- Clarence United
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Clarence United Full name Clarence United Football Club Founded 1978 Ground Wentworth Park , Howrah Chairman Gordon Jablonski Manager Andrew Brown League Southern Premier League 2009 4th Home coloursClarence United Football Club is a football (soccer) club based in the City of Clarence, Tasmania. The club currently participates in the Tasmanian Southern Premier League, at present, the highest level of football in Southern Tasmania. The club also has women's teams and teams in all junior divisions. Founded in 1978 the club spent much of its early history competing in lower divisions, where it has been reasonably successful, winning several lower division titles and cups. Despite this, Clarence United had struggled for many years to attain success at the highest level within the state, although Clarence United was finally crowned state champions for the first time in 2009.[1]
Clarence United play their home games at Wentworth Park, an impressive multiple pitch venue located alongside Howrah Beach in the Clarence, Tasmania with good quality playing surfaces and club facilities.
Contents
History
In the 1970s there was a lack of association football clubs in the Municipality of Clarence on Hobart's eastern shore, with most of the southern clubs located in Hobart. A group of keen players, many of whom were from the Scottish Australian ex-patriot community held a meeting in October 1977 to discuss the possibility of forming a new club to enter the 1978 southern competition. The club was formed in 1978 as Phoenix Rovers Soccer Club, and originally wore a Scotland International strip for home matches, and a plain red t-shirt as an alternative away strip. The original committee was Syd Cairns, Mike Barter, Ken Ellison, Trevor Davey, Lloyd Davey, with Syd Cairns appointed as the first coach of the team. Cairns performed this role as an active player-coach. The club only had enough players to form one team in their first season, and were entered into the Southern Division Two competition. The team finished 3rd in a 22 team Division Two competition in their first season.[2]
In 1979 the name was changed to Phoenix Lauderdale Rovers after amalgamating with Lauderdale Soccer Club which gave them enough players to form a reserve team, and in that season the club won their first accolade, being crowned Division Two champions. The clubs colours were also changed to the current red and black design. In 1982, they met with Clarence Soccer Club to discuss a merger, but it did not go ahead at that time.[3] The Phoenix team of that season was quite strong, and had on-field success by winning the Rothmans Division One league title and the Michael The Tailors Pre-Season Cup. At the time, Division One was the second tier of football behind the Statewide League, but victory in Division One did not necessarily mean promotion, as there were additional financial requirements for membership in the State League. Phoenix defended their Division One title the following year, and also added the Summer Cup, but were again not promoted to the State League.[4] 1984 was less successful, with the only trophy going to the Division Four reserve side. The merger with Clarence eventually went ahead that year, and a meeting was held where it was agreed the name would change to "PCL United" (Phoenix Clarence Lauderdale).[5] The following year the new PCL United Soccer Club again won the Michael The Tailors Pre-Season Cup Winners, but were unable to follow it up with any league success. The late 1980s brought a fairly barren period for the club, although they picked up a few minor lower division trophies, they were unable to secure any major successes.[6]
Phoenix won the Division Two title in 1989, and backed it up with success in the Knock-out cup, giving them a 'double'. In the early 1990s the club invested in building a new clubhouse, bar and changing room complex in the middle of the Wentworth Park complex. It was the catalyst for a period of major improvement. Junior development teams were highly successful, and dominated many of the age-groups of the Eastern Region Junior Soccer Association competitions. A new cohesion developed as players grew up playing together from a young age, and by 1994 the club had won the Knock-out cup once more. That side, under coach Darren Grainger, led a barnstorming year the following season, as they were crowned Division One winners. It was the club's first senior league success in twelve years. Phoenix also managed to claim the Division Two, and Division Four titles, as well as back-to-back KO Cups.[7] 1996 did not bring league success, but the KO Cup and reserve KO cup were secured, and in 1997 they came second in Division One.[8]
At the start of the 1998 season, Soccer Tasmania led a move for clubs to distance themselves from their traditional ethnic associations on the initiative of Soccer Australia. it was felt that these associations were the cause of many of the problems and violence that plagued football in Australia. Although Phoenix did not have any obvious ethnic connotations, the club used the opportunity to rename itself as Clarence United Football Club. In their first season under their new identity, Clarence United again took the Division One title. After years of trying, Clarence United was finally able to secure entry into the Statewide League for the first time in the 1999 season. Their first season in the Statewide league was an awakening, and proved disastrous. Clarence finished last with only two wins out of sixteen matches, and a goal difference of -55. Even worse, after finally achieving promotion to the Statewide League after so many years of trying, the league was wound up at the end of the 1999 season because of financial troubles. Clarence returned to the Southern Premier League for the 2000 season, but hey only fared slightly better, finishing second last ahead of South Hobart. Clarence finished second last every season between 2000 and 2003.[9]
2004 saw a turn around in the club's fortunes, claiming fourth spot in the Southern Premier League. In the mid-2000s, Clarence fairly consistently managed mid-table results, but 2009 brought a long-awaited first-ever Forestry Tasmania State Championship title, and in the same season Clarence United were crowned Premier Men's Statewide Lakoseljac Cup Winners, earning the club a first-ever senior 'double'.[10]
Colours and crest
Clarence United Home Kit. In their first two seasons, Phoenix originally wore a Scotland International strip for home matches, and a plain red t-shirt as an alternative away strip. The main team currently wears a shirt which is predominantly black, with black shorts, and black socks. The Club is currently sponsored by Cash Converters, RACT, Print Applied Technology and others. All of the club's teams were the red and black colour combination, but utilise a variety of different design styles to differential between divisional and age-group teams.
