List of Manchester United F.C. records and statistics

A photograph of a man with dark hair and a focused expression on his face, wearing a red shirt and white shorts.
Ryan Giggs, Manchester United's record appearance maker

Manchester United Football Club is an English professional football club based in Old Trafford, Greater Manchester. The club was founded as Newton Heath LYR F.C. in 1878 and turned professional in 1885, before joining the Football League in 1892. After a brush with bankruptcy in 1901, the club reformed as Manchester United in 1902. Manchester United currently play in the Premier League, the top tier of English football. They have not been out of the top tier since 1975, and they have never been lower than the second tier.[1] They have also been involved in European football ever since they became the first English club to enter the European Cup in 1956.[2]

This list encompasses the major honours won by Manchester United and records set by the club, their managers and their players. The player records section includes details of the club's leading goalscorers and those who have made most appearances in first-team competitions. It also records notable achievements by Manchester United players on the international stage, and the highest transfer fees paid and received by the club. The club's attendance records, both at Old Trafford, their home since 1910, and Maine Road, their temporary home from 1946 to 1949, are also included in the list.

The club currently holds the record for the most Premier League titles with 13, and the highest number of English top-flight titles with 20. The club's record appearance maker is Ryan Giggs, who made 963 appearances between 1991 and 2014, and the club's record goalscorer is Bobby Charlton, who scored 249 goals in 758 games between 1956 and 1973.

All stats accurate as of match played 30 November 2016.

Honours

A photograph of three medals sitting on a stand. One medal is gold and two are silver.
Winners' and runners-up medals from Manchester United's UEFA Champions League final appearances in 2008, 2009 and 2011

Manchester United's first trophy was the Manchester Cup, which they won as Newton Heath LYR in 1886.[3] Their first national senior honour came in 1908, when they won the 1907–08 Football League First Division title. The club also won the FA Cup for the first time the following year. In terms of the number of trophies won, the 1990s was Manchester United's most successful decade, during which they won five league titles, four FA Cups, one League Cup, five Community Shield (one shared)[A], one UEFA Champions League, one UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, one UEFA Super Cup and one Intercontinental Cup.

The club currently holds the record for most top-division titles, with 20. They were also the first team to win the Premier League, as well as holding the record for the most Premier League titles (13), and became the first English team to win the European Cup when they won it in 1968. Their most recent trophy came in May 2016, when they won the FA Cup. The only major honour that Manchester United has not yet won is the UEFA Europa League.[4]

Domestic

League

English Top flight: 20 - record

Cups

European

Worldwide

Players

A side-on photograph of a man with red hair. He is wearing a red shirt, white shorts and black socks.
Paul Scholes has made the third-highest number of appearances for Manchester United.

All current players are in bold

Appearances

Most appearances

Competitive, professional matches only. Appearances as substitute (in parentheses) included in total.

Name Years League[10] FA Cup[11] League Cup[12] Europe[13] Other[C][14] Total[15]
1Wales Ryan Giggs1991–2014672 (117)074 (12)041 0(6)157 (23)019 0(3)963 (161)
2England Bobby Charlton1956–1973606 00(2)078 0(0)024 0(0)045 0(0)005 0(0)758 00(2)
3England Paul Scholes1994–2011
2012–2013
499 0(95)049 (17)021 0(7)134 (21)015 0(1)718 (141)
4England Bill Foulkes1952–1970566 00(3)061 0(0)003 0(0)052 0(0)006 0(0)688 00(3)
5England Gary Neville1992–2011400 0(21)047 0(3)025 0(2)117 0(8)013 0(2)602 0(36)
6England Wayne Rooney2004–present380 0(35)038 0(7)018 0(6)0950(6)008 0(1)539 0(55)
7England Alex Stepney1966–1978433 00(0)044 0(0)035 0(0)023 0(0)004 0(0)539 00(0)
8Republic of Ireland Tony Dunne1960–1973414 00(0)055 0(1)021 0(0)040 0(0)005 0(0)535 00(1)
9Republic of Ireland Denis Irwin1990–2002368 0(12)043 0(1)031 0(3)075 0(2)012 0(0)529 0(18)
10England Joe Spence1919–1933481 00(0)029 0(0)000 0(0)000 0(0)000 0(0)510 00(0)

Goalscorers

A photograph of a bald man looking at the camera. The man is wearing a black suit, white shirt, and a red tie.
Bobby Charlton is Manchester United's highest all-time goalscorer.

