Banbury United F.C.

Banbury United F.C.

Football club infobox
clubname = Banbury United


fullname = Banbury United Football Club
nickname = The Puritans
founded = 1931 (as Spencer Villa)
ground = Spencer Stadium
Banbury, Oxon
capacity = 2,000
chairman = David Bennett
manager = Kieran Sullivan
league = Southern League Premier Division
season = 2007–08
position = Southern League Premier Division, 9th
pattern_la1=|pattern_b1=|pattern_ra1=

leftarm1=FF0000|body1=FF0000|rightarm1=FF0000|shorts1=FFFF00|socks1=FF0000

pattern_la2=|pattern_b2=_unknown|pattern_ra2

leftarm2=FFFFFF|body2=FFFFFF|rightarm2=FFFFFF|shorts2=FFFFFF|socks2=FFFFFF

Banbury United are a football club based in Banbury, Oxfordshire, who currently play in the Southern League Premier Division. They are nicknamed The Puritans and they play their home matches at the Spencer Stadium. They were originally named Spencer Villa.

History

* 1931 - Formed as Spencer Villa, home matches played on Middleton Road
* 1934 - Changed name to Banbury Spencer and moved to Spencer Stadium
* 1935-36 - Joined Birmingham & District League Southern Division
* 1947-48 - Reached First Round Proper of FA Cup
* 1948-49 - Record Attendance of 7,160
* 1962-63 - League changed name to West Midlands (Regional) League
* 1965 - Club bought by local businessmen
* 1965 - Changed name to Banbury United
* 1966-67 - Joined Southern League Division One
* 1979-80 - League re-organised to Southern & Midland Divisions (No Premier), placed in Midland Division
* 1990-91 - Joined Hellenic League Premier Division
* 1999-00 - Hellenic League Champions
* 2000-01 - Rejoined Southern League, in Eastern Division
* 2003-04 - Oxfordshire Senior Cup Winners
* 2003-04 - Play-offs for places in new structure - Banbury United 2 Sutton Coldfield Town 1; promoted to Premier Division
* 2005-06 - Oxfordshire Senior Cup Winners
* 2006-07 - Oxfordshire Senior Cup Winners
* 2007-08 - Oxfordshire Senior Cup Runners - upBanbury United were founded in 1931, when they were called Spencer Villa. At this time it was essentially a works club. In 1934, they changed their name to Banbury Spencer and moved to the Spencer Stadium. They had a lot of early success, winning most of the leagues which they played in.

Early History

They were elected to the Birmingham Combination in 1935. In 1947 their attendances averaged at 3,500. They reached the first round proper of the FA Cup, where they lost 2-1 to Colchester United The club also broke their record attendance the following season, as over 7,000 people saw them lose to Oxford City in the third qualifying round of the FA Cup. [http://www.southern-football-league.co.uk/directory0607/clubsPrem/history/banburyHist.rtf]

In 1962, the club's owners signalled their wish to sell the club and in 1965, the club was bought out by a group of local businessmen. They changed the name from Banbury Spencer to Banbury United. Former Chelsea, West Ham United and Arsenal player Len Goulden, was employed as Manager.

In 1966, they joined the Southern League. They stayed in the Southern League for 24 years. In this time they won the Midland Floodlit Cup and reached the First Round Proper of the FA Cup, losing to Northampton Town in a replay.

However, in the late 1970s, Banbury suffered huge financial problems and by 1984 the club was nearly bankrupt. The club gave up the ownership of the ground. In the 1989-90 season, Banbury were relegated for the first time in their history. The new ground owners threatened to sell and for a brief period, the club was on the virge of extinction. The threat was withdrawn, and the club was saved by a small bunch of volunteers.

Banbury languished in the Hellenic League for several years, and at times they suffered more financial problems. But in 1997, the club's committee made several improvements in the team's finances.

A new era

At the start of the 1999-00 season, former Newcastle United, Oxford United and QPR player Kevin Brock was installed as manager of Banbury United. By the end of 1999, Banbury trailed Hellenic League leaders Highworth Town by 19 points. However, a run of 13 consecutive victories and 62 points from a possible 66 in the new year, saw Banbury overhaul Highworth and clinch the title.

In the next two seasons Banbury finished 13th and 15th. Banbury's hopes of improvement in the 2002-03 season were dealt a blow after injury to the club's top striker Matty Gooderick. Brock signed 19 year old Frenchman Norman Sylla, who would become Banbury's star player. After a slow start in which he scored 1 goal in his first five games, he hit form and began to improveam's fortunes. His record of 41 goals in all competitions that season saw Banbury finish 8th.

Due to the restructuring of the non-league pyramid, the club knew that if in the 2003-04 season they could finish in the top seven or finish eighth and win a play off, they would be promoted to the Southern League Premier Division. Norman Sylla departed the club and joined Conference side Redditch United. Banbury wavered between 5th and 9th for much of the season and with twelve games remaining it seemed that they may struggle to finish in the top seven because their rivals had games in hand. Banbury won eight of their next games and finished eighth, securing a play-off match against Sutton Coldfield Town for promotion.

The game was played at the Spencer Stadium due to Banbury's superior record over the season. In the play-off the game was locked in a 0-0 stalemate after 90 minutes despite Banbury's dominance. Early in the second period of extra time, Sutton took the lead, but a Jason Allen equaliser saw Banbury level the scores and in the dying minutes Wayne Blossom headed the winner to send Banbury up.

In the 2004-05 season Banbury avoided relegation on the penultimate game of the season. New striker Howard Forinton was one of the heroes of the season. The 2005-06 season saw the signing of a number of new players. Andy Baird joined from local rivals Brackley Town, Paul Lamb and Johnny Gardener signed from Aylesbury United, as well as Darren Pond and Tommy Kinch who came through Banbury's youth system.

Banbury were near the top of the table for the whole season and for a long time it seemed that they would earn a play-off place. However, dip in form followed and Banbury finished 7th.

However, long time player Jody Mckay, who made over 600 appearances, a club record, and scored 170 goals left the club in January 2006 to join Leamington.

Source: fchd|id=BANBURYU|name=Banbury United

Spencer Stadium

Spencer Stadium is Banbury's home ground. It is situated next to the town's train station on Bridge street in the Grimsbury ward of the town. The stadium has a capacity of 2000, and has a 250 seat stand called the 'John Nicholls Stand', named after the club's sponsor. The roof of the Town End stand was blown off by strong winds in 2007, but has now been reconstructed. The club have secured a lease with Robin Faccenda until 2009.

Banbury United have been playing at the ground since 1934. It is thought that the roofing which was partially blown down, is probably the only part of the ground which was originally there when Banbury United moved into the ground.

2007-08 squad

Club Records

* Best league position: 7th Southern League 2005-2006
* Best FA Cup performance: 1st round replay, 1973-74
* Best FA Trophy performance: 3rd round replay, 1970-71
* Best FA Vase performance: 2nd round, 1999-00Oxfordshire Senior Cup Champions

Player Records

* Most goals scored in a season: Tony Jacques 62 1967-68

Attendance

In the 2005-06 season, the club had an average league attendance of 415 when playing at home. Their highest league attendance that season was 588 at home to Salisbury City.

Previous League Positions

External links

* [http://www.banburyunited.co.uk Official site]
* [http://www.clubwebsite.co.uk/banburyunited Unofficial site]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Banbury (United Kingdom) — Hotels: Best Western Banbury House Hotel (City) Cromwell Lodge Hotel Banbury (City Centre) Macdonald Whately Hall (Banbury Cross) Red Lion Hotel Banbury (Adderbury) …   International hotels

  • Banbury — Banbury …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Banbury — infobox UK place country = England latitude= 52.0605 longitude= 1.3362 official name= Banbury population= 43,867 (2001 Census) shire district= Cherwell shire county = Oxfordshire region= South East England constituency westminster= Banbury post… …   Wikipedia

  • Banbury (UK Parliament constituency) — UK constituency infobox Name = Banbury Map1 = Banbury Map2 = Oxfordshire Entity = Oxfordshire Type = County Year = 1553 Entity = Oxfordshire County = Oxfordshire EP = South East England MP = Tony Baldry Party = ConservativeBanbury is a… …   Wikipedia

  • Banbury Merton Street railway station — Infobox UK disused station name = Banbury Merton Street caption = locale = Banbury borough = Cherwell, Oxfordshire original = Buckinghamshire Railway London and North Western Railway manager = London and North Eastern Railway London Midland… …   Wikipedia

  • Banbury Road — A4165 road Route information Length: 3.7 mi (6.0 km) Major junctions …   Wikipedia

  • Banbury District and Lord Jersey FA — The Banbury District and Lord Jersey FA is a football competition based in Oxfordshire, England. The league has a total of four divisions, of which the highest, the Premier Division, sits at level 13 of the English football league system and is a …   Wikipedia

  • Banbury — /ban ber ee, beuh ree, bree, bam /, n. a town in N Oxfordshire, in S England. 29,216. * * * ▪ England, United Kingdom       town, Cherwell district, administrative and historic county of Oxfordshire, England. It lies along the River Cherwell. For …   Universalium

  • Banbury Reservoir — Infobox lake lake name = Banbury Reservoir image lake = caption lake = image bathymetry = caption bathymetry = location = London Borough of Waltham Forest coords = coord|51.6047|N|0.0350|W|type:waterbody region:GB|display=inline,title type =… …   Wikipedia

  • United Learning Trust — The United Learning Trust (ULT) is an educational charity in England, created to manage a number of Academies spread across the country. ULT is a subsidiary of the not for profit charity, the United Church Schools Trust (UCST). ULT s ethos is… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

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