Coventry City Football Club is an English professional football club based in Coventry, West Midlands, England. The club competes in the Premier League, the top tier of English football, following promotion from the EFL Championship. The club is nicknamed the Sky Blues after the sky blue colours that have featured prominently throughout their history, which they have worn continuously since 1962.
Coventry City formed as Singers F.C. in 1883 following a general meeting of the Singer Gentleman's club. They adopted their current name in 1898 and joined the Southern League in 1908, before being selected into the Football League in 1919. Relegated in 1925, they returned to the Second Division as champions of the Third Division South and Third Division South Cup winners in 1935–36. Relegated in 1952, they won promotion in the inaugural Fourth Division season in 1958–59. Coventry reached the First Division after winning the Third Division title in 1963–64 and the Second Division title in 1966– 67 under the management of Jimmy Hill. In the 1970–71 season, the team competed in the European Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, reaching the second round. Despite beating Bayern Munich 2–1 in the home leg, they had lost 6–1 in the first leg in Germany, and were eliminated.
Coventry's first period in the top division lasted 34 consecutive seasons between 1967 and 2001, and the club were inaugural members of the Premier League in 1992. Following their relegation from the top flight in 2001, they dropped down to League One in 2012 and League Two in 2017. Coventry won the FA Cup in 1987, the club's only major trophy, beating Tottenham Hotspur 3–2 in the final. The club also won the EFL Trophy in 2017, in the same season that they were relegated to the fourth tier.
Coventry returned to Wembley in 2018, beating Exeter City in the League Two play-off final. Manager Mark Robins built on this success guiding the Sky Blues to eighth in League One the next season, and then led the club to promotion back to the EFL Championship as League One champions in 2020. In the 2022–23 season, Coventry secured a play-off place in the Championship, before losing the play-off final to Luton Town on penalties.
For 106 years from 1899 to 2005, Coventry City played at the Highfield Road ground. The 32,609-capacity Coventry Arena was opened in August 2005 to replace Highfield Road, but the club only used the stadium periodically during a long-running dispute over rent between 2013 and August 2025, when the club acquired the stadium outright.
They will play in the 2026–27 Premier League after winning promotion, as champions, to return to the English top flight for the first time since the 2000–01 season.
History
thumb|300px|right|Chart of historic table positions of Coventry City in the Football League.
Early years (1883–1919)
Coventry City was founded in 1883 as Singers F.C., following a meeting between William Stanley and seven colleagues from the Singer Cycle Company at the Lord Aylesford Inn in Hillfields. It was one of several 19th century clubs linked to Coventry's bicycle factories, and the company founder George Singer was its first president. Singers joined the Birmingham County Football Association in 1884 and played about forty games in their first four years at Dowells Field in the Stoke area. In early seasons they lacked a regular playing staff and sometimes lacked equipment such as goal nets. In 1887, the club moved to the larger Stoke Road Ground, which had rudimentary stands, and they charged an entrance fee for the first time. The following five seasons were very successful, culminating in back-to-back Birmingham Junior Cup titles in 1891 and 1892.
Singers turned professional in 1892 and joined the Birmingham & District League in 1894, competing against strong reserve sides from established regional teams such as Aston Villa. Coventry residents not connected to the cycle company began supporting the club, and it was renamed Coventry City in 1898. Highfield Road opened in 1899, but its construction caused a financial crisis and subsequent salary disputes with the players. The club endured several poor seasons on the field, having to re-apply for membership of the league three times in the space of five years. In 1901, Coventry suffered their worst ever defeat with an 11–2 loss against Worcester-based Berwick Rangers in the qualifying round of the FA Cup. The club became a limited company in July 1907 and the team was more successful the following season, reaching the first round proper of the FA Cup for the first time before being eliminated by Crystal Palace.
In 1908, Coventry joined the Southern League, at the time the third-strongest English division. In their second season, Coventry reached the FA Cup quarter-final, beating top-flight teams Preston and Nottingham Forest before losing to Everton. Another two successful seasons followed but in 1914 the club was relegated, amid renewed financial problems. Its economic health worsened as attendances dropped sharply, and the club was in danger of dissolution. It was saved in part by the abandonment of competitive football in mid-1915 due to World War I. The club's debts were then paid off by benefactor David Cooke in 1917. During the war, they played some friendly matches against local clubs and joined a temporary wartime division for 1918–19.
League football and the "Old Five" (1919–1945)
In 1919, Coventry submitted a successful application to join the Football League and were placed into the Second Division for the 1919–20 season, the first played after the war. In preparation for league football, the club invested in new players and increased Highfield Road's capacity to 40,000. They avoided finishing last in 1919–20 when they won their final game against Bury, but this result was later found to be rigged, the club receiving a heavy fine in 1923. In 1924–25, after their sixth successive relegation battle, Coventry finished bottom of the table and dropped into the Third Division North. A year later they were asked by the League to switch to the Third Division South, to keep the sizes of the divisions even. Their poor form continued, and in 1927–28 they narrowly avoided having to seek re-election. Supporters rioted after the final game that season, some calling for the club to be wound up and a phoenix club established in its place. In 1928, the club's worst ever attendance was recorded with a gate of 2,059 for a match against Crystal Palace.
In addition to poor form on the field, the club ran into financial difficulties by the end of the 1920s, having to rely on fundraisers by supporters and a cash injection by Cooke, who had become club president. A committee of enquiry in 1928 concluded that the club was being mismanaged, leading to resignation of chairman W. Carpenter and his replacement by Walter Brandish. The club's form began to improve under the new board, and the appointment of Harry Storer as manager in 1931 brought in an era of success at the club. Coventry scored a total of 108 goals in the 1931–32 season, gaining the nickname "The Old Five" as a result of scoring five or more in many games. New signing Clarrie Bourton's individual tally of 49 goals was the Football League record for that season, and his overall total of 50 remains the club record. Two further 100-goal seasons followed, the first time in the league that a team had achieved three in a row, and Coventry recorded their largest ever league victory in April 1934, 9–0 against Bristol City. Despite scoring heavily, Coventry missed out on promotion every season until 1935–36, when they finished as Third Division North champions.
The club continued their good form in the second tier, finishing eighth, fourth and fourth again between 1936 and 1939. They also constructed a new main stand and purchased the freehold of Highfield Road, utilising a loan of £20,000 from local motor-industry entrepreneur John Siddeley. In 1937–38 they met with Midlands rivals Aston Villa the first time in league football, securing with a win and a draw in the two meetings as well as a higher-placed finish than the Birmingham club. In September 1939, the league season was aborted after three games due to the start of World War II. Many supporters at the time blamed the war for robbing the team of a probable imminent promotion to the First Division, although several top players including Bourton had been sold by 1939, and attendances had begun to fall. Coventry continued playing some friendly games until November 1940, when the Coventry Blitz damaged the stadium and brought all football in the city to a halt. Friendly matches resumed again in 1942, as parts of Highfield Road had been rebuilt, and the team joined the Midland Regional League.
Rise to the First Division, Europe, and FA Cup victory (1945–1987)
Storer left Coventry for Birmingham City after the war, and many of the 1939 squad had retired by 1945. New manager Dick Bayliss assembled a squad with a mixture of pre-war players and newcomers, but his tenure was cut short when he died after being stranded in a snow storm in 1947. Replacement Billy Frith was dismissed following a poor start to 1948–49 and the club persuaded Storer to return from Birmingham. In 1950–51, Coventry led the Second Division table at Christmas, but a poor run ended their promotion hopes and the following season they were relegated. They spent the next six seasons in the Third Division South, with seven different managers, but were never in contention for promotion. The average attendance at Highfield Road dropped sharply during this period, and several top players had to be sold amid financial difficulties. In 1958, the north and south divisions were replaced by a single nationwide third and a new fourth. Coventry were placed in the latter as a result of a bottom-half finish in 1957–58. Three games into 1958–59, the club occupied its lowest ever overall league position, 91st, but recovered to secure promotion back into the third tier.
