List of Bolton Wanderers F.C. records and statistics
This article details all-time records. For a season-by-season statistical breakdown see Bolton Wanderers F.C. seasons
Bolton Wanderers F.C. is an English professional association football club based in Horwich, Bolton. The club was founded as Christ Church F.C. in 1874, making them one of the oldest football clubs in England, and turned professional in 1877, before joining the Football League as founder members in 1888. Bolton Wanderers currently play in English Football League, the third tier of English football. They were relegated from the top tier (where they had been since 2001) in 2012 but in their time as a professional club have played in all four professional English leagues.
This list encompasses the major honours won by Bolton Wanderers and records set by the club, their managers and their players. The player records section includes details of the club's leading goalscorers and those who have made most appearances in first-team competitions. It also records notable achievements by Bolton Wanderers players on the international stage, and the highest transfer fees paid and received by the club. The club's attendance records, both at The Reebok Stadium, their home since 1997, and Burnden Park, their home between 1895 and 1997, are also included in the list.
The club have won the FA Cup four times, but not since 1958,[1] and have spent the majority of their history in the top flight of English football. Bolton also hold the record for the most years in the top flight of English football without winning the title; 73 years in total. The club's record appearance maker is Eddie Hopkinson, who made 578 appearances between his debut in 1952 and retirement in 1970, and the club's record goalscorer is Nat Lofthouse, who scored 285 goals in 503 games between 1946 and 1960.
Most capped player: Ricardo Gardner, 72 caps for Jamaica as a Bolton Wanderers player. 37 of his (then) 109 caps coming in 1997 and 1998 prior to signing with Bolton. He made three more after leaving in 2012.
First player to play in a World Cup: Nat Lofthouse for England against Belgium on 17 June 1954.
First player to score in a World Cup: Nat Lofthouse against Belgium on 17 June 1954.
Bolton Wanderers's record signing is Johan Elmander, who signed for the club from Toulouse for £8.2 million in June 2008. The transfer also included Daniel Braaten, with that reportedly making the transfer worth 11m. This beat the previous record of £8.0 million, which the club paid Fenerbahce for Nicolas Anelka in 2006.
^The transfer also included Daniel Braaten, with it reported to have made the overall transfer equal to 11m.[4]
Progression of record fee paid
The club's first £1,000 transfer came in 1911, when they signed Alf Bentley from Derby County. They made their first £100,000 signing in 1978 with the transfer of Alan Gowling from Newcastle United for £120,000 and their first £1,000,000 transfer when they signed Gerry Taggart from Barnsley in 1995.
The largest fee that Bolton Wanderers have received for one of their players was the £15million that Chelsea paid for the services of Nicolas Anelka during the transfer window of January 2008. Four years later, Bolton received their second largest transfer fee, also from Chelsea, for defender Gary Cahill.
Highest sum of best scores in different competitions: 20 in 2023–24 (8 in EFL trophy v Man Utd U21 (26 September), 7 in League 1 v Exeter City, 5 in FA Cup (25 November) v Harrogate T. (2 December)
Matches
Record wins
Record League home win: 8–0 (v. Barnsley, 6 October 1934).
Record League away win: 7–1 (v. Aston Villa, 26 December 1914).
Record FA Cup home win: 13–0 (v. Sheffield United second round, 1 February 1890).
Record FA Cup away win: 5–1 (v. Charlton Athletic third round, 14 January 1933).
Record League Cup home win: 6–1 (v. Tottenham Hotspur fourth round, 27 November 1996).
Record League Cup away win: 4–0 (v. Rochdale second round, 10 October 1973).
Record Premier League home win: 5–0 (v. Stoke City, 6 November 2011.
Record Premier League away win: 5–0 (v. Leicester City, 18 August 2001).
Games without a draw: 34. (v. Newcastle United, 26 February 2011) – (v. Wolverhampton Wanderers, 31 December 2011) including 2 FA Cup games and 3 League Cup games.
Highest attendance at a FA Cup match (Wembley Stadium (1923)): 126,047 (official) (v. West Ham, FA Cup Final, 28 April 1923). Some estimates of attendance exceed 300,000.