Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Dagenham & Redbridge F.C.

Association football club in London, England

Dagenham & Redbridge F.C.

Association football club in London, England

FieldValue
clubnameDagenham & Redbridge
imageDagenham and Redbridge FC crest.svg
upright0.7
fullnameDagenham & Redbridge Football Club
nicknameThe Daggers
founded
groundVictoria Road
capacity6,078
owntitleChairman
ownerDaniel Hall
managerLee Bradbury
league
season
position
pattern_b1_thinbluehoops
leftarm1FF0000
body1FF0000
rightarm1FF0000
shorts10000FF
socks10000FF
pattern_b2_thinwhitehoops
leftarm2333399
body2333399
rightarm2333399
shorts2FFFFFF
socks2FFFFFF
<!-- 3rd kit-->website
current2024–25 National League

Dagenham & Redbridge Football Club (), often known simply as Dagenham and abbreviated when written to Dag & Red, is a professional association football club based in Dagenham, Greater London, England that play in the , the sixth level of the English football league system. They are nicknamed the Daggers and play their home games at Victoria Road.

The club was formed in 1992 through a merger of Dagenham and Redbridge Forest, the latter merged from Ilford, Leytonstone and Walthamstow Avenue. The club's traditional colours are red and blue, to represent the merged teams. The club replaced Redbridge Forest in the Football Conference but were relegated in 1996. They won the Isthmian League title in 1999–2000 and qualified for the next three Conference play-offs, missing out on the 2001–02 title on goal difference and losing the 2003 Conference play-off final. They secured promotion into the Football League after winning the Conference title in the 2006–07 season. They then moved up from League Two after winning the 2010 play-off final, though were relegated the next season after finishing 21st in League One. Dagenham were relegated back into non-League football in 2016. They suffered a further relegation to the National League South in 2024–25.

History

Formation

Dagenham & Redbridge F.C. was formed in 1992 following a merger between two clubs – Dagenham and Redbridge Forest. Both clubs had fallen on hard times due to dwindling attendances. The club can trace back its ancestry to 1881 as Redbridge Forest was an amalgamation of three of the amateur game's most famous clubs, Ilford, Leytonstone and Walthamstow Avenue. Between the clubs they won the FA Trophy once, FA Amateur Cup seven times, Isthmian League 20 times, Athenian League six times, Essex Senior Cup 26 times and London Senior Cup 23 times.

Dag & Red League finishes

Non-League

Dagenham & Redbridge spent its inaugural season in the Football Conference taking the place of Redbridge Forest. The club's first fixture in its new guise was on 25 July 1992, an 8–0 thrashing of Great Wakering Rovers in a friendly. The first competitive result was a 2–0 win over Merthyr Tydfil in the Conference.

Dagenham & Redbridge spent several seasons in the Football Conference but was relegated to the Isthmian League Premier Division in 1996. The club remained in that division until winning promotion in 1999–2000, going on to establish itself as one of the strongest clubs in the Conference, finishing third, second and fifth in its first three seasons back following promotion.

The club was narrowly beaten to the Conference title by Boston United in 2002 on goal difference. Boston United was subsequently found guilty of inappropriately making illegal payments to its players in its title-winning season. Dagenham & Redbridge attempted unsuccessfully to have itself declared Conference Champions, and therefore take Boston's contentious place in The Football League. A four-point deduction was put in place against Boston United for the following season but not for the season in which the irregularities had been committed.

The Daggers then declined somewhat, finishing the 2003–04, 2004–05 and 2005–06 seasons in mid-table. On 27 February 2004 the club were hammered 9–0 at home by Hereford United, equalling the record highest winning margin in the Conference.

The 2006–07 season saw Dagenham & Redbridge battle it out with Oxford United for the top of the league spot. Despite Oxford quickly racing to the top, a collapse in Oxford's form combined with an excellent run for the Daggers saw them overtake Oxford in the league. On 7 April, Dagenham & Redbridge beat Aldershot Town 2–1 to build an unbeatable lead in the league, becoming Conference champions, meaning the club would play in the Football League for the first time in its history.

2007–2015: Football League

Dagenham & Redbridge played its first match in the Football League on 11 August 2007, a 1–0 defeat to Stockport County. The club won its first Football League game at home to Lincoln City on 1 September 2007. The Daggers finished the season in 20th place, ensuring a second season of Football League competition. The following season, the Daggers reached their highest ever position of eighth. They narrowly missed out on the League Two play-offs after losing to Shrewsbury Town at home on the final day of the season.