Although the club is no longer known by the name "Phoenix", a phoenix rising out of flames is still the club logo.
Ground
Main article: Wentworth Park, TasmaniaClarence United play their home games at Wentworth Park. Located off Clarence Street in Howrah, Wentworth Park is a pictureseque ground surrounded by trees and adjoining Howrah Beach in a primarily residential suburban area. The Wentworth Park complex is used by other sports such as hockey, rugby, touch football, and Ultimate Frisbee tournaments. In the summer it is used as a cricket ground. However the three main football pitches occupy the largest section of the complex, and the Clarence United club house, bar and changing facility is the main building on site. Although their home ground has good quality playing surfaces and club facilities, there is no stadium, grandstand or seating available.[11]
The ground is not owned by the club, but is a Clarence City Council facility who lease the ground to the club on a long-term basis on the proviso that other sports be permitted to share the facilities with Clarence United. The site was originally coastal lagoons, and the city council had historically used the site as landfill rubbish tip. In 2003, the ground was featured in the media on ABC Stateline, when local residents suggested that DDTs, and other Organochlorides had been used to control vermin and mosquitoes when the site was a rubbish dump, and that these chemicals were responsible for higher than usual rates of diseases such as cancer in the local area.[12] An investigation was carried out, collecting soil, groundwater and soil gas data. An environmental assessment report was published in response, suggesting that the human health risk posed by latent chemicals was negligible.[13]
In 2008 the council and the club jointly financed the installation of modern ground lighting which angered some local residents.[14]
Players
2010 players Mens: Seniors, Reserves and U19's (Not in Order)
Nathan Rees, Toby Wolley, Josef Closer, Samuel Reibel, Toby Ling, Jarrod Bugg, Liam Marsh, Sam Sweeten, Jordan King, Adam McIntyre, Sam Mcintyre, Harrison Reading, Jeremy Price, Sam Maxwell, Sam Randall, James Palfery, Alex Sparks, James Kingston, Locky Brown, Sam Karas, Adam Knapek, Adam O'Brien, Oliver Barta, Daniel Ming, Locky Hardwick, Brian Quarmby, Aaron Browning, Sam Jacobs, Will Malovnek, Jake Undy, Luke Wilcock, Nick Mayne, Emmanuel Tsakaris, Angus Hardwick, Dipendra Kunwar, Jon Darby, Paul Enkelaar, Alan Jablonski, Andrew Barron, Ben Hamlett, Luke Cripps, Grant Malcom, Alex Nandan, Joseph Stevens, Luke Huigsloot, Chris Hunt, David Hoppitt, Sam Cannamela, Christopher Nicholson, Mattias Toghill, Ben Parker, Matthew Lewis, Julian McMahon, Camerson Sweeney.
Mens Coaching Staf
Premier
Coach: Andrew Brown
Assistant: Franco Previdi (Italian import)
Manager: Garry Ling
Trainer: Phil Randall
Premier Reserves
Coach: Alan Jablonski
Assistant: Phillip
Manager: Gary Ling
Trainer: Philip Randall
Premier U19's
Coach: Eihab Khoury
Assistant: Franco Previdi
Manager: Glen Reading
Trainer Phillip Randall
Women's Coaching Staff
Premier
Coach: Ronnie Bolton
Assistant: Steve Kannegiesser
Trainer: Maree Edwards
Premier Reserves
Coach: John Burnett
Managers
Name Nationality From To Matches Won Drawn Lost Win % Syd Cairns Australia
1977 1981 - - - - - Jerome Marron Australia
1982 1984 - - - - - Ron Swift Australia
1985 1985 - - - - - Syd Cairns Australia
1986 1986 - - - - - Mike Barter Australia
1981 1987 - - - - - Arthur Seymour Australia
1988 29/08/1990 - - - - - Greg McGuire
(Care-taker)Australia
29/08/1990 1990 - - - - - Colin Minniecon Australia
1991 1993 - - - - - Kam Beta Australia
1994 1994 - - - - - Darren Grainger Australia
1995 2000 - - - - - Les Ware Australia
2001 2002 - - - - - Andrew Brown Australia
2003 Present - - - - - Honours and Statistics
- 1979 Div. 2 Winners, Div. 4 KO Cup Runners-up.
