Romford F.C.

Romford F.C.

Football club infobox
clubname = Romford


fullname = Romford Football Club
nickname = The Boro
founded = 1876
ground = Field Mill, Aveley (groundshare with Aveley)
capacity = 1,100
chairman = Steve Gardener
manager = Paul Martin
league = Essex Senior League
season = 2007-08
position = Essex Senior League, 5th
pattern_la1=|pattern_b1=|pattern_ra1=
leftarm1=3333dd|body1=3333dd|rightarm1=3333dd|shorts1=3333dd|socks1=3333dd|

Romford F.C. (The Boro) are a football club based in Romford, England. Romford were established in 1876 and reached the Quarter-Finals of the FA Cup in the 1880-81 season. In 1949 they were FA Amateur Cup finalists, beaten 1-0 by Bromley. They subsequently went professional and were Southern League Champions in 1966-67. A proposed move to a new ground in Oldchurch Park ended in disaster when it failed to meet Southern League standards and the club went out of existence. Later reformed, in 1992, they won the Isthmian League Second Division. They are currently playing in the Essex Senior League. They have also a reserve team in the Essex, Herts and Bordering Counties Combination League, the reserves are the current holders of the Essex & Herts Combination Cup.

Records

*Highest Attendance: (820) v Leatherhead F.C., ICIS League Division Two 15.4.97

*Most Appearances: Stuart Horne (246)

*Biggest Win: (9-0) v Hullbridge Sports F.C. (H), Essex Senior League 21.10.95

*Fastest Goal: Danny Benstock 11 secs v Great Wakering Rovers F.C. (A), Essex Senior League 28.8.95

Management

Manager: Paul Martin

Assistant Manager: Mark Lord

Coach: Steve Bryce

Physio: Peter Shepherd

Goalkeeper Coach: Cliff Matthews

Kit Man: Keith Preston

Assistant Kit Man: Colin Meehan

Noted Players and Ex Players

Neil Finn

Had a brief moment of fame, becoming the youngest Premier League 'keeper in the 1995/96 season whilst playing for West Ham United at 17 years old. West Ham lost the game 2-1 Niall Quinn netting both. He then went on to play for Barnet F.C. and suffered a serious injury which kept him out for 3 years before joining the boro.

Lee Flynn

Started out with the boro and played from 1991 to 1993 before moving to Hendon F.C.. He played for Stevenage Borough F.C., Barnet F.C. and Dagenham & Redbridge along with other profiled clubs.

Andrew Oxby

Played for Norwich City in their most recent Premier League season before signing for Romford for one season. He then signed for Braintree Town F.C. at the start of the 2007/08 season finding himself surplus to requirements at the club he signed for former manager Jimmy Cooper at Metropolitan Police F.C., before returning back at the boro.

Danny Benstock

Made over 240 appearances for the boro, he cut short his time at Portuguese outfit Leixões Sport Club to join Romford. He also made over 20 appearances for Leyton Orient. Nick-named 'The Rolls Royce'.

Vinny John

Signed from Dagenham & Redbridge in the 1997/98 season. Sold to Grays Athletic for £4K the highest recorded transfer fee at the club. He also played for Bishop's Stortford, Wycombe Wanderers and Torquay United.

Ground

Romford play at Ford Sports Stadium (Rush Green, Romford) a 3000 capacity stadium. The stadium has one stand seating 354 people and 500 covered standing. The stadium also has 7 changing rooms, 3 shower rooms, 1 sauna, 2 bars with big screen televisions and 1 function hall. The stadium is complete with floodlights, dugouts, turnstyles, PA system, press box and a burger stall. The stadium also has 4 pitches on the surrounding area with one having floodlight facilities. It also has a floodlit training area which is used also by Dagenham & Redbridge.

