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Swindon Town Football Club was founded by Reverend William Pitt of Liddington in 1879. [1] The team turned professional in 1894 and joined the Southern League which was founded in the same year. [1] During this period Septimus Atterbury played for the club. The Swindon Town team for the 1909–10 season
During the final stages of the 2011/12 season Swindon Town confirmed two pre-season friendlies, the first confirmed fixture was a home tie against Championship side Crystal Palace (8 August). Shortly afterwards the club announced that a local friendly with fellow Wiltshire outfit Salisbury City was confirmed to take place at the Raymond ...
Author Dick Mattick selected the play-off final as one of the matches for his book Swindon Town Football Club – Fifty of the Finest Matches. [32] Conversely, in Sunderland A.F.C. – the official history 1879–2000 , the game was described as a "horrendous anti-climax" and that "the 1–0 scoreline was a travesty – [Sunderland] should have ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Category:Swindon Town F.C. for images. ... Pages in category "Swindon Town F.C." The following 14 pages are ...
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.
Former Swindon Town Player of the Year Jonathan Douglas looked set to sign a new contract but eventually turned it down for a move to Brentford. [9] Swindon Town returned to pre-season on 29 June 2011. During the summer, Swindon spent 10 days in Italy at a training camp in Norcia, Umbria. During the course of the week Town played two friendlies ...
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.
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