The East Stand, known as the Ben Bennett Stand, is the stadium's family stand. The Robins are the nickname of Swindon Town, the Silkmen are Macclesfield, and the Spiders is the nickname of the Scottish team Queen's Park. It was also suggested as being the biggest sponsorship deal of the club's history.[10]. [1] Meanwhile, Thornhill's fortunes were on the rise to the extent that in 1905 they laid claim to being the pre-eminent club in the town and changed their name to Rotherham County For a period both clubs competed in the Midland League, finishing first and second in 1911–12. When it was decided to introduce Division Three, Town were hopeful of becoming Rotherham's second League club but they received just 13 votes, not enough to gain admittance.

The KCM Recycling Stand holds 2,000 home fans, and has the lettering of the club's initials – RUFC – in white across it. When the Football League was resumed in 1919, Rotherham County applied successfully to join for the first time while Rotherham Town's application was turned down but they were allowed back into the Midland League. with the other people who live there. Chuckle had been an honorary president of Rotherham United and was a regular at the team's matches.[11]. The stadium has a 12,000 all-seated capacity, with the option to be able to increase the stadium's capacity if needed. [32] At the first attempt, Rotherham returned to the Championship, defeating Shrewsbury in the play-off final.[33]. After winning every league game in October, Knill was awarded the Manager of the Month and Yorkshire Manager of the Year awards. IJsjes-tram: Summer version of the snert tram, providing tourists with ijsjes (ice cream) rather than snert. Immediately after the Second World War things looked up. [18] In the final against Leyton Orient, the game went to a penalty shoot-out, where two saves from Adam Collin secured a second successive promotion for the club. However, that evening Barnsley FC requested to speak with Breckin, along with first-team coach Steve Taylor and fitness coach Nick Daws, with regards to following Mark Robins to Oakwell. They slipped into the Fourth Division in 1991, just two years being promoted, but reclaimed their status in the third tier (renamed Division Two for the 1992–93 season due to the launch of the FA Premier League) by finished third in the Fourth Division in 1992.
An eleventh-hour intervention by a consortium of local businessmen offering substantial investment and a new business plan averted a possible dissolution of the club.

The stadium includes The 1925 Club, a corporate hospitality suite. The Millers won the division three title in 1981. The West Stand, known as the Eric Twigg Pukka Pies Stand for sponsorship reasons, is the main stand of the stadium. Also Guest and Chrimes used to make fire hydrants for New York City. [14] Following this announcement, Chairman Tony Stewart relieved Robins of his managerial duties, placing him on 'Gardening Leave'. At one point during the close season, the team had only seven full-time professionals on the books but Knill made a number of signings during this period to bolster the squad including former Liverpool winger Richie Partridge, ex-Premiership players Delroy Facey and Martin Woods, former Bayern Munich and Nottingham Forest star Eugen Bopp and many others who have played at a higher level. [13] Local businesses such as Norton Finance[14] and Premier Hytemp[15] were some of the first members. Moore was previously a player and later the manager of the club, taking them from the third to first division and established them there for four years. Despite losing top scorer Reuben Reid to West Bromwich Albion, Mark Robins kept the majority of the team together from the 2008–09 campaign whilst bolstering his squad with the signings of Tom Pope, Adam le Fondre, Nicky Law, Jamie Annerson, Paul Warne, Andy Liddell and Kevin Ellison. A SECONDARY reason to call it that, in support of the local affection, is it attracts investment, sponsorship and endorsement from rich New York based companies looking to branch out in Britain. 12: Rotterdam Centraal – Stadion Feyenoord or Rotterdam Centraal – Het Kasteel ('The Castle', Sparta Stadium).

Ronnie Moore was reappointed manager at a press conference on 25 September 2009. Don’t think anyone else in the kop started singing it so don’t know exactly when it actually took off. This led to the launch of a "Save Our Millers" campaign, aiming to raise the £1 million needed to complete the season. Opened in July 2012, it is the home ground of Rotherham United. [8] Firstly the Millers thrashed the Londoners 6–0 at Millmoor before triumphing 4–1 at Stamford Bridge in the return in front of 11,900 fans.
Rotterdam (/ ˈ r ɒ t ər d æ m /, UK also / ˌ r ɒ t ər ˈ d æ m /; Dutch: [ˌrɔtərˈdɑm] ()) is the 2nd largest city and municipality in the Netherlands.It is in the province of South Holland, at the mouth of the Nieuwe Maas channel leading into the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta at the North Sea.Its history goes back to 1270, when a dam was constructed in the Rotte. The Football League ruled that accepting the 17-point deduction would be a condition the team must obey to be eligible to play, which was accepted.[12].