguese Ricardo Santos Silva and British businessman 🌟 Nick Candy, supported by former Chelsea striker Gianluca Vialli.[210]
On 7 May, the club finally confirmed that "terms have been agreed" 🌟 for a new ownership group led by Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital.[211] On 30 May, it was confirmed that the 🌟 Boehly consortium had completed the purchase of the club.[212] The consortium also includes Wyss and Mark Walter. Walter and Boehly 🌟 are also owners of the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Los Angeles Lakers, and the Los Angeles Sparks. The consortium was 🌟 later known as BlueCo. The transaction had received all necessary approvals from the governments of the United Kingdom and, the 🌟 Premier League, and other authorities.[213][214]
Chelsea's kit has been manufactured by Nike since July 2024. Previously, the kit was manufactured by 🌟 Adidas, which was originally contracted to supply the club's kit from 2006 to 2024. The partnership was extended in October 🌟 2010 in a deal worth £160 million over eight years.[215] This deal was again extended in June 2013 in a 🌟 deal worth £300 million over another 10 years.[216] In May 2024, Adidas announced that by mutual agreement, the kit sponsorship 🌟 would end six years early on 30 June 2024.[217] Chelsea had to pay £40m in compensation to Adidas. In October 🌟 2024, Nike was announced as the new kit sponsor, in a deal worth £900m over 15 years, until 2032.[218] Previously, 🌟 the kit was manufactured by Umbro (1975–81), Le Coq Sportif (1981–86), The Chelsea Collection (1986–87), Umbro (1987–2006), and Adidas (2006–2024).
Chelsea's 🌟 first shirt sponsor was Gulf Air, agreed during the 1983–84 season. The club was then sponsored by Grange Farms, Bai 🌟 Lin Tea and Simod before a long-term deal was signed with Commodore International in 1989; Amiga, an offshoot of Commodore, 🌟 also appeared on the shirts. Chelsea was subsequently sponsored by Coors beer (1994–97), Autoglass (1997–2001), Emirates (2001–05), Samsung Mobile (2005–08), 🌟 Samsung (2008–15)[219][220] and Yokohama Tyres (2024–20). From July 2024, Chelsea's sponsor was Three;[221] however, it temporarily suspended its sponsorship in 🌟 March 2024 in response to sanctions leveled by the UK government against Abramovich.[222] It restored its sponsorship after the change 🌟 of ownership of the club.[223]
Following the introduction of sleeve sponsors in the Premier League, Chelsea had Alliance Tyres as its 🌟 first sleeve sponsor in the 2024–18 season,[224] followed by Hyundai Motor Company in 2024-19 season.[225] In 2024–23 season, Amber Group 🌟 became the new sleeve sponsor, with the flagship digital asset platform WhaleFin appearing on the sleeves of both men's and 🌟 women's teams.[226]
The club also has a variety of other sponsors and official partners, which include Cadbury, EA Sports, FICO, Hilton 🌟 Worldwide, 3 (company), Levy Restaurants, MSC Cruises, Oman Air, Parimatch, Rexona, Singha, The St. James and Trivago.[227]
Popular culture
Chelsea parade through 🌟 the streets of Fulham and Chelsea after winning their league and cup double, May 2010
In 1930, Chelsea featured in one 🌟 of the earliest football films, The Great Game.[228] One-time Chelsea centre forward, Jack Cock, who by then was playing for 🌟 Millwall, was the star of the film and several scenes were shot at Stamford Bridge, including on the pitch, the 🌟 boardroom, and the dressing rooms. It included guest appearances by then-Chelsea players Andrew Wilson, George Mills, and Sam Millington.[229] Owing 🌟 to the notoriety of the Chelsea Headhunters, a football firm associated with the club, Chelsea have also featured in films 🌟 about football hooliganism, including 2004's The Football Factory.[230] Chelsea also appeared in the Hindi film Jhoom Barabar Jhoom.[231] In April 🌟 2011, Montenegrin comedy series Nijesmo mi od juče made an episode in which Chelsea played against FK Sutjeska Nikšić for 🌟 qualification of the UEFA Champions League.[232]
Up until the 1950s, the club had a long-running association with the music halls; their 🌟 underachievement often provided material for comedians such as George Robey.[233] It culminated in comedian Norman Long's release of a comic 🌟 song in 1933, ironically titled "On the Day That Chelsea Went and Won the Cup", the lyrics of which describe 🌟 a series of bizarre and improbable occurrences on the hypothetical day when Chelsea finally won a trophy.[12] In Alfred Hitchcock's 🌟 1935 film The 39 Steps, Mr Memory claims that Chelsea last won the Cup in 63 BC, "in the presence 🌟 of the Emperor Nero."[234] Scenes in a 1980 episode of Minder were filmed during a real match at Stamford Bridge 🌟 between Chelsea and Preston North End with Terry McCann (Dennis Waterman) standing on the terraces.[235]
Players
First-team squad
As of 3 January 2024[236]
Note: 🌟 Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Out on loan
As 🌟 of 3 January 2024[237]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one 🌟 non-FIFA nationality.
Development Squad and Academy
Player of the Year
Former players
Management
Coaching staff
Source: Chelsea F.C.
Notable managers
The following managers won at least one trophy 🌟 when in charge of Chelsea:
Club personnel
Source: Chelsea F.C.
Honours
Upon winning the 2012–13 UEFA Europa League, Chelsea became the fourth club in 🌟 history to have won the "European Treble" of European Cup/UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup/UEFA Europa League, and European Cup Winners' 🌟 Cup/UEFA Cup Winners' Cup after Juventus, Ajax and Bayern Munich. Chelsea is the first English club to have won all 🌟 three major UEFA trophies.[239]
record
s shared record
Diego Costa and John Terry holding the League Cup after Chelsea's victory in 2024
Doubles
Didier Drogba 🌟 holding the Champions League trophy after Chelsea's victory in 2012
Chelsea Women
Chelsea also operate a women's football team, Chelsea Football Club 🌟 Women, formerly known as Chelsea Ladies. They have been affiliated to the men's team since 2004[240] and are part of 🌟 the club's Community Development programme. They play their home games at Kingsmeadow, formerly the home ground of the EFL League 🌟 Two club AFC Wimbledon. The club were promoted to the Premier Division for the first time in 2005 as Southern 🌟 Division champions and won the Surrey County Cup nine times between 2003 and 2013.[241] In 2010, Chelsea Ladies were one 🌟 of the eight founder members of the FA Women's Super League.[242] In 2024, Chelsea Ladies won the FA Women's Cup 🌟 for the first time, beating Notts County Ladies at Wembley Stadium,[243] and a month later clinched their first FA WSL 🌟 title to complete a league and cup double.[244] In 2024, they won a second league and FA Cup double.[245] Two 🌟 years later, in 2024, they repeated their double success by winning the third league title and the FA Women's League 🌟 Cup for the first time.[246][247] In the 2024–21 season, Chelsea won a domestic treble by winning the league, FA Cup 🌟 and League Cup.[248] They also reached the final of the UEFA Women's Champions League for the first time, losing to 🌟 Barcelona 4–0.[249]
John Terry, former captain of the Chelsea men's team, is the president of Chelsea Women.[250]
Notes
References
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