Stoke City

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  1. New Stoke crest installed at bet365 Stadiumpublished at 08:15 BST 25 June

    A picture of Stoke City's new club crest. A shield showing a Staffordshire knot, the club's foundation date of 1863, their red and white stripes, and a kiln.Image source, Stoke City

    Stoke City have announced the club's new crest has been installed at bet365 Stadium.

    The Potters adopted a new design last summer following several months of consultation with fans and revealed a "phased" introduction at their home ground with similar updates to be made at their Clayton Wood training complex "over the coming seasons".

    At the time the club said the idea was to produce a crest "that is truly synonymous with Stoke City Football Club and the city of Stoke-on-Trent" and offered a choice between staying with the current one or adopting a new one.

    The alternative - a shield depicting a Staffordshire knot, the club's foundation date of 1863, their famous red and white stripes, and a kiln, in a nod to the area's link to the ceramic industry - received 68% of the vote.

    Stoke owner and chair John Coates said the new crest showed the "history, traditions, work ethic and togetherness" of the club and the city.

    "We can all look at the club crest and reflect that it truly represents what it means to be Stoke City," he said.

    "We are determined that our new crest will come to represent a new and successful era on and off the field.

    "Our supporters can be assured that, as the 2026-27 season approaches, we are all working relentlessly towards that aim."

    A picture of the outside of Stoke's home ground the bet365 Stadium showing the new badge in two locations on the wall.Image source, Stoke City
  2. Fixture day is almost upon us...published at 14:51 BST 22 June

    The EFL will reveal its fixture list for the 2026-27 season on Thursday.

    Want to know who your team will face on opening day? The fixtures will be announced at 12:00 BST - but that is not all.

    The draws for the group stage of the Vertu Trophy and the first round of the Carabao Cup will also take place.

    So check back on 25 June to see who your team faces first, last and everything in between.

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  3. Stoke City players prepare for World Cuppublished at 11:23 BST 9 June

    Bae Jun-ho, wearing South Korea's red kit with black accents, playing during the side's international friendly against Ivory Coast in MarchImage source, Getty Images

    Stoke City's Bae Jun-ho and Viktor Johansson have joined their international sides as they begin preparations for the World Cup this summer.

    Midfielder Bae has earned 13 caps for South Korea since his senior debut in 2024, while Johansson has 12 under his belt for Sweden after his first appearance in 2023.

    Here is a reminder of the groups the Stoke players are in and who they will face, so you can keep an eye out for them once the World Cup begins on 11 June:

    • Bae Jun-ho, South Korea - Group A: Czech Republic, Mexico and South Africa

    • Viktor Johansson, Sweden - Group F: Tunisia, Netherlands and Japan

  4. Stoke defender Agina gets Kenya call-uppublished at 17:35 BST 20 May

    A general view inside Kenya's Nyayo International StadiumImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Kenya play their home internationals at the Nyayo International Stadium in Nairobi

    Stoke City defender Syd Agina has been called into Kenya's senior squad for the first time in his career.

    The 18-year-old has been included for friendlies against Palestine and Kyrgyzstan next month as the Harambee Stars prepare for the 2027 Africa Cup of Nations which they are co-hosting.

    Agina made his first-team debut for Stoke in a 3-3 draw against Ipswich Town in the Championship in March.

    He has since made a futher four appearances including three starts as the Potters finished the season in 17th place.

  5. Zetterstrom & Johansson in Sweden's World Cup squadpublished at 18:05 BST 12 May

    Split graphic showing goalkeepers Jacob Widell Zetterstrom from Derby County on the left and Stoke City's Viktor Johansson on the rightImage source, Shutterstock/Getty Images

    Derby County goalkeeper Jacob Widell Zetterstrom and Stoke City's keeper Viktor Johansson have been named in the Sweden squad for the World Cup in the USA, Mexico and Canada.

    The pair have been included along with current number one Kristoffer Nordfeldt in Graham Potter's squad for the tournament which gets under way in 11 June.

    Zetterstrom, who has won two caps, played 32 times for the Rams as the club finished eighth, narrowly missing out on a place in the Championship play-offs this season.

    Twelve-cap Johansson, who signed a new four-year contract on 1 May, has spent most of 2026 recovering from shoulder surgery but made his return in Stoke's final game of the season against Bristol City.

    Sweden secured their World Cup place by beating Ukraine and Poland in the play-offs and will open their campaign against Mexico in Monterrey on Monday, 15 June.

    Arsenal striker Viktor Gyokeres and Liverpool forward Alexander Isak are also included, as are Leeds' Gabriel Gudmundsson, Aston Villa defender Victor Lindelof, Brighton's Yasin Ayari, Tottenham Hotspur's Lucas Bergvall and Newcastle United winger Anthony Elanga.

  6. 'Potters have a lot of work to do this summer'published at 09:53 BST 3 May

    Mark Elliott
    BBC Radio Stoke commentator

    Mark Robins issues instructions to Stoke City players on the touchline during a gameImage source, Shutterstock

    Stoke City's 2-0 defeat at Bristol City was their 18th loss in their past 32 games.

    At the end of matchday 14, Stoke were second in the Championship with eight wins and 27 points.