The 2009–10 season saw the Daggers promoted from League Two to League One via the play-offs. They defeated Rotherham United in a dramatic 3–2 play-off final at Wembley on 30 May 2010. Twice the Daggers took the lead, only to concede moments later. Jon Nurse regained the advantage for Dagenham & Redbridge, scoring a scrappy 70th-minute winner. The Daggers first game in League One was a 2–0 defeat to Sheffield Wednesday. It was an unsuccessful season in League One as they finished 21st and were relegated on the last day of the 2010–11 season back to League Two.

They eventually finished the 2011–12 season in 19th place back in League Two. John Still left the club during the 2012–13 season to join Luton Town after nine years at the helm. The Daggers would finish in 22nd. Following the club's safety from relegation, Wayne Burnett was appointed as manager on a permanent basis after a spell as caretaker manager. Despite an inconsistent start to the 2013–14 season, Dagenham & Redbridge finished in a respectable ninth place.

However, the club faced a match fixing scandal during the season. Following newspaper reports, an investigation launched by the National Crime Agency jailed two players and businessman, Krishna Ganeshan, Chann Sankaran and Michael Boateng, a Whitehawk player, for match-fixing. Moses Swaibu was similarly charged in January 2014. They were convicted of conspiracy to commit bribery for a failed plot to fix a game between AFC Wimbledon and Dagenham & Redbridge on 26 November. It is believed that the case may have been part of a wider Singaporean match-fixing syndicate which Europol and other investigations uncovered.

In the 2014–15 League Cup, the Daggers played out an entertaining 6–6 match with Brentford before losing the subsequent penalty shootout. The League Cup paid tribute to the historic match by removing the goal nets at Victoria Road, putting them on display at the National Football Museum.

In the 2015–16 season, the Daggers started the season poorly. Burnett was sacked in December 2015, to be replaced by John Still. In the 2015–16 FA Cup, Dagenham & Redbridge visited Premier League club Everton in the third round, losing 2–0. Still was unable to save Dagenham & Redbridge from relegation in his third spell. After a 3–2 defeat away to Leyton Orient, relegation from League Two was confirmed.

2016–present: return to non-League

In their first season back in the National League, they ended the season in fourth place; they lost their play-off semi-final to Forest Green Rovers. The 2017–18 season started positively, but after the club was hit by a financial crisis midway through the season, the Daggers finished the campaign in 11th place. The financial crisis was resolved early in the 2018–19 season.

In May 2024, Club Underdog, a subsidiary of North Sixth group, reached an agreement in principle to purchase the club. They became the fifth club owned by the group, joining Italian clubs Campobasso and Ascoli, Swiss club FC Locarno and American club Brooklyn FC.

Manager since March 2023, Ben Strevens was sacked in December 2024, after a run of just seven wins from 23 league fixtures left the Daggers five points above the relegation zone. They were ultimately relegated to the National League South on the final day of the 2024–25 season.

Club sponsorship

Kit suppliersDatesSupplier
1996–97En-S
1997–2013Vandanel
2013–2019Sondico
2019–2023Nike
2023–2025Admiral
2025–PresentUmbro
Shirt sponsorsDatesSponsor
1992–96Dagenham Post
1996–97Recorder Newspapers
1997–2006Compass
2006–West & Coe

Current squad

First-team squad

Out on loan

Current staff

Updated 07 July 2025{{cite web | access-date=1 November 2012

PositionName
ManagerLee Bradbury
Assistant ManagerJerry Gill
First-team coachStuart Fergus
Goalkeeper coachScott Chalmers-Stevens
Head of Data and Physical PerformanceScott Munro
Club physioBryony Woolley
Club doctorDr M Tahir

Managers

Dagenham & Redbridge have had ten different managers since their formation in 1992.

