This page is an attempt to provide advice for editing articles about football clubs. It is intended to supplement the WikiProject Football style guide for club articles, and was inspired by the brilliant copyediting advice given at User:Tony1/How to satisfy Criterion 1a.

The advice given here is based on my opinion of what makes a good football club article, and is not in any way intended as a ruleset.

The Lead

The opening section of should provide a summary of the article in two or three paragraphs. See Wikipedia:Lead section for the relevant section of the Manual of Style. When writing the lead, it is useful to think "What is the most essential information about this club?" What sets the club apart from FC Boring? For all clubs, the lead should state where the club play (both town and stadium), when the club were founded, what major honours the club have won (or in the absence of any major honours, the best league or cup performance the club have achieved) and the league the club currently play in.

History

The history should be the first subsection. It is usually the first section in a football club article to reach a reasonable level of comprehensiveness. Remember to cite sources for statements which could be challenged. Think long and hard before creating a History of Example F.C. daughter article; any improvements required in this section will probably need doing on the history article too, increasing the workload.

Stadium

A good football club article should contain a brief overview of the stadiums a club has played in, without going into excessive detail. If the article about a club's stadium is larger than a stub, use WP:Summary style to bring together the main points from the stadium article. For articles about stadiums in Britain, I apply the "Inglis test" when reviewing. Any article about a stadium in England aiming for GA/FA ought to reference at least one book by Simon Inglis, whose "Football Grounds of Great Britain" is the definitive history of the subject for anything built before the Taylor Report.

Common weaknesses

This section lists some common weaknesses found in football club articles, and how to avoid them.

  1. ^ Sunderland fans, at a guess