Eiður Guðjohnsen (pictured playing for Barcelona in 2008) played ten matches in a Fulham shirt in his one-season spell with the club in 2011. As of August 2019, Guðjohnsen sits joint fourth on his country's record appearance list and is Iceland's all-time top scorer with 26 goals in 88 games.
Fulham Football Club is an English professional football team based in Fulham in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham. The club was formed in West Kensington in 1879 as Fulham St Andrew's Church Sunday School F.C., shortened to Fulham F.C. in 1888.[1] They initially played at Fulham Fields before a move to Craven Cottage in 1896; the club played their first professional match in December 1898 and made their FA Cup debut in the 1902–03 season. The club competed in the Southern Football League between 1898 and 1907, when they were accepted into the Football League Second Division.[1] Having spent much of their history outside the top division, the team gained promotion to the Premier League in 2001.[2][3] They spent more than ten seasons in the top flight, and reached the final of the UEFA Europa League in 2010.[4] In 2014 they were relegated to the Championship.[5] They have since spent one further season back in the Premier League in 2018–19 but suffered an immediate return to the Championship.[6][7]
Arter, Cavaleiro, Francois, Knockaert, Onomah, Reed, Decordova-Reid and Taylor-Crossdale have all made their Fulham debut during the 2019–20 season, with Francois, Onomah and Taylor-Crossdale all making their first appearance most recently in Fulham's League Cup tie against Southampton F.C. on 27 August 2019.
Players
This list contains the 500 players, including sixteen current squad members, as of 30 August 2019, who have made fewer than 25 appearances for Fulham, ordered by the year in which they played for the club and then alphabetically by surname. The figure for league appearances and goals comprise those in the Southern Football League, the Football League and the Premier League. Total appearances and goals comprise those in the Southern Football League, Football League (including test matches and play-offs), Premier League, FA Cup, Football League Cup, Football League Trophy, UEFA Intertoto Cup and UEFA Cup/Europa League. Wartime matches are regarded as unofficial and are excluded, as are matches from the abandoned 1939–40 season. Statistics for the Watney Cup and Anglo-Scottish Cup are not included in the table. International appearances and goals are given for the senior national team only.
Figures are mostly taken from Fulham: The Complete Record by Dennis Turner (published in 2007). UEFA Intertoto Cup and UEFA Cup/Europa League appearance statistics for 2002–03, 2009–10 and 2011–12 are taken from Soccerbase, along with all other statistics from the 2007–08 season onwards.
Statistics are correct as of 30 August 2019. International statistics are correct as of 19 July 2019.
^Joe Bradshaw became Fulham manager in 1926 and remained in his post for three years. His father Harry had managed the team from 1904 to 1909 when Joe was playing for them, along with his other son Will.
Clubs are grouped by their division in the 2023–24 season. Includes the Welsh clubs where lists have been created. 'POTY' = 'Player of the Year / Season'.