The 2023/24 Premier League season sees three new faces make up the 20 top-flight club list, as Burnley and Sheffield United return to the big time.
Burnley will bring another representative from England's North West to the table with Sheffield United replacing relegated Leeds United as the league's sole Yorkshire club.
However, alongside this double comeback, the new campaign also features a Premier League debutant, after Luton Town secured their first ever shot at the top tier after winning the Championship playoffs.
The Sporting News looks at a little bit of Premier League history on each club in the 2023/24 focuses on their nicknames.
Premier League records: Most points, goals, appearances and season tallies ahead of 2023/24 kickoff
Club nicknames often have a long running historical connection with their club and fan bases are fiercely proud of them.
Arsenal's nickname finds it roots in their club formation by a group of munitions workers in the Royal Arsenal Factory in Woolwich, London in 1886.
The factory produced weapons and explosives, and the Arsenal crest has featured a cannon ever since, as a symbol of the link to their early days.
Villa's nickname is more than just a play on words with the club's title with fan historians confirming the link comes from urban legend the 'Villa Villan'.
The 'Villa Villan' appeared in the local Sports Argus newspaper from 1879, with conflicting reports over whether of not he actually existed, but the term has stuck with the Villa fans ever since.
There are two main stories behind why Bournemouth find themselves with a fruit flavoured nickname with fans open-minded over which is the truth
Some link it to the cherry red striped shirts the club opted for as their home kit, with others
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