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This is a list of notable footballers who have played for Swindon Town F.C. Generally, this means players that have played 100 or more first-class matches for the club. However, some players are included who have played fewer matches but made significant contributions to the club's history (e.g. Macari, Austin, Hoddle, McMahon and Fjørtoft).
On 13 July 2013, MacDonald left Swindon Town by mutual consent, only three weeks before the start of the 2013–14 season and only five months after taking the Swindon job. In the 2014–15 season, Swindon reached the League One Play-off final again where they lost 4–0 to Preston [ 31 ] after a season in which they were competing for ...
This is a list of seasons played by Swindon Town Football Club in English and European football, from the club's formation in 1879 to the present day. It details the club's achievements in major competitions, and the top scorers for each season where known.
The Swindon Art Gallery collection was established in 1944 by a local benefactor, H. J. P. Bomford, through a significant donation of artworks. [1] Until June 2021 it was displayed in Apsley House, a 19th-century former house [2] on the corner of Bath Road and Victoria Road in Swindon's Old Town, [3] but had to leave when Swindon Borough Council decided in the summer of 2021 that the building ...
Round 2: Bradford City 1–1 Swindon Town Replay: Swindon Town 4–3 Bradford City. Round 3: Swindon Town 1–0 Blackburn Rovers. Round 4: Coventry City 2–2 Swindon Town Replay: Swindon Town 3–0 Coventry City. Round 5: Derby County 0–0 Swindon Town Replay: Swindon Town 1–0 Derby County. Semi-final: 1st Leg: Burnley 1–2 Swindon Town
More than 4,000 tonnes of food scraps were collected in Swindon in the last year [Swindon Borough Council] Residents have helped their local council save more than £500,000 after putting out ...
The origin of the Anglo-Italian League Cup (also known as the Anglo-Italian Cup Winners' Cup [1] and billed on the match programme as the International League Cup Winners' Cup) was to reward Swindon Town with European football in lieu of their ineligibility for the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup following their victory in the 1968–69 League Cup, beating Arsenal in the final.