Sheffield F.C.

Sheffield F.C.
logo
Full name Sheffield Football Club
Founded 24 October 1857
Ground Coach and Horses Ground, Dronfield
(Capacity: 2,000)
Chairman Richard Tims[1]
Manager Chris Dolby
League NPL Division One South
2009-10 NPL Division One South, 5th
Home colours
Away colours

Sheffield Football Club are an English football club from Sheffield, South Yorkshire. The club are most noted for the fact that they are the world's oldest club now playing Association football, founded in 1857. They currently play in the Northern Premier League Division One South.

The team was originally based on various grounds around Sheffield, including Bramall Lane, formerly home to Sheffield Wednesday and now the home of Sheffield United. They are now based at the Coach and Horses Ground in Dronfield, Derbyshire. The club are also noted for participating in the world's oldest footballing rivalry. Sheffield competed against Hallam in the world's first inter-club match during 1860 - the match is known as the "Sheffield" derby.

The club's finest hour came in 1904 when they won the FA Amateur Cup, a competition conceived after a suggestion by Sheffield. They also finished as runners up of the FA Vase in 1977. They have been bestowed with the FIFA Order of Merit and commemorated by the English Football Hall of Fame for their significant place in football history.

Contents

History

Formation

In 1855, members of a Sheffield cricket club organised informal kick-abouts without any official rules.[2] Nathaniel Creswick and William Prest formed the Sheffield Football Club.

The inaugural meeting of Sheffield F.C. took place on 24 October 1857 at Parkfield House in the suburb of Highfield.[3] The original headquarters was a greenhouse on East Bank Road lent by Thomas Asline Ward, father of the first club president Frederick Ward, and the adjacent field was used as their first playing ground.[4] Initially, Sheffield FC games were played among club members themselves and took the format of "Married v Singles" or "Professionals v the Rest". The Sheffield club is officially recognised by FIFA as the oldest football club in the world.[5]

Creswick and Prest were responsible for drawing up the club's rules of play, which decided upon at the clubs AGM on 21 October 1858.[6] They were referred to as the Sheffield Rules. At the time, before the formation of the Football Association (FA), many different kinds of football were popular in England. For example, each of the various public schools played football according to their own individual rules, and these varied widely.

1890 Sheffield squad shot.

The first rules were distinctive.[7] There was no offside rule and was the first to introduce free kicks for foul play. Australian rules football, which began to develop the following year, resembles the original Sheffield code in various respects.

Sheffield's near neighbour, Hallam, was formed in 1860 and in the same year the two clubs first played each other in a local derby which is still contested today.[8] By 1862 there were 15 clubs in the Sheffield area. These rules were later adopted by the Sheffield Football Association when it was formed in 1867. By this time the club had decided only to play teams outside Sheffield in order to seek a bigger challenge.

They became members of the The Football Association in 30 November 1863 but continued to use their own set of rules.[9]

On 2 January 1865, the club played its first fixture outside Sheffield against Nottingham, playing eighteen aside under Nottingham Rules. The rest of the season also saw them visit Nottingham Forest and Lincoln City.

On 31 March 1866, there was a match between a team representing Sheffield and one representing London clubs, at Battersea Park. Rules that differed only slightly from the FA rules were used. The game, played as an eleven aside, was won by London by 2 goals and four touchdowns to nil.

However the matter of rules remained a problem with Sheffield continuing to play by their own rules. A number of rule proposals by the club were rejected by the FA in February 1867 and the London Committee were reluctant to commit to further fixtures over Sheffield's refusal to play strictly to FA rules. Sheffield finally adopted the FA rules in 1878.

Famous players

Three players represented England while on the books of Sheffield F.C. - Charles Clegg who played in the first international game against Scotland in 1872, John Owen in 1874 and John Hudson in 1883. All three players made just one appearance .

Charles Clegg also became both chairman and president of the Football Association.

Thursday Wanderers

Thursday Wanderers were a team founded by Sheffield F.C. players who wished to play in the Sheffield Challenge Cup. Sheffield Club had decided not to play in any local matches, so many of their players started playing on Thursdays. The team operated each season from 1876-77 until 1878-79, winning the Cup in their final year. The side was briefly revived in the early 1880s.[10]

Decline

Its decline from the top echelon of football began with the introduction of professionalism in July 1885, with the amateurs of Sheffield failing to compete with professional teams, losing heavily that year to Aston Villa, Nottingham Forest and Notts County.

After the legalisation of professionalism Sheffield Club suggested to the FA the creation of a cup exclusively for amateur clubs. This would become the FA Amateur Cup and gave Sheffield their first ever cup success in 1904.

League history since World War II

Sheffield joined the Yorkshire League in 1949, remaining in that competition until it merged with the Midland League to form the Northern Counties East League in 1982. During their 33-year stay in the Yorkshire League, their only divisional title was the Division Two crown in 1975-76. After joining the new league, initially in the lower divisions, they twice won the Division One title in 1988-89 and 1990–91, and held Premier Division status continuously from 1991 to 2007. In 2006-07, they finished second in the Premier Division, their highest position ever, and because of the latest round of restructuring of the National League System were accepted into the Northern Premier League Division One for 2007-08.

150th anniversary onwards

Pelé at Sheffield's 150th anniversary match v Inter Milan

Sheffield F.C. are now based at the Coach and Horses Ground in Dronfield, Derbyshire, the first ground they have owned themselves. They play in the Northern Premier League Division One South, which is directly below the Northern Premier League Premier Division in the National League System. There are now 2 senior teams, 9 junior teams, 1 women's team (formed by a merger with Norton FC) and 1 disability team.

