Formation and rise to prominence (1874−1886) 's trophy haul of six League Championships and six FA Cups established Aston Villa as the most successful club in England. He has been described as the world's first paid football manager. (1846–1911), founder of The Football League Aston Villa are believed to have formed
on 21 November 1874, by members of the Aston Villa
Wesleyan Chapel in
Handsworth: which is now part of
Birmingham. The chapel stood at Villa Cross, a road junction whose name derived from a house known as
Aston Villa, a suburban
Georgian villa that over time had given its name to the surrounding locality. The four founders of Aston Villa Football Club were Jack Hughes, Frederick Matthews, Walter Price and William Scattergood, who were members of the chapel's cricket team looking for a way to stay fit during the winter months. Having watched a fellow member of their Bible class playing in a rugby match, they paused beneath a dim gas lamp near Villa Cross and agreed that rugby was a little too rough, deciding instead to play association football. The meeting beneath the gas lamp is traditionally regarded as the birth of Aston Villa F.C. Due to the lack of local football teams Aston Villa's first match was against the local
Aston Brook St Mary's Rugby team. As a condition of the match, the Villa side had to agree to play the first half under Rugby rules and the second half under Association rules. Villa won their first game 1–0. The infant club's fortunes changed forever when a young Scotsman called
George Ramsay stumbled across the Villa players' practice match in
Aston Park in 1876. He was asked to make up the numbers, and they were amazed by his skills; they had never seen such a display of close ball control before. When the game was over, the Villa players surrounded him and invited him to join the club and become their captain. Word spread about how fine a player Ramsay was, spectators began turning up to watch the little man nicknamed "Scotty". He also took charge of training, Ramsay later described the newly formed club's approach to the game as "a dash at the man and a big kick at the ball". On the other hand, Ramsay had been influenced by the Scottish club
Queen's Park, who pioneered what became known as "combination football" in his native
Glasgow. The intricate passing game he introduced was a revolutionary move for an English club in the late 1870s. Villa began to establish themselves as one of the best teams in the Midlands, winning their first honour, the
Birmingham Senior Cup in 1880. The club went on to lift the trophy nine times in the next 12 seasons.
Victorian and Edwardian golden age (1886–1914) winning team of 1896–97 with the
First Division Championship and the
FA Cup (shared with Queen's Park), as well as a number of
county cup honours scores one of his two goals in the
1905 FA Cup final. Following the professionalisation of football in 1885, the club decided that it needed a full-time paid manager. The following advert was placed in the
Birmingham Daily Gazette newspaper in June 1886: Villa received 150 applicants for the role, but with his strong association with the club George Ramsay was the overwhelming choice of the membership. Thus on 26 June 1886, Aston Villa appointed what has been described as the world's first professional football manager. During the following season Aston Villa rose to national prominence, as the first Midlands team to win the FA Cup in 1887. Villa's captain, the powerful Scottish centre-forward
Archie Hunter, became one of the game's first household names, being the first player to score in every round of the FA Cup. Aston Villa were one of the dozen teams that competed in the inaugural
Football League in 1888 with one of the club's directors,
William McGregor being the league's founder. Following the professionalisation of football in 1885, clubs needed regular income to pay their players' wages. Frequently
friendlies were cancelled due to opponents' FA Cup or
county cup matches or clubs simply failed to honour a fixture in favour of a more lucrative match elsewhere. McGregor took action after seeing Villa matches cancelled, to the increasing frustration of the club's fans, on five consecutive Saturdays. suggesting the creation of a league competition that would provide a number of guaranteed fixtures for its member clubs each season. Following two meetings between representatives of the leading clubs, the world's first Football League season began in September 1888 with 12 member clubs from the Midlands and north of England:
Accrington, Aston Villa, Blackburn Rovers, Bolton Wanderers,
Burnley,
Derby County,
Everton,
Notts County, Preston North End,
Stoke, West Bromwich Albion and Wolverhampton Wanderers. Despite Villa founding the league, by 1893 they had yet to win it. Villa Committee Member
Frederick Rinder was the instigator of a club meeting at Barwick Street in February 1893 that removed the committee running the club at the time. All fourteen committee members resigned and were replaced by a committee of five led by Rinder after he gave a rousing speech criticising the board's tolerance of ill discipline and players' drinking. On the pitch, manager
George Ramsay was moulding a team that became renowned for its short, quick combination passing which saw Villa win its first league title in
1893–94; the season after that the club won its second FA Cup in
1894-95. This was followed by back-to-back League titles in
1895–96 and
1896–97. Aston Villa emerged as the most successful English club of the
Victorian era, winning no fewer than five League titles and three FA Cups by the end of
Queen Victoria's reign in 1901. Villa's captain during this era was Birmingham-born forward
John Devey, who enjoyed a successful partnership with the lightning-fast winger
Charlie Athersmith and marshalling Villa's defence was the tough-tackling Scotsman
James Cowan, who had an unrivalled sense of timing and anticipation.
