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Bradford City A.F.C.

Bradford City Association Football Club is an English professional football club in Bradford, West Yorkshire. The club competes in EFL League One, the third tier of English football, and is managed by Graham Alexander. The club was founded in 1903 and immediately elected into the Football League Second Division. Promotion to the top tier followed as they won the 1907–08 Second Division title and then they went on to win the 1911 FA Cup final, which remains the club's only major honour. They were relegated in 1922 and again in 1927, before winning the Third Division North title in 1928–29. Another relegation in 1937 did allow the club to go on to win the Third Division North Cup in 1939, however a further relegation followed in 1962 to leave the club in the newly created Fourth Division. They secured promotions back into the third tier in 1969 and 1977, but were relegated in 1972 and 1978. They found success in the 1980s under the stewardship of first Roy McFarland and then Trevor Cherry, winning promotion in 1981–82 and following this up with the Third Division title in 1984–85, though they were relegated out of the Second Division in 1990. Bradford were promoted back into the second tier via the play-offs in 1996, before securing another promotion in 1998–99 to reach the Premier League, marking a return to the top-flight after a 77-year absence. They entered Europe and reached the semi-finals of the UEFA Intertoto Cup in 2000–01 but ended the campaign with relegation from the Premier League. A succession of financial crises followed as the club entered administration twice in two years and further relegations followed in 2004 and 2007 to leave the club back in the fourth tier. They found success under the management of Phil Parkinson by reaching the 2013 League Cup final and then going on to win that year's League Two play-off final but were relegated from League One in 2019. The club's home ground is the 24,840-capacity Valley Parade, which was the site of the Bradford City stadium fire on 11 May 1985, which took the lives of 56 supporters. They are the only professional football club in England to wear claret and amber, and have worn these colours throughout their history. They have though been known by various nicknames, with the "Bantams" being the most commonly used nickname as it appears on the current club crest. Supporters hold West Yorkshire derby rivalries with Huddersfield Town and Leeds United, as well as a historic Bradford derby rivalry with the now non-league side Bradford (Park Avenue).

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11 m

Valley Parade

Valley Parade est un stade de football localisé à Bradford. C'est l'enceinte du club de Bradford City Association Football Club.
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708 m

Désastre de Valley Parade

Le désastre du Valley Parade est un incendie qui a lieu le 11 mai 1985 au stade de Valley Parade à Bradford. L’équipe anglaise de football de Bradford City, à domicile, affronte alors Lincoln City. Lors de cet incendie, 56 spectateurs trouvent la mort et plus de 260 sont blessés.
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886 m

Gare de Bradford Forster Square

La gare de Bradford Forster Square est une gare ferroviaire du Royaume-Uni. Elle est située dans la ville de Bradford, dans le Yorkshire de l'Ouest en Angleterre. Les services à partir de Bradford Forster Square sont opérés par Virgin Trains East Coast et Northern Rail.
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1.2 km

Diocèse de Bradford

Le diocèse de Bradford est un ancien diocèse anglican de la Province d'York qui s'étendait sur l'ouest du Yorkshire. Son siège était la cathédrale de Bradford. Il est créé en 1920 à partir du diocèse de Ripon. Le diocèse était divisé en deux archidiaconés, à Bradford même et à Craven. En 2014 ce diocèse fut dissout et fusionné avec le diocèse de Ripon et le diocèse de Wakefield pour créer le Diocèse anglican de Leeds.
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1.2 km

Cathédrale de Bradford

La cathédrale de Bradford est située au cœur de Bradford dans le Yorkshire de l'Ouest, en Angleterre, sur un site utilisé pour le culte chrétien depuis le VIIIe siècle, lorsque les missionnaires basés à Dewsbury évangélisèrent la région. Pendant la plupart de son histoire le bâtiment a été l'église paroissiale de Saint-Pierre, avant de devenir une cathédrale à la suite de la création du diocèse de Bradford en 1919. Depuis 2014, la cathédrale de Bradford fonctionne comme une des trois cocathédrales du diocèse anglican de Leeds, avec la cathédrale de Wakefield et la cathédrale de Ripon.