Overall scorers

Competitive, professional matches only, appearances including substitutes appear in brackets.
Name Years League[26] FA Cup[27] League Cup[28] Europe[29] Other[C][30] Total[31]
1England Bobby Charlton1956–1973199 (606)019 0(78)007 0(24)022 0(45)002 00(5)249 (758)
2England Wayne Rooney2004–present179 (380)021 0(38)005 0(18)039 0(95)004 00(8)248 (539)
3Scotland Denis Law1962–1973171 (309)034 0(46)003 0(11)028 0(33)001 00(5)237 (404)
4England Jack Rowley1937–1955182 (380)026 0(42)000 00(0)000 00(0)003 00(2)211 (424)
5England Dennis Viollet1952–1962159 (259)005 0(18)001 00(2)013 0(12)001 00(2)179 (293)
Northern Ireland George Best1963–1974137 (361)021 0(46)009 0(25)011 0(34)001 00(4)179 (470)
7England Joe Spence1919–1933158 (481)010 0(29)000 00(0)000 00(0)000 00(0)168 (510)
Wales Ryan Giggs1991–2014114 (672)012 0(74)012 0(41)029 (157)001 0(19)168 (963)
9Wales Mark Hughes1983–1986
1988–1995
120 (345)017 0(46)016 0(38)009 0(33)001 00(5)163 (467)
10England Paul Scholes1994–2011
2012–2013
107 (499)013 0(49)009 0(21)026 (134)000 0(15)155 (718)

Award winners

Ballon d'Or

The following players have won the Ballon d'Or while playing for Manchester United:[32]

European Golden Shoe

The following players have won the European Golden Shoe while playing for Manchester United:

UEFA Club Footballer of the Year

The following players have won the UEFA Club Footballer of the Year award while playing for Manchester United:[34]

FIFA World Player of the Year

The following players have won the FIFA World Player of the Year award while playing for Manchester United:

FIFA Puskás Award

The following players have won the FIFA Puskás Award while playing for Manchester United:

Internationals

A wooden board headed with the Manchester United crest and the words "International Honours Board", with names in gold writing on eight slate panels, protected by perspex panels.
Manchester United's international players are listed in the players' lounge at Old Trafford.

Transfers

Highest transfer fees paid

Manchester United's record signing is Paul Pogba, who signed for the club from Juventus for a world record fee of £89.7 million in August 2016.[40] The signing of Anthony Martial for £36 million in 2015 set a world record for the transfer of a teenager.[41]

PlayerFromFeeDate
1France Paul PogbaItaly Juventus£89.7 million[40]August 2016
2Argentina Ángel Di MaríaSpain Real Madrid£59.7 million[42]August 2014
3Spain Juan MataEngland Chelsea£37.1 million[43]January 2014
4France Anthony MartialFrance Monaco£36 million[41]September 2015
5Bulgaria Dimitar BerbatovEngland Tottenham Hotspur£30.75 million[44]September 2008
6Ivory Coast Eric BaillySpain Villarreal£30 million[45]June 2016
7England Rio FerdinandEngland Leeds United£29.3 million[46]July 2002
8Spain Ander HerreraSpain Athletic Bilbao£29 million[47]July 2014
9Argentina Juan Sebastián VerónItaly Lazio£28.1 million[48]July 2001
10Belgium Marouane FellainiEngland Everton£27.5 million[49]September 2013

Progression of record fee paid

A photograph of a man with very short, dark hair. He is standing with his hands on his hips, and he is wearing a plain red shirt with a white collar and white shorts.
Rio Ferdinand, signed in July 2002 from Leeds United for £29.3 million, then Manchester United's most expensive purchase.

The first transfer for which Manchester United (then Newton Heath) had to pay a fee was the transfer of Gilbert Godsmark from Ashford in January 1900. Manchester United paid Ashford a fee of £40 for Godsmark.[46] The club's first £1,000 transfer came in 1910, when they signed Leslie Hofton from Glossop.[46] When the club signed Tommy Taylor from Barnsley in 1953, the fee was intended to be £30,000. However, Matt Busby did not want to burden the young player with the "£30,000 man" tag, and Barnsley agreed for the fee to be reduced by £1 to £29,999. Busby then took the extra pound from his wallet and gave it to the lady who had been serving the teas.[50]

Manchester United made their first £100,000 signing in August 1962 with the transfer of Denis Law from Torino for £110,000,[46] a new British record.[51] The club broke the British transfer record again in 1981 with the £1.5 million signing of Bryan Robson from West Bromwich Albion.[52] When Andy Cole signed for United in January 1995, the club paid £7 million, almost double their previous record of £3.75 million, which they paid for Roy Keane 18 months earlier.[46] In the summer of 2001, the club broke their transfer record twice in the space of a month, first paying PSV £19 million for Ruud van Nistelrooy, and then £28.1 million to Lazio for Juan Sebastián Verón.