The nature of the lease means it is renewed annually, not allowing the required security of tenure for membership of any higher leagues. This was the reason for previous tenants Ford United relocating to Barkingside and eventually renaming themselves Redbridge F C, which in turn cleared the way for Romford to move in when they were forced to vacate their previous home at Sungate during the 2001-02 season. Local press have reported that Romford's lease would not be renewed for the 2008-09 season and that the facility is to be sold to an unidentified party, leading to speculation that the Rush Green site would be bought by West Ham United as a training facility, which may or may not be compatible with Romford remaining as tenants. Romford have since been reported to have secured an open-ended groundshare agreement with Aveley F C to commence in 2008-09, with the possibility of a long-term contract which would enable promotion to the Ryman League.

Full Romford Football Club History

The current side is the third Romford Football Club, both their predecessors having competed at some point in the Southern League, and each time having been defunct for fourteen years before the name was revived.

All three versions have had their moments, although the present model has yet to emulate previous achievements on the national stage.

The original club was founded in 1876 and reached the last six of the F A Cup in 1880-81, then in 1884-85 visited a Blackburn Rovers side on their way to completing a hat-trick of F A Cup wins. The Club joined the Southern League in 1909 but failed to complete their fixtures in their first season, and after an internal dispute which saw a breakaway club formed and a change of name to Romford Town, folded during the First World War.

For a while there was no senior football at all in Romford, but the situation was addressed in 1929 when local figure Tom MacPherson, later to become M P for the area and subsequently Lord MacPherson, took charge of re-forming the Club after a public meeting at the Corn Exchange, which was so well attended that the crowd spilled on to the street outside, to the annoyance of the police. The meeting was advertised by a poster proclaiming a match between Romford and Aston Villa, revealed to be hypothetical in the small print. The new Club moved into the local Brooklands stadium, which was bought by the Club when it became a limited company in the mid-1930s, possibly the first Amateur club to do so. After two seasons in the London League, Romford joined the Athenian League in 1931, and between 1935 and 1938 won two championships and twice reached the semi-finals of the F A Amateur Cup.

After the Second World War the Club, who had acquired the nickname Boro after the Borough of Romford [was created in 1937, competed in the Isthmian League and finished third in each of their first two seasons. The highlight of this era was reaching the Final of the F A Amateur Cup in 1949, losing 1-0 to Bromley in front of 95 000 spectators in the first Final to be held at Wembley. However fortunes then plummeted and after finishing in the bottom three five times in a row, Romford took the bold move of turning professional and joining the Southern League in 1959.

Promotion was achieved at the first attempt and, after a near miss in 1963-64 when Boro finished fifth after remaining unbeaten until the New Year, the enormous Championship shield came to Brooklands in 1967. Romford were perennial (and unsuccessful) applicants for membership of the Football League but, apart from third place in 1970-71, never looked like repeating their title success and eventually were relegated in 1975.

Boro’s failure to make it into the Football League had left huge debts, but only when the ground was sold did the extent of the Club’s problems come to light. 90% of the proceeds of the sale of Brooklands were eaten up in debt repayments and tax, leaving barely £60 000 to finance a new stadium, and the 1977-78 season was spent playing home matches at borrowed grounds - indeed the last match, at home to Folkestone & Shepway, was eventually played at Folkestone with Boro only able to field ten players including the manager. Romford Football Club closed down in 1978 and the site of the unfinished stadium in Oldchurch Park became Romford Ice Rink.

Appropriately, it was at the Ice Rink that the first meeting took place in February 1992 to gauge interest in reviving the Club. Over 150 people attended to hear the ideas of Dave Howie, and very soon the Club was formed, a ground-share arranged with Hornchurch and Senior status granted from the Essex F A. To have achieved so much so soon owed much to what had gone before, and in view of the importance and significance of such a heritage to the success of the new club, it was inevitable that it would adopt the traditional blue and gold colors and Boro nickname, despite the local council having since become the London Borough of Havering.

The Club took their place in the Essex Senior League and with Lyndon Lynch at the helm, finished in ninth place. This was followed by fourth place in 1993-94 and third the season after. The highlight of this third season was the Club’s first entry into the F A Cup, when Boro made national headlines by beating Grays Athletic and Hayes, and almost took St Albans City to a replay before going down 1-0 at Clarence Park in a match that was featured on Grandstand.

