The Ninety-Two Club is a groundhopping society, in order to be a member of which a person must attend an association football game at the stadium of every current Premier League and EFL Championship, EFL League One, EFL League Two club in England and Wales.[1]
The 'club' takes its name from the fact that there are 92 teams in the English professional league tier. The list of stadiums changes each year, as clubs are promoted and relegated in and out of the EFL, and other clubs move to new stadiums.
The Ninety-Two Club was founded in 1978 by Bristol Rovers F.C. supporter Gordon Pearce.[2][3]
List of 92 Club Stadiums in 2023-24 season
Premier League
- Emirates Stadium (Arsenal)
- Villa Park (Aston Villa)
- Dean Court (AFC Bournemouth)
- Brentford Community Stadium (Brentford)
- Falmer Stadium (Brighton & Hove Albion)
- Turf Moor (Burnley)
- Stamford Bridge (Chelsea)
- Selhurst Park (Crystal Palace)
- Goodison Park (Everton)
- Craven Cottage (Fulham)
- Anfield (Liverpool)
- Kenilworth Road (Luton Town)
- City of Manchester Stadium (Manchester City)
- Old Trafford (Manchester United)
- St James' Park (Newcastle United)
- City Ground (Nottingham Forest)
- Bramall Lane (Sheffield United)
- Tottenham Hotspur Stadium (Tottenham Hotspur)
- London Stadium (West Ham United)
- Molineux Stadium (Wolverhampton Wanderers)
EFL Championship
- St Andrew's (Birmingham City)
- Ewood Park (Blackburn Rovers)
- Ashton Gate Stadium (Bristol City)
- Cardiff City Stadium (Cardiff City)
- Coventry Building Society Arena (Coventry City)
- John Smith's Stadium (Huddersfield Town)
- MKM Stadium (Hull City)
- Portman Road (Ipswich Town)
- Elland Road (Leeds United)
- King Power Stadium (Leicester City)
- Riverside Stadium (Middlesbrough)
- The Den (Millwall)
- Carrow Road (Norwich City)
- Home Park (Plymouth Argyle)
- Deepdale (Preston North End)
- Loftus Road (Queens Park Rangers)
- New York Stadium (Rotherham United)
- Hillsborough Stadium (Sheffield Wednesday)
- St Mary's Stadium (Southampton)
- bet365 Stadium (Stoke City)
- Stadium of Light (Sunderland)
- Swansea.com Stadium (Swansea City)
- Vicarage Road (Watford)
- The Hawthorns (West Bromwich Albion)
EFL League One
- Oakwell (Barnsley)
- Bloomfield Road (Blackpool)
- University of Bolton Stadium (Bolton Wanderers)
- Memorial Stadium (Bristol Rovers)
- Pirelli Stadium (Burton Albion)
- Abbey Stadium (Cambridge United)
- Brunton Park (Carlisle United)
- The Valley (Charlton Athletic)
- Whaddon Road (Cheltenham Town)
- Pride Park Stadium (Derby County)
- St. James Park (Exeter City)
- Highbury Stadium (Fleetwood Town)
- Brisbane Road (Leyton Orient)
- Sincil Bank (Lincoln City)
- Sixfields Stadium (Northampton Town)
- Kassam Stadium (Oxford United)
- London Road Stadium (Peterborough United)
- Fratton Park (Portsmouth)
- Vale Park (Port Vale)
- Madejski Stadium (Reading)
- New Meadow (Shrewsbury Town)
- Broadhall Way (Stevenage)
- DW Stadium (Wigan Athletic)
- Adams Park (Wycombe Wanderers)
EFL League Two
- Crown Ground (Accrington Stanley)
- Plough Lane (AFC Wimbledon)
- Holker Street (Barrow)
- Valley Parade (Bradford City)
- Colchester Community Stadium (Colchester United)
- Broadfield Stadium (Crawley Town)
- Gresty Road (Crewe Alexandra)
- Keepmoat Stadium (Doncaster Rovers)
- The New Lawn (Forest Green Rovers)
- Priestfield Stadium (Gillingham)
- Blundell Park (Grimsby Town)
- Wetherby Road (Harrogate Town)
- Field Mill (Mansfield Town)
- Stadium MK (Milton Keynes Dons)
- Globe Arena (Morecambe)
- Rodney Parade (Newport County)
- Meadow Lane (Notts County)
- Moor Lane (Salford City)
- Edgeley Park (Stockport County)
- Gander Green Lane (Sutton United)
- County Ground (Swindon Town)
- Prenton Park (Tranmere Rovers)
- Bescot Stadium (Walsall)
- Racecourse Ground (Wrexham)
See also
References
- ↑ "The 92 Club's football map". Football Ground Map. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
- ↑ Heald, Claire (6 January 2006). "Going to ground (all 92 of them)". BBC News. Retrieved 4 September 2013.
- ↑ "Lifelong Gas fan Gordon passes away". Bristol Post. 2010-05-07. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
Mr Pearce became famous for setting up the 'The Ninety-Two Club', an organisation that continues today to serve those who, like Mr Pearce, have witnessed a game at every Football League and Premier League ground.
External links
- The Ninety-Two Club - the original Ninety-Two Club founded in 1978 by Gordon Pearce
- The 92 Club - a later established website with the ability to track visits & relevant merchandise
- http://www.the92.net - unaffiliated (free) website fans can track, rate and find other people who are on the way, or are already part of the 92.
- http://www.doingthe92.com - unaffiliated (free) website fans can use to track the grounds they've visited
- http://www.footballfans.eu/ Great website for tracking fixtures attended that automatically calculates what grounds you have been to
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