Vicarage Road is a stadium in Watford, England, and is the home stadium of club Watford.
An all-seater stadium, its current capacity is 22,200.
It has been the home of Watford since 1922, when the club moved from Cassio Road.
The ground was officially opened by Col. Charles Healey of Benskins Brewery for the visit of Millwall on 30 August 1922.
After purchasing the freehold of the stadium from Benskins in January 2002, Watford's financial situation forced them to sell and lease back the stadium later that year.
However, after a campaign entitled 'Let's Buy Back The Vic' with donations coming from fans, as well as celebrity former owner Elton John donating the entire proceeds of a concert held at the venue, the club was able to repurchase the stadium in September 2004.
Watford Football Club is an English professional football club based in Watford, Hertfordshire.
The team played at several grounds in their early history, including what is now West Herts Sports Club, before moving to Vicarage Road in 1922.
They have a long-standing rivalry with nearby club Luton Town.
Graham Taylor's tenure as manager at the club between 1977 and 1987 saw Watford rise from the fourth tier to the first.
The team finished second in the First Division in 1982–83, competed in the UEFA Cup in 1983–84, and reached the 1984 FA Cup final.
The club played again in the highest tier in 2006–07 under Aidy Boothroyd's management, and then again from 2015 to 2020, reaching the 2019 FA Cup final, their second FA Cup final, but losing to a record-equalling 6–0 score line.
In April 2021, Watford were promoted back into the Premier League having spent just one season in the Championship, but were relegated back to the Championship in May 2022.
Watford's kit has changed considerably over the course of the club's history. The club's kit featured various combinations of red, green and yellow stripes, before a new colour scheme of black and white was adopted for the 1909–10 season.
These colours were retained until the 1920s, when the club introduced an all-blue shirt.
After a change of colours to gold shirts and black shorts for 1959–60, the team's nickname was changed to The Hornets, after a popular vote via the supporters club.
These colours remained until 1976, when Watford's kits started featuring red, and the gold was changed to yellow.
That colour scheme has continued into the 21st century.
Watford's initial nickname was The Brewers, in reference to the Benskins Brewery, which owned the freehold of Vicarage Road.
This nickname did not prove particularly popular, and upon the adoption of a blue-and-white colour scheme in the 1920s, the club became predominantly known as The Blues.
When Watford changed kit colours in 1959, supporters chose The Hornets as the team's new nickname, and the club later introduced a crest depicting a hornet.
In 1974 the design was changed to depict Harry the Hornet, the club's mascot. The club's nickname remains, but in 1978 the hornet crest was replaced by a depiction of a hart – a male red fallow deer– on a yellow and black background.
A hart represents the town's location in the county of Hertfordshire. Until Barnet and, later, Stevenage joined the Football League, Watford were Hertfordshire's only league club.
Other nicknames have since been adopted, including Yellow Army and The 'Orns.
-
Music: Here by extenz is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/...
Support by RFM - NCM: https://bit.ly/2xGHypM
-
Информация по комментариям в разработке