The summer of 1995 was all change, as Dave Howie stepped down and Lyndon Lynch chose to move on. With an almost entirely new committee and considerably improved financial backing, Boro started again from scratch, moving in with Essex Senior League rivals Ford United and appointing as joint managers the local dream ticket of Donal McGovern and Alan Marson, a partnership with a quite phenomenal record at this level and higher. They brought several of the squad with whom they had won the previous season’s Isthmian League Division Three championship at Collier Row, and proceeded to win the Essex Senior League with a record total of 91 goals from just 28 games. This was accompanied by success in the League Cup, beating Southend Manor 2-0 in the final at Burnham Ramblers, and another run to the Third Qualifying Round of the F A Cup, again losing at St Albans by 3-1 after leading at half-time.

There was another period of upheaval for Romford in 1996, as the agreement with Ford was terminated and Boro finished the season sharing with Collier Row at Sungate. A merger was arranged between the two clubs and the new club, known as Collier Row & Romford, took Row’s place in Division Two of the Isthmian League. A run to the last sixteen of the F A Vase contributed to a fixture backlog that meant Boro fell so far behind that they had to play exactly half their league fixtures in March and April. However promotion was secured with three games to play and Boro overtook Leatherhead at the top of the table for the first time going into the final match, where a 3-0 win at home to Hungerford Town brought the championship to Sungate. Boro finished the League season unbeaten away from home, went 29 games without defeat and lost only twice.

With McGovern and Marson moving on, former reserve team manager Les Whitton was promoted to become first team manager in the summer of 1997. The Club reverted to its original title and the following season the name of Romford appeared in the Fourth Qualifying Round of the F A Cup for the first time since 1975-76. Boro also reached the quarter-finals of the League Cup and won the East Anglian Cup, recovering from 2-0 down to beat Aveley 3-2 at Sungate in the Final. Boro finished seventh in Division One, top scorers with 92 goals.

The tail end of the season had been largely overshadowed by concern over the Club’s future, and the eventual defeat of a takeover bid resulted in the departure of several Club personnel and the entire first team management, leaving a committee almost entirely hand-picked from the terraces, while Dave Howie returned after three years away. Reserve team manager Steve Wheeler took over the first team and managed to keep the side in the top half of the table on a reduced budget, but at the end of January chairman John Goodwin left to take over at Bishops Stortford, taking Wheeler and several players with him.

First team coach Amin Levitt was immediately appointed manager, and plenty of fresh blood was quickly recruited with reserve and youth team players also being promoted. The response was magnificent and the team remained unbeaten in the league for several weeks, however just when things were settling down again another bombshell came when the Sungate ground was closed by the League, due to the deterioration of the pitch and other facilities. Romford’s last six home games had to be played at other grounds, including Chesham and Hendon, and even had to play three nights running in the final week of the season as Boro finished a creditable tenth. Some consolation was found in the reserve and youth sides, the latter making Romford the only non-League club to reach the Third Round proper of the F A Youth Cup. The Club also won the Umbro Fair Play Award for Division One.

Following a number of delays, Sungate’s ‘B’ grading was finally re-instated on the opening day of the 1999-2000 season. The return to Sungate had a profound effect on the team as they won ten of their next thirteen games and reached the Fourth Qualifying Round of the F A Cup, a 6-0 win over Congleton Town earning Non-League Team of the Week honors in The Sun. However the Club soon found itself fighting relegation, and Sungate went through another period of closure while urgent electrical work was carried out, requiring another three games to be played elsewhere. The relegation threat was finally put to rest with three matches remaining, and Boro were more than happy with a final position of nineteenth.

Still the summer was not without its problems as the clubhouse suffered major fire damage, and complications arising from that and the subsequent delay to the completion of other rebuilding works prevented any matches from taking place at Sungate for a long time. The constant uncertainty finally took its toll and Amin Levitt resigned in October to be replaced by John Bennett, but after a brief revival came a further shock in December as Boro were suspended by the Ryman League with no return to Sungate in sight - Bennett left and Romford were left with no option but to release the entire first team squad.

The Club were finally able to return to Sungate in mid-January, and former reserve team manager Paul Withey was appointed to the first team. Early results were encouraging as the side posted three wins in four games, but as the fixture backlog increased with the continued wet weather the task of keeping the Club in Division One proved to be beyond everybody, with Boro having to play eighteen games in the final 33 days of the season.

