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The Zulu Warriors have also seen offshoot gangs created such as the Brew Crew and the Junior Business Boys [1] They have featured in the 2005 film Green Street.The match shown in the film is supposedly between West Ham United F.C. and Birmingham City with a fight after the match between the Zulu Warriors and the Green Street Elite (GSE), the name used in the film for the Inter City Firm (ICF).
Maik Taylor, the club's most capped international player Birmingham City Football Club, an English association football club based in the city of Birmingham, was founded in 1875 under the name of Small Heath Alliance. They first entered the FA Cup in the 1881–82 season. When nationally organised league football in England began, the club, by then called simply Small Heath F.C., was a founder ...
This is a category for Birmingham City F.C. players past and present. This includes players who played for the club under its previous names: Small Heath Alliance (1875–1888), Small Heath (1888–1905) and Birmingham (1905–1943).
Small Heath F.C., champions of the inaugural Football League Second Division 1892–93 Birmingham City Football Club, an association football club based in Birmingham, England, was founded in 1875 as Small Heath Alliance. For the first thirteen years of their existence, there was no league football, so matches were arranged on an ad hoc basis, supplemented by cup competitions organised at ...
In the early years of his life while growing up in the tough streets of Handsworth, Birmingham, Patterson adopted a criminal lifestyle with an addiction to violence; [4] this was during the early 1980s, when relationships between ethnic communities in the inner cities and the police force were tense.
Steve Finnan, who began his professional career with Birmingham, played for the Republic of Ireland in the 2002 World Cup and won the Champions League in 2005 with Liverpool. [4] Mauro Zárate scored Lazio's goal in the 2009 Coppa Italia Final. [14] Loanee Obafemi Martins scored Birmingham's winning goal in the 2011 Football League Cup Final. [9]
Birmingham-Southern keeps its baseball season alive with a 9–7 walk-off win over Randolph-Macon in the Division III College World Series.
To reduce the club's losses in light of breaches of the EFL's Profitability and Sustainability Regulations, the stadium was sold for £22.8 million to Birmingham City Stadium Ltd, a new company wholly owned by the football club's parent, and would be leased back to the club, [159] In December 2020, 21.64% of the club and 25% of Birmingham City ...