List of AFC Wimbledon records and statistics

AFC Wimbledon is an English professional association football club, based in Kingston upon Thames, Greater London. The club was formed on 30 May 2002 by supporters of Wimbledon Football Club, led by Kris Stewart, Marc Jones and Trevor Williams who strongly opposed the decision of an independent commission appointed by the FA to allow the relocation of Wimbledon F.C. to Milton Keynes, to be subsequently rebranded as MK Dons.[1]

AFC Wimbledon's progress through the football pyramid up to the present day.

The club was accepted into the Combined Counties League for the 2002–03 season and proceeded to rise through the non-League system, winning five promotions in nine seasons to return to the Football League less than a decade after the original Wimbledon Football Club had still been competing in the top flight of English football.[2] AFC Wimbledon’s average home attendance at league fixtures for their first season exceeded 3,000 – higher than the average attendance in the same season of Wimbledon F.C., who were still playing in the First Division (now the Football League Championship).[3]

This list encompasses the major honours won by AFC Wimbledon and records set by the club, its managers and its players. The player records section includes details of the club's leading goalscorers and those who have made the most competitive first-team appearances. The club's attendance records are also included in the list.

As of 2016, the club still holds the record for having the longest run of unbeaten league games at any level of senior English football, having remained unbeaten for 78 league matches between 22 February 2003 (a 2–0 defeat at home to Withdean 2000) and 4 December 2004 (a 2–0 defeat at Cray Wanderers).[4][5] The club's record appearance maker is defender Sam Hatton, who made 187 league appearances for The Dons between 2007 and 2012 and the club's record goalscorer is Kevin Cooper, who scored 90 league goals in 87 appearances between 2002 and 2004.

Honours

Following the move of Wimbledon F.C. to Milton Keynes and its rebranding as Milton Keynes Dons, there was much debate over the rightful home of all the honours won by Wimbledon F.C.. Former supporters argued that the trophies won by Wimbledon F.C. rightfully belong to the community of Wimbledon and should be returned to the local area. AFC Wimbledon believe that the honours of Wimbledon F.C. belong to the fans, as illustrated by the following statement on the club's official website:

The supporters of AFC Wimbledon believe that our club is a continuation of the spirit which formed Wimbledon Old Centrals in 1889 and kept Wimbledon Football Club alive until May 2002. We consider that a football club is not simply the legal entity which controls it, but that it is the community formed by the fans and players working towards a common goal. We therefore reproduce the honours won by what we believe was, and will always be, "our" club, in our community.
AFC Wimbledon, statement on the club's official website

In October 2006, an agreement was reached between Milton Keynes Dons F.C., the MK Dons Supporters Association, the Wimbledon Independent Supporters Association and the Football Supporters Federation. The replica of the FA Cup plus all club patrimony gathered under the name of Wimbledon F.C. would be returned to the London Borough of Merton. Ownership of trademarks and website domain names related to Wimbledon F.C. would also be transferred to the Borough. It was also agreed that any reference made to Milton Keynes Dons F.C. should refer only to events after 7 August 2004, the date of the first league match played as Milton Keynes Dons. As a result of this deal, the Football Supporters Federation announced that the supporters of Milton Keynes Dons would be permitted to become members of the federation, and that it would no longer appeal to the supporters of other clubs to boycott MK Dons matches.[6] The replica trophies and Wimbledon F.C. memorabilia were returned to Merton on 2 August 2007.[7]

Honours

Only honours won by AFC Wimbledon are listed here. For a list of honours won by Wimbledon F.C., see Wimbledon F.C. Honours

League honours

Cups and Trophies

Minor honours

Players

Most league appearances

As of 30 April 2016.

Football League era (2011–present)

The following table shows players who have made 100 appearances for AFC Wimbledon in Football League matches as well as all major Football League cup competitions in descending order. The statistics only incorporate appearances made by players since AFC Wimbledon gained promotion to the Football League in 2011. In instances where two players have the same total number of appearances, league appearances shall be given precedence when determining ranking. The figure in parentheses is the number of appearances made by a player as a substitute. The figures also take into account appearances made by players whilst they were on loan to AFC Wimbledon from a parent club.

