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Football League with most clubs: 100+ clubs – Cape Verdean Football Championship; Shortest National Championship: 7 days – Greenlandic Football Championship [99] Longest football match: 3 hours and 23 minutes – Stockport County 3–2 Doncaster Rovers, On, 30 March 1946. It was a Division Three North Cup replay, after the first game ended ...
Bayern Munich's double winning team of 2014. The Double, in association football, is the achievement of winning a country's top tier division and its primary domestic cup competition in the same season. The lists in this article examine this definition of a double, while derivative sections examine much less frequent, continental instances.
The only player in NBA history to record a 40–40 is Wilt Chamberlain, who achieved the feat eight times in his career, four of which were in his rookie season. [8] Longest continuous streak of double-doubles: According to the Elias Sports Bureau, Wilt Chamberlain holds the record with 227 consecutive double-doubles from 1964 to 1967. [9]
This article concerns football records in England. Unless otherwise stated, records are taken from the Football League or Premier League . Where a different record exists for the top flight ( Football League First Division 1888–1992, and Premier League 1992–present), this is also given.
Doubles and trebles are usually long-remembered achievements, but do occur with some level of frequency, [1] whereas winning four or more trophies in one season is much rarer. In the 2010s, the terms quadruple , quintuple , and sextuple have sometimes been used to refer to winning four, five, and six trophies in a single season.
This list excludes rivalries involving current Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) schools, and thus excludes the all-time NCAA record for most consecutive wins by one rival over another: Yale (now an FCS team) beat Wesleyan University (Connecticut) (now a Division III team) 46 times in a row between 1875 and 1913. The two teams ...
Most consecutive clean sheets at the start of a season: 6, 14 August 2005 – 17 September 2005 (English top flight record) Longest sequence of unbeaten home league matches: 86, 21 February 2004 – 26 October 2008 (English record) [123] Most clean sheets in a season: 25, 2004–05 (Premier League record) [123]
The history of Arsenal Football Club from 1966 to the present day covers the third, fourth, and fifth periods of success in Arsenal's history, including three Doubles, a Cup Double, and success in European football, and an unbeaten league season.