Pride of Anglia

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Various English association football clubs located in East Anglia vie for being the Pride of Anglia, an unofficial title celebrated by fans of the clubs involved. These clubs include Cambridge United, Colchester United, Ipswich Town, Norwich City and Peterborough United—although by modern geographical reckoning, Essex is not considered part of East Anglia.

Currently, fans of Norwich can claim their club to be the Pride of Anglia under the two most common methods for deciding it, most recent league position and most recent result in the East Anglian derby.[1]

Description[edit]

Colchester Chief Executive, Marie Partner with "Pride of Anglia" trophy, awarded by Anglia Television in 2007. This the only time (on record) a reward has been bestowed on a club for achieving "Pride of Anglia" status

Professional association football teams from the ceremonial counties that make up East Anglia (i.e. the counties of Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex and Cambridgeshire in England) compete for this unofficial title (no actual official trophy or reward is awarded) which is celebrated by fans, pundits/media and the clubs themselves (among others) merely as regional prestige/bragging rights etc..[citation needed]

Winning the most recent East Anglian derby and/or finishing as the highest Anglian team in the league pyramid are the two main measures employed by fans/pundits etc. that decide who can claim this title. The main two football clubs vying for the title are Ipswich Town from Suffolk and Norwich City from Norfolk. Both teams regularly compete in the top two tiers in the English football league in recent times and often find themselves in the same league, meaning at least two derby matches will be played during the season as league games, in addition to any cup/play-off games where the two teams may be drawn against each other. Potentially, the holder of the title using the derby game method can change many times during the season.[citation needed]

Other league clubs from the region include Colchester United, Peterborough United and Cambridge United. These teams occasionally find themselves in the same league as the aforementioned two protagonists and thus have the opportunity to claim the title for finishing highest in the league. This has only happened in 2007 to Colchester United, the club were (uniquely) awarded a special trophy by Anglia Television to mark the event.[2]

East Anglian derby[edit]

When Norwich and Ipswich meet, the match is known as the 'East Anglian derby', first played in 1902. The most recent encounter played on 06 April 2024 at Carrow Road ended in a 1-0 victory to Norwich. As of April 2024, Norwich have not been beaten by Ipswich in a competitive derby match since April 2009.[3] The fixture is sometimes referred to as the "Old Farm derby", a humorous reference to the "Glasgow Old Firm derby" and the stereotypical rural nature and farming tradition of East Anglia.

There currently is no scheduled East Anglian derby game in the near future.

League position[edit]

League positions for the five professional association football clubs in East Anglia

Another commonly employed measure for "Pride of Anglia", and one that encompasses all of the East Anglian teams, is the side finishing as the highest-placed East Anglian team in the English football league system.[4] In the 2022–23 season, Norwich was the only team from East Anglia in the 2nd tier (no East Anglian team in the 1st tier) and so finished as the highest ranked team from East Anglia.

For the current 2023-24 season, Ipswich were promoted from the 3rd tier and so will be able to challenge Norwich for the Pride of Anglia this season on both league position and through at least 2 derby league games.

Current Games[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ MacInnes, Paul (15 May 2015). "Alex Neil's Norwich ready to renew Pride of Anglia mandate against Ipswich". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  2. ^ U's gain Anglia acclaim, Colchester United FC, 2007-05-18. Retrieved 2013-05-23.
  3. ^ "Norwich City football club: Record v Ipswich%20Town".
  4. ^ Chris Lakey (1 April 2007). "Cureton tells fans good times are coming". Norwich Evening News. Retrieved 20 April 2007. [dead link]