Limerick F.C.

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Limerick FC
Image:Limerickfc crest.gif
Full name Limerick Football Club
Nickname(s) "The Blues" and "Lims"
Founded 1937
Ground Hogan Park, Rathbane,
Limerick City
Capacity 9,000
Chairman Danny Drew
Manager Danny Drew
League Eircom First Division
2005 7th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Limerick Football Club is an Irish football club playing in the Football League of Ireland. There has been senior football in the city since 1937. Limerick FC, who replaced Limerick City in the League of Ireland in 1983, play their home matches at Hogan Park. This ground does not seem to have a future as it is in a notorious part of the city. Club colours are blue and white. The current manager is Chairman Danny Drew after the resignation of Noel O'Connor.


Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Limerick F.C. Colours

While Limerick soccer has for long been associated with the colours blue and white, Limerick teams have taken to the field in a variety of club colours.

When a senior soccer team first appeared on the scene in 1937 blue was nowhere to be seen. The first teams wore Stoke City-like red and white striped jerseys and white shorts. The colour was more accurately described as Cardinal red (It was reported that black and amber was also suggested as the club colours, but that Young Munsters ruse didn't work).

Limerick did not appear in blue and white until 1943, and in their first game in the new colours lost 5-0 to Cork United at the Markets Field. After this 'blue' start, Limerick teams continued to wear blue and white for the next 40 years. Limerick City came into being in 1983 and the team colours were changed along with the club name and the home ground. The club moved to Rathbane and took to wearing canary yellow and green shirts and green shorts.

The re-emergence of Limerick FC in the mid-1990s also saw the re-emergence of the famous blue jerseys. In an attempt to re-engage with the Limerick footballing public the blue and white made a return.

[edit] Limerick F.C. in European Competition

Previous Limerick FC crest
Enlarge
Previous Limerick FC crest

Limerick has appeared in European competitions on six occasions in its history. In 12 matches they have scored 7 goals and while the club has never won a European game, it has drawn twice. One of those draws was achieved at the Dell against a Southampton team that included former European Footballer of the Year Kevin Keegan and Mick Channon.

Limerick first competed in 1960 in the European Cup against Young Boys Berne, but suffered their heaviest aggregate defeat. Limerick moved their 1965 Cup Winners' Cup home leg to Dalymount Park, the other time that Limerick has played a 'home' game outside of Limerick. Interestingly, Pat Nolan is the only player ever to have scored for Limerick in Limerick in a European game.

The most famous European game was the 'home' match against Real Madrid in the European Cup in 1980. The match was played at Lansdowne Road where Dublin football fans stayed away en masse. Only 6,000 people saw a Limerick team under Eoin Hand almost beat the aristocrats of European soccer. Des Kennedy scored twice against Real Madrid in the tie, the only player to do so in Europe that year. Johnny Matthews had a 'goal' disallowed. Had it been given he would have completed a remarkable treble, as he had previously scored in European competition against Manchester United and Celtic while at Waterford United.

Year Comp Versus Results and Limerick Scorers
1960 European Cup Young Boys Berne (H - Thomond Park) 0-5 (A) 2-4 Leo O'Reilly & George Lynam
1965 CWC CSKA Sofia (H - Dalymount Park) 1-2 Dick O'Connor (A) 0-2
1971 CWC Torino (H- Thomond Park) 0-1 (A) 0-4
1980 European Cup Real Madrid (H - Lansdowne Road) 1-2 Des Kennedy (A) 1-5 Des Kennedy
1981 UEFA Cup Southampton (H - Markets Field) 0-3 (A) 1-1 Tony Morris
1982 CWC AZ Alkmaar (H - Markets Field) 1-1 Pat Nolan (A) 0-1

[edit] Current first team squad

As of 4 December 2006:
No. Position Player
Republic of Ireland GK Noel Mooney
Republic of Ireland GK John Healy
Republic of Ireland DF Brian Buckley
Republic of Ireland DF Paul Finucane
Republic of Ireland DF Anthony Wolfe
Republic of Ireland DF Ken Kiely
Republic of Ireland DF Pat Purcell
Republic of Ireland MF Brian Donnellan
Republic of Ireland MF Ger Bourke
Republic of Ireland MF Conor Molan
Republic of Ireland MF Gareth Cooney
Republic of Ireland MF Colm Heffernan
No. Position Player
Republic of Ireland MF David Ryan
Republic of Ireland MF Kevin Waters
Republic of Ireland MF Tommy Barrett
Republic of Ireland MF Conor Sinnott (on loan from Reading)
Republic of Ireland FW Derek McCarthy
Republic of Ireland FW Liam Costelloe
Republic of Ireland FW Shane Guerin
Republic of Ireland FW Paul Rose
Republic of Ireland FW John Lester
Republic of Ireland FW Robbie Kelleher
Republic of Ireland FW Jason McCarthy (on loan from Sligo Rovers)
Republic of Ireland FW Thomas Clarke

[edit] Management team

[edit] Honours

  • League Champions: 2
    • 1959/60, 1979/80
  • FAI Cup Winners: 2
    • 1971, 1982
  • League Cup Winners: 3
    • 1976/77, 1992/93, 2001/02
  • Shield Winners: 2
    • 1953/54, 1983/84
  • First Division Championship: 1
    • 1991/92
  • Dublin City Cup Winners: 2
    • 1958/59, 1969/70
  • Munster Senior Cup Winners: 7
    • 1938, 1949, 1954, 1959, 1963, 1977, 1995

[edit] Hall of Fame

[edit] External links


Football League of Ireland 2006
Premier League
Bohemians | Bray Wanderers | Cork City | Derry City | Drogheda United | Longford Town
Shelbourne | Sligo Rovers | St. Patrick's Athletic | UCD | Waterford United |
First Division
Athlone Town | Cobh Ramblers | Dundalk | Finn Harps | Galway United | Kildare County
Kilkenny City | Limerick | Monaghan United | Shamrock Rovers
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