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These are Sheffield Wednesday F.C. records. ... Highest Home Attendance (all-time): Manchester City: Hillsborough Stadium: 17 February 1934 (FA Cup Round 5) 72,841 [3]
This is a list of seasons played by Sheffield Wednesday Football Club in English and European football, from 1877 (when The Wednesday first entered the Sheffield Challenge Cup) to the present day. It details the club's achievements in major competitions, the top scorers in all competitions, and the average home league attendance for each season.
Sheffield Wednesday : 0–0: Watford: Sheffield: 19:45 GMT: Palmer 29 ' Famewo 39 ' Johnson 42 ' Bannan 75 ' Report: Matheus Martins 25 ' Pollock 76 ' Hamer 90 ' Stadium: Hillsborough Stadium Attendance: 22,303 Referee: Rebecca Welch: Note: Fixture was originally scheduled for 27 January, but was postponed due to Sheffield Wednesday's FA Cup ...
St Mary's, the home of Southampton, is one of the few club grounds to have set an attendance record in the 21st century. This is a list of record home attendances of English football clubs. It lists the highest attendance of all English non-League, English Football League and Premier League clubs, for a home match above a highest attendance of ...
Average home league attendances since Sheffield Wednesday moved to Hillsborough in the 1899–1900 season, shown with the tier of league football that the team were competing in at the time. The highest seasonal average attendance at Hillsborough was 42,520 in the 1952–53 season in Division 1.
Sheffield Wednesday's first permanent home ground was at Olive Grove, a site near Queen's Road originally leased from the Duke of Norfolk. The first game at Olive Grove was a 4–4 draw with Blackburn Rovers on 12 September 1887.
Josh Windass (Sheffield Wednesday) right footed shot from a difficult angle and long range on the left is just a bit too high from a direct free kick. Sheffield Wednesday vs Millwall 16:14
Several League Cup ties and the First Division match between Sheffield United and Sheffield Wednesday were screened live on Pay-TV, available only in Westminster and Sheffield, in the 1966-67 season. Television coverage was threatened in 1983 by a bid from Telejector, to screen live League football exclusively in pubs, bars and clubs.