List of Aston Villa F.C. records and statistics

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Aston Villa team of the late 19th century

Football League in 1888, as well as the Premier League in 1992.[1] They are one of the oldest football clubs in England, having won the First Division Championship seven times and the FA Cup seven times.[2] In 1982, the club became one of only six English clubs to win the European Cup.[3]

This list encompasses the honours won by Aston Villa and the records set by the players and the club. The player records section includes details of the club's leading goalscorers and those who have made the most appearances in first-team competitions. Attendance records at Villa Park are also included in the list.

Honours

The 1982 European Cup winning squad celebrate the 25th anniversary of their win.
FA Cup

Aston Villa have won honours both domestically and in European cup competitions. Their most recent domestic honour was a

League Cup win in 1996.[4][5]

European

  • European Super Cup
    :
    • Winners (1):
      1982–83

Domestic

League

Cups

Youth

Friendly and exhibition

Player records

Appearances

Most appearances

Competitive matches only. Each column contains appearances in the starting eleven, followed by appearances as substitute in brackets.[16]

Rank Player Years League FA Cup
League Cup
Other Total
1 Scotland Charlie Aitken 1959–1976 559 (2) 34 (1) 61 (0) 3 (0) 657 (3)
2 England Billy Walker 1919–1934 478 (0) 53 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 531 (0)
3 England Gordon Cowans 1976–1985
1988–1991
399 (15) 8 (1) 40 (4) 39 (2) 508 (22)
4 England Joe Bache 1900–1915 431 (0) 42 (0) 0 (0) 1 (0) 474 (0)
5 Scotland Allan Evans 1977–1989 374 (6) 26 (0) 42 (1) 24 (0) 466 (7)
6 England Nigel Spink 1979–1996 357 (4) 28 (0) 45 (0) 19 (1) 449 (5)
7 England Tommy Smart 1919–1933 405 (0) 47 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 452 (0)
8 England Gareth Barry 1997–2009 353 (12) 19 (2) 29 (0) 22 (4) 423 (18)
9 England Johnny Dixon 1945–1961 392 (0) 38 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 430 (0)
10 England Dennis Mortimer 1975–1985 315 (1) 21 (0) 38 (0) 30 (0) 404 (1)
Other competitions include European Cup, UEFA Cup and Intertoto Cup

Goalscorers

Top goalscorers

Competitive matches only, appearances including substitutes appear in brackets.[20]

Rank Player Years League FA Cup
League Cup
Other Total
011 England Billy Walker 1919–1933 214 (478) 30 (53) 0 (0) 0 (0) 244 (531)
022
Harry Hampton
1904–1920 215 (339) 27 (34) 0 (0) 0 (0) 242 (373)
033
John Devey
1891–1902 169 (268) 18 (38) 0 (0) 0 (2) 187 (308)
044 England Joe Bache 1900–1914 168 (431) 17 (42) 0 (0) 0 (1) 185 (474)
055 England Eric Houghton 1927–1946 160 (361) 10 (31) 0 (0) 0 (0) 170 (392)
066
Tom Waring
1928–1935 159 (216) 8 (10) 0 (0) 0 (0) 167 (226)
077 England Johnny Dixon 1945–1961 132 (263) 12 (38) 0 (0) 0 (0) 144 (430)
088 Northern Ireland Peter McParland 1952–1962 97 (293) 19 (36) 4 (11) 0 (1) 120 (341)
099 England Billy Garraty 1897–1908 96 (224) 15 (31) 0 (0) 1 (3) 112 (258)
1010= Wales Dai Astley 1931–1936 92 (165) 8 (8) 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 (173)
1010= England Len Capewell 1921–1930 88 (143) 12 (13) 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 (156)
Olof Mellberg, one of only three Villa players to play in two World Cups while at the club, alongside Steve Staunton and Paul McGrath. Also Villa's most internationally capped player and captain of Sweden during the 2006 FIFA World Cup.[21]

International

This section refers only to caps won while an Aston Villa player.

Record transfer fees

Moussa Diaby, Aston Villa's record signing. (Pictured here with Bayer Leverkusen in 2022)

This section lists the record transfer fees paid by the club for a player. The highest transfer fee received by the club is the £100 million fee paid by Manchester City for Jack Grealish in August 2021. The sale at the time was a British transfer record.[34] The highest fee Aston Villa have ever paid for a player was £51.9 million, for French winger Moussa Diaby from Bayer Leverkusen in July 2023.[35]


