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Newcastle United FC

St James’ Park. The Toon Army. Shearer, Keegan and Entertainers football that still makes the pulse race. Newcastle United are one of English football’s great sleeping giants, and they are waking up.

Founded
1892
Stadium
St James’ Park
Capacity
52,305
Nickname
The Magpies
Manager
Eddie Howe
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Newcastle United Ten-a-Ball Quiz
33 questions

Think you know your Toon? Find all ten answers on the board before your five lives run out. Questions span players, managers, famous nights at St James’ Park and the moments that have defined Newcastle United.

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Questions rotate from 33 total
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Name the Top 10 Goal Scorers for Newcastle in the 2018/19 Premier League Season

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Club History
1892 – 1955
Foundation and the golden age

Newcastle United were formed in 1892 through the merger of Newcastle East End and Newcastle West End, inheriting St James’ Park as their home. The club’s early decades produced their most successful period in terms of league titles: First Division championships in 1927, 1926, 1927 and four FA Cups between 1910 and 1955. The Magpies were one of England’s dominant forces in the early 20th century, with St James’ Park regularly packed to capacity by a passionate Geordie fanbase unlike any other in the country.

1992 – 1997
Keegan’s Entertainers: the most exciting team never to win the title

Kevin Keegan’s Newcastle side of the mid-1990s remains the most romanticised team in Premier League history. Playing breathtaking, high-scoring, cavalier football, they led the 1995/96 Premier League title race by 12 points in January before Manchester United overtook them in one of the greatest title collapses the division has seen. Keegan’s famous “I will love it if we beat them” outburst on live television captured the passion and the anguish of that season perfectly.

The squad was extraordinary: Peter Beardsley, David Ginola, Les Ferdinand, Faustino Asprilla, Rob Lee and a young Alan Shearer arriving from Blackburn for a world record fee in 1996. They played football that made the whole country take notice, and St James’ Park was the loudest, most electric stadium in England.

Relive the Entertainers era: browse Newcastle’s iconic 1990s shirts on CFS Shop 1990s Newcastle →
1997 – 2009
Shearer, European football and the long decline

Alan Shearer led Newcastle to an FA Cup final in 1998, losing to Arsenal, and the club enjoyed regular European football under Kenny Dalglish and then Sir Bobby Robson. Robson’s tenure from 1999 to 2004 was a golden period: Champions League football, top-four finishes and a team built around Shearer, Kieron Dyer, Craig Bellamy and Jermaine Jenas that played with genuine ambition.

After Robson’s departure in 2004, Newcastle entered a turbulent period of managerial changes and declining performances. Shearer retired in 2006 having scored 206 goals for the club. The slide continued until the unthinkable happened in 2009: relegation to the Championship under Joe Kinnear and then Chris Hughton, with Mike Ashley’s ownership drawing mounting criticism from supporters.

Browse Newcastle’s 2000s kits from the Sir Bobby Robson era on CFS Shop 2000s Newcastle →
2021 – present
The Saudi takeover and the new era

The Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia completed their takeover of Newcastle United in October 2021, ending Mike Ashley’s deeply unpopular 14-year reign. Eddie Howe was appointed manager and set about a rapid transformation, signing players of the calibre of Bruno Guimaraes, Alexander Isak, Sven Botman and Anthony Gordon. Newcastle finished fourth in 2022/23, their best Premier League finish in years, and qualified for the Champions League for the first time since 2003.

The ambition is clear, the fanbase is energised and St James’ Park is once again one of the most atmospheric grounds in European football. Newcastle’s return to genuine relevance is one of the most compelling stories in modern football.

