Name
Scunthorpe
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Next Event
Darlington F.C. vs Scunthorpe (26 Nov)

Head Coach

Neil Cox

League Position
1

Recent League Form ➡


Established
1899 (125 years old)

Sport
Soccer

Venue

Glanford Park

(9,088 Capacity)

Equipment Clearart

Archive

Primary Colours

Location
Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire

Nicknames
SUFC, The Iron

Competitions
English National League North
FA Cup
FA Trophy

Last Edit
smudgie: 05/Oct/24
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Upcoming
26 Nov Darlington F - Scunthorpe
30 Nov Scunthorpe - Alfreton Tow
14 Dec Marine - Scunthorpe
21 Dec Scunthorpe - Hereford
26 Dec Peterborough - Scunthorpe

Results
23 Nov Leamington 0 - 2 Scunthorpe
16 Nov Scunthorpe 1 - 2 Warrington R
09 Nov Scunthorpe 2 - 3 Buxton F.C.
05 Nov Spennymoor T 3 - 2 Scunthorpe
02 Nov Scunthorpe 0 - 0 Radcliffe


Description Available in:
Scunthorpe United Football Club is a professional association football club based in the town of Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire, England. The team compete in League Two, the fourth tier of the English football league system.

The team is nicknamed The Iron, and has played in a home strip of claret and blue for most of its history. It plays its home games at Glanford Park, having moved from the Old Show Ground in 1988. Grimsby Town, Hull City, Doncaster Rovers, Lincoln City and York City are its main rivals, although Doncaster are the only one of these clubs that currently plays in Scunthorpe's division. It is currently the only league club located in Lincolnshire.

The club was formed in 1899, turned professional in 1912 and joined the Football League in 1950. It achieved promotion to Division Two in 1958, where it stayed until 1964, but has spent most of its time as a Football League club in the basement tier. The club has had more success recently, however: it was promoted from Football League Two in 2005, and has spent three of the last five seasons in the Football League Championship. The Iron were relegated to Football League One in 2011, having finished bottom of the Championship.

In recent years, the club has developed a reputation for developing promising young strikers, having sold Billy Sharp, Martin Paterson and Gary Hooper on for seven-figure sums. The club was also considered one of the most financially prudent in English football, being one of only three in the top four divisions to be debt-free. This status has recently changed after it was announced that a £2 million loan from the outgoing chairman Steve Wharton was on the accounts to help the club maintain some sense of financial stability.


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