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League Two

Sat 15 Aug 2026
15:00
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About our Bristol Rovers news

Latest news on Bristol Rovers FC, covering League Two fixtures, results, transfers, Memorial Stadium news and the latest on The Gas, The Pirates and Gasheads.

Bristol Rovers Football Club, founded in 1883 and based in Horfield, compete in EFL League Two, the fourth tier of English football. Known locally as The Gas and officially nicknamed The Pirates, the club draws loyal support from across Bristol and South Gloucestershire under the collective banner of the Gasheads. Home matches are played at the Memorial Stadium, a ground with a capacity of around 12,000. Majority owner and chairman Hussain AlSaeed, who has built up his ownership stake since 2023, leads a club still aiming to return to the third tier of English football.

Steve Evans was appointed permanent manager in April 2026, signing a contract until 2028 after first joining the club the previous December. His arrival coincided with a marked upturn in results, including a long unbeaten run that lifted the team up the table. Evans works alongside assistant manager Paul Raynor, with the pair credited for restoring belief among players and supporters alike. Squad news, transfer activity and matchday reports remain among the most closely followed strands of Rovers coverage.

Off the pitch, the club has faced significant financial challenges, reporting losses running into millions of pounds in recent years. This has fed into one of the club's longest-running debates: whether to redevelop the Memorial Stadium or relocate to an entirely new site. AlSaeed has indicated that practical obstacles make redevelopment increasingly difficult, though no final decision has been confirmed. The uncertainty continues to be a significant talking point among supporters and local stakeholders.

The Gasheads' identity is rooted in the club's industrial past, with the nickname stemming from a gasworks that once stood beside Rovers' former Eastville home. The Pirates moniker, by contrast, nods to Bristol's seafaring history and features on the club crest. Matches against neighbours Bristol City are known as the Bristol derby, one of the fiercest rivalries in English football. The club also fields a women's team in the FA Women's National League and runs community programmes addressing fan welfare and local engagement.

Rovers were formed as Black Arabs FC in 1883, becoming Bristol Rovers within a couple of decades and joining the Football League in 1920. The club's highest-ever league finish came in the old Second Division during the 1950s, and its only major trophy remains the Watney Cup, won in 1972. Ground moves have shaped the club's story, from the long-demolished Eastville Stadium to a decade at Bath's Twerton Park, before settling at the Memorial Stadium in 1996. That history of upheaval continues to colour discussions about the club's next permanent home.

From transfer speculation and matchday reports to boardroom decisions and stadium plans, Bristol Rovers generate plenty of interest beyond the West Country. Whether following promotion pushes, managerial updates or the latest from the Memorial Stadium, fans want a single, reliable source for news. This NewsNow feed brings together the latest headlines on Bristol Rovers, The Gas and the Gasheads, keeping supporters and neutral observers alike up to date with everything happening at the club.