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Hull City Football Tickets

 
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Book any of Hull City's 38 league fixtures as well as all cup fixtures online here at Computicket.co.uk. As a specialist in Premier League football tickets we are the answer to getting hold of tickets for Sold Out Fixtures. With Premier League football becoming more and more popular demand for tickets is high. Computicket has an allocation of official match tickets to each and every Hull City fixture so dont miss out, reserve your ticket online today with Computicket.co.uk.

Here at Computicket.co.uk we offer tickets for each and every Hull Premier League and Cup match.


With Hull City tickets in such high demand trust Computicket.co.uk to bring you Guaranteed Official Match Tickets. We source tickets for every match and offer tickets in a range of price bands. The tickets will be slightly above face value but you can rest assured that your tickets are 100% official with our Ticket Guarantee. Enjoy the Game! ...... COME ON YOU TIGERS!!


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Hull City Information

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About Hull City Football Club

Founded in 1904, the highest position Hull City have finished in the English Football League was 3rd in the old second division in 1909-10, a feat they repeated in 2007-08 when they gained promotion from The Championship by beating Bristol City 1-0 in the play-off final at Wembley Stadium. Their greatest achievement in cup competitions came in 1930, when the team reached the semi-finals of the FA Cup.

The club play their home games at the KC Stadium in Hull. They previously played at Boothferry Park, but moved to their current home in 2002, with Boothferry Park set for demolition. They traditionally play in black and amber, often with a striped shirt design, hence their nickname The Tigers. The club's mascot is known as Roary the Tiger.

Hull City did not wear a crest on their team shirt until 1947. This crest depicted a tiger's head in a yellow-shaded badge, which was worn up until 1955, when it was changed to just the tiger's head. This was worn for four years, when the shirt again featured no emblem. Then, in 1971, the club returned to showing the tiger's head on the shirt. This was used for four years, until the club initials 'HCAFC' were shown for five years. After this, a logo with the tiger's head with the clubs name underneath was used from 1980 until 1998. The next logo, which is currently used by the club, features the tiger's head in an amber shield which shows the clubs name, along with the clubs nickname, The Tigers.

Recent success

The new chairman ploughed funds into the club, allowing Little to rebuild the team. Hull occupied the Division Three promotion and playoff places for much of the 2001–02 season, but Little was sacked two months before the end of the season and Hull slipped to 11th under his successor Jan Mølby.

Hull began the 2002–03 season with a terrible start, which saw relegation look more likely than promotion, and Mølby was sacked in October as Hull languished fifth from bottom in the league. Peter Taylor was named as Hull's new manager and in December 2002, just two months his appointment, Hull relocated to the impressive new 25,400-seater Kingston Communications Stadium after 56 years at Boothferry Park. At the end of the season Hull finished 13th.

Wembley Stadium before the Championship play-off final against Bristol CityThe two seasons which followed the opening of the new stadium were hugely successful. Hull were Division Three runners-up in 2003–04 and League One runners-up in 2004–05. These back-to-back promotions took them into the Championship, the second tier of English football. The 2005–06 season, the club's first back in the second tier, saw Hull finish in 18th place, a comfortable 10 points clear of relegation and their highest league finish for 16 years.

However, Taylor left the club on 13 June 2006 to take up the manager's job at Crystal Palace. Phil Parkinson was confirmed as his replacement on 29 June 2006, but was sacked on 4 December 2006 with Hull in the relegation zone, despite having spent over £2 million on players. Phil Brown took over as caretaker manager, and took over permanently in January 2007, having taken Hull out of the relegation zone. Brown brought veteran striker Dean Windass back to his hometown club on loan from Bradford City, and his eight goals helped secure Hull's Championship status as they finished in 21st place. At the end of the season, another familiar face, former manager Brian Horton, rejoined the club as Phil Brown's assistant.

Chairman Pearson sold the club to a consortium led by Paul Duffen in June 2007, stating that he "had taken the club as far as I could", and would have to relinquish control in order to attract "really significant finance into the club". He resigned from the board on 31 July 2007, thus severing all ties with the club.

Under Paul Duffen and manager Phil Brown Hull City improved greatly on their relegation battle of 2006–07 and qualified for the play-offs after finishing the season in third. They beat Watford 6–1 on aggregate in the semi-finals and played Bristol City in the final on 24 May 2008, which Hull won 1–0 at Wembley Stadium, with Hull native Dean Windass scoring the winning goal.

Their ascent from the bottom division of the English football league to the top in just five seasons is the third fastest ever.

Hull City Rivalries

According to a 2003 poll, Hull City fans consider their main rival to be Leeds United, though this is not reciprocated. Much of this was due to the high numbers of Leeds fans living in the Hull area during a period when Leeds were in the upper and Hull in the lower divisions. The rivalry had increased further in recent times with the return of league meetings when both teams were present in The Championship.

 

 
 

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