    Over the remaining 70% of the season they failed to double that win tally, picked up just 28 more points and compiled a record second only to Sheffield Wednesday as the worst in the league over that period.

    Sadly, the first 14 games were the exception that kept the Potters away from relegation, but are Stoke in a better position now than they were this time last year when they'd just finished one place and four points worse off in 18th?

    The answer is complicated.

    The squad contains sellable assets, not least Sorba Thomas who indicated he'd be open to a move when answering my post match question about whether he'd be at the club in August with the words "no comment".

    Stoke could potentially generate income by moving on younger players like Bae Junho, Eric Bocat or Million Manhoef and may also look to jettison some of their older, comparatively highly-paid colleagues.

    To do so successfully, they'll need to find suitors willing to take those players and the right deal for all parties, but everyone at the club is probably available at the right price.

    They might then have a reasonable amount of money to spend, but the club's recent track record in recruitment is patchy to say the least.

    Stoke need more power, athleticism and physicality in their squad but, beyond that, those in coaching and recruitment must develop a clear idea of what they want a Stoke team to be, what they want it to represent, how they want it to play and how they're going to implement that.

    Currently, there are vacancies within the coaching staff and that culture, identity or DNA - choose your own cliche - isn't clearly visible.

    Manager Mark Robins and sporting director Jon Walters end the season under pressure and decisions will have to be made quickly on a structure and methodology for next season that everyone agrees on.

    They cannot afford to end up in a position where big changes once again become inevitable early in a new season.

    One major positive is that they now have a summer to spend getting everyone fit after a season badly affected by injuries to key players.

    There's a lot of work to be done as a fanbase worn down by bottom-half finishes looks for hope and inspiration.

  7. 'Lot of things up in the air' says Robinspublished at 16:04 BST 2 May

    Media caption,

    Robins: 'I thank the supporters for their backing'

    Stoke City manager Mark Robins has stated his uncertainty over what the future holds for the club after his side's season ended with a 2-0 defeat at Bristol City on Saturday.

    Newly re-signed goalkeeper Viktor Johansson's miskicked pass in the opening minute gave Delano Burgzorg and Bristol City a dream start to the match.

    The Potters' Junior Tchamadeu did hit the crossbar in the first half with an impressive half-volley effort, but that was the best Stoke got to equalising before Sam Bell consolidated the hosts' three points at Ashton Gate on the 88th minute.

    "I think we were the better team," said Robins to BBC Radio Stoke after the game. "I thought we played well. We gave a goal away, a real soft goal away, in minute one and then we ended up trying to chase the game for the rest of it because we had to try and make the run-in.

    "We're in next week, we'll have meetings no doubt, and we'll speak with the hierarchy and see what happens from there.

    "A lot of things are up in the air, not least the financial rules for the league and things like that. I think that will certainly have a bearing on what we eventually do or can do.

    "But in the meantime, we'll just get on and do what we can at this point."

  8. Pick of the stats: Bristol City v Stoke Citypublished at 14:06 BST 30 April

    The club badges of Bristol City and Stoke City side by side on a red background

    There is nothing riding on this game (12:30 BST) other than both teams trying to send their fans into the summer with something to smile about.

    Bristol City can no longer secure a top-10 finish while Stoke, having spent the first-half of the season challenging for a play-off place will end the campaign in the bottom half of the table.

    • Bristol City won this exact fixture last season 2-0, but have not won back-to-back home league games against Stoke since March 1959.

    • Stoke have won three of their past five league meetings with Bristol City (D1 L1), more than their previous nine beforehand (W2 D1 L6).

    • Bristol City have only won their final league game in one of the past 10 seasons (D3 L6), winning 2-0 at QPR in 2022-23.

    • Stoke City have only lost their final league game in one of the past 14 seasons (W8 D5), losing 2-0 at Watford in 2022-23.

    • Stoke are guaranteed to have a bottom-half finish in the Championship for an eighth consecutive season – since 2018-19, they are one of eight ever-present Championship teams and they have the fewest points of those eight (448).

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  9. Failed Stoke project to be torn down, but what next?published at 08:37 BST 27 April

    Mark Elliott
    BBC Radio Stoke commentator

    Mark Robins looks stern on the Stoke City sideline Image source, Shutterstock

    At the end of the final home game of the season, Stoke's players were sent out to do a lap of appreciation, honouring the fans, and were faced with row upon row of empty red seats.

    The supporters have stuck with their team admirably this season, but over the last few weeks patience that was wearing thin has been worn through.

    The performance against Portsmouth was abject, lacking enthusiasm, energy, desire and resolve from more than a handful of players in red and white.

    After the game manager Mark Robins said players would be "cut loose."

    Damningly, he added that Stoke "need to move people on who are mercenary, don't want to train and don't want to work hard."

    Robins reiterated again that the club has a lot of work to do and fans are again staring down a summer during which one failed project will be torn down and another one put in place, all in the space of three or four months.

    He has repeatedly said that greater physicality will be a priority and promised significant change and a focus on players with the right mindset to compete.

    Everyone associated to Stoke will hope it's ninth time lucky for a club stuck in Championship purgatory.