Name Seasons Football League FA Cup Football League Cup Football League Trophy Total
1England Sammy Moore2010–2015130 (9)06 0(1)03 0(1)05 0(0)144 (11) – 155
2England Barry Fuller2013–present134 (0)06 0(0)03 0(0)03 0(1)146 (1) – 147
3England Jack Midson2011–2014100 (26)05 0(2)02 0(1)04 0(0)111 (29) – 140
4England George Francomb2012–present109 (16)05 0(0)03 0(0)03 0(1)120 (17) – 137
5England Luke Moore2009–201480 (24)04 0(1)02 0(1)00 0(0)86 (26) – 112

Non–League Football era (2002–2011)

The following table shows the players who have made 100 appearances or more for AFC Wimbledon in semi-professional league matches (spanning from the Combined Counties Premier League up until the Conference National) as well as in all major Non–League cup competitions (including the Combined Counties League Premier Challenge Cup, the Isthmian League Cup and the Conference League Cup) in descending order. The statistics only incorporate appearances made by players prior to AFC Wimbledon gaining promotion to the Football League in 2011. In instances where two players have the same total number of appearances, league appearances shall be given precedence when determining ranking. The figure in parentheses is the number of appearances made by a player as a substitute.

Name Seasons Non–League Non–League Cup FA Cup FA Trophy FA Vase Total
1England Sam Hatton2007–2012144 (15)1 (1)014 0(2)010 0(2)00 0(0)169 (20) – 189
2England Antony Howard2004–2008123 (14)6 (1)015 0(0)017 0(0)00 0(0)161 (15) – 176
3England Andy Little2005–2010109 (0)3 (0)015 0(0)016 0(0)00 0(0)143 (0) – 143
4England Danny Kedwell2008–2011113 (6)0 (0)013 0(0)04 0(2)00 0(0)130 (8) – 138
5England Luke Garrard2006–201088 (10)0 (0)013 0(1)06 0(1)00 0(0)107 (12) – 119
6Republic of Ireland Gavin Bolger2002–200578 (17)10 (0)03 0(1)00 0(1)06 0(0)97 (19) – 116
7England Jon Main2007–201078 (23)0 (0)09 0(1)01 0(2)00 0(0)88 (26) – 114
8England Richard Butler2004–200767 (19)7 (1)07 0(1)08 0(0)00 0(0)89 (21) – 110

Top scorers

As of 30 April 2016.

Football League era (2011–present)

The following table charts the club's top scorers in all Football League matches as well as all major Football League cup competitions in descending order. The statistics only incorporate appearances and goals made by players since AFC Wimbledon gained promotion to the Football League in 2011. In instances where two players have the same total goal tally, league goals shall be given precedence when determining ranking. Only players with 20 goals or more in all competitions have been included. The figure in parentheses shows the total number of appearances made in relation to goals scored.

Name Seasons Football League FA Cup Football League Cup Football League Trophy Total
1England Jack Midson2011–201438 (126)03 0(7)01 0(3)00 0(4)42 (140)
2Montserrat Lyle Taylor2015–present20 (42)00 0(1)00 0(1)01 0(1)21 (45)
3England Adebayo Akinfenwa2014–present19 (82)01 0(4)00 0(2)01 0(2)21 (90)

Non–League Football era (2002–2011)

The following table charts the club's top scorers in all semi-professional league matches from the Combined Counties Premier League up until the Conference National as well as in all major Non–League cup competitions (including the Combined Counties League Premier Challenge Cup, the Isthmian League Cup and the Conference League Cup) in descending order. The statistics only incorporate appearances and goals made by players prior to AFC Wimbledon gaining promotion to the Football League in 2011. In instances where two players have the same total goal tally, league goals shall be given precedence when determining ranking. Only players with 20 goals or more in all competitions have been included. The figure in parentheses shows the total number of appearances made in relation to goals scored.