The appointment of Derrick Robins as chairman in 1958 and Jimmy Hill as manager in 1961, marked the start of the "Sky Blue revolution" at the club. Hill changed the club's kit colour and nickname, introduced the "Sky Blue Song", and added pre-match entertainment. Backed by an injection of cash from Robins, Hill led Coventry to the Third and Second Division championships in 1964 and 1967 respectively, taking them to the top division for the first time. Coventry's record attendance was set in 1967, against fellow title-chasers Wolverhampton Wanderers; the official gate was 51,455 although the club estimated that the figure was higher. In 1969–70, under Hill's successor Noel Cantwell, the club finished sixth in the First Division, which remains their highest ever position. The top-six finish earned them a place in the 1970–71 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, which ended in the second round with a 7–3 aggregate defeat against Bayern Munich. In the mid-1970s, the club faced renewed financial difficulty and sold several top players. A relegation battle followed in 1976–77, which culminated in a controversial 2–2 draw with Bristol City that saw both sides survive at the expense of Sunderland, playing out the final minutes without any attempt to score further goals. A season of success followed in 1977–78, as Coventry finished seventh, narrowly missing a European place. In 1980–81, Coventry reached their first major semi-final, losing to West Ham United in the League Cup.
Hill returned to the club as managing director in 1975, and was elevated to chairman in 1980. He initiated several transformations at the club, including the conversion of Highfield Road to England's first all-seat stadium in 1981, and the opening of a sports centre and training ground in Ryton-on-Dunsmore. Hill attempted to rename the club "Coventry Talbot", after their sponsors, but this was rejected by the Football Association. To pay for the developments, the club sold top players including popular striker Tommy Hutchison, and results suffered. Hill was forced out of the club in 1983 and terraces reintroduced two years later. Despite surviving relegation battles for four successive seasons, with three changes of manager, by 1986 the club had assembled a strong squad. Under duo George Curtis and John Sillett, they spent most of the following season in the top eight, and advanced to the 1987 FA Cup final. In a match later described by Steven Pye of The Guardian as a "classic final", Coventry beat Tottenham Hotspur 3–2 at Wembley which, , is the club's only major trophy to date.
Recent history (1987–present)
Coventry's FA Cup defence ended with a fourth-round defeat to Watford, followed a season later by one of the biggest upsets in FA Cup history when they lost 2–1 to non-league Sutton United in the third round. However, they finished seventh in the league that season, their highest finish since 1978. A last-day escape in 1991–92 earned Coventry a place in the newly-formed Premier League. Bryan Richardson took over as club chairman in summer 1993, making large sums of money available for players over subsequent years. With Ron Atkinson and then Gordon Strachan as manager, Coventry signed several high-profile players such as Dion Dublin, Moustapha Hadji, Peter Ndlovu and Robbie Keane, but did not finish higher than 11th place for the remainder of their Premier League tenure.
In 1997, Richardson revealed the initial proposals for a new stadium in the north of Coventry, at the time envisaged as having 40,000 seats and included in England's unsuccessful bid for the 2006 World Cup. The project was backed by Coventry City Council and gained planning permission in 1998, but involved high costs, inducing the board to sell Highfield Road to a property developer and lease it back, before construction had started. On the field, Coventry were forced by the rising debts to sell their top players without replacement, and were finally relegated in 2000–01, ending 34 years of continuous tenure in the top flight.
In their first season back in the second tier, Coventry occupied 4th place with seven games remaining, but ultimately finished 11th, outside the play-off places. The new stadium opened in 2005, having been reduced in size and delayed several times; the club had previously sold its 50% share to the Alan Higgs charity to repay debts. The club's financial situation remained poor, and by 2007 they faced the possibility of being forced out of business; this was averted when the club was bought by hedge fund owner Sisu Capital. Led by chairman Ray Ranson, Coventry signed several promising youngsters in the early Sisu years, but they failed to achieve on-field success. Sisu began reducing investment from 2009 as debts mounted, leading eventually to Ranson's resignation in 2011. They were relegated to League One in 2012, and were forced to groundshare with Northampton Town (a 70-mile round trip from Coventry) for more than a year from 2013, following a rent dispute with the Ricoh Arena owners. Coventry City Football Club Ltd was dissolved, but the team were allowed to continue playing in League One under Sisu Company Otium.
In 2016–17, Coventry were relegated to League Two, but also won the EFL Trophy in the same season, their first trophy for 30 years. The following season, their first in the fourth tier since 1959, they were promoted straight back, finishing sixth and beating Exeter City in the play-off final. Two seasons later, they were promoted again, being awarded the League One championship via a points-per-game system after the season was curtailed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. At the time of curtailment in March 2020, they led the table with 67 points from 34 games.
The Sisu era at Coventry City ended in 2023, when local businessman Doug King purchased the club. King had also attempted to acquire the stadium, now renamed the CBS Arena, after both Wasps and the stadium holding company had fallen into administration, but his bid came too late and the stadium was eventually sold to Mike Ashley. Coventry finished fifth in the Championship and then progressed to the play-off final at Wembley, missing out on promotion to the Premier League in a penalty shoot-out defeat against Luton Town. The following season, the club reached the FA Cup semi-final for the first time since 1987, facing Manchester United at Wembley. After going 3–0 down, Coventry dramatically levelled the match in stoppage time and had a ‘winning’ goal controversially disallowed for offside in the final seconds by the very narrowest of margins, then went on to lose on penalties. Later in 2024, Coventry dismissed long-time manager Mark Robins following a run of poor results, replacing him with Frank Lampard. Coventry purchased the CBS Arena in August 2025. On 17 April 2026, Coventry were promoted to the Premier League for the first time since the 2000–01 Season after a 1–1 draw with Blackburn Rovers. On 21 April 2026, Coventry defeated Portsmouth 5–1 to clinch the 2025–26 EFL Championship title.
Kit
Colours
Coventry's home shirts are either completely or predominantly sky blue. However, in past seasons, different 'home colours' were worn. For example, in 1889, the then Singers FC wore pink and blue halved shirts (mirroring the corporate colours of Singers Motors). Furthermore, in the 1890s, black and red were the club's colours. In the early 1920s, the club wore red and green (to reflect the colours of the city crest). Sky blue was first used by Coventry in 1898 and the theme was used until 1922. Variations of blue and white were then used until the 1960s and the beginning of the 'sky blue revolution'. The colour made its return in 1962 thanks to the then manager, Jimmy Hill. To mark the 125th year of the club, Coventry wore a special brown shirt in the last home game of the 2008–09 season against Watford, having first worn a chocolate brown away kit in 1978. This kit has been cited by some as the worst in English football history, but also has an iconic status with some fans.
In 2012, in the Third round FA Cup tie versus Southampton, the team wore a commemorative blue and white striped kit, marking the 25th anniversary of the club winning the FA Cup in 1987. The strip was worn again in January 2013 for Coventry's 3rd round FA Cup fixture with Tottenham Hotspur, whom they beat in the 1987 final. In 2019, Coventry City announced a new third kit in black and white honouring the city's connection with 2 Tone Records on the 40th anniversary of the record label.
Kit makers and sponsorship
Since the 2019–20 season, the kit is made by Hummel. The home, away, and third kit is sponsored by Monzo as the main club sponsor across the front of the shirt and King of Shaves on the reverse since the 2024–25 season.
The first official kit manufacture deal came in 1974 when Umbro signed a deal with the club. Coventry also had the first kit sponsorship deal in the football league, when Jimmy Hill, then chairman of the club, negotiated a deal with Talbot, who manufactured cars in the city.