Fees Paid

Rank Player Fee From Date Ref.
1 France Moussa Diaby 096£51.9m Germany Bayer Leverkusen 2023-07July 2023 [35]
2 Argentina Emiliano Buendía 096£33m (rising to £38m) England Norwich City 2021-06June 2021 [36]
3 Spain Pau Torres 096£31.5m Spain Villarreal 2023-07July 2023 [37]
4 Jamaica Leon Bailey 096£30m Germany Bayer Leverkusen 2021-08August 2021 [38]
5 England Ollie Watkins 096£28m (rising to £33m) England Brentford 2020-09September 2020 [39]
6 Brazil Diego Carlos 096£26m Spain Sevilla 2022-05May 2022 [40]
7 England Danny Ings 096£25m (rising to £30m) England Southampton 2021-08August 2021 [41]
France Lucas Digne 096£25m England Everton 2022-01January 2022 [42]
9 Brazil Wesley 096£22m Belgium Club Brugge 2019-06June 2019 [43]
10 England Tyrone Mings 096£20m England Bournemouth 2019-07July 2019 [44]

Fees Received

Rank Player Fee To Date Ref.
1 England Jack Grealish 096£100m England Manchester City 2021-08August 2021 [34]
2 Belgium Christian Benteke 096£32.5m England Liverpool 2015-07July 2015 [45]
3 England James Milner 096£26m England Manchester City 2010-08August 2010 [46]
4 England Stewart Downing 096£20m England Liverpool 2011-07July 2011 [47]
England Carney Chukwuemeka 096£20m England Chelsea 2022-08August 2022 [48]
6 England Cameron Archer 096£18m England Sheffield United 2023-08August 2023 [49]
7 England Ashley Young 096£17m England Manchester United 2011-06June 2011 [50]
8 England Matt Targett 096£15m England Newcastle United 2022-06June 2022 [51]
9 Trinidad and Tobago Dwight Yorke 096£12.6m England Manchester United 1998-08August 1998 [52]
10 England Danny Ings 096£12m (rising to £15m) England West Ham United 2023-01January 2023 [53]
England Gareth Barry 096£12m England Manchester City 2009-06June 2009 [54]
England Aaron Ramsey 096£12m England Burnley 2023-08August 2023 [55]

Managerial records

  • First manager/secretary of the club: George Ramsay, in charge of 1327 games from August 1884 to 5 May 1926.[18]
  • Longest serving manager: George Ramsay.[18]
  • Most successful manager: George Ramsay, 6 League Championships and 6 FA Cups.[18]

Club records

Goals

Points

  • Most points in a season:
    • Two points for a win: 70 points (in 46 matches in the 1971–72 season, Division Three).[59]
    • Three points for a win: 83 points (in 46 matches in the
      Championship
      ).
  • Fewest points in a season:

Matches

Firsts

Record wins

Record defeats

  • Record defeat: 0–8 (v. Chelsea, Premier League, 23 December 2012).
  • Record FA Cup defeat: 1–8 (v. Blackburn Rovers, 3rd round, 16 February 1889).[18]
  • Record League Cup defeat: 1–6 (v. West Bromwich Albion, 2nd round, 14 September 1966).[5]
  • Record European defeat: 1–4 (v.
    on 17 September 1975).[69]

Attendances

Streaks

National records

  • Most
    League Cup
    matches played (252) and won (148)
  • All-Time record for the most top-flight goals scored in a season, scoring 128 in
    season 1930–31.[83]
  • First football club in the world to appoint a paid manager, George Ramsay in 1886.[84]
  • First top-flight club to appoint a manager from outside the British Isles, Jozef Vengloš in July 1990.[85]
  • Villa Park was the first English stadium to stage international football in three different centuries.[86]
  • Villa Park has hosted more FA Cup Semi-Finals than any other ground, 55 to date.[87]
  • Highest FA Cup attendance (pre-World War I): 121,919 (Aston Villa vs Sunderland, Final at Crystal Palace, 19 April 1913)[88]
  • First football club to have a player score in every round of the FA Cup, when captain Archie Hunter led the club to its first FA Cup trophy in 1887.
  • First football club to pay more than £100 for a player, for Willie Groves in 1893.
  • First English football club to have a Black player on the scoresheet in the English Football League, when Willie Clarke scored on Christmas Day 1901, in a 3–2 victory over Everton.[89]
  • First English club to have a player score a hat-trick of penalty kicks in a league match, Billy Walker doing so in a 7–1 win against Bradford City in November 1921.[90]
  • First football club to have a player win both the PFA Young Player of the Year and PFA Players' Player of the Year in the same season, Andy Gray in 1976–77.

Aston Villa in UEFA competitions

As of July 2023, Aston Villa are one of only six English clubs to have won the European Cup, doing so in 1982.[5][91] Aston Villa's scores are noted first in both results columns.