- 1980 Div. 3 KO Cup Runners-up.
- 1982 Rothmans League Div. 1 Winners, Michael The Tailors Pre-Season Cup Winners.
- 1983 Div. 1 Winners, Summer Cup Winners.
- 1984 Div. 4 KO Cup Runners-up.
- 1985 Michael The Tailors Pre-Season Cup Winners.
- 1988 Div. 3 KO Cup Runners-up.
- 1989 Div. 2 Winners, Div. 2 KO Cup Winners.
- 1991 Div. 2 KO Cup Winners.
- 1994 KO Cup Winners.
- 1995 Div. 1 Winners, Div. 2 Winners, Div. 4 Winners, KO Cup Winners.
- 1997 League Runners-up, KO Cup Winners, Social Cup Winners.
- 1998 Div. 1 Winners, Div. 1 Reserves Winners.
- 1999 Div. 3 Winners.
- 2001 Div. 2 Winners.
- 2002 Div. 2 Winners.
- 2003 Div. 2 Winners, Women's Div. 1 Winners.
- 2007 Under 19 Winners, Div. 3 Winners, Women's Statewide Cup Runners-up.
- 2008 Under 19 Winners, Women's Statewide Cup Runners-up.
- 2009 Forestry Tasmania State Championship Winners, Premier Men's Statewide Lakoseljac Cup Winners, Southern Under 19 Cup Winners, Women's Statewide Cup Runners-up.
- 2010 Women's Premier League Champions, Women's Statewide Cup Runners-up, Women's Div 1 Winners, Statewide KO Cup Runners-up, Div 3 White Winners, Div 3 Grandfinal Winners
CLUB SONG:
OHHHHHHHHHWe're from the Eastern Shore,
A fighting fury from the Eastern Shore.
In any weather you will see us with a grin,
risking head and shin.
If we're behind then never mind we'll fight and fight and win.
We're from the Eastern Shore,We'll never weaken 'til the final whistle's blown.
Just like the Phoenix of old,
we're strong and we're bold.
Oh we're from Clarence,
RED, WHITE AND BLACK.
We're from the Eastern Shore!
Give me a 'U'! ("U")Give me a 'N'! ("N")
Give me a 'I'! ("I")
Give me a 'T'! ("T")
Give me a 'E'! ("E")
Give me a 'D'! ("D")
What does that spell?
UNITED!UNITED!
UNITED!
Reference
- ^ http://www.themercury.com.au/article/2009/09/18/98171_soccer.html
- ^ http://clarenceunited.org.au/history_4.html
- ^ http://clarenceunited.org.au/history_4.html
- ^ http://www.footballfedtas.com.au/Statistics/index.html
- ^ http://clarenceunited.org.au/history_4.html
- ^ http://www.footballfedtas.com.au/Statistics/index.html
- ^ http://www.footballfedtas.com.au/Statistics/index.html
- ^ http://www.footballfedtas.com.au/Statistics/index.html
- ^ http://www.footballfedtas.com.au/Statistics/index.html
- ^ http://www.footballfedtas.com.au/Statistics/index.html
- ^ Popular Parks in Clarence. Published by the Clarence City Council 2003
- ^ http://australianetwork.com/englishbites/stories/s1294097.htm
- ^ Final Report. Environmental Sit Assessment and Tier 1 Risk Assessment, Wentworth Park, Howrah Tasmania. Prepared for DPIWE. 24 September 2004 54203-001 (43294671)
- ^ http://www.themercury.com.au/article/2008/11/26/40645_tasmania-news.html
External links
- Clarence United - Official Website
- Clarence United - Myspace Page
- - Football Federation Tasmania statistics page
Soccer in Australia Football Federation Australia National teams Current national leagues Former leagues Cup competitions Australian Cup (defunct) • FFA Cup (proposed)Domestic leagues Australian Capital Territory • New South Wales (Northern, Southern) • Queensland • South Australia • Tasmania (Northern, Southern) • Victoria • Western AustraliaSoccer in Australia by state and territory Football Federation Tasmania Northern Premier League Southern Premier League BeachSide FC · Clarence United · Glenorchy Knights · Hobart Olympic · Hobart Zebras · Kingborough Lions · New Town Eagles · South Hobart ·Southern League One Tasmanian football cups · Tasmanian Championship (defunct) · Tasmanian representative team · Tasmanian A-League Bid Categories:- Association football clubs established in 1978
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