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;margin-left:1em"
!Period
!Kit manufacturer
!Shirt sponsor
!Shorts sponsor
|-
|1974–75
|Umbro
|rowspan=2|None
| rowspan="24" |None or N/A
|-
|1975–80
|rowspan=2|Admiral Sportswear
|-
|1980–81
|rowspan=2|Talbot
|-
|1981–83
|Big T
|-
|1983–84
|rowspan=3|Umbro
|Tallon
|-
|1984–85
|Glazepta
|-
|1985–86
|Elliotts
|-
|1986–87
|Triple S Sport
|rowspan=2|Granada Bingo
|-
|1987–88
|rowspan=2|Hummel
|-
|1988–89
|None
|-
|1989–92
|Asics
|rowspan=4|Peugeot
|-
|1992–94
|Ribero
|-
|1994–96
|Pony International
|-
|1996–97
|rowspan=2|Le Coq Sportif
|-
|1997–99
|rowspan=3|Subaru (home)
Isuzu (away)
|-
|1999–2004
|In House Manufacturer (CCFC Leisure)
|-
|2004–05
|rowspan=2|Kit@
|-
|2005–06
|rowspan=2|Cassidy Group
|-
|2006–10
|rowspan=4|Puma
|-
|2010–13
|City Link
|-
|2013–14
|Grace Medical Fund (charity partner)
|-
|2014–15
|rowspan=2|Allsopp & Allsopp
|-
|2015–18
|rowspan=2|Nike
|-
|2018–19
|Midrepro
|-
|2019–20
| rowspan="6" |Hummel International
|Allsopp & Allsopp
|The Exams Office
|-
|2020–21
|BoyleSports (front), Jingltree (back)
| rowspan="2" |G&R Scaffolding (home), SIMIAN Aspects Training (away)
|-
|2021–23
|BoyleSports (front), XL Motors (back)
|-
|2023–24
|King of Shaves (front), XL Motors (sleeve), Coventry Building Society (rear)
| rowspan="2" |G&R Scaffolding
|-
|2024–25
|Monzo (front), Mercury (sleeve), King of Shaves (rear)
|-
|2025–
|Monzo (front), XL Motors (sleeve), Monzo Business (rear)
|None or N/A
|}
Stadium
Early grounds
Coventry's first ground was at Dowells Field, where they played as Singers F.C. from their founding in 1883 until 1887. It was located in the Stoke area south of Binley Road close to a landmark called Robinsons Pit, in an area of fields which belonged at the time to a landowner named Samuel Dowell. The site was later the location of the Gosford Park Hotel and the Coventry loop line railway, and much of the former pitch is now occupied by housing.
The club's second pitch was at Stoke Road, to which Singers moved in 1887. It was located between Paynes Lane and Swan Lane, immediately to the south of the eventual Highfield Road stadium. The first game at the ground was a 1–0 win against Stoke City with an attendance of 3,000, but the club went on to finish bottom of the Birmingham & District League in the opening season.
A run to the FA Cup quarter finals in 1910 saw a then-record 18,995 attendance at Highfield Road, and the club spent the revenue generated by the cup run on the construction of a new stand on the northern side. A new terrace at the east of the ground, known as the Spion Kop, was opened in 1922, and in 1927 a roof was added over part of the western terrace, taken from Twickenham Stadium and funded by the supporters' club. The stadium was bombed in the Coventry Blitz in 1941, damaging the pitch and the main stand, writer Nemo in the Coventry Telegraph said that Adolf Hitler had "done a spot of ploughing". The first floodlights were installed at the ground in 1953, and were upgraded in 1957, using money raised by the supporters' club. Hill also oversaw the ground's conversion to all-seater as Chairman in 1981, but this was deeply unpopular with fans as well as Hill's successor John Poynton, and a report in early 1985 concluded that it was not achieving its desired effect of combatting hooliganism at Highfield Road. The Spion Kop was reconfigured and converted back to a standing terrace later that year. The Taylor Report of 1990 led to a requirement that all top-flight teams should switch to all-seater. This led to what proved to be the final major development at Highfield Road, the construction of the new East Stand. The stadium hosted its last league game in a 6–2 Coventry win over Derby County in 2005 and was subsequently demolished to make way for a new housing development.
Coventry Building Society Arena
thumbnail|Coventry Building Society Arena
In 1997, Coventry City published plans for a 40,000-seat stadium on the site of a former gasworks in the Foleshill area of Coventry. Backed by a 50% stake from Coventry City Council, the stadium gained planning permission in 1998, and in 2000 was included in England's bid for the 2006 FIFA World Cup. The failure of this bid and relegation in 2001 forced Coventry City to sell their share of the stadium to the Alan Higgs charity to repay debts. After several delays, decontamination work on the site, and reductions in the scope of the project, the stadium hosted its first game in 2005 when Coventry defeated Queen's Park Rangers 3–0. Electronics manufacturer Ricoh were the initial sponsor of the stadium and it was named the Ricoh Arena. In addition to the stadium, the venue features an exhibition hall, hotel and casino and is adjacent to a retail complex and superstore. It became the Coventry Building Society Arena in 2021 following a deal with Coventry Building Society.
In 2012, the club defaulted on its rent amid a dispute with the stadium's owners, Arena Coventry Limited (ACL) – a company owned jointly by the city council and the Higgs charity. The two sides could not agree on a revised deal and Coventry played its home games at Sixfields Stadium for the 2013–14 season while also announcing plans to build a new stadium elsewhere in Coventry. The move was met with strong opposition and protests by Coventry fans, many of whom boycotted games at the stadium, gathering instead on an area close to Sixfields which they dubbed "Jimmy's Hill".
Coventry City returned to the Ricoh Arena in August 2014 after reaching a deal with ACL. Wasps purchased the stadium in late 2014, relocating to Coventry from Adams Park in High Wycombe. Coventry City were exiled from the stadium again from 2019 to 2021, playing their home games at St Andrew's and later announcing a partnership with the University of Warwick with the goal of acquiring land for a new stadium. They returned to the Ricoh Arena following an agreement with Wasps in 2021, also maintaining the longer-term goal of constructing a new stadium. On 23 August 2025, the club announced it had purchased the stadium from Frasers Group, thus granting them full ownership of the stadium.
Supporters
Former Players' Association
In February 2007 a Former Players' Association was launched. Set up by club historian and statistician Jim Brown, former 1980s player Kirk Stephens and a committee of volunteers, its aim was to bring former players of the club together and cherish their memories. To qualify for membership players have to have made at least one first-team competitive appearance for the club or been a manager.
About 50 former stars of the club attended the launch including Coventry City legends George Hudson, Cyrille Regis, Charlie Timmins and Bill Glazier. The association's first newsletter was published in autumn 2007 and a website launched. The launch of 2007 was followed by subsequent Legends' Days. The 2009 event, held at the home game against Doncaster Rovers was attended by 43 former players including the first visit to Coventry for many years of Roy Barry and Dave Clements. In March 2012 the membership had increased past the 200 mark with former captain Terry Yorath inducted as the 200th member at the 2012 Legends' Day.
Legends’ Day has become an almost permanent fixture amongst Coventry supporters. Legends’ Day has been held almost every year since the Inaugural Event. The only exceptions being in 2014 when the club were exiled playing home games in Northampton and in 2020 and 2021 after fans were shut out of stadiums as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Identity
The club's support is collectively known as The Sky Blue Army. In Coventry and Warwickshire the use of the term ‘Going Up The City’ is a term used to say you are going to watch a Coventry City match.