In 1897, the year Villa won
The Double, they moved into their present home, the Aston Lower Grounds. Supporters coined the name "Villa Park"; no official declaration listed the ground as
Villa Park. Success continued into the
Edwardian era, with Villa lifting the FA Cup for the fourth time in
1904–05, and a sixth league title in
1909–10. A further FA Cup triumph was achieved on the eve of the
First World War in 1913, with the club narrowly missing out on winning a second
Double, finishing runners-up in the league. Star players during this era included
Howard Spencer, the cultured defender who captained both Villa and England, and the prolific strike force of
Joe Bache and
Harry Hampton who between them scored 382 goals in claret and blue.
Relative decline and first relegation (1920–1939) (1897–1964) scored 244 goals in 531 appearances for Villa between 1920 and 1934. He is Aston Villa's all-time top goalscorer. (1906–1980) scored 50 goals for Villa in the 1930–31 season, a record-breaking campaign in which the team scored 128 top-flight goals. In January 1920,
Billy Walker scored twice on his Villa debut in a 2–1 FA Cup first-round win over
QPR; the club won the FA Cup for the sixth time that season and Walker went on to establish himself as Villa's star player of the 1920s, scoring a record 244 goals in 531 appearances, captaining Villa and
England.
George Ramsay retired in 1926, at the age of 71, and his replacement
Billy Smith was unable to continue Ramsay's success. In reality, several other football clubs had caught up with Aston Villa, most notably
Arsenal, to which the club finished runners-up in the league in
1930–31 and
1932–33. Despite missing out on the league title, Villa Park crowds were entertained by attacking football; the 128 goals scored in the 1930–31 season remains the all-time top-flight record. A remarkable 49 of the league goals that season were scored by centre-forward
Tom 'Pongo' Waring, with another 30 goals from winger
Eric Houghton. The club appointed
Jimmy McMullan as manager in 1934, however, the move proved disastrous, resulting in Villa's first ever relegation in 1935–36 after 48 years in the top flight. Villa struggled largely due to a dismal defensive record: they conceded 110 goals in 42 games, 7 of them coming from
Arsenal's
Ted Drake in an
infamous 1–7 defeat at Villa Park. The club made seven signings and spent a staggering sum for the time of £35,500 trying to retain top-flight status at all costs, but were unable to buy their way out of trouble. Aston Villa, at the time one of the most famous and successful clubs in world football, was relegated in 1936 for the first time in its history. Following relegation to the Second Division, the Villa board brought back the ageing former club chairman
Fred Rinder, who said on his return "Villa have been a great club, are still a great club, and always will be a great club". He was vocal in his criticism of the board for its "almost total neglect of the reserve team, instead relying on paying big fees for ready made players". He believed that this change in policy from scouting and developing young homegrown talent led to a decline in the club's culture and style of play, which alongside a tolerance of ill-discipline in the players led to Villa's relegation. Rinder's first act was to travel to Austria to recruit the progressive coach
Jimmy Hogan as manager. Within two seasons, Hogan had guided Villa back to the top flight as Second Division champions playing attractive free-flowing football. Hogan outlined his philosophy: "I am a teacher and lover of constructive football with every pass, every kick, every movement an object." He used to tell his players that "football was like a
Viennese waltz, a rhapsody. One-two-three, one-two-three, pass-move-pass, pass-move-pass." However, the
Second World War ended Hogan's project to restore Aston Villa to the top of the English game.
