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The Wheeze Kids – Name for the 1983 NL Championship team. Reference to their lack of youth. The Broad Street Bellies [57] - Reference to the 1993 NL Championship team for their lack of physical fitness, and the nickname of the NHL's nearby Philadelphia Flyers, the "Broad Street Bullies". Macho Row - Reference to 1993 NL Championship team.
EFL Championship teams confirmed to be playing in the 2024–25 EFL Championship season are indicated in bold.If the longest spell is the current spell, this is indicated in bold, and if the highest finish is that of the most recent season, this is also in bold.
The English Football League (EFL) is a league of professional football clubs from England and Wales. Founded in 1888 as the Football League, it is the oldest football league in the world, and was the top-level football league in England from its foundation until 1992, when the top 22 clubs split from it to form the Premier League.
The three lowest-finishing teams in the Championship are relegated to League One. The Championship is the wealthiest non-top-flight football division in the world, the ninth-richest division in Europe, [2] and the 12th best-attended division in world football (with the second highest per-match attendance of any secondary league – after the ...
The team improved to a 5–11 mark in the 2003 season. [16] The team continued to make progress with a 7–9 record in the 2004 season. [17] In the 2005 season, the Texans fell to a 2–14 record for the worst mark in the league. [18] Following the end of the season, the team fired Capers as head coach. [19] They earned the top pick in the 2006 ...
The nickname "Phillies" first appeared in The Philadelphia Inquirer on April 3, 1883, in the paper's coverage of an exhibition game by the new National League club and was the team's accepted nickname from the start. This name is one of the longest continually used nicknames in professional sports by a team in the same city. [18]
This is a list of football clubs that compete within the leagues and divisions of the men's English football league system as far down as Level 10 (Step 6), that is to say, six divisions below the Premier League/English Football League. Also included are clubs from outside England that play within the English system (suitably highlighted).
A club's mascot is a cartoon character, often that of an animal, that symbolises some virtue boasted by the team. Most of them have proper names. Usually mascots come in two versions, a "soft" one, which is the official and a "hardcore" one used by ultras and torcidas , which often contain traces of vulgarity or violence.