The club's support massively dropped off in the years of the SISU ownership, with the decline in average attendances falling in line with the club's slide down the league pyramid. The exit from The Ricoh Arena in 2013 led to many supporters protesting against SISU's ownership of the club. In the 2013–14 season, in which the club was exiled at Northampton Town's Sixfields Stadium the average attendance dropped to just over 2,000.
The Sky Blue Trust is the largest member-based supporters club and in its peak was fighting to gain a stake in the club and to get fan representation on the board of directors. As of 2022 The Sky Blue Trust are less vocal and are viewed as obsolete by many supporters.
Sky Blue anthem
The words to the club's song were written in 1962 by Team Manager Jimmy Hill and Director John Camkin; The words being set to the tune of the "Eton Boating Song". It was launched at the home game with Colchester on 22 December 1962 (a match abandoned at half-time because of fog) with the words printed in the programme.
<poem>Original Words:
Let's all sing together
Play up, Sky Blues
While we sing together
We will never lose
Proud, Posh or Cobblers
Oysters or anyone
They shan't defeat us
We'll fight till the game is won!
City! City! City!</poem>
<poem>Current Words:
Let's all sing together
Play up, Sky Blues
While we sing together
We will never lose
Tottenham or Chelsea
United or anyone
They shan't defeat us
We'll fight till the game is won!
City! City! City!</poem>
Famous supporters
The club has a number of famous supporters, Television Broadcaster Richard Keys was born in the city and is a lifelong supporter of the club.
The former principal of the Red Bull Formula 1 team Christian Horner was outed as a supporter of the club when he jokingly claimed in an interview with Sky F1 he was trying to convince Kevin De Bruyne to join the club.
Haas F1 Team principal Ayao Komatsu revealed in an interview with Sky Sports F1 that he is a fan of the club. Komatusu's support stems from being introduced to the club whilst he was studying at Loughborough University. Following the break after the 2026 Japanese Grand Prix, the Team and Komatsu attended the clubs training ground
Comedian Josh Pugh grew up in nearby Atherstone and currently lives in Coventry and supports the Sky Blues.
From the world of music, Musician Neville Staple of The Specials is also a keen supporter of the club and in 2019, appeared in a kit launch for the club's new ‘Two Tone’ themed Third Kit. Tom Clarke, Andy Hopkins and Liam Watts who formed local rock band The Enemy are all big City supporters.
Singer/songwriter Tom Grennan is also a fan of the club owing to his manager and agent being a Sky Blues fan.
The actor Graeme Hawley who is best known for playing the role of John Stape in the ITV soap opera Coronation Street is a season ticket holder at the club. Other famous fans include professional Darts players Steve Beaton and Steve Hine, Formula 1 mogul Eddie Jordan and Westlife member Brian McFadden.
Malcolm In The Middle actor Frankie Muniz is reportedly a Coventry City fan, apparently owing to a producer he made friends with on the set of the film Agent Cody Banks 2.
Politician Geoffrey Robinson is a fan of the club and once served as chairman.
Rivalries
Coventry's principal rivalries are with their local rivals in the English Midlands; these include Aston Villa, Leicester City, Birmingham City, West Bromwich Albion and Wolverhampton Wanderers. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the rivalry with Wolverhampton was the most noteworthy – the clubs were both promoted in 1967, meeting in the Second Division championship decider, and then contested an FA Cup quarter-final six years later which was won by Wolverhampton.
Aston Villa are Coventry's main rival. Historically, Aston Villa were Coventry's main rivals, however many Coventry supporters also view the rivalry with Leicester City as significant. Leicester and Coventry compete the M69 Derby. However, largely due to the clubs' differing fortunes meetings between the two have been rare in recent years; the two clubs had not played each other between 2012 and 2023.
In the 1960s and 1970s there was intense rivalry with Wolverhampton Wanderers which started in 1965 after Wolves were relegated from Division One and the two clubs met in Division Two. The two sides were promoted together in 1967 and there were fierce battles in both city centres when the clubs met during the period. There was also rivalries with West Bromwich Albion and Walsall but these are much less fierce than the ones with Leicester, Wolves and Villa. A local rivalry also exists with Birmingham City, however the ground share agreement at St Andrew's between 2019 and 2021 – which effectively spared Coventry from being expelled from the EFL – has led to friendlier relations between the two clubs’ supporters.
The club has an unusual long-distance rivalry with North-East side Sunderland, which stems back to the end of the 1976–77 season, when Coventry, Sunderland and Bristol City were all battling against relegation from Division One on the final day of the season. With Coventry and Bristol City facing each other at Highfield Road, the referee, on the advice of the police, delayed the kick-off of the match by 15 minutes as many Bristol City fans were still trying to enter the ground and there was a risk of serious trouble. Sunderland, who were playing away to Everton at the same time, lost 2–0, and the result was displayed on the Highfield Road scoreboard. There were still 15 minutes left to play and Coventry and Bristol City effectively stopped playing knowing that a 2–2 draw would keep both teams up and send Sunderland down. There was an inquiry but the result was allowed to stand and Sunderland were relegated. Some Sunderland fans have held a grudge and there has also been some rivalry more recently as the two clubs competed for promotion from League One together in 2018–19 and 2019–20. In 2018–19 crowd trouble marred the meetings between the two at The Ricoh Arena and The Stadium of Light leading to numerous arrests among both sets of fans.
In a 2020 survey conducted by the Coventry Telegraph, supporters of various teams were asked to name the top-five clubs they viewed as rivals. Among Coventry supporters, Aston Villa were the club named the most with 83% including them. This was followed by Leicester City with 76%, Wolverhampton Wanderers with 50%, Birmingham City with 47% and West Bromwich Albion with 45%. Sunderland were named by 34% of Coventry fans. In the other direction, 66% of Leicester City fans included Coventry in their top five while the club were named by about 50% of supporters from Northampton, West Brom, Aston Villa, Birmingham City, Burton Albion, Wolves, Walsall and Sunderland.
Players
First-team squad
Out on loan
Under-21 squad
<!--====Out on loan====
-->
Under-18 squad
Management
{|
|valign="top"|
{| class="wikitable"
!Name
!Position
|-
| Frank Lampard
| First-team manager
|-
| Joe Edwards
| First-team assistant manager
|-
| Chris Jones <br/> John Dempster <br/>
| First-team coach
|-
| Aled Williams
| First-team goalkeeper coach
|-
| Mark Delaney
| Under 21s Manager
|-
| Daniel Bolas
| Academy Manager
|-
| Dr Ricky Shamji
| Club Doctor
|-
| Dr Claire-Marie Roberts
| Performance Director
|-
| Liam Stanley
| First-Team Physiotherapist
|-
| Adam Hearn
| Head of Sports Science
|-
| Andy Young
| Senior Fitness Coach
|-
| Jonny Clancy
| Head of Analysis
|-
| Dean Austin
| Head of Recruitment
|-
| Jamie Johnson
| Head of Scouting
|-
| Harry Colledge
| Kit Manager
|-
| Abbie Forman
| Sports Scientist
|}
|valign="top"|
{| class="wikitable"
!Name
!Position
|-
| Doug King
| Owner/Chairman
|-
| John Taylor
| Chief Operations Officer
|-
| Nicola Ibbetson
| Chief Business Officer
|-
| Vacant
| Club Secretary
|-
| Mark Hornby
| Head of External Relations
|-
| Suzette Johnson
| Hospitality Manager
|-
| Danielle McGorman
| Head of Ticketing
|-
| Dan Smith
| Head of Partnerships
|-
| Chris Pihoue
| Head of Marketing
|-
| TBC
| Head of Retail
|-
| Dale Gregory
| Head of Grounds
|-
| Connor Brady
| Deputy Head of Grounds (First Team)
|-
| Neil Matts
| Deputy Head of Grounds (Academy)
|-
| Megan Drage
| Head of Training Ground and Academy Facilities
|-
| David Busst
| Head of Sky Blues in the Community
|-
| Jim Brown
| Club Historian
|}
|}
Seasons
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 90%"
! Season Review<br>& Statistics
!
