Name
Millwall

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Next Event
Ipswich vs Millwall (29 Nov)

Head Coach

Gary Rowett

League Position
18

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Established
1885 (138 years old)

Sport
Soccer

Stadium/Home
The Den
(20,146 Capacity)

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Primary Colours
#00194A
#ffffff

Location
Bermondsey, London, England

Nicknames

Competitions
English League Championship
FA Cup
EFL Cup

Last Edit
smudgie: 01/Sep/23
Site
Home / Sport / Soccer / English League Championship / Millwall



Upcoming Events
29 Nov 23 Ipswich  -  Millwall
02 Dec 23 Millwall  -  Sunderland
09 Dec 23 Cardiff  -  Millwall
13 Dec 23 Leicester  -  Millwall
16 Dec 23 Millwall  -  Huddersfield Town

Latest Results
25 Nov 23 Millwall  0 - 3  Coventry
11 Nov 23 Sheffield Weds  0 - 4  Millwall
04 Nov 23 Millwall  0 - 1  Southampton
28 Oct 23 Watford  2 - 2  Millwall
24 Oct 23 Millwall  1 - 2  Blackburn

Description
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Il Millwall Football Club, noto semplicemente come Millwall, è una società calcistica inglese con sede nella città di Londra, militante in Football League Championship (seconda divisione del calcio inglese) dal 2017. Disputa le proprie partite casalinghe al Den Stadium, impianto da 20.000 posti a sedere.

Lo stemma del club è un leone rampante che definisce il soprannome dei calciatori e dei tifosi, noti come Lions (in italiano Leoni). La divisa tradizionale consiste in una maglietta blu con pantaloncini bianchi.

Il Millwall ha trascorso gran parte della sua storia nella seconda e nella terza divisione del calcio inglese, ma ha partecipato alla First Division (prima divisione) nelle stagioni 1988-1989 e 1989-1990, ottenendo come miglior risultato un 10º posto nell'annata d'esordio. Nel 2004 il club ha raggiunto la finale di FA Cup per la prima volta nella sua storia, perdendo per 0-3 contro il Manchester United di Sir Alex Ferguson, il che gli ha permesso di qualificarsi alla Coppa UEFA dopo 120 anni e diventare la prima squadra militante nella seconda divisione inglese a partecipare ad una competizione europea (record poi eguagliato dal Birmingham City nel 2011 e dal Wigan Athletic nel 2013).

Team Members



Bialkowski
#33



Bradshaw
#9



Bryan
#15



Campbell
#14



Cooper
#5



Emakhu
#22



Esse
#25



Flemming
#10



Harding
#45



Honeyman
#39



Hutchinson
#4



Leonard
#18



Longman
#11



McNamara
#2



Mitchell
#8



Nisbet
#7



Norre
#24



Norton-Cuffy
#17



Sarkic
#20



Saville
#23



Trueman
#27



Wallace
#3



Watmore
#19


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Stadium or Home

The Den (previously called The New Den) is a football stadium and the home of Millwall Football Club. It is situated in South Bermondsey, South East London, almost directly adjacent to the railway line between London Bridge and New Cross Gate, and the SELCHP incinerator. It is under a quarter of a mile away from The Old Den. Built on a previous site of housing, a church and the Senegal Fields playing fields, it has an all-seated capacity of 20,146, with the average attendance for the 2010-11 season being 12,438. The Den is the sixth ground that Millwall have occupied since their formation as a football club in the Millwall area of the Isle of Dogs in 1885.
The Den was the first new all seater stadium to be completed after the Taylor Report on the Hillsborough disaster. It was designed with effective crowd management in mind (given Millwall's crowd problems at The Old Den), with the escape routes being short and direct. After chairman Reg Burr decided that it would not be viable to redevelop The Den as an all-seater stadium, he announced during 1990 that Millwall would be relocating to a new stadium in the Senegal Fields area. Originally, it was planned to have a seating capacity of between 25,000 to 30,000. Millwall however, could not meet the additional cost.

View from the West lower stand against Charlton Athletic during a 4-0 win in the 09-10 season.
Millwall played their final game on 8 May 1993 at The Old Den after 83 years, and moved to the new 20,000 all-seater stadium a quarter of a mile away from Cold Blow Lane. The £16 million Den was opened by John Smith MP (leader of the Labour Party and Opposition at the time) on 4 August 1993 prior to a prestigious friendly against Sporting Lisbon which Sporting won by 2-1. The Den was the first new football stadium constructed for a professional team in London since 1937.

Millwall have experienced mixed fortunes since relocating to The Den. Their first season at the stadium (1993-94) saw them finish third in Division One—their highest finish since relegation from the top flight four years earlier. However, their dreams of Premier League football were ended by a defeat in the playoffs and they were relegated to Division Two in 1996, not winning promotion from that level until 2001. They came close to reaching the Premier League again in 2002, finishing fourth but once again losing in the playoffs. The Lions reached the FA Cup final for the first time in 2004, and despite a 3-0 defeat by Manchester United they qualified for a European competition for the very first time (although their UEFA Cup campaign was short lived). Relegation from the newly named Football League Championship (second highest division in England) followed in 2006. They were promoted back to the N-Power Championship, via a 1-0 win against Swindon Town at Wembley in 2010.

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