Name Seasons Non–League Non–League Cup FA Cup FA Trophy FA Vase Total
1England Kevin Cooper2002–200490 (86)10 (8)00 0(0)00 0(0)04 0(5)104 (99)
2England Danny Kedwell2008–201157 (119)0 (0)02 0(13)04 0(6)00 0(0)63 (138)
3England Jon Main2007–201055 (101)0 (0)02 0(10)01 0(3)00 0(0)58 (114)
4England Richard Butler2004–200743 (86)2 (8)03 0(8)04 0(8)00 0(0)52 (110)
5England Joe Sheerin2002–200535 (85)0 (1)00 0(3)00 0(1)03 0(5)38 (95)
6England Matt Everard2003–200528 (70)4 (8)00 0(1)00 0(1)02 0(5)34 (85)
7England Ryan Gray2003–200622 (75)3 (9)00 0(4)00 0(2)01 0(6)26 (96)
8England Sam Hatton2007–201221 (159)0 (2)03 0(16)01 0(12)00 0(0)25 (189)
9Republic of Ireland Gavin Bolger2002–200521 (95)2 (10)00 0(4)00 0(1)02 0(6)25 (116)
10England Roscoe D'Sane2006–200717 (35)0 (1)01 0(4)03 0(6)00 0(0)21 (46)
11New Zealand Shane Smeltz2005–200619 (43)0 (2)00 0(3)01 0(5)00 0(0)20 (53)

Top Scorer by season

Non-League Top Scorers by season (2002–2011)

The following table lists all top scorers for AFC Wimbledon by season. The statistics incorporate results for league matches and results in all major Non-League Cup competitions (including the Combined Counties League Premier Challenge Cup, the Isthmian League Cup and the Conference League Cup as well as results in the FA Vase, the FA Trophy and the FA Cup. The figure in parentheses gives the total number of appearances made by the player in that competition during the season in which they became top scorer.

Season Name Non-League Non-League Cup FA Cup FA Trophy FA Vase Total
2002–03England Kevin Cooper37 (45)1 (2)0 (0)0 (0)0 (0)38 (47)
2003–04England Kevin Cooper53 (41)5 (6)0 (0)0 (0)4 (5)62 (52)
2004–05England Richard Butler24 (37)2 (4)2 (4)0 (2)0 (0)28 (47)
2005–06New Zealand Shane Smeltz19 (43)0 (2)0 (3)1 (5)0 (0)20 (53)
2006–07England Roscoe D'Sane17 (35)0 (1)1 (4)3 (6)0 (0)21 (46)
2007–08Scotland Steven Ferguson10 (43)0 (0)1 (3)0 (5)0 (0)11 (51)
2008–09England Jon Main33 (41)0 (0)1 (6)0 (1)0 (0)34 (48)
2009–10England Danny Kedwell21 (40)0 (0)1 (3)2 (3)0 (0)24 (46)
2010–11England Danny Kedwell23 (45)0 (0)0 (3)2 (2)0 (0)25 (50)

Football League Top Scorers by season (2011–present)

The following table lists all top scorers for AFC Wimbledon by season. The statistics incorporate results for league matches and results in all major Football League Cup competitions (including the Football League Cup and Football League Trophy as well as the FA Cup. The figure in parentheses gives the total number of appearances made by the player in that competition during the season in which they became top scorer.

Season Name Football League Football League Cup Football League Trophy FA Cup Total
2011–12England Jack Midson18 (46)1 (1)0 (2)1 (3)20 (52)
2012–13England Jack Midson13 (43)0 (1)0 (1)2 (3)15 (48)
2013–14England Michael Smith9 (23)0 (0)0 (1)1 (1)10 (25)
2014–15England Adebayo Akinfenwa13 (37)0 (1)1 (1)1 (4)15 (43)

Player of the Year

The following table lists every player that has been voted as 'Player of the Year' by The Wimbledon Independent Supporters Association (WISA) since the club's inaugural season. The (c) symbol signifies that a player was selected to act as club captain during the season in which they won the award. Names written in italics signify that a player was also AFC Wimbledon's league top scorer during the season in which they were elected Player of the Year.

Season Player of the Year
2002–03 England Lee Sidwell
2003–04 England Matt Everard
2004–05 England Richard Butler
2005–06 England Andy Little
2006–07 England Antony Howard
2007–08 England Jason Goodliffe (c)
2008–09 England Ben Judge
2009–10 England Danny Kedwell
2010–11 England Sam Hatton
2011–12 England Sammy Moore
Season Player of the Year
2012–13 England Jack Midson
2013–14 England Barry Fuller
2014–15 England Adebayo Akinfenwa

Young Player of the Year

The following table lists every player that has been voted 'Young Player of the Year' since the club's inaugural season. In order to be eligible to win the Natalie Callow Memorial Trophy players must be aged 21 or under at the start of the season in which they are nominated for the award. Names written in italics signify that a player was also AFC Wimbledon's league top scorer during the season in which they were elected Player of the Year.