Shop Newcastle’s new era kits from the 2020s on CFS Shop 2020s Newcastle →
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Trophy Cabinet
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4
First Division titles
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6
FA Cups
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1
Fairs Cup
1
Championship title 2010
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5
Second Division titles
4th
Premier League 2022/23
Legendary Players
AS
Alan Shearer
1996 – 2006
404
Apps
206
Goals
The greatest player in Newcastle United’s history and the Premier League’s all-time record scorer with 260 goals. Shearer turned down Manchester United to sign for his hometown club for a world record fee in 1996. He gave them everything and remains a god on Tyneside.
PB
Peter Beardsley
1983 – 1987 & 1993 – 1997
326
Apps
119
Goals
The heart of Keegan’s Entertainers. Beardsley’s return to Newcastle in 1993 galvanised the club’s promotion push and his partnership with Les Ferdinand and David Ginola made Newcastle the most exciting team in England. A Geordie hero across two spells.
DG
David Ginola
1995 – 1997
78
Apps
17
Goals
Box office. Ginola’s two seasons at Newcastle were among the most thrilling of the entire Premier League era. Electrifying on the left wing, impossible to contain and adored by the St James’ Park faithful, he embodied everything about Keegan’s glorious, doomed Entertainers.
LF
Les Ferdinand
1995 – 1997
84
Apps
41
Goals
Sir Les. Ferdinand’s two seasons at Newcastle produced some of the most devastating centre-forward play the Premier League has seen. Powerful, quick and clinical, he scored 29 goals in his first season and was PFA Players’ Player of the Year runner-up in 1996.
BG
Bruno Guimaraes
2022 – present
120+
Apps
20+
Goals
The heartbeat of Eddie Howe’s Newcastle. Signed from Lyon in January 2022, Guimaraes immediately became one of the best midfielders in the Premier League: technically brilliant, relentless in pressing and a born leader. Already a cult hero at St James’ Park.
AI
Alexander Isak
2022 – present
100+
Apps
55+
Goals
One of the most complete strikers in the Premier League. Isak combines pace, technique and an eye for goal that has drawn comparisons to Thierry Henry. Signed for a club-record fee in 2022, he has delivered on every penny and is already among the top forwards in Europe.
SB
Sir Bobby Robson
1999 – 2004 (manager)
190
Games
4th
Best finish
Though a manager rather than a player, Sir Bobby Robson deserves his place among Newcastle’s all-time greats. His five years at St James’ Park restored dignity, European football and genuine belief. The city of Newcastle mourned him like a family member when he passed away in 2009.
FA
Faustino Asprilla
1996 – 1998
48
Apps
17
Goals
Unpredictable, brilliant and utterly unique. Asprilla’s hat-trick against Barcelona in the Champions League in 1997 is one of the great individual performances in Newcastle’s history. He was chaos in a football shirt, and the Geordie faithful adored him for it.
Iconic Moments
1996
The 4-3: the greatest Premier League game ever played
Liverpool 4 Newcastle 3 at Anfield in April 1996 is widely voted the greatest Premier League game ever played. Trailing 3-2, Newcastle levelled through Asprilla, then Collymore scored a devastating winner in injury time. The drama, the goals, the occasion. Kevin Keegan slumped over the advertising hoardings. Football has never been the same since.
1996
“I will love it if we beat them”
With Newcastle 12 points clear at the top of the table in January 1996, Manchester United began their comeback. Keegan’s response to Alex Ferguson’s mind games produced the most emotional outburst in live television football history. Newcastle finished second. The Entertainers era was over. But nobody who watched will ever forget it.
1996
Shearer signs: a world record for a Geordie boy
Alan Shearer turned down Manchester United to sign for his hometown club in July 1996 for a world record fee of 15 million pounds. The scenes in Newcastle were extraordinary. A Geordie lad, the best striker in the world, coming home. It remains one of the most romantic transfer stories in football history.
1997
Asprilla’s hat-trick against Barcelona
In one of the great Champions League nights at St James’ Park, Faustino Asprilla scored a hat-trick against Barcelona — including a stunning header and two clinical finishes. Newcastle won 3-2. The Nou Camp crowd would be a different story, but that night on Tyneside was unforgettable.
2021
The takeover: a new era begins
When the Saudi Public Investment Fund completed their takeover in October 2021, ending Mike Ashley’s unpopular ownership, the reaction from Newcastle supporters was one of pure joy. Fans gathered outside St James’ Park in Saudi robes and headdresses. A sleeping giant had been woken up with serious intent.
2023
Champions League return: top four achieved
Newcastle finished fourth in the 2022/23 Premier League season, their best top-flight finish since Sir Bobby Robson’s era, qualifying for the Champions League for the first time in 20 years. Eddie Howe had transformed the club in under two seasons. St James’ Park heard Champions League football again.
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Newcastle United Retro Football Shirts

From the iconic Brown Ale-sponsored shirts of the Entertainers era to the Shearer years, Newcastle United’s black and white stripes are among the most recognisable and sought-after in English football. Classic Football Shirts stock original and replica Newcastle kits from every decade.

Newcastle United: the complete club guide

Newcastle United Football Club were founded in 1892 and play their home matches at St James’ Park, one of the largest and most atmospheric stadiums in English football. The club won four First Division titles and six FA Cups in their early history, though their greatest period of recent relevance came during Kevin Keegan’s Entertainers era of the mid-1990s and the current Saudi-backed renaissance under Eddie Howe.

The Entertainers and the nearly men

Keegan’s Newcastle of 1995/96 are remembered as the most thrilling team never to win the Premier League. Leading by 12 points in January, they were overhauled by Manchester United in one of the great title collapses. The squad featured Shearer, Beardsley, Ginola, Ferdinand and Asprilla, playing football that the whole country fell in love with. The heartbreak made the love stronger.

Alan Shearer: the Geordie king

Alan Shearer is not only Newcastle United’s greatest ever player but also the Premier League’s all-time record scorer with 260 goals. His decision to sign for his hometown club rather than Manchester United in 1996 remains one of the most romantic moments in the history of English football. He scored 206 goals for Newcastle across ten seasons and retired as a true Geordie legend.

The new era under Eddie Howe

Since the Saudi Public Investment Fund’s takeover in 2021 and Eddie Howe’s appointment as manager, Newcastle United have undergone one of the most rapid transformations in Premier League history. A top-four finish and Champions League qualification in 2022/23, built around Bruno Guimaraes, Alexander Isak and Anthony Gordon, confirmed that Newcastle are back as a genuine force. For the latest squad news and fixtures visit the official Newcastle United website, or read the full club history on Wikipedia.

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