Livingston F.C.
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| Livingston F.C. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Full name | Livingston Football Club | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Nickname(s) | Livi Lions | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Founded | 1943 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Ground | Almondvale Stadium, Livingston, Scotland (Capacity 10,122) |
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| Chairman | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Manager | Vacant | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| League | Scottish First Division | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2007-08 | Scottish First Division, 7th | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Livingston Football Club is a Scottish football team based in Livingston, West Lothian. They currently play in the First Division. They have no manager after Mark Proctor was sacked on the 3rd of June 2008
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[edit] History
[edit] Ferranti Thistle (1943-1974)
The club began life as Ferranti Thistle in 1943. A works team, they initially played in the East of Scotland League. The team played at City Park in Edinburgh. Following the demise of Third Lanark, a place opened up in the second division of the Scottish Football League. After beating off competition from four Highland League sides, Hawick Royal Albert and Gateshead United, Ferranti Thistle were accepted into the league by a vote of 21-16 over Inverness Thistle. However, due to stringent SFL rules on overt sponsorship of teams at the time, Ferranti Thistle were forced to change their name to take their place in the league. After a campaign by the Edinburgh Evening News to find a name for the club, the name Meadowbank Thistle was chosen, and approved by the SFL in time for the new season.
[edit] Meadowbank Thistle (1974-1995)
Having had little time to form a squad from the existing Ferranti squad, the first Meadowbank Thistle manager John Bain faced an uphill task to produce a competitive squad in time for the new season. Meadowbank played their first competitive match on 9 August 1974 against Albion Rovers in the League Cup, eventually losing 1-0 despite the strenuous efforts of a go-go dancer hired to mark the occasion.
Their apex came in the late 1980s. In the 1986-87 season, Meadowbank won the Scottish Division Two championship and won promotion to Division One. They finished Division One runners-up the following season but were denied promotion to the Premier Division due to a streamlining the size of the division.
The club suffered from the restructuring of the Scottish Football League in 1994-1995 season. Having finished mid-table in Division One, it was relegated to Division Two because the league was scrapping its format of two 12-club and one 14-club divisions in favour of four divisions of 10 clubs. Meadowbank suffered a second successive relegation in 1994–95, finishing second from bottom in Division Two. After this, Meadowbank ran into severe financial difficulties, and were facing closure as a result. As a result, and in the face of significant opposition from many Meadowbank fans who objected to the dropping of the club name and the team moving from Edinburgh, in 1995 Meadowbank Thistle relocated to a new stadium in the new town of Livingston and changed name again, to Livingston F.C..
[edit] Livingston
Livingston F.C's first season ended in triumph as they were crowned champions of the Scottish Division Three for the 1995-96 season. Three years later, in 1998-99, they won promotion again as Division Two champions. Another promotion followed in 2000-01 when the club finished champions of Division One and gained promotion to the Scottish Premier League after just six seasons in existence. Livingston's first SPL campaign, 2001-02, brought more success as they finished third in the league (behind Celtic and Rangers) and qualified for the UEFA Cup. The club's reputation grew particularly after a competent showing in the UEFA Cup. After deposing of FC Vaduz of Liechtenstein on the away goal rule after a 1-1 draw, they came up against SK Sturm Graz of Austria, and after a thrilling 14 goal, 2 leg affair they narrowly missed out on the second round, going out on the wrong side of an astonishing 8-6 aggregate scoreline. The club avoided the second season syndrome however finishing 9th the following season. Livingston won their first National trophy in 2004 by winning the Scottish League Cup after a 2-0 win over Hibernian at Hampden Park.
However the club's rise was short lived as they went into financial administration on 3 February 2004[1] Many fans found this ironic considering their sponsor for a while was Intelligent Finance. It was 13 May 2005 before Livingston emerged from administration, following a period of financial turmoil in which the previous boardroom occupants were ousted to make way for Pearse Flynn's Lionheart Consortium. They are now owned by Italian majority shareholders Angelo Massone, Tommaso Bruno, Alessandro Di Mattia, and Tommaso Angelini after Pearse Flynn sold his shares in June 2008.
On February 11, 2006, Paul Lambert resigned as Livingston manager after 12 straight defeats leaving Livingston bottom of the Scottish Premier League. He was replaced by former player and coach John Robertson .
Despite his best efforts, Livingston were relegated for the first time in May 2006, and a poor showing in the 2006/07 First Division saw John Robertson removed as Livingston manager on 15 April 2007. His successor was announced on the 22nd May 2007 as former Hibernian FC assistant coach Mark Proctor. Mark Proctor appointed Curtis Fleming as his assistant on the 26th of June 2007, and both were sacked in June 2008 after a disappointing season in which they finished seventh. The Italian owners are likely to appoint Roberto Landi as head coach in June.[2]
[edit] Honours
- Scottish League Cup Winners (1) - 2004
- Scottish First Division Winners (1) - 2000-01
- Scottish Second Division Winners (2) - 1985-86¹, 1998-99
- Scottish Third Division Winners (1) - 1995-96
- Scottish Challenge Cup Runners Up (1) - 2000-01
- Scottish Qualifying Cup (South) Winners (1) - 1973-74²
¹ This includes honours won between 1974 and 1995, when the club was known as Meadowbank Thistle.
² This includes honours won between 1943 and 1974, when the club was known as Ferranti Thistle.
[edit] Kit sponsors
| Period | Kit manufacturer | Shirt sponsor |
|---|---|---|
| 1995–1998 | Russell Athletic | Mitsubishi |
| 1998–2001 | Motorola | |
| 2001–2002 | Jerzeez | |
| 2002–2004 | Intelligent Finance | |
| 2004–2007 | Xara | |
| 2007– | Nike | Smarter Loans |
[edit] Managers
Jim Leishman (1995–1997)
Ray Stewart (1997–2000)
Jim Leishman (2000–2003)
Marcio Maximo Barcellos (2003)
David Hay (2003–2004)
Allan Preston (2004)
Richard Gough (2004–2005)
Paul Lambert (2005–2006)
Alec Cleland (Caretaker, 2006)
John Robertson (2006–2007)
Dave Bowman (Caretaker, 2007)
Mark Proctor (2007–2008)
[edit] Famous players
Neil Alexander
Rab Douglas
David Bingham
John Robertson
Marvin Andrews
David Fernández
Javier Sánchez Broto
Stuart Lovell
Quino
Oscar Rubio
Davide Xausa
David McNamee
Hassan Kachloul
Paul Dalglish
Paul Lambert
Guillermo Amor
Rolando Zarate
[edit] Current First Team Squad
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[edit] Current Under 19's Team
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[edit] Club records
- Record Victory: 7 - 0 v Queen of the South, 29 January, 2000
- Record Defeat: 0 - 7 v Hibernian, 8 February, 2006
- Record Defeat (incl. Meadowbank): 0 - 8 v Hamilton Academical, 14 December, 1974
[edit] See also
- Clubs who have relocated:

