Published: 30th July 2025 | The English Chronicle Desk | The English Chronicle Online
As Birmingham City Football Club enters its historic 150th anniversary season, the mood across the West Midlands is charged with a sense of rebirth. The club, backed by its ambitious American owners Knighthead Capital, has not only returned to the Championship in style but now has its sights set firmly on reclaiming a place among England’s elite in the Premier League. With a reinvigorated sense of purpose, fresh talent, and a management team aligned with modern footballing principles, Birmingham’s resurgence is quickly becoming one of the most compelling stories in the English game.
Head coach Chris Davies, who guided the Blues to the League One title in his debut managerial season, is now spearheading what could be one of the most decisive chapters in the club’s recent history. With eight new signings, including former academy star Demarai Gray, Japanese international Kyōgo Furuhashi, and England U21 midfielder Tommy Doyle, Birmingham City’s summer recruitment has been both strategic and symbolic. These are players with pedigree, experience, and a hunger that matches the club’s upward trajectory.
At the core of Birmingham’s evolution is Knighthead Capital’s sweeping three-year plan for Premier League promotion, laid out at the time of their takeover in July 2023. It’s a plan rooted in data, analytics, and relentless ambition. Tom Wagner, Knighthead’s chairman, has made no secret of his desire to build a top-20 club in England, not just in footballing terms but also in commercial and cultural relevance. With minority shareholder and NFL icon Tom Brady lending both star power and sports science expertise, the club has sought to blend tradition with a modern, results-driven approach.
The upcoming documentary Built in Birmingham: Brady & The Blues, set to release this Friday on Prime Video, offers a glimpse into this transformation—from the struggles of recent years to the optimism that now defines St. Andrew’s and beyond. The anticipation surrounding Birmingham’s opening Championship fixture against Ipswich Town has already reached a fever pitch. Tickets for the match sold out over a month in advance, and the atmosphere around the Elite Performance and Innovation Centre training ground in Henley-in-Arden has been electric.
Wagner, speaking candidly to the media, highlighted how Birmingham’s relegation in 2024 became a moment for structural reset. The club was reshaped from top to bottom—new leadership, modern facilities, a performance-based recruitment strategy, and a renewed focus on fan engagement. “If you remove the television revenue differential and just look at revenue, we’re a top-20 club in England,” he said, underscoring the club’s commercial strength.
That confidence is echoed by Davies, who spent years as an assistant to Brendan Rodgers and later to Ange Postecoglou at Tottenham before stepping into management. His footballing philosophy prioritises possession, high pressing, and swift attacking transitions. Under his leadership, Birmingham recorded the fastest ball recovery rate across England’s top four divisions last season. The recent EFL rule change that penalises time-wasting—such as goalkeepers holding the ball beyond eight seconds—is expected to further benefit teams with aggressive pressing styles like Birmingham.
Yet, perhaps the most telling indicator of Birmingham’s revival is in the details. From the banners in the gym reading “Have you done enough?” to the walls of the training ground now lined with images from last season’s title run, the ethos of accountability and belief permeates every corner of the club.
Knighthead’s investment footprint is visible everywhere. Over £35 million has been channelled into upgrading St. Andrew’s, the training ground, and the youth academy. The stadium has been revitalised, with over £1 million spent on a new pitch alone. Corporate hospitality has undergone a stylish transformation with themed restaurants such as The Garrison, inspired by Peaky Blinders, and the creation of a fan park with a 1,200-person capacity. Matchday revenue per supporter has soared by over 700 per cent since the changes began.
But even these ambitious developments pale in comparison to Knighthead’s most audacious project: the proposed East Birmingham Sports Quarter. With over 60 acres already purchased and plans in motion, the £3 billion vision includes sporting, commercial, and community infrastructure that could transform the area and elevate Birmingham City into one of the most modern sports clubs in Europe.
Despite all this, the main focus remains resolutely on the pitch. The Championship, known for its competitiveness and unpredictability, offers no guarantees. Still, Davies remains grounded yet bold, calling the challenge of pressure “a privilege.” For him and his squad, the roar of travelling supporters braving stormy away days in Barnsley and beyond is proof of the passion that fuels Birmingham City.
The club has come a long way from the instability and inertia that defined its final years under previous ownership. Today, it stands on the threshold of something greater. The anniversary season is not only a celebration of the club’s past but a declaration of its intent for the future.
For Birmingham City, the dream of returning to the Premier League is no longer a distant hope—it’s a clearly mapped objective backed by strategy, spending, and a city that’s beginning to believe again.