Season Player of the Year
2002–03 ?
2003–04 Republic of Ireland Gavin Bolger
2004–05 England Richard Butler
2005–06 England Richard Butler
2006–07 England Luke Garrard
2007–08 England Chris Hussey
2008–09 England Chris Hussey
2009–10 England Seb Brown
2010–11 England Seb Brown
2011–12 England Billy Knott
Season Player of the Year
2012–13 Wales Jonathan Meades
2013–14 England George Francomb
2014–15 England Adedeji Oshilaja

Team of the Year

The following AFC Wimbledon players were selected for the honour of being named in the 'Team of the Year' for their respective league based on consistently high performances throughout a given season.

2010–11 Conference Premier Team of the Year

Position Player
GK England Seb Brown
Position Player
DF England Sam Hatton
Position Player
FW England Danny Kedwell

Managers

Managerial Statistics

As of 30 April 2016.

These statistics incorporate results for league matches (including play-off matches) and results in all major League Cup competitions (including the Combined Counties League Premier Challenge Cup, the Isthmian League Cup, the Conference League Cup, the Football League Cup and the Football League Trophy) as well as results in the FA Vase, the FA Trophy and the FA Cup.

Caretaker managers are shown in italics.

Name From Until Games Won Drawn Lost Win %
England Terry Eames13 June 200213 February 2004*82694984.15
England Nick English13 February 200411 May 200421192090.48
Northern Ireland Dave Anderson11 May 20042 May 200716195402659.01
England Terry Brown15 May 200719 September 2012266128548548.12
England Simon Bassey19 September 201210 October 2012420250.00
England Neal Ardley10 October 2012present19267557034.90

* suspended as manager on 13 February but not officially dismissed until 18 February 2004.

Honours

The following is a list of all AFC Wimbledon managers to date who have ever won a league promotion or major trophy during their tenure.

Caretaker managers are shown in italics.

Name From Until Games Win % Honours
England Nick English13 February 200411 May 20042190.482003–04 Combined Counties League Premier Division Champions
2003–04 Combined Counties League Premier Challenge Cup winners
Northern Ireland Dave Anderson11 May 20042 May 200716159.012004–05 Isthmian League First Division Champions
England Terry Brown15 May 200719 September 201226648.122007–08 Isthmian League Premier Division play-off winners
2008–09 Conference South Champions
2010–11 Conference National play-off winners

Team Records

Undoubtedly the club's greatest record to date is securing 5 promotions in 9 seasons, believed to be the fastest ascent for any English football club. Chief executive Erik Samuelson said that the club has always planned a return to the top flights of English football: "I was clearing out some old files the other day and found a five-year plan from the first season and we assumed promotion every other year. It never occurred to us that we wouldn't succeed. We didn't expect it but always believed we would do what the old Wimbledon did and we have."[30]

Matches

Scorelines

Points

Streaks

Seasonal Results

Goals

Attendance records

Average attendance

Only includes attendances at league home fixtures, rounded to one decimal place:

Player records

References

  1. Buckley, Will (14 July 2002). "A club is born". The Observer. Retrieved 3 June 2009.
  2. Moody, Graham (20 May 2011). "Timeline: The rise of AFC Wimbledon". The Surrey Comet. Retrieved 20 May 2011.
  3. Marcotti, Gabriele (2 December 2012). "A Wimbledon-Wimbledon Situation". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  4. "Cray Wanderers 2–0 AFC Wimbledon". wimbledonheritage.co.uk. 4 December 2004. Retrieved 3 June 2009.
  5. "AFC Wimbledon set English record". BBC Football. 13 November 2004. Retrieved 23 November 2007.
  6. ""Accord on history and honours of Wimbledon F.C." – WISA website". Wimbledon Independent Supporters Association. 9 September 2006. Archived from the original on 7 January 2008. Retrieved 24 November 2007.
  7. "Merton given back Dons trophies". BBC. 2 August 2007. Retrieved 24 November 2007.
  8. "AFC Wimbledon show their class in Ramsey tournament". iomtoday.co.im. 21 March 2013. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  9. "Match report for Lanes Cup vs. Tooting & Mitcham United 2007". AFC Wimbledon. 1 April 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  10. "Match report for Lanes Cup vs. Tooting & Mitcham United 2011". AFC Wimbledon. 1 April 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  11. "Match report for London Senior Cup vs. Metropolitan Police 2014". AFC Wimbledon. 6 May 2014. Retrieved 7 May 2014.
  12. "Match report for London Senior Cup vs. Metropolitan Police F.C. 2009". AFC Wimbledon. 1 April 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  13. "Match report for Supporters Direct Cup vs. Enfield town 2002". AFC Wimbledon. 12 August 2002. Retrieved 14 September 2007.
  14. "Match report for Supporters Direct Cup vs. FCUM 2005". AFC Wimbledon. 23 June 2005. Retrieved 14 September 2007.
  15. "Match report for Supporters Direct Cup vs. FCUM 2009". AFC Wimbledon. 1 April 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  16. "Match report for Supporters Direct Cup vs. Brentford". AFC Wimbledon. 20 July 2004. Retrieved 14 September 2007.
  17. "Match report for Supporters Direct Cup vs. FCUM". AFC Wimbledon. 22 June 2006. Retrieved 14 September 2007.
  18. "Match report for Supporters Direct Cup vs. Brentford". AFC Wimbledon. 19 July 2008. Retrieved 19 July 2008.
  19. "Match report for Surrey Senior Cup vs. Walton & Hersham 2004". AFC Wimbledon. 1 April 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  20. "Match report for Surrey Senior Cup vs. Kingstonian 2005". AFC Wimbledon. 1 April 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  21. "Match report for Trevor Jones Memorial Cup vs. Kingstonian 2004". AFC Wimbledon. 1 April 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  22. "Match report for Trevor Jones Memorial Cup vs. Kingstonian 2005". AFC Wimbledon. 1 April 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  23. "Match report for Trevor Jones Memorial Cup vs. Kingstonian 2007". AFC Wimbledon. 1 April 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  24. "Match report for Trevor Jones Memorial Cup vs. Kingstonian 2008". AFC Wimbledon. 1 April 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  25. "Match report for Trevor Jones Memorial Cup vs. Kingstonian 2003". AFC Wimbledon. 1 April 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  26. "Match report for Trevor Jones Memorial Cup vs. Kingstonian 2006". AFC Wimbledon. 1 April 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  27. "Dons give Cards a tough afternoon". Woking Football Club. 25 July 2010. Archived from the original on 27 July 2010. Retrieved 26 July 2010.
  28. "Billy Lucas Memorial Cup". AFC Wimbledon. 21 March 2013. Archived from the original on 2 August 2003. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  29. "Dons claim "The John Morris Memorial Trophy" following penalty shoot-out". Bedfont Town Football Club. 22 July 2011. Archived from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 26 March 2012.
  30. MK Dons and AFC Wimbledon gear up for first meeting, BBC Sport, 13 November 2012. Retrieved 27 Nov 2012.
  31. "Football League Two average attendance 2014–15". worldfootball.net. Retrieved 2015-11-28.
  32. "Football League Two average attendance 2013–14". Football365.co.uk. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  33. "Football League Two average attendance 2012–13". Football365.co.uk. Retrieved 2013-04-28.
  34. "Football League Two average attendance 2011–12". worldfootball.net. Retrieved 2012-09-13.
  35. "Conference National average attendance 2010–11". totalworlds.com. Retrieved 2012-09-13.
  36. "Conference National average attendance 2009–10". totalworlds.com. Retrieved 2012-09-13.
  37. "Conference South average attendance 2008–09". totalworlds.com. Retrieved 2012-09-13.
  38. "Isthmian League Premier Division average attendance 2007–08". totalworlds.com. Retrieved 2012-09-13.
  39. "Isthmian League Premier Division average attendance 2006–07". totalworlds.com. Retrieved 2012-09-13.
  40. "Isthmian League Premier Division average attendance 2005–06". totalworlds.com. Retrieved 2012-09-13.
  41. "Isthmian League Division One average attendance 2004–05". totalworlds.com. Retrieved 2012-09-13.
  42. "Combined Counties League average attendance 2003–04". totalworlds.com. Retrieved 2012-09-13.
  43. "Combined Counties League average attendance 2002–03". totalworlds.com. Retrieved 2012-09-13.
  44. Graham, Moody (20 January 2012). "Dons' Harrison not fazed by record signing tag". Retrieved 25 March 2012.
  45. "Profile details for Chris Hussey". Coventry City. 20 June 2012. Retrieved 2012-06-20.

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, May 02, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.