Mediocrity and discontent (1945–1961) Like all English clubs, Villa lost seven seasons to the Second World War, and that conflict brought several careers to a premature end. Bumper crowds flocked to Villa Park following the war, 76,588 people attended the FA Cup quarter-final between Villa and
Derby County in March 1946, which is the all-time record attendance at Villa Park. The team was rebuilt under the guidance of former player
Alex Massie for the remainder of the 1940s. Star players of this era included the one-club man
Harry Parkes, the Welsh centre forward
Trevor Ford and inside-forward
Johnny Dixon, however the club only achieved mid-table finishes throughout the forties and fifties, never finishing higher than 6th place in the league. The board came in for increasing criticism during this time, with the 1953 AGM described by the
Sports Argus as "the longest and liveliest Villa meeting". Shareholders and supporters criticised the club's lack of youth development, recruitment and training methods. When
Danny Blanchflower submitted a transfer request in 1954 he said that "the club had grown fat and lazy on its old traditions and the decay was eating at the once solid foundations". Despite narrowly avoiding relegation the season before, Aston Villa's first trophy for 37 years came in the 1956–57 season when another former Villa player,
Eric Houghton led the club to a then record seventh FA Cup Final win, defeating the 'Busby Babes' of
Manchester United 2–1 with Northern Irish winger
Peter McParland scoring both goals. The team continued to struggle for consistency in the league though, which led to Eric Houghton being sacked in December 1958. His replacement
Joe Mercer could not prevent the club being relegated for only the second time in their history in
1958-59. However, under the stewardship of Mercer, Villa returned to the top-flight in 1960 as Second Division Champions with a talented young side which became known as 'Mercer's Minors'. In the following season Aston Villa became the first team to win the
Football League Cup, with England centre-forward
Gerry Hitchens scoring an impressive 42 goals in
1960-61.
Deep malaise and revival (1961–1974) Hitchens' goals brought him to the attention of Italian club
Inter Milan, who offered him a large financial incentive to sign. He was sold for £85,000 in summer of 1961, his replacement,
Derek Dougan was not a success and Villa slid backwards. Mercer's forced retirement from the club in July 1964, following a stress-induced stroke, signalled a period of deep turmoil and malaise. The most successful club in England had failed to keep pace with changes in the modern game; three of the five-man board of directors were over 70 years old, the club had neglected its scouting network and coaching structure and the club's finances were in a parlous state. This led to the club selling its top striker
Tony Hateley to
Chelsea for £100,000 in October 1966, without his goals Villa were relegated for the third time in its history, under manager
Dick Taylor in 1967. The board even sold the club's training ground outside Villa Park for housing, leaving the team in the position of training on borrowed training pitches of local factory teams. The following season the fans called for the board to resign as Villa finished 16th in the Second Division. With mounting debts and Villa lying at the bottom of Division Two, the board sacked
Tommy Cummings (the manager brought in to replace Taylor), and within weeks the entire board resigned under overwhelming pressure from fans. After much speculation, control of the club was bought by London financier Pat Matthews, who brought in
Doug Ellis as chairman in December 1968. Off the pitch, the board purchased the new 20-acre
Bodymoor Heath Training Ground in December 1971, with a view to improving the club's youth development and coaching facilities.
Back among the elite (1974–1992) Following a 14th-place finish in the Second Division, Crowe was replaced in August 1974 by
Ron Saunders. He was a fitness fanatic, whose brand of no-nonsense man-management proved effective, with the club winning the League Cup the following season and, by the end of season 1974–75, he had taken Aston Villa back into the First Division and into Europe. One player who had been a mainstay of the Villa team throughout the rollercoaster of relegations and subsequent revival was fan-favourite
Charlie Aitkin, who made 659 appearances at
left back for the club between 1959 and 1976, making him Villa's all-time record appearance holder. Aston Villa were back among the elite as Saunders continued to mould a winning team, finishing 4th in the league and winning a further League Cup in
1976–77, with the formidable strike partnership of
Brian Little and
Andy Gray, who became the first player to win both the
PFA Young Player of the Year and
PFA Players' Player of the Year in the same season. The 1970s was an era of boardroom unrest at Villa Park. Ron Saunders had a strained relationship with
Doug Ellis, resenting Doug's perceived interference in football matters. Over time Ellis became an isolated figure on the board, as the other directors sided with Saunders. He was ousted as chairman in 1975 to make way for
Sir William Dugdale. He remained on the board until 1979, when he left the club after a protracted power struggle with majority shareholder
Ron Bendall. With Ellis gone, Saunders became all-powerful as manager. Villa achieved a seventh top-flight league title in
1980–81, with players such as
Gordon Cowans,
Tony Morley and captain
Dennis Mortimer leading the club to its first top-flight title in 71 years. Remarkably, they did so using just 14 players, with seven players being ever-presents. Villa's Birmingham-born forward
Gary Shaw was named 1980-1981
PFA Young Player of the Year. To the surprise of commentators and fans, Ron Saunders quit halfway through the
1981–82 season, with Villa in the quarter final of the European Cup. Saunders had expressed his exasperation with the board at the lack of funds available to him to strengthen the team and fell out with the chairman Ron Bendall over the terms of his contract. He was replaced by his softly-spoken assistant manager