!
! Player of the Year
! Top Goalscorer
!
! Most Appearances
! Most Captain Apps
! Other
|-
! 1958–59 season
|align=center| 4
|style="text-align:center; background:silver;"| 2nd <small>(24)</small>
|rowspan=9| not awarded
| Ray Straw 30
|align=center| 48
| Roy Kirk 48
| Reg Ryan
| Football League Fourth Division Runners-up
|-
! 1959–60 season
|align=center| 3
|align=center| 5th <small>(24)</small>
| Ray Straw 21
|align=center| 48
| Arthur Lightening 48
| Roy Kirk
| Southern Professional Floodlit Cup Winners
|-
! 1960–61 season
|align=center| 3
|align=center| 15th <small>(24)</small>
| Ray Straw 20
|align=center| 51
| George Curtis 51
| George Curtis
|
|-
! 1961–62 season
|align=center| 3
|align=center| 14th <small>(24)</small>
| Mike Dixon 12
|align=center| 49
| George Curtis 49
| George Curtis
|
|-
! 1962–63 season
|align=center| 3
|align=center| 4th <small>(24)</small>
| Terry Bly 29
|align=center| 57
| George Curtis 56
| George Curtis
|
|-
! 1963–64 season
|align=center| 3
|style="text-align:center; background:gold;"| 1st <small>(24)</small>
| George Hudson 28
|align=center| 50
| George Curtis 50<br> Ronnie Rees 50
| George Curtis
| Football League Third Division Champions
|-
! 1964–65 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 10th <small>(22)</small>
| George Hudson 24
|align=center| 47
| George Curtis 46<br> Ronnie Rees 46
| George Curtis
|
|-
! 1965–66 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 3rd <small>(22)</small>
| George Hudson 17
|align=center| 50
| George Curtis 50
| George Curtis
|
|-
! 1966–67 season
|align=center| 2
|style="text-align:center; background:gold;"| 1st <small>(22)</small>
| Bobby Gould 25
|align=center| 46
| George Curtis 46
| George Curtis
| Football League Second Division Champions
|-
! 1967–68 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 20th <small>(22)</small>
| Ernie Machin
| Ronnie Rees 9
|align=center| 46
| Ernie Machin 44
| George Curtis
| FA Youth Cup Runners-up
|-
! 1968–69 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 20th <small>(22)</small>
| Bill Glazier
| Ernie Hunt 13
|align=center| 49
| Bill Glazier 49
| George Curtis
|
|-
! 1969–70 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 6th <small>(22)</small>
| Neil Martin
| Neil Martin 15
|align=center| 45
| Mick Coop 44
| Roy Barry
| FA Youth Cup Runners-up
|-
! 1970–71 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 10th <small>(22)</small>
| Willie Carr
| Ernie Hunt 13<br> Neil Martin 13
|align=center| 52
| Jeff Blockley 52
| Neil Martin
| Inter-Cities Fairs Cup Second round;<br>BBC Goal of the Season: Ernie Hunt
|-
! 1971–72 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 18th <small>(22)</small>
| Ernie Hunt
| Ernie Hunt 12
|align=center| 45
| Willie Carr 45<br> Wilf Smith 45
| Roy Barry
| Texaco Cup Second round
|-
! 1972–73 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 19th <small>(22)</small>
| Willie Carr
| Brian Alderson 17
|align=center| 48
| Mick Coop 48
| Roy Barry
| Texaco Cup First round
|-
! 1973–74 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 16th <small>(22)</small>
| Bill Glazier
| Brian Alderson 15
|align=center| 54
| Jimmy Holmes 53<br> Tommy Hutchison 53
| John Craven
| Texaco Cup First round
|-
! 1974–75 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 14th <small>(22)</small>
| Graham Oakey
| Brian Alderson 8<br> David Cross 8
|align=center| 46
| Tommy Hutchison 46
| John Craven
|
|-
! 1975–76 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 14th <small>(22)</small>
| Tommy Hutchison
| David Cross 16
|align=center| 47
| Mick Coop 47<br> Tommy Hutchison 47
| John Craven
|
|-
! 1976–77 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 19th <small>(22)</small>
| Jim Blyth
| Mick Ferguson 15
|align=center| 47
| John Beck 45
| Terry Yorath
|
|-
! 1977–78 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 7th <small>(22)</small>
| Ian Wallace
| Ian Wallace 23
|align=center| 47
| Bobby McDonald 47<br> Barry Powell 47
| Terry Yorath
|
|-
! 1978–79 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 10th <small>(22)</small>
| Bobby McDonald
| Ian Wallace 15
|align=center| 45
| Tommy Hutchison 45<br> Bobby McDonald 45
| Terry Yorath
|
|-
! 1979–80 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 15th <small>(22)</small>
| Gary Gillespie
| Ian Wallace 13
|align=center| 47
| Tommy Hutchison 45
| Tommy Hutchison
|
|-
! 1980–81 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 16th <small>(22)</small>
| Danny Thomas
| Garry Thompson 15
|align=center| 55
| Paul Dyson 54<br> Harry Roberts 54
| Mick Coop
| Football League Cup semi-finalists
|-
! 1981–82 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 14th <small>(22)</small>
| Danny Thomas
| Mark Hateley 18
|align=center| 48
| Gary Gillespie 46
| Gerry Daly
| PFA Merit Award: Joe Mercer
|-
! 1982–83 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 19th <small>(22)</small>
| Gary Gillespie
| Steve Whitton 14
|align=center| 48
| Gary Gillespie 48
| Gerry Francis
| PFA Team OTY: Danny Thomas
|-
! 1983–84 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 19th <small>(22)</small>
| Nick Platnauer
| Terry Gibson 19
|align=center| 49
| Terry Gibson 41<br> Nick Platnauer 41
| Harry Roberts
|
|-
! 1984–85 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 18th <small>(22)</small>
| Terry Gibson
| Terry Gibson 19
|align=center| 46
| Steve Ogrizovic 46
| Trevor Peake
|
|-
! 1985–86 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 17th <small>(22)</small>
| Trevor Peake
| Terry Gibson 13
|align=center| 47
| Steve Ogrizovic 47
| Brian Kilcline
|
|-
! 1986–87 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 10th <small>(22)</small>
| Steve Ogrizovic
| Cyrille Regis 16
|align=center| 53
| Steve Ogrizovic 53
| Brian Kilcline
| FA Cup Winners: 1987 FA Cup final;<br>FA Youth Cup Winners: 1987 FA Youth Cup final;<br>BBC Goal of the Season: Keith Houchen
|-
! 1987–88 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 10th <small>(21)</small>
| David Speedie
| Cyrille Regis 12
|align=center| 46
| Steve Ogrizovic 46
| Brian Kilcline
| FA Charity Shield Runners-up: 1987 FA Charity Shield;<br>Full Members Cup semi-finalists
|-
! 1988–89 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 7th <small>(20)</small>
| David Speedie
| David Speedie 15
|align=center| 42
| Brian Borrows 42<br> Steve Ogrizovic 42
| Brian Kilcline
|
|-
! 1989–90 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 12th <small>(20)</small>
| Brian Borrows
| David Speedie 9
|align=center| 47
| Brian Borrows 46<br> David Smith 46
| Brian Kilcline
| Football League Cup semi-finalists
|-
! 1990–91 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 16th <small>(20)</small>
| Kevin Gallacher
| Kevin Gallacher 16
|align=center| 47
| Brian Borrows 47
| Brian Kilcline
| PFA Merit Award: Tommy Hutchison
|-
! 1991–92 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 19th <small>(22)</small>
| Stewart Robson
| Kevin Gallacher 10
|align=center| 48
| Lloyd McGrath 46
| Stewart Robson
|
|-
! 1992–93 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 15th <small>(22)</small>
| Peter Atherton
| Micky Quinn 17
|align=center| 45
| John Williams 44
| Brian Borrows
|
|-
! 1993–94 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 11th <small>(22)</small>
| Phil Babb
| Peter Ndlovu 11
|align=center| 46