Transfers in bold are also records for fees paid by British clubs[53][54]

DatePlayerBought fromFee[46][55]
January 1900England Gilbert GodsmarkAshford£40
January 1903Scotland Alex BellAyr Parkhouse£700
July 1910England Leslie HoftonGlossop£1,000
March 1914England George HunterChelsea£1,300
September 1920Scotland Tom MillerLiverpool£2,000
November 1921Scotland Neil McBainAyr United£6,000
February 1938England Jack SmithNewcastle United£6,500
March 1949Scotland John DownieBradford Park Avenue£18,000
March 1953England Tommy TaylorBarnsley£29,999
September 1958England Albert QuixallSheffield Wednesday£45,000
August 1962Scotland Denis LawTorino£110,000
August 1968Scotland Willie MorganBurnley£117,000
February 1972Scotland Martin BuchanAberdeen£125,000
March 1972England Ian Storey-MooreNottingham Forest£200,000
January 1978Scotland Joe JordanLeeds United£350,000
February 1978Scotland Gordon McQueenLeeds United£495,000
August 1979England Ray WilkinsChelsea£825,000
October 1980England Garry BirtlesNottingham Forest£1,250,000
October 1981England Bryan RobsonWest Bromwich Albion£1,500,000
June 1988Wales Mark HughesBarcelona£1,800,000
August 1989England Gary PallisterMiddlesbrough£2,300,000
July 1993Republic of Ireland Roy KeaneNottingham Forest£3,750,000
January 1995England Andy ColeNewcastle United£7,000,000
July 1998Netherlands Jaap StamPSV£10,750,000
August 1998Trinidad and Tobago Dwight YorkeAston Villa£12,600,000
June 2001Netherlands Ruud van NistelrooyPSV£19,000,000
July 2001Argentina Juan Sebastián VerónLazio£28,100,000
July 2002England Rio FerdinandLeeds United£29,300,000
September 2008Bulgaria Dimitar BerbatovTottenham Hotspur£30,750,000
January 2014Spain Juan MataChelsea£37,100,000
August 2014Argentina Ángel Di MaríaReal Madrid£59,700,000
August 2016France Paul PogbaJuventus£89,700,000

Highest transfer fees received

A photograph of a smiling man with a shaven head. He is wearing a white shirt with yellow trim and a navy blue collar, and a light blue armband.
David Beckham was sold to Real Madrid for a then club record of £25 million in July 2003.

The club's record sale came in July 2009, when they sold Cristiano Ronaldo to Real Madrid for £80 million.[56]

PlayerToFee[55]Date
1Portugal Cristiano RonaldoSpain Real Madrid£80 millionJuly 2009[56]
2Argentina Ángel Di MaríaFrance Paris Saint-Germain£44.1 millionAugust 2015
3England David BeckhamSpain Real Madrid£25 millionJune 2003
4England Danny WelbeckEngland Arsenal£16 millionSeptember 2014
5Netherlands Jaap StamItaly Lazio£15.25 millionAugust 2001
6Argentina Juan Sebastián VerónEngland Chelsea£15 millionAugust 2003
7Netherlands Ruud van NistelrooySpain Real Madrid£10.3 millionJuly 2006
8Argentina Gabriel HeinzeSpain Real Madrid£8.1 millionAugust 2007
9England Andy ColeEngland Blackburn Rovers£7.5 millionDecember 2001
10Mexico Javier HernándezGermany Bayer Leverkusen£7.3 millionAugust 2015

Progression of record fee received

The first player for whom Manchester United, then Newton Heath, received a fee was William Bryant, who moved to Blackburn Rovers for just £50 in April 1900. That same month, Manchester City paid five times more for Scottish forward Joe Cassidy. The club's first £1,000 sale came 12 years later with the sale of Harold Halse to Aston Villa.[46]

The club's first British record sale came in March 1949, when Derby County paid £24,500 for Johnny Morris. However, 35 years passed before Manchester United next broke the record for the biggest sale by a British club; the sale of Ray Wilkins to Milan for £1.5 million in June 1984 was also the club's first million-pound sale. Another British record followed two years later with the sale of Mark Hughes to Barcelona for £2.5 million. The club's record sale increased fivefold in the space of two transfers over the next 15 years; first with the £7 million sale of Paul Ince to Inter Milan in 1995, and then the 2001 transfer of Jaap Stam to Lazio for £15.25 million.[46] Manchester United broke the world transfer record for the first time in July 2009 with the £80 million sale of Cristiano Ronaldo to Real Madrid.[56]