Season Competition Round Country Opponent Home Away
1975–76 UEFA Cup 1R  Belgium Antwerp 0–1 1–4
1977–78 UEFA Cup 1R  Turkey Fenerbahçe 4–0 2–0
2R  Poland Górnik Zabrze 2–0 1–1
3R  Spain Athletic Bilbao 2–0 1–1
QF  Spain Barcelona 2–2 1–2
1981–82 European Cup (Winners) 1R  Iceland
Valur
5–0 2–0
2R  East Germany Dynamo Berlin 0–1 2–1
QF  Soviet Union Dynamo Kyiv 2–0 0–0
SF  Belgium Anderlecht 1–0 0–0
F  West Germany Bayern Munich 1–0
1982–83
UEFA Super Cup
(Winners)
F  Spain Barcelona 3–0 0–1
Intercontinental Cup F  Uruguay
Peñarol
0–2
European Cup 1R  Turkey Beşiktaş 3–1 0–0
2R  Romania Dinamo București 4–2 2–0
QF  Italy Juventus 1–2 1–3
1983–84 UEFA Cup 1R  Portugal Vitória de Guimarães 5–0 0–1
2R  Soviet Union Spartak Moscow 1–2 2–2
1990–91 UEFA Cup 1R  Czechoslovakia Baník Ostrava 3–1 2–1
2R  Italy Inter Milan 2–0 0–3
1993–94 UEFA Cup 1R  Slovakia Slovan Bratislava 2–1 0–0
2R  Spain Deportivo La Coruña 0–1 1–1
1994–95 UEFA Cup 1R  Italy Inter Milan 1–0 0–1
2R  Turkey Trabzonspor 2–1 0–1
1996–97 UEFA Cup 1R  Sweden Helsingborg 1–1 0–0
1997–98 UEFA Cup 1R  France Bordeaux 1–0 0–0
2R  Spain Athletic Bilbao 2–1 0–0
3R  Romania
Steaua București
2–0 1–2
QF  Spain Atlético Madrid 2–1 0–1
1998–99 UEFA Cup 1R  Norway Stromsgodset 3–2 3–0
2R  Spain Celta Vigo 1–3 1–0
2000–01 Intertoto Cup 3R  Czech Republic
Dukla Pribram
3–1 0–0
SF  Spain Celta Vigo 1–2 0–1
2001–02 Intertoto Cup (Winners) 3R  Croatia Slaven Belupo 2–0 1–2
SF  France Rennes 1–0 2–1
F   Switzerland Basel 4–1 1–1
UEFA Cup 1R  Croatia Varteks 2–3 1–0
2002–03 Intertoto Cup 3R   Switzerland Zürich 3–0 0–2
SF  France Lille 0–2 1–1
2008–09 Intertoto Cup (Co-winners) 3R  Denmark
Odense
1–0 2–2
UEFA Cup 2QR  Iceland Fimleikafélag Hafnarfjarðar 1–1 4–1
1R  Bulgaria Litex Lovech 1–1 3–1
GS  Netherlands Ajax 2–1
 Czech Republic Slavia Prague 1–0
 Slovakia Žilina 1–2
 Germany Hamburger SV 1–3
R32  Russia CSKA Moscow 1–1 0–2
2009–10 Europa League P/O  Austria Rapid Wien 2–1 0–1
2010–11 Europa League P/O  Austria Rapid Wien 2–3 1–1
2023–24 Europa Conference League P/O  Scotland Hibernian 3–0 5–0
GS  Poland Legia Warsaw 2–1 2–3
 Bosnia and Herzegovina Zrinjski Mostar 1–0 1–1
 Netherlands AZ 2–1 4–1
R16  Netherlands Ajax 4–0 0–0
QF  France Lille 2–1 1–2
SF  Greece Olympiacos
Key
  • 2QR = Second qualifying round
  • P/O = Play-off round
  • 1R = First round
  • 2R = Second round
  • 3R = Third round
  • GS = Group stage
  • R32 = Round of 32
  • R16 = Round of 16
  • QF = Quarter-finals
  • SF = Semi-finals
  • F = Final

Record by competition

Competition Record
Pld W D L GF GA GD Win %
European Cup
15 9 3 3 24 10 +14 060.00
UEFA Cup/UEFA Europa League 56 24 14 18 79 59 +20 042.86
UEFA Europa Conference League 12 8 2 2 27 10 +17 066.67
UEFA Intertoto Cup 16 6 4 6 21 17 +4 037.50
UEFA Super Cup 2 1 0 1 3 1 +2 050.00
FIFA Intercontinental Cup 1 0 0 1 0 2 −2 000.00
Total 102 48 23 31 154 99 +55 047.06

Footnotes

A. 
Football League One
.
^ In 1981, the Charity Shield was shared in the event of a draw.
SC Braga.[92]
^ The home team are listed first.

References

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General

External links