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Bristol Rovers

Bristol Rovers Classificação

League Two crestLeague Two

Legenda:
  1. Acesso
  2. Play-off do Acesso
  3. Rebaixamento
PosiçãoTimeJVEDGPGCSGPSequência
1Bromley crestBromley432314668432583
D
V
E
D
V
2Milton Keynes Dons crestMilton Keynes Dons432213879433679
V
E
E
D
D
3Cambridge United crestCambridge United422114762313177
V
E
E
D
V
4Notts County crestNotts County432371371492276
D
V
D
V
D
5Swindon Town crestSwindon Town432281367511674
D
V
E
E
V
6Salford City crestSalford City43235155750774
E
D
V
V
D
7Chesterfield crestChesterfield431915966541272
V
E
V
V
V
8Grimsby Town crestGrimsby Town4219111263471668
D
V
V
D
V
9Barnet crestBarnet4318131260491167
V
V
E
V
V
10Crewe Alexandra crestCrewe Alexandra431991563531066
D
V
D
V
V
11Oldham Athletic crestOldham Athletic4317141254391565
D
D
E
V
D
12Colchester United crestColchester United4317121458461263
V
V
V
D
E
13Walsall crestWalsall431711155250262
D
D
E
E
V
14Fleetwood Town crestFleetwood Town431513155354-158
V
D
D
E
V
15Bristol Rovers crestBristol Rovers43174224963-1455
V
V
V
V
V
16Accrington Stanley crestAccrington Stanley43149204250-851
D
D
D
V
D
17Gillingham crestGillingham431214174962-1350
D
E
V
E
D
18Cheltenham Town crestCheltenham Town421310195068-1849
V
V
E
D
D
19Shrewsbury Town crestShrewsbury Town43138224066-2647
V
D
V
D
D
20Tranmere Rovers crestTranmere Rovers42910234972-2337
E
D
D
D
D
21Crawley Town crestCrawley Town43813224165-2437
D
D
V
V
D
22Newport County crestNewport County43107264373-3037
V
D
D
V
D
23Barrow crestBarrow4399254370-2736
V
D
D
E
V
24Harrogate Town crestHarrogate Town4389263566-3133
D
D
V
D
D

EFL Trophy crestEFL Trophy

Legenda:
  1. Próxima Fase
PosiçãoTimeJVEDGPGCSGPSequência
1Bristol Rovers crestBristol Rovers32106428
V
V
V
2Plymouth crestPlymouth32018356
D
V
V
3Cheltenham Town crestCheltenham Town301225-32
V
D
D
4Tottenham Hotspur Academy crestTottenham Hotspur Academy3021812-42
D
D
D

Perguntas frequentes

Manchester United were founded in 1878, although under a different name at first - Newton Heath LYR. The name Manchester United was born in April 1902, beating alternative suggestions like Manchester Central and Manchester Celtic.

Manchester United are currently co-owned by the Glazer family, as well as INEOS founder Sir Jim Ratcliffe. In February, Ratcliffe bought an initial 25% stake in the club, ganing control over all the sporting operations.

Manchester United play their home games at the Old Trafford, which is also known as the 'Theatre Of Dreams' among fans and pundits.

Old Trafford has a capacity of 74,310, making it UK's second-biggest football stadium in terms of capacity (behind Wembley).

Manchester United have an impressive haul of 68 trophies in their prestigious history, which includes 20 league titles, three Champions Leagues, as well as 13 FA Cups.

Manchester United have won a record 20 English top flight titles. They have won 13 titles in the Premier League era, all of them coming under Sir Alex Ferguson. United, though, haven't lifted the Premier League trophy since the 2012-13 season.

With 963 appearances to his name, Ryan Giggs holds the record of making the most appearances for Manchester United. Giggs made his debut for the club in March 1991 and spent his entire professional career, spanning 23 years, at Old Trafford.

Wayne Rooney is Manchester United's all-time top goalscorer with 253 goals in 559 games for the club. He spent 13 years at the club, from 2004 to 2017.

Eric Cantona, Cristiano Ronaldo, George Best, Paul Scholes, Wayne Rooney, Rio Ferdinand, Edwin van der Sar, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Angel Di Maria, and Denis Irwin are some of the most famous players to have donned the Manchester United colours.

Sir Matt Busby, Sir Alex Ferguson, Jose Mourinho, David Moyes, and Louis van Gaal are among the most famous to have been at the helm at Old Trafford.

Manchester United are famously known as The Red Devils among their fans and rivals alike. The term was introduced by the legendary Sir Matt Busby in the 1960s – after the tragic Munich air disaster – seeking inspiration from a local rugby club from Salford, who were referred to as "Les Diables Rouges" (The Red Devils) when they toured France in 1934.