Transfers in bold are also British record transfers
DatePlayerSold toFee[55]
April 1900England William BryantBlackburn Rovers£50
April 1900Scotland Joe CassidyManchester City£250
October 1909Scotland Alex DownieOldham Athletic£600
June 1911England Ted ConnorSheffield United£750
July 1912England Harold HalseAston Villa£1,200
August 1913England Charlie RobertsOldham Athletic£1,750
December 1920England Tommy MeehanChelsea£3,300
September 1937Scotland George MutchPreston North End£5,000
March 1948England Joe WaltonPreston North End£10,000
March 1949England Johnny MorrisDerby County£24,500
January 1962England Dennis ViolletStoke City£25,000
March 1962England Warren BradleyBury£40,000
June 1972Scotland Francis BurnsSouthampton£50,000
June 1972England Alan GowlingHuddersfield Town£60,000
March 1973Scotland Ted MacDougallWest Ham United£130,000
March 1977Republic of Ireland Gerry DalyDerby County£175,000
April 1978England Gordon HillDerby County£250,000
August 1979England Brian GreenhoffLeeds United£350,000
October 1980England Andy RitchieBrighton & Hove Albion£500,000
June 1984England Ray WilkinsMilan£1,500,000
August 1986Wales Mark HughesBarcelona£2,500,000
July 1995England Paul InceInter Milan£7,000,000
August 2001Netherlands Jaap StamLazio£15,250,000
June 2003England David BeckhamReal Madrid£25,000,000
July 2009Portugal Cristiano RonaldoReal Madrid£80,000,000[56]

Managerial records

A side-on photograph of a man with grey hair. He is wearing spectacles and a black overcoat.
Sir Alex Ferguson was the manager of Manchester United for 1,500 matches, more than any other manager.

Team records

Matches

Record wins

10–1 v Wolverhampton Wanderers, First Division, 15 October 1892
9–0 v Walsall, Second Division, 3 April 1895
9–0 v Darwen, Second Division, 24 December 1898
9–0 v Ipswich Town, Premier League, 4 March 1995
7–0 v Grimsby Town, Second Division, 26 December 1899
8–1 v Nottingham Forest, Premier League, 6 February 1999

Record defeats

v Blackburn Rovers, First Division, 10 April 1926
v Aston Villa, First Division, 27 December 1930
v Wolverhampton Wanderers, Second Division, 26 December 1931
v Blackburn Rovers, First Division, 10 April 1926
v Aston Villa, First Division, 27 December 1930
v Wolverhampton Wanderers, Second Division, 26 December 1931
0–5 v Newcastle United, 20 October 1996
0–5 v Chelsea, 3 October 1999
1–6 v Manchester City, 23 October 2011
1–7 v Burnley, First Round, 13 February 1901
0–6 v Sheffield Wednesday, Second Round, 20 February 1904
0–6 v Aston Villa, First Division, 14 March 1914
1–7 v Newcastle United, First Division, 10 September 1927
0–6 v Huddersfield Town, First Division, 10 September 1930
v Blackburn Rovers, First Division, 10 April 1926
v Aston Villa, First Division, 27 December 1930
v Wolverhampton Wanderers, Second Division, 26 December 1931

Streaks

Wins/draws/losses in a season

Goals

Points

Two points for a win: 64 in 42 matches, First Division, 1956–57[1]
Three points for a win:
92 in 42 matches, Premier League, 1993–94[1]
91 in 38 matches, Premier League, 1999–2000[1]
Two points for a win:
22 in 42 matches, First Division, 1930–31[1]
14 in 30 matches, First Division, 1893–94[76]
Three points for a win: 48 in 38 matches, First Division, 1989–90[1]

Attendances

Season-by-season performance

League record by opponent

Footnotes

A. ^ Between 1949 and 1993, when the Charity Shield finished in a draw, the Shield would be shared by the two teams. In the 1980s and early 1990s, the Shield itself was held by each club for six months.[80]
B. ^ The Premier League took over from the First Division as the top tier of the English football league system upon its formation in 1992. The First Division then became the second tier of English football, the Second Division became the third tier, and so on. The First Division is now known as the Football League Championship, while the Second Division is now known as Football League One.
C. ^ The "Other" column constitutes goals and appearances (including those as a substitute) in the FA Community Shield, the UEFA Super Cup, the Intercontinental Cup and the FIFA Club World Cup.
D. ^ Major competitions include the Premier League, the FA Cup, the League Cup and the UEFA Champions League.
E. ^ Due to bomb damage to Old Trafford, in the period between the end of the Second World War and 1949, Manchester United played their home games at Maine Road, the home of Manchester City,[66] with the exception of two FA Cup matches in the 1947–48 season, which were played at Goodison Park, Liverpool, and Leeds Road, Huddersfield, respectively.
F. ^ This is also the Premier League's record attendance.

References

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