Tony Barton who guided the club to a 1–0 victory over
Bayern Munich in the
European Cup final in
Rotterdam courtesy of a
Peter Withe goal in the 67th minute. Ten minutes into the final, Villa's first choice goalkeeper,
Jimmy Rimmer, was injured and young substitute keeper
Nigel Spink was called into action, having only made one previous appearance in the first team. Spink performed superbly, keeping a clean sheet, and helping Villa become only the fourth English club to lift the European Cup. The following season the defence of the European Cup ended in a quarter-final defeat to
Juventus, but Villa won the
European Super Cup, beating
Barcelona 3–1 on aggregate. This marked a pinnacle though and Villa's fortunes declined sharply for most of the 1980s. Doug Ellis returned as chairman and majority shareholder in November 1982. The club was saddled with significant debts and questions had been raised by the police regarding fraudulent financial activity surrounding the building of the North Stand at Villa Park from 1980 to 1982. The cost of the work was £1.3 million. An internal investigation found that £700,000 of the £1.3 million worth of bills were unaccounted for. A later report by accountants
Deloitte found that there were "serious breaches of recommended codes of practice and poor site supervision". Ellis immediately set about trying to reduce the club's overheads. He informed the players that they needed to take pay cuts and told the manager Tony Barton that there was a need to reduce the playing staff. Saunders' team was broken up and not adequately replaced, culminating in the club being relegated in 1987, just five years after Villa had been crowned European champions. However, Villa bounced back quickly, achieving promotion the following year under
Graham Taylor and a runners-up position in the top-flight in the 1989–90 season with a fine side that included
Paul McGrath,
Tony Daley and
David Platt. Following this success, Graham Taylor accepted the offer to take over as England manager in 1990.
24 years in the Premier League (1992–2016) Villa were one of the founding members of the Premier League in 1992, one of just three clubs to have been founding members of both the Football League in 1888 and the Premier League, along with
Blackburn Rovers and
Everton. Villa finished runners-up to Manchester United in the inaugural season under manager
Ron Atkinson. His side lifted the League Cup in 1994, beating Manchester United 3–1 in the final, with goals from
Dalian Atkinson and
Dean Saunders, but the team struggled for form in the league and Atkinson was replaced by former Villa striker
Brian Little in November 1994. Little assembled a young side which included players as
Gareth Southgate,
Steve Staunton,
Ian Taylor and
Dwight Yorke, leading the club to a fifth League Cup triumph in 1996, beating
Leeds United 3–0 at Wembley. Villa finished fourth in the league that season, and fifth the season after. Following a dip in form, Doug Ellis sacked Little and replaced him with another former Villa player
John Gregory in February 1998. One of his first matches in charge was the
UEFA Cup quarter-final against
Atlético Madrid, which Villa lost on away goals over two-legs. In the summer of 1998, Yorke was transferred to Manchester United for £12.6 million. Gregory managed four top-eight finishes in the league and took the club to an FA Cup final in 2000 with a side that included
David James,
Dion Dublin,
Paul Merson and
Gareth Barry but was unable to assemble a team capable of challenging for Champions League places. At the end of the season Villa's captain
Gareth Southgate handed in a transfer request, claiming that "if I am to achieve in my career, it is time to move on". Gregory's frustration at the lack of investment in the team led to him publicly accusing Ellis of being "stuck a time warp"; their relationship remained strained until Gregory resigned in January 2002. Ellis appointed
Graham Taylor for a second spell in February 2002, but a 16th-place finish in the league led to his replacement with
David O'Leary in June 2003. After a sixth-place finish in his first season, Villa the finished 10th and 16th, leading to O'Leary leaving in the summer of 2006. After 23 years as chairman and single biggest shareholder (approximately 38%), Ellis sold his stake in Aston Villa due to ill-health at the age of 82. American businessman
Randy Lerner, owner of
NFL franchise the
Cleveland Browns, completed his takeover in September 2006. The arrival of a new owner in Lerner and of manager
Martin O'Neill marked the start of a new period of optimism at Villa Park and sweeping changes occurred throughout the club including a new badge, investment in state-of-the-art facilities at the
Bodymoor Heath Training Ground and significant investment in the squad in the summer of 2007. The first Cup final of the Lerner era came in 2010 when Villa were beaten 2–1 in the
League Cup Final. Just five days before the opening day of the
2010–11 season, O'Neill resigned as manager, despite three consecutive 6th-place finishes, due to frustration in the lack of investment in the squad, following the sale of star players
Gareth Barry,
James Milner and
Ashley Young. His replacement
Gérard Houllier stepped down due to ill-health in September 2011, to be replaced by
Birmingham City manager
Alex McLeish, despite fan protests against his appointment. McLeish's contract was terminated at the end of the 2011–12 season after Villa finished in 16th place, and he was replaced by
Paul Lambert. In February 2012, the club announced a financial loss of £53.9 million, and Lerner put the club up for sale three months later. With Lerner still on board, but unwilling to spend following the stock market crash of 2008, the club was uncompetitive for several seasons, culminating in the
2014–15 season, when Lambert was sacked in February 2015 after the team managed just 12 goals in the first 25 league games, the lowest in Premier League history.