FromToManager
May 1992May 1994ENG John Still
May 1994September 1995ENG Dave Cusack
September 1995April 1996ENG Graham Carr
April 1996March 1999ENG Ted Hardy
May 1999April 2004ENG Garry Hill
April 200426 February 2013ENG John Still
2 May 201321 December 2015ENG Wayne Burnett
31 December 201518 May 2018ENG John Still
5 June 201829 December 2019ENG Peter Taylor
3 January 202024 February 2023IRE Daryl McMahon
10 March 202326 December 2024ENG Ben Strevens
16 January 20258 May 2025ENG Lewis Young
5 June 2025CurrentENG Lee Bradbury

Stadium

Main article: Victoria Road (Dagenham)}}the Stadium has been built in 1919 and it was named after the magician Khaled D., then they changed it to the Craigs by 1930 until 1994. now they are playing on a local stadium they do own it and its name is the gators.{{expand section

Records and statistics

League history

Main article: List of Dagenham & Redbridge F.C. seasons

Source:

SeasonDivisionPositionTop league goalscorer(s)Notes
1992–93Conference (V)3rdPaul Cavell (19)
1993–94Conference (V)6thDavid Crown (9)
1994–95Conference (V)15thIan Richardson (10)
1995–96Conference (V)22ndKelly Haag (8)Relegated
1996–97Isthmian Premier (VI)4thVinnie John (12)
1997–98Isthmian Premier (VI)4thPaul Cobb (24)
1998–99Isthmian Premier (VI)3rdPaul Cobb (21)
1999–2000Isthmian Premier (VI)1stPaul Cobb (18)Promoted
2000–01Conference (V)3rdDanny Shipp / Junior McDougald (9)
2001–02Conference (V)2ndMark Stein (24)Runners-up on goal difference
2002–03Conference (V)5thMark Stein / Steve West (16)Play-off finalists
2003–04Conference National (V)13thChris Moore (10)
2004–05Conference National (V)11thChris Moore (19)
2005–06Conference National (V)10thChris Moore (15)
2006–07Conference National (V)1stPaul Benson (28)Promoted
2007–08League Two (IV)20thBen Strevens (15)
2008–09League Two (IV)8thPaul Benson (18)
2009–10League Two (IV)7thPaul Benson (22)Play-off winners; promoted
2010–11League One (III)21stRomain Vincelot (12)Relegated
2011–12League Two (IV)19thBrian Woodall (13)
2012–13League Two (IV)22ndLuke Howell (9)
2013–14League Two (IV)9thRhys Murphy (13)
2014–15League Two (IV)14thJamie Cureton (19)
2015–16League Two (IV)23rdChristian Doidge (8)Relegated
2016–17National League (V)4thOliver Hawkins (18)
2017–18National League (V)11thMichael Cheek (13)
2018–19National League (V)18thConor Wilkinson (12)
2019–20National League (V)17thÁngelo Balanta (7)Season abandoned, final table decided by points-per-game
2020–21National League (V)12thPaul McCallum (15)
2021–22National League (V)8thPaul McCallum (18)
2022–23National League (V)10thJosh Walker / Junior Morias (10)
2023–24National League (V)15thInih Effiong (16)
2024–25National League (V)21stJosh Rees (16)Relegated

Club records

  • Record victory:

    • Football League – 6–0 vs. Chester City, 9 August 2008; 6–0 vs. Morecambe, 16 May 2010
    • Football Conference – 8–1 vs. Woking, 19 April 1994
  • Record defeat:

    • Football League – 5–0 vs. Peterborough United, 7 May 2011; 5–0 vs Cheltenham Town, 18 February 2012
    • Football Conference – 9–0 vs. Hereford United, 27 February 2004
  • Record attendance: 5,949 vs. Ipswich Town, FA Cup third round, 5 January 2001

  • Record league attendance: 4,791 vs. Shrewsbury Town, League Two, 2 May 2009

  • Record transfer fee paid: Oliver Hawkins from Hemel Hempstead, undisclosed fee

  • Record transfer fee received: Dwight Gayle to Peterborough United, £470,000 (2013)

  • Record appearance holder: Tony Roberts, 507 appearances over 10 years

  • Record goalscorer: Danny Shipp, 105 goals over nine years

  • Best FA Cup performance: Fourth round, 2002–03; lost to Norwich City 1–0

  • Best EFL Cup performance: First round (9), 2007–08, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2010–11, 2011–12, 2012–13, 2013–14, 2014–15, 2015–16

  • Best EFL Trophy performance: Quarter-finals, 2001–02, 2008–09, 2013–14, 2015–16