Sadly, despite an injection of fresh blood the poor run of form continued into the 2001-02 season, and Withey was replaced as manager by Paul Joynes at the end of August. Although performances improved considerably, Boro still finished the season well adrift at the bottom of Division Two. Meanwhile several issues at Sungate were never satisfactorily resolved and the Club moved out mid-season, once again playing out the season on borrowed grounds and reluctantly forwarding its resignation from the Ryman League.

A return to familiar territory in the Essex Senior League and back at Rush Green Road saw a strong recovery after the struggles of recent years, and Boro stayed on the edge of the leading pack all season, finishing fifth with a late-season run of form breaking several Club records.

Paul Joynes took up an offer to return to the Ryman League with Tilbury and popular former Boro player Mark Reed stepped in to replace him, emulating the previous season’s fifth-place finish after leading the table for two months, reaching the semi-final of the Essex Thames-side Trophy and adding the Gordon Brasted Memorial Trophy with a 3-0 win over Ilford at Burnham Ramblers F C. 2004-05 saw Boro finish fifth once again, while they were beaten 1-0 away to Aveley in the Final of the Essex Thames-side Trophy.

The loss of several players during the summer led to a mediocre 2005-06, finishing twelfth with the nearest thing to a highlight being a run to the semi-finals of the League Cup, only to be expelled for the second season running (and the third time in the Club's history in that same competition) over an ineligible player in the first leg. However the recovery was extraordinary, with 2006-07 being possibly the Club's best for a decade. Runners-up spot was achieved, including a league double over eventual champions Brentwood Town and taking the same opposition to penalties before losing in the League Cup Final at Barkingside F C.

Frustration over the Club's inability to secure a long-term home, capable of enabling promotion to a higher level, prompted Mark Reed finally to carry out his often-repeated threat to resign in November 2007, after another disappointing start to the season. Paul Martin stepped up after several successful seasons in charge of the reserve team, and made an immediate impact as Romford went unbeaten in his first ten games in charge, making it as high as fourth in the table by Easter but too late for a late title challenge.

External links

Official Website

*http://www.romfordfc.com

The almost-complete Romford Archive featuring player profiles, season-by-season statistics and hundreds of photos from 1992 onwards

*http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/romfordarchive/

Pictures of former home, Brooklands Stadium

*http://www.mikefloate.clara.co.uk/progpics.htm


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Romford — Romford …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Romford — (spr. Rommferd), Stadt in der englischen Grafschaft Essex; Alebrauereien, Viehhandel; 4000 Ew …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Romford — (spr. römmförd), Stadt in der engl. Grafschaft Essex, 14 km östlich von London, hat eine berühmte Brauerei, Vieh und Kornhandel und (1901) 13,656 Einw. 5 km nördlich das Dorf Haveringatte Bower (407 Einw.), bis zum 17. Jahrh. mit königlichem… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Romford — (spr. römmf rd), Stadt in der engl. Grafsch. Essex, (1901) 13.656 E …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Romford — [rum′fərd, räm′fərd] former municipal borough in Essex, SE England: now part of Havering, near London * * * …   Universalium

  • Romford — [rum′fərd, räm′fərd] former municipal borough in Essex, SE England: now part of Havering, near London …   English World dictionary

  • Romford — Coordinates: 51°34′36″N 0°10′48″E / 51.5768°N 0.1801°E / 51.5768; 0.1801 …   Wikipedia

  • Romford — London Borough of Havering Lage in Greater London Status London Borough Region …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Romford — Original name in latin Romford Name in other language lompeodeu State code GB Continent/City Europe/London longitude 51.57515 latitude 0.18582 altitude 20 Population 0 Date 2010 10 17 …   Cities with a population over 1000 database

  • Romford and Gidea Park Rugby Club — Romford and Gidea Park Rugby Union Club is a rugby union club in Romford, East London, England. A Brief historyLike Nomads, rugby players in Romford have been on the move since their first match in 1929. It was not until September, 1983 that the… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”