Tim Sherwood succeeded him, and steered the club away from relegation while also leading them to the
2015 FA Cup Final. However, the club sold two of its star players
Christian Benteke and captain
Fabian Delph in the summer transfer window and did not adequately replace them. Villa struggled in the 2015–16 season, and Sherwood was sacked following six consecutive defeats. He was replaced by
Rémi Garde, who left after just five months with Villa lying bottom of the table; his reign included a club-record 19 game winless run. The club was relegated at the end of the season, ending their 29-year stay in the top flight.
Championship to Champions League (2016–present) In June 2016, Chinese businessman
Tony Xia bought the club for £76 million. Former Chelsea boss
Roberto Di Matteo was appointed as the club's new manager, but was dismissed after just 12 games following a poor start to the season. He was replaced by former Birmingham manager
Steve Bruce. Bruce led the team to finish fourth in the 2017–18 season, but lost in the
2018 EFL Championship play-off final to
Fulham. Following failure to secure promotion to the
Premier League, the club faced significant financial difficulties. Following rumours that
administration was imminent, Xia looked to sell the club. On 20 July 2018 it was announced that the
NSWE Group, a consortium consisting of Egyptian billionaire
Nassef Sawiris and the American billionaire
Wes Edens, were to invest in the football club. They purchased a controlling 55% stake in the club, and Sawiris took over the role of club chairman, appointing
Christian Purslow as CEO. to Manchester City for a British record £100 million. In October 2018, Bruce was dismissed after winning only once in a nine match stretch. He was replaced by
Brentford manager and boyhood Villa fan
Dean Smith, who led the team to fifth place, and reaching the playoffs again—helped on by a club-record 10 league game winning streak. They reached the
2019 EFL Championship play-off final and defeated
Derby County 2–1 to gain promotion back to the Premier League after a three-year absence. On the eve of Villa's Premier League return,
Recon Group's minority share ownership was bought out by NSWE, meaning Xia no longer had any stake in the club. Villa's first season back in the Premier League saw a significant overhaul of the squad, with 12 players signed during the summer transfer window. The team battled relegation for most of the season, but stayed up on the final day with a 17th-place finish. In Villa's second season back in the Premier League, Smith oversaw an 11th-place finish, but was unable to persuade star player and captain
Jack Grealish to remain at the club after Manchester City's British-record £100 million bid triggered his release clause. Following a poor start to the 2021–22 season, which saw seven losses in the club's opening 11 games, Dean Smith was dismissed. Aston Villa appointed former
Liverpool and England captain
Steven Gerrard as head coach on 11 November 2021. After a poor start to the 2022–23 season, in which Villa won just twice and scored only seven goals in their opening 11 games, Gerrard was sacked in October 2022, and replaced by four-time
Europa League-winning Spanish manager
Unai Emery. He led Villa to 7th place and qualification for the
Europa Conference League in his first season. In the 2023–24 season, Emery led the club to the
Conference League semi-finals, where they were knocked out by
Olympiacos, and a fourth-place finish in the league, securing participation in the
UEFA Champions League for the first time since 1982–83. In the following
Champions League campaign, the team reached the quarter-finals before a 5–4 aggregate loss to eventual winners
Paris Saint-Germain. In February 2026, Aston Villa were reported to be facing a second fine from UEFA for breaching its financial regulations by exceeding the squad cost limits for the 2025 season. == Colours and badge ==