  • Best FA Trophy performance: Runners-up, 1996–97; lost to Woking 1–0

  • Best National League Cup performance: Group stage, 2024–25

Other records

  • Tony Roberts was the second goalkeeper in the history of the FA Cup to have scored a goal from open play. He netted against Basingstoke Town in October 2001, it was a fourth qualifying round.
  • First fully capped international whilst playing for Dagenham & Redbridge was Jon Nurse who was capped for Barbados against Dominica in 2008.
  • The highest ever scoreline in the first leg of a play-off game is now held by Dagenham & Redbridge, they defeated Morecambe 6–0 on 16 May 2010, although they could not build on this afterwards with a 2–1 defeat in the second leg.
  • The joint highest aggregate score in a League Cup match: 12 – On 12 August 2014, Dagenham & Redbridge drew 6–6 after extra time at home with Brentford in the first round of the League Cup. They went on to lose 4–2 on penalties.

Honours

Sources:

League

  • League Two (level 4)
    • Play-off winners: 2010
  • Conference (level 5)
  • Isthmian League (level 6)

Cup

  • FA Trophy
  • Essex Senior Cup
    • Winners: 1997–98, 2000–01
    • Runners-up: 2001–02

References

References

  1. (17 July 2008). "Ground History". Dagenham & Redbridge F.C..
  2. (7 November 2001). "History of Dagenham & Redbridge FC". DiggerDagger.com.
  3. "History". Dagenham & Redbridge F.C.
  4. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/eng_conf/3489720.stm Dag & Red 0–9 Hereford] BBC Sport, 27 February 2004
  5. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/eng_conf/6513465.stm Dag & Red 2–1 Aldershot] BBC Sport, 7 April 2007
  6. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/teams/d/dagenham_and_redbridge/6532833.stm Daggers delight at promotion prize] BBC Sport, 7 April 2007
  7. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/eng_div_3/6931028.stm Stockport 1–0 Dag & Red] BBC Sport, 11 August 2007
  8. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/eng_div_3/6963604.stm Dag & Red 1–0 Lincoln] BBC Sport, 1 September 2007
  9. [http://www.football.co.uk/dagenham_redbridge/dag__red_1-2_shrewsbury_rss98435.shtml Dag Red 1–2 Shrewsbury] Football.co.uk, 2 May 2009
  10. Fletcher, Paul. (30 May 2010). "Dagenham & Redbridge 3–2 Rotherham". BBC Sport.
  11. (8 May 2011). "Peterborough 5 Daggers 0". Newsquest (London).
  12. (5 December 2013). "Two footballers charged with match fixing".
  13. (5 December 2013). "Two Whitehawk FC players charged with match fixing". The Argus.
  14. (17 January 2014). "Match-fixing: Third footballer charged". BBC News.
  15. (17 January 2014). "Third former Whitehawk footballer charged in match-fixing investigation". The Argus.
  16. (20 June 2014). "Businessmen and footballer jailed over match-fixing". BBC News.
  17. (20 June 2014). "Football match-fixing trio sent to prison".
  18. (20 June 2014). "Jail terms for three over match-fixing in England". Reuters.
  19. Caroline Chapman. (9 January 2016). "Everton 2–0 Dagenham & Redbridge". BBC Sport.
  20. (16 April 2016). "Leyton Orient 3–2 Dagenham: Daggers relegated from Football League". Sky Sports.
  21. "Forest Green Rovers 2–0 Dagenham & Redbridge (Agg: 3–1)". BBC Sport.
  22. (18 April 2018). "Cash-strapped Daggers could play their last ever home game".
  23. "Daggers' season my hardest ever - Still". BBC Sport.
  24. (8 May 2024). "CLUB UNDERDOG ACQUIRES CONTROLLING INTEREST IN DAGENHAM & REDBRIDGE".
  25. (27 December 2024). "Dagenham sack boss Strevens after poor run of form". BBC Sport.
  26. (5 May 2025). "Solihull Moors 1–1 Dagenham & Redbridge: Visitors relegated on dramatic final day". BBC Sport.
  27. "Dagenham & Redbridge F.C. First Team".
  28. "Previous Managers". Dagenham & Redbridge F.C.
  29. "Dagenham & Redbridge". Football Club History Database.
  30. "The Third Man". The Football Association.
  31. (2 August 2013). "BBC Sport – Dagenham & Redbridge 6–6 Brentford (2–4 pens)". bbc.co.uk.
  32. "Club Records". Dagenham & Redbridge.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Dagenham & Redbridge F.C. — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report