They have recently started a membership drive, notable members are Sven-Göran Eriksson, Sepp Blatter and Michael Vaughan. They have also enjoyed links with Real Madrid since both clubs received the FIFA Order of Merit and there were plans to play a match against them to celebrate their 150th Anniversary.

Sheffield FC's opponents for the 150th anniversary match in November 2007 were Italian Serie A side Inter Milan; Brazilian legend Pelé was guest of honour and was introduced to the teams and the fans before the game.[11] The match ended 5-2 to Inter, with 18,741 supporters attending the match at Bramall Lane, Inter's side included World Cup winner Marco Materazzi and a young Mario Balotelli. The day of the anniversary was marked with a church service and gala dinner attended by Geoff Thompson and Geoff Hurst among other major figures in the sport.[12] Continuing their celebrations, Sheffield played Ajax on 13 April 2008, celebrating a historic 2-0 win. The match was again played at Bramall Lane in front of a crowd of 5,000, with the Premier League's Uriah Rennie refereeing the match.[13]

F.A. Competitions

The club have had their fair share of success in national competitions, with an FA Amateur Cup win in 1903-04, and a Wembley appearance in the 1976-77 FA Vase final (although they lost the replay at the City Ground, Nottingham to Billericay Town). In the more senior FA Cup, they have not graced the competition proper since the 1880s, but they did make the quarter finals on three occasions in the 1870s. They have a unique place in FA Cup history, knocking out Shropshire Wanderers on the toss of a coin in 1873; the only time a tie has been decided in this way.[14]

Current squad 2010-11 season

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
England GK Leigh Walker
England GK Tom Cross
England DF Ryan Ludlam
England DF Adam Burley
England DF Ryan Davis
England DF Gavin Smith
England DF Ryan Davis
England DF Greg Wright
England DF Tom Jones
England MF Matty Thorpe
No. Position Player
England MF Matt Roney
England MF Ryan Ford
England MF Chris Dolby
England MF Chris Adam
England MF Matt Outram
England FW Kirk Jackson
England FW Brian Cusworth
England FW Ashley Burbeary

Grounds

Sheffield club have played at a number of grounds around Sheffield. Initially they played at Strawberry Hall Lane Park.[15] However, like all of the early grounds they played at, it wasn't owned by the club. In the following years they would play at Newhall Athletic ground, Old Forge ground and a ground near Hunters Bar on Ecclesall Road.[16]

There was much reluctance from the owners of Bramall Lane to see the pitch be used for football. They didn't relent until a charity match between Sheffield and Hallam was suggested in late 1862. The ground was used by Sheffield F.C. for its more important fixtures but relations with the owners remained strained. They collapsed altogether in 1875 when the club vowed never to play at the ground again.

Eventually Sheffield settled at Abbeydale Park with occasional forays to Owlerton Stadium. During the 1990s they played at Hillsborough Park, Owlerton Stadium and Don Valley Stadium before purchasing some land next to the Coach and Horses pub in Dronfield that was previously being used by the Coach and Horses pub team.

The Coach and Horses football ground is the former home of the now defunct Norton Woodseats FC and Dronfield United FC

Honours

FA Amateur Cup

FA Vase

Yorkshire League Division Two

Yorkshire League Cup

Whitbread Trophy

Northern Counties East League Premier Division

Northern Counties East League Division One

Northern Counties East League Cup

Sheffield and Hallamshire Senior Cup

References

  1. Interview, Daily Telegraph Sports Section Issue 47,330 pg S6 Tuesday 7th August, 2007
  2. young, Percy (1964). Football in Sheffield. S. Paul. pp. 16–17. 
  3. Keith Farnsworth (1995). Sheffield Football:A History - Volume 1 1857-1961. The Hallamshire Press. pp. 21–22. 
  4. Hutton, Steven; Graham Curry, Peter Goodman (2007). Sheffield Football Club: 150 years of Football. At Heart Limited. pp. 50. ISBN 9781845471743. 
  5. "World's Oldest Football Club". http://www.thefa.com/TheFA/NewsFromTheFA/Postings/2006/12/OldestClub.htm. Retrieved 2007-06-27. 
  6. Murphy, Brendan (2007). From Sheffield with Love. SportsBooks Limited. pp. 44–45. ISBN 978 1 899807 56 7. 
  7. Harvey, Adrian (2005). Football, the First Hundred Years. Routledge. pp. 98. ISBN 0415350190. http://books.google.com/books?id=TxoZ0S-GC7MC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Football,+the+First+Hundred+Years&sig=zXwMJCXCG3A06tTxi8-gapAd8eo. 
  8. "Hall of Fame - Sheffield FC". National Football Museum. http://www.nationalfootballmuseum.com/pages/fame/Inductees/sheffield%20fc.htm. Retrieved 2008-05-22. 
  9. Young, Percy. Football in Sheffield. S. Paul. pp. 20–21. 
  10. A. Drake. "Thursday Wanderers". http://www.btinternet.com/~a.drake/sheff/club/thursday.htm. Retrieved 2007-06-27. 
  11. BBC - South Yorkshire - In Pictures - Sheffield FC 2-5 Inter Milan
  12. "Pele joins Sheffield celebrations". BBC Sport. 9 November 2007. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/7081034.stm. Retrieved 9 November 2007. 
  13. "Club clinch historic win". Sheffield F.C.. http://www.sheffieldfc.com/ajax-i323.html. Retrieved 15 April 2007. 
  14. Collett, Mike (2003). The Complete Record of The FA Cup. p. 537. ISBN 1899807-19-5. 
  15. Murphy, Brendan (2007). From Sheffield With Love. SportsBooks Limited. ISBN 9781899807 56 7. 
  16. Walters, Fred (1957). "The History of Sheffield Football Club". 

External links