| Phil Babb 44<br> Steve Morgan 44
| Brian Borrows
|
|-
! 1994–95 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 16th <small>(22)</small>
| Brian Borrows
| Dion Dublin 16
|align=center| 49
| Brian Borrows 40<br> Paul Cook 40<br> Steve Ogrizovic 40
| Brian Borrows
| PFA Merit Award: Gordon Strachan
|-
! 1995–96 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 16th <small>(20)</small>
| Paul Williams
| Dion Dublin 16
|align=center| 45
| John Salako 43
| Dion Dublin
|
|-
! 1996–97 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 17th <small>(20)</small>
| Dion Dublin
| Dion Dublin 13
|align=center| 46
| Gary McAllister 46<br> Steve Ogrizovic 46
| Gary McAllister
|
|-
! 1997–98 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 11th <small>(20)</small>
| Dion Dublin
| Dion Dublin 23
|align=center| 47
| Dion Dublin 43
| Gary McAllister
| Premier League Golden Boot: Dion Dublin;<br>PFA Merit Award: Steve Ogrizovic
|-
! 1998–99 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 15th <small>(20)</small>
| Richard Shaw
| Noel Whelan 13
|align=center| 44
| Magnus Hedman 42<br> Richard Shaw 42
| Gary McAllister
| FA Youth Cup Runners-up
|-
! 1999–2000 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| 14th <small>(20)</small>
| Gary McAllister
| Gary McAllister 13
|align=center| 43
| Gary McAllister 43
| Gary McAllister
| FA Youth Cup Runners-up;<br>FAI Young Int'l Player OTY: Robbie Keane
|-
! 2000–01 season
|align=center| 1
|style="text-align:center; background:pink;"| 19th <small>(20)</small>
| Gary Breen
| Craig Bellamy 8
|align=center| 44
| Craig Bellamy 39
| Mustapha Hadji
| PFA Merit Award: Jimmy Hill;<br>Welsh Footballer OTY: John Hartson
|-
! 2001–02 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 11th <small>(24)</small>
| David Thompson
| Lee Hughes 14
|align=center| 49
| Muhamed Konjić 41
| John Eustace
|
|-
! 2002–03 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 20th <small>(24)</small>
| Muhamed Konjić
| Jay Bothroyd 11
|align=center| 52
| Muhamed Konjić 48
| Muhamed Konjić
|
|-
! 2003–04 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 12th <small>(24)</small>
| Stephen Warnock
| Gary McSheffrey 12
|align=center| 51
| Stephen Warnock 49
| Muhamed Konjić
| FWA Tribute Award: Jimmy Hill
|-
! 2004–05 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 19th <small>(24)</small>
| Michael Doyle
| Gary McSheffrey 14
|align=center| 51
| Michael Doyle 49
| Stephen Hughes
| First CONCACAF 50-goal scorer: Stern John;<br>Last goal at Highfield Road: Andy Whing
|-
! 2005–06 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 8th <small>(24)</small>
| Gary McSheffrey
| Gary McSheffrey 17
|align=center| 51
| Gary McSheffrey 50
| Michael Doyle
| First goal at Ricoh Arena: Claus Bech Jørgensen
|-
! 2006–07 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 17th <small>(24)</small>
| Andy Marshall
| Dele Adebola 9
|align=center| 49
| Dele Adebola 42<br> Michael Doyle 42<br> Marcus Hall 42<br> Andy Marshall 42
| Rob Page
| Birmingham Senior Cup Winners
|-
! 2007–08 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 21st <small>(24)</small>
| Jay Tabb
| Michael Mifsud 17
|align=center| 53
| Michael Doyle 49<br> Isaac Osbourne 49<br> Jay Tabb 49
| Stephen Hughes
|
|-
! 2008–09 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 17th <small>(24)</small>
| Aron Gunnarsson
| Clinton Morrison 12
|align=center| 53
| Keiren Westwood 49
| Scott Dann
| PFA Team OTY: Danny Fox, Keiren Westwood
|-
! 2009–10 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 19th <small>(24)</small>
| Keiren Westwood
| Clinton Morrison 11
|align=center| 49
| Keiren Westwood 46
| Stephen Wright
|
|-
! 2010–11 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 18th <small>(24)</small>
| Marlon King
| Marlon King 13
|align=center| 49
| Richard Keogh 48
| Lee Carsley
| FL Fan OTY: Kevin Monks
|-
! 2011–12 season
|align=center| 2
|style="text-align:center; background:pink;"| 23rd <small>(24)</small>
| Richard Keogh
| Lukas Jutkiewicz 9<br> Gary McSheffrey 9
|align=center| 48
| Richard Keogh 47<br> Joe Murphy 47
| Sammy Clingan
| Championship Apprentice Award: Gaël Bigirimana
|-
! 2012–13 season
|align=center| 3
|align=center| 15th <small>(24)</small>
| Carl Baker
| David McGoldrick 18
|align=center| 58
| Joe Murphy 56
| Carl Baker
| FL Trophy Northern area finalists;<br>PFA Team OTY: Leon Clarke;<br>FL Fan OTY: Pat Raybould
|-
! 2013–14 season
|align=center| 3
|align=center| 18th <small>(24)</small>
| Callum Wilson
| Callum Wilson 22
|align=center| 53
| Joe Murphy 53
| Carl Baker
| FL Goal OTY: Franck Moussa;<br>PFA Team OTY: Callum Wilson
|-
! 2014–15 season
|align=center| 3
|align=center| 17th <small>(24)</small>
| Jim O'Brien
| Frank Nouble 7
|align=center| 52
| John Fleck 47<br> Jim O'Brien 47
| Réda Johnson
|
|-
! 2015–16 season
|align=center| 3
|align=center| 8th <small>(24)</small>
| John Fleck
| Adam Armstrong 20
|align=center| 49
| Sam Ricketts 46<br> Romain Vincelot 46
| Sam Ricketts
| PFA Team OTY: Adam Armstrong
|-
! 2016–17 season
|align=center| 3
|style="text-align:center; background:pink;"| 23rd <small>(24)</small>
| George Thomas
| George Thomas 9
|align=center| 59
| Jordan Turnbull 46<br> Jordan Willis 46
| Jordan Willis
| EFL Trophy Winners: 2017 EFL Trophy final
|-
! 2017–18 season
|align=center| 4
|style="text-align:center; background:palegreen;"| 6th <small>(24)</small>
| Marc McNulty
| Marc McNulty 28
|align=center| 58
| Jack Grimmer 53
| Michael Doyle
| EFL League Two play-offs Winners: 2018 play-off final;<br>EFL Team OTY: Lee Burge, Jordan Willis;<br>PFA Team OTY: Jack Grimmer;<br>PFA Fans' Player OTY: Marc McNulty;<br>PFA Merit Award: Cyrille Regis
|-
! 2018–19 season
|align=center| 3
|align=center| 8th <small>(24)</small>
| Dominic Hyam
| Jordy Hiwula 13
|align=center| 51
| Luke Thomas 44
| Liam Kelly
|
|-
! 2019–20 season
|align=center| 3
|style="text-align:center; background:gold;"| 1st <small>(23)</small>
| Fankaty Dabo
| Matt Godden 15
|align=center| 47
| Jordan Shipley 42
| Liam Kelly
| EFL League One Champions;<br>LMA Awards Manager OTY (L1): Mark Robins;<br>PFA Team OTY: Marko Maroši, Fankaty Dabo,<br> Liam Walsh, Matt Godden
|-
! 2020–21 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 16th <small>(24)</small>
| Callum O'Hare
| Tyler Walker 8
|align=center| 49
| Callum O'Hare 48
| Liam Kelly
|
|-
! 2021–22 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 12th <small>(24)</small>
| Gustavo Hamer
| Viktor Gyökeres 18
|align=center| 49
| Viktor Gyökeres 47<br> Callum O'Hare 47
| Kyle McFadzean
| Championship Apprentice Award: Ryan Howley
|-
! 2022–23 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 5th <small>(24)</small>
| Gustavo Hamer
| Viktor Gyökeres 22
|align=center| 51
| Jake Bidwell 50<br> Viktor Gyökeres 50
| Kyle McFadzean
| EFL Championship play-offs Runners-up: 2023 play-off final;<br>Birmingham Senior Cup Runners-up;<br>EFL Team OTY: Ben Wilson, Viktor Gyökeres;<br>EFL Golden Glove: Ben Wilson;<br>PFA Team OTY: Viktor Gyökeres
|-
! 2023–24 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 9th <small>(24)</small>
| Ben Sheaf
| Ellis Simms 19<br> Haji Wright 19
|align=center| 53
| Ellis Simms 53
| Ben Sheaf
| FA Cup semi-finalists
|-
! 2024–25 season
|align=center| 2
|align=center| 5th <small>(24)</small>
| Jack Rudoni
| Haji Wright 12
|align=center| 53
| Milan van Ewijk 51
