NEWI Cefn Druids F.C.

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NEWI Cefn Druids
Full name NEWI Cefn Druids Football Club
Nickname(s) The Druids, The Flexers
Founded 1992 (amalgamation of Cefn Albion

and Druids United)

Ground Plaskynaston Lane
Cefn Mawr
Wrexham
Capacity 2000 (300 seated)
Chairman Flag of Wales Brian Mackie
Manager Flag of England Dixie McNeil
League League of Wales
2005-06 League of Wales, 14th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

NEWI Cefn Druids F.C. is a football team based in the village of Cefn Mawr, playing in the League of Wales.

The club was founded in 1992 from the amalgamation of Cefn Albion F.C. and Druids United F.C. Depending on sponsorship, the club was renamed Flexsys Cefn Druids F.C. in 1998, and NEWI Cefn Druids F.C. in 2003 (after sponsorship by the North East Wales Institute of Higher Education), and plays at Plaskynaston Lane, Cefn Mawr, Wrexham.

The team's first choice strip is black and white striped shirts, black shorts and socks. The second choice strip is yellow shirts, black shorts and socks.

[edit] History

The team take their prolific history from the famous old Welsh team Druids F.C. who were founded in the 1860s. They had won the Welsh Cup on no less than 8 occasions and have finished runners-up 5 times but fell on hard times with the advent of professional football. Druids were ancient mystic men throughout Celtic civilisation. However, on the British Isles they were predominantely in Wales and became symbolic of Welsh nationalism and independence.

In 1992 after many years of discussion the inevitable amalgamation of Druids United and Cefn Albion F.C. took place to end the internal village soccer rivalry in the village of Cefn Mawr. The new look club took the bold step of applying to join the new Cymru Alliance. The joint resources of the clubs could be focused on a revival of football fortunes in the village of Cefn Mawr. In 1999 Cefn Druids became Champions of the Cymru Alliance and were promoted into the League of Wales, finishing a respectable 13th in its first season in the national league.

After the appointment of ex-Rochdale midfielder Steve O'Shaughnessy in the summer of 2001, the Ancients experienced their best results since the halcyon Welsh Cup days of the late 19th century and early 20th century.

The 2001-02 season was a season of consolidation in the Welsh Premier League finishing in 14th place. However in the Welsh Cup after victories over Llangefni-Glantraeth, Ruthin Town, Halkyn United and Welshpool Town, Cefn found themselves in the semi-finals of the Welsh Cup for the first time in 98 years. It was not to be, as a Marc Lloyd-Williams inspired Bangor City won 5-0 at Belle Vue, Rhyl on 6 April 2002.

The 2002-03 season was a financially difficult one with the playing and management staff going weeks without payment at one point in the season. This even forced O'Shaughnessy to resign out of principle during this time. Fortunately, he returned after reassurances were given. On the pitch, Cefn finished in a highly respectable 12th place.

The 2003-04 season, saw an array of young players join the club like Gareth Evans, who eventually left to join Football League Two club Wrexham. The average age of the team for one match against Caersws on Friday December 12, 2003 was just 21.

As the 2003-04 season came to a conclusion with players and management looking ahead to the future with excitement with a young squad at their disposal.

However, on the evening of Sunday April 18, 2004, Steve O'Shaughnessy was sacked by the club's board. Since then the club has been severely struggling on the pitch with the squad that O'Shaughnessy put together leaving en masse. Amongst the players who left were Aden Shannon, Brett Jefferies, Dave Cunnah and First Team Coach, Jimmy Hunter all to Welshpool Town, who have qualified for the FAW Premier Cup in the last two seasons.

The Ancients should have been relegated from the Welsh Premier League in April 2005 after finishing in the bottom two, but were given a last minute reprieve by Cymru Alliance winners Buckley Town, who declined promotion.

[edit] Precursor teams' honours

  • Plasmadoc/Druids (1869-1992)
Welsh Cup Winners: 1879-80, 1880-81, 1881-82, 1884-85, 1885-86, 1897-98, 1898-99, 1903-04
Welsh Cup Finalists: 1877-78, 1882-83, 1883-84, 1899-1900, 1900-01
Welsh Amateur Cup Winners: 1902-03
Welsh Amateur Cup Finalists: 1903-04, 1956-57
Welsh Youth Cup Winners: 1957-58, 1958-59
North East Wales FA: 1979-80
Welsh National League Division 2 Cup Finalists: 1987-88
  • Cefn Albion
North East Wales FA Challenge Cup Winners: 1977-78
NEWFA Challenge Cup Finalists: 1975-76, 1988-89
NEWFA Horace Wynn Cup Winners: 1976-77
Welsh National League Premier Division Runners up: 1984-85
WNL Division 1 Champions: 1979-80, 1980-81
WNL Division 1 Runners up: 1978-79
WNL Division Cup Finalists: 1983-84, 1990-91
WNL Division 2 Cup Winners: 1973-74
WNL Division 2 Cup Finalists: 1970-71
WNL Division 3 Cup Finalists: 1968-69, 1983-84
WNL Division 3B Champions: 1969-70

[edit] External links

League of Wales 2006–07
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Aberystwyth Town | Airbus UK | Bangor City | Caernarfon Town | Caersws | Carmarthen Town | Connah's Quay Nomads | Cwmbran Town | Haverfordwest County | Llanelli | NEWI Cefn Druids | Newtown | Port Talbot Town | Porthmadog | Rhyl | The New Saints | Welshpool Town

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