Salisbury City F.C.

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Salisbury City
Full name Salisbury City Football Club
Nickname(s) The Whites
Founded 1947 (as Salisbury)
Ground The Raymond McEnhill Stadium,
Salisbury
(Capacity 3,500)
Chairman Neville Beal
Manager Nick Holmes
League Conference National
2007-08 Conference National, 12th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Salisbury City Football Club are an English football club based in Salisbury, Wiltshire. They were formed in 1947 and play at the Raymond McEnhill Stadium. Salisbury have gained back-to-back promotions in recent years, first to the Conference South in the 2005-06 season by finishing top of the Southern League Premier Division, followed by winning the play-off final in the 2006-07 season to participate in the Conference National in 2007-08.

Contents

[edit] History

The club was founded as simply Salisbury F.C. in 1947. A previous club had existed under the name Salisbury City prior to World War II but the current club does not consider itself to be connected to this club and uses the 1947 date of formation.

The club immediately entered the Western League and won the Second Division title at the very first attempt. An attendance of 8,902, a figure never beaten, saw the championship decider, a 1-1 draw against Weymouth. Salisbury remained members of the Western League until 1968, winning the championship in 1957-58 and 1960-61 as well as finishing second on four occasions and reaching the FA Cup first round on four occasions and the second round once.

In 1968 the club was elected to the Southern Football League but met with little success until the 1985-86 season when Salisbury finished as runners up to Cambridge City and were promoted to the Premier Division, albeit only for a single season.

In 1993 the club’s name was officially changed to Salisbury City, and in 1994-95 they won the Southern League Southern Division championship. After redevelopment work at the council-owned Victoria Park, the club was able to step up to the Premier Division, a promotion which had been denied them two years earlier due to ground gradings.

Salisbury lasted seven seasons in the Premier Division, but troubles off the field eventually led to the departure of manager Geoff Butler, who had been in the role for more than 17 seasons. Relegation followed and the club came close to being wound-up before being saved by a consortium led by one of the club's sponsors, Neville Beal, who was also able to tempt former Southampton player Nick Holmes, at the time living in the USA, to take over as manager in 2002. In the 2003-04 season, Salisbury gained promotion from the Southern League Eastern Division by finishing sixth, but a re-organisation of the English football league system saw them placed in the Isthmian League Premier Division, although after one season they were switched back to the Southern League Premier Division, which they won at the first attempt to gain a place in the Conference South. On 13 May 2007, they defeated Braintree Town 1-0 in the Conference South promotion playoff final, earning a promotion spot to Conference National.

As well as winning promotion, 2006-07 saw Salisbury embark on one of their most successful FA Cup runs, reaching the 2nd Round for only the second time in the club's history, where they were drawn against Nottingham Forest. In front of a record attendance of 3,100, Salisbury held Forest to a 1-1 draw live on BBC One.[1] The replay at the City Ground saw Forest progress into the 3rd round with a 2-0 victory. [2]

[edit] Ground

In 1997 Salisbury City moved to a purpose built stadium at Old Sarum, named after the then chairman. The Raymond McEnhill Stadium's capacity officially stands at 3,500 (although it is technically able to hold 5,000 [3]) , with covered accommodation for 2,247 fans.

A then record crowd of 2,570 saw the FA Cup first round 2-0 defeat by Hull City in 1998. This figure was beaten twice during the FA Cup run of 2006-07 - against Fleetwood Town in the first round proper and then against Nottingham Forest in the second round, with 3,100 attending the 1-1 draw.

The record league attendance figure of 2,633 was set on 19 January 2008 when Salisbury City played Torquay United, drawing 0-0. [4]

[edit] Squad

[edit] Staff

  • Manager: Nick Holmes
  • Assistant Manager: Barry Blankley
  • Player Coach: Tommy Widdrington
  • Physios: Conrad Parrott and Kevin Bushby
  • Football in the Community Officer: Andy Cook

[edit] Current squad

As of 27 April 2008.[5]
No. Position Player
1 Flag of England GK Ryan Clarke
2 Flag of England DF Jon Bass
3 Flag of England DF Matthew Robinson
4 Flag of Wales DF Aaron Cook (captain)
5 Flag of England DF Tim Bond
6 Flag of Wales MF Mike Fowler
7 Flag of England MF Wayne Turk
8 Flag of England DF Scott Bartlett
10 Flag of England FW Matt Tubbs
12 Flag of England DF Simon Browne
13 Flag of England MF Tommy Widdrington (player/coach)
15 Flag of England FW Marvin Brown (Transfer listed)
No. Position Player
16 Flag of England FW Robbie Matthews
17 Flag of England MF Danny Clay (Transfer listed)
18 Flag of England MF Darrell Clarke
19 Flag of England MF Liam Feeney
20 Flag of England DF Charlie Knight
21 Flag of England MF Jamie Barron
23 Flag of England GK James Bittner
25 Flag of England MF Ian Herring
28 Flag of England MF Andy Sandell
30 Flag of England MF Matt Holmes

[edit] Club honours

[edit] References

  1. ^ BBC News
  2. ^ BBC News
  3. ^ BBC News - McEnhill gets green light
  4. ^ Salisbury Journal
  5. ^ Salisbury City. FootballSquads. Retrieved on 2007-08-13.

[edit] Sources

[edit] External links


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