| Ben Sheaf
| EFL Championship play-offs semi-finalists;<br>PFA Lifetime Achievement Award: David Busst
|-
! 2025–26 season
|align=center| 2
|style="text-align:center; background:gold;"| 1st <small>(24)</small>
| Carl Rushworth
| Haji Wright 18
|align=center| 49
| Matt Grimes 48
| Matt Grimes
| EFL Championship Champions;<br>EFL Team OTY: Carl Rushworth, Milan van Ewijk,<br> Matt Grimes, Haji Wright;<br>EFL Manager OTY: Frank Lampard;<br>EFL Golden Glove: Carl Rushworth;<br>LMA Awards Manager OTY (Champ): Frank Lampard;<br>LMA Awards Manager OTY (Overall): Frank Lampard
|-
! 2026–27 season
|align=center| 1
|align=center| <small>(20)</small>
|
|
|align=center|
|
|
|
|}
Coventry City deducted 10 points by the Football League for going into administration.<br>
Coventry City deducted 10 points by the Football League.<br>
Bury were expelled from the EFL on 27 August 2019 due to financial issues at the club. The season was postponed on 13 March 2020 and later concluded prematurely due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with league positions and promotions decided on a points-per-game basis.<br>
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Season in progress.
Notable players
Official Hall of Fame
{|
|valign="top"|
{| class="wikitable"
!Player
!Apps
!Goals
|-
| Dave Bennett || 201 || 33
|-
| Brian Borrows || 477 || 13
|-
| Clarrie Bourton || 241 || 182
|-
| Willie Carr || 280 || 36
|-
| Mick Coop || 492 || 22
|-
| George Curtis || 538 || 13
|-
| Jimmy Dougall || 236 || 14
|-
| Dion Dublin || 170 || 72
|}
|valign="top"|
{| class="wikitable"
!Player
|-
|Highest transfer fee received || Viktor Gyökeres, undisclosed fee in the region of £20,000,000 in 2023 (to Sporting CP)
|-
|Most appearances (all competitions) || Steve Ogrizovic, 601 (1984–2000)
|-
|Most appearances (league) || Steve Ogrizovic, 504 (1984–2000)
|-
|All-time top scorer (all competitions) || Clarrie Bourton, 182 goals (1931–1937)
|-
|All-time top scorer (league) || Clarrie Bourton, 173 goals (1931–1937)
|-
|Top-flight era top scorer (all competitions) || Dion Dublin, 72 goals (1994–1998)
|-
|Top-flight era top scorer (league) || Dion Dublin, 60 goals (1994–1998)
|-
|Most goals by one player in a game || Arthur Bacon, 5 (vs Gillingham, 1933)<br> Clarrie Bourton, 5 (vs Bournemouth & Boscombe Athletic, 1931)<br> Cyrille Regis, 5 (vs Chester City, 1985)
|-
|Most goals by one player in a season || Clarrie Bourton, 50 (1931–1932, 49 league, 1 FA Cup)
|-
|Most goals by one player in a season in top-flight || Dion Dublin, 23 (1997–1998)<br> Ian Wallace, 23 (1977–1978)
|-
|Oldest player to play in a first-team match || Alf Wood, 43 years 207 days (vs Plymouth Argyle, 1958)
|-
|Youngest player to play in a first-team match || Jonson Clarke-Harris, 16 years 21 days (substitute vs Morecambe, 2010)
|-
|Youngest player to start a first-team match || Brian Hill, 16 years 273 days (vs Gillingham, 1958)
|}
Managers and chairmen
thumb|150px|[[Jimmy Hill (left) was manager 1961–1967, and chairman 1980–1983]]
thumb|150px|[[Ron Atkinson was manager 1995–1996]]
thumb|150px|[[Gordon Strachan was manager 1996–2001]]
thumb|150px|[[Gary McAllister was manager 2002–2003]]
thumb|150px|[[Chris Coleman (footballer)|Chris Coleman was manager 2008–2010]]
thumb|150px|Tim Fisher (SISU group) was chairman 2014–2023
thumb|150px|[[Tony Mowbray was manager 2015–2016]]
thumb|150px|[[Mark Robins (left) was manager 2012–2013 and 2017–2024, alongside assistant manager Adi Viveash (right) 2017–2024]]
thumb|150px|[[Frank Lampard has been manager since 2024]]
{| class="wikitable"
!Dates
!style="width:150px"|Chairman
!Dates
!style="width:250px"|Manager(s)
|-
|rowspan=10|1883–1907
|rowspan=10|Unknown
|style="background:skyblue;"|1883–1885
|style="background:skyblue;"| William Stanley
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1885–1887
|style="background:skyblue;"| Harry Hathaway
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1887–1892
|style="background:skyblue;"| J.G. Morgan
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1893
|style="background:skyblue;"| Teddy Kirk
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1893
|style="background:skyblue;"| George Maley
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1893–1895
|style="background:skyblue;"| Joe Collins
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1895–1900
|style="background:skyblue;"| Tom Cashmore
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1900–1902
|style="background:skyblue;"| Ben Newhall
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1902–1905
|style="background:skyblue;"| Michael O'Shea
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1905–1907
|rowspan=2 style="background:skyblue;"| Joe Beaman
|-
|rowspan=4|1907–1912
|rowspan=4| Thomas Owen
|style="background:skyblue;"|1907–1908
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1908–1909
|style="background:skyblue;"| Walter Harris
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1909–1910
|style="background:skyblue;"| Harry Buckle
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1910–1912
|rowspan=2 style="background:skyblue;"| Robert Wallace & committee
|-
|rowspan=8|1912–1928
|rowspan=8| David Cooke
|style="background:skyblue;"|1912–1913
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1913–1915
|style="background:skyblue;"| Frank Scott-Walford & committee
|-
|1915–1917
| H. Howard & committee <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1917–1919
|style="background:skyblue;"| William Clayton
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1919–1920
|style="background:skyblue;"| Harry Pollitt
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1920–1924
|style="background:skyblue;"| Albert Evans
|-
|1924–1925
| Harry Harbourne <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1925–1928
|style="background:skyblue;"| James Kerr
|-
|rowspan=4|1928–1935
|rowspan=4| Walter Brandish
|1928
|Vacant
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1928–1931
|style="background:skyblue;"| Jimmy McIntyre
|-
|1931
| Bill Slade <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1931–1935
|rowspan=2 style="background:skyblue;"| Harry Storer
|-
|rowspan=2|1935–1946
|rowspan=2| Fred Stringer
|style="background:skyblue;"|1935–1945
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1945–1946
|rowspan=2 style="background:skyblue;"| Dick Bayliss
|-
|rowspan=5|1946–1954
|rowspan=5| George Jones
|style="background:skyblue;"|1946–1947
|-
|1947
|Vacant
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1947–1948
|style="background:skyblue;"| Billy Frith
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1948–1953
|style="background:skyblue;"| Harry Storer (2)
|-
|1953–1954
|Vacant
|-
|rowspan=6|1954–1958
|rowspan=6| W Erle Shanks
|style="background:skyblue;"|1954
|style="background:skyblue;"| Jack Fairbrother
|-
|1954–1955
| Charlie Elliott <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1955
|style="background:skyblue;"| Jesse Carver
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1956
|style="background:skyblue;"| George Raynor
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1956–1957
|style="background:skyblue;"| Harry Warren
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1957–1958
|rowspan=3 style="background:skyblue;"| Billy Frith (2)
|-
|1958–1960
| Walter Brandish Jr.
|style="background:skyblue;"|1958–1960
|-
|rowspan=5|1960–1973
|rowspan=5| Derrick Robins
|style="background:skyblue;"|1960–1961
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1961–1967
|style="background:skyblue;"| Jimmy Hill
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1967–1972
|style="background:skyblue;"| Noel Cantwell
|-
|1972
| Bob Dennison <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1972–1973
|rowspan=2 style="background:skyblue;"| Joe Mercer
|-
|rowspan=2|1973–1975
|rowspan=2| Peter Robins
|style="background:skyblue;"|1973–1974
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1974–1975
|rowspan=4 style="background:skyblue;"| Gordon Milne
|-
|1975–1977
| Jack Scamp
|style="background:skyblue;"|1975–1977
|-
|1977–1980
| Phil Mead
|style="background:skyblue;"|1977–1980
|-
|rowspan=2|1980–1983
|rowspan=2| Jimmy Hill
|style="background:skyblue;"|1980–1981
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1981–1983
|rowspan=2 style="background:skyblue;"| Dave Sexton
|-
|rowspan=2|1983–1984
|rowspan=2| Iain Jamieson
|style="background:skyblue;"|1983
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1983–1984
|rowspan=2 style="background:skyblue;"| Bobby Gould
|-
|rowspan=5|1984–1990
|rowspan=5| John Poynton
|style="background:skyblue;"|1984
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1984–1986
|style="background:skyblue;"| Don Mackay
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1986–1987
|style="background:skyblue;"| John Sillett<br> George Curtis
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1987–1990
|style="background:skyblue;"| John Sillett
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1990
|rowspan=2 style="background:skyblue;"| Terry Butcher
|-
|rowspan=3|1990–1993
|rowspan=3| Peter Robins (2)
|style="background:skyblue;"|1990–1992
|-
|1992
| Don Howe <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1992–1993
|rowspan=3 style="background:skyblue;"| Bobby Gould (2)
|-
|1993
| John Clarke
|style="background:skyblue;"|1993
|-
|rowspan=5|1993–2002
|rowspan=5| Bryan Richardson
|style="background:skyblue;"|1993
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1993–1995
|style="background:skyblue;"| Phil Neal
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1995–1996
|style="background:skyblue;"| Ron Atkinson
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|1996–2001
|style="background:skyblue;"| Gordon Strachan
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2001–2002
|rowspan=2 style="background:skyblue;"| Roland Nilsson
|-
|rowspan=8|2002–2005
|rowspan=8| Mike McGinnity
|style="background:skyblue;"|2002
|-
|2002
| Steve Ogrizovic <small>(caretaker)</small><br> Trevor Peake <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2002–2003
|style="background:skyblue;"| Gary McAllister
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2003–2004
|style="background:skyblue;"| Eric Black
|-
|2004
| Steve Ogrizovic (2) <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2004–2005
|style="background:skyblue;"| Peter Reid
|-
|2005
| Adrian Heath <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2005
|rowspan=2 style="background:skyblue;"| Micky Adams
|-
|rowspan=3|2005–2007
|rowspan=3| Geoffrey Robinson
|style="background:skyblue;"|2005–2007
|-
|2007
| Adrian Heath (2) <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2007
|rowspan=3 style="background:skyblue;"| Iain Dowie
|-
|2007
| Joe Elliott
|style="background:skyblue;"|2007
|-
|rowspan=5|2007–2011
|rowspan=5| Ray Ranson
|style="background:skyblue;"|2007–2008
|-
|2008
| Frankie Bunn <small>(caretaker)</small><br> John Harbin <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2008–2010
|style="background:skyblue;"| Chris Coleman
|-
|2010
| Steve Harrison <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2010–2011
|rowspan=2 style="background:skyblue;"| Aidy Boothroyd
|-
|rowspan=3|2011
|rowspan=3| Ken Dulieu
|style="background:skyblue;"|2011
|-
|2011
| Steve Harrison (2) <small>(caretaker)</small><br> Andy Thorn <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2011
|rowspan=3 style="background:skyblue;"| Andy Thorn
|-
|2011–2012
| John Clarke (2)
|style="background:skyblue;"|2011–2012
|-
|rowspan=5|2012–2014
|rowspan=5|Vacant
|style="background:skyblue;"|2012
|-
|2012
| Richard Shaw <small>(caretaker)</small><br> Lee Carsley <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2012–2013
|style="background:skyblue;"| Mark Robins
|-
|2013
| Lee Carsley (2) <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2013–2014
|rowspan=2 style="background:skyblue;"| Steven Pressley
|-
|rowspan=6|2014–2023
|rowspan=6| Tim Fisher
|style="background:skyblue;"|2014–2015
|-
|2015
| Neil MacFarlane <small>(caretaker)</small><br> Dave Hockaday <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2015–2016
|style="background:skyblue;"| Tony Mowbray
|-
|2016
| Mark Venus <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2016–2017
|style="background:skyblue;"| Russell Slade
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2017–2023
|rowspan=2 style="background:skyblue;"| Mark Robins (2)
|-
|rowspan=3|2023–
|rowspan=3| Doug King
|style="background:skyblue;"|2023–2024
|-
|2024
| Rhys Carr <small>(caretaker)</small>
|-
|style="background:skyblue;"|2024–
|style="background:skyblue;"| Frank Lampard
|}
Honours
Sources:
League
- Second Division / EFL Championship (level 2)
- Champions: 1966–67, 2025–26
- Third Division South / Third Division / League One (level 3)
- Champions: 1935–36, 1963–64, 2019–20
- Runners-up: 1933–34
- Fourth Division / League Two (level 4)
- Runners-up: 1958–59
- Play-off winners: 2018
Cup
- FA Cup
- Winners: 1986–87
- FA Charity Shield
- Runners-up: 1987
- EFL Trophy
- Winners: 2016–17
- Third Division South Cup
- Winners: 1935–36
- Birmingham Senior Cup
- Winners: 1910–11, 1922–23, 2006–07
- Runners-up: 2022–23
- Southern Professional Floodlit Cup
- Winners: 1959–60
Notes
References
External links
- Soccerbase – Results; Squad Stats; Transfers
- Sky Sports Coventry City
- Coventry City Former Players Association
