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St Jude's Institute on Ilbert Street W10 is still in use as a community hall and in July 2011 club icon Stan Bowles unveiled a plaque celebrating its place in QPR history. 1882: QPR was founded as Queens Park Rangers by a group of schoolboys from the area of Queen’s Park in North-West London. The club initially played in local leagues and was ...
The CTA stated in early November 2013 that no payments would be made to Cubic until customer service line wait times are under five minutes, transactions at entry take less than 2.5 seconds for 99% of transactions, and that 99% of the new equipment is functioning.
QPR agreed a multi-year partnership with Erreà as the official technical kit suppliers, the 2024–25 season will be the eighth year of the deal. The kits will be 100 percent bespoke designs for the duration of the deal. [1] On 8 December 2022 QPR announced that the kit deal with Erreà had been extended until the end of the 2025/26 season. [2]
As league runners-up in the 1975–76 season, QPR qualified for the UEFA Cup for the first time in 1976–77, alongside fellow English clubs Derby County and the two Manchester clubs - City and United. [1] They would first face SK Brann of Norway, and brush them aside 11–0 on aggregate, including a 7–0 win away at the Brann Stadion.
The Queens Park Rangers team from the 1907–08 season who won the Southern League for the first time and competed in the first Charity Shield match Queens Park Rangers Football Club, also known as QPR, is an English association football club based in White City, London. The club originated from a merger between St Jude's and Christchurch Rangers in 1886, both of whom were founded in 1882 ...
The Loft is a two tier stand built in 1981 behind the goal and is traditionally where most members and season ticket holders sit. The lower tier became a Family Stand in the summer of 2012. This is the third most expensive stand to sit in. QPR generally opt to attack this end in the second half because it is believed to be good luck.
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Date Opponent Venue Result Scorers Attendance Position 7 August 2004: Rotherham United: H: 1–1: Ainsworth: 14,547 14 9 August 2004: Watford: A: 0–3: 14,737 19 14 August 2004