East Fife F.C.

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East Fife
Full name East Fife Football Club
Nickname(s) The Fifers
Founded 1903
Ground Bayview Stadium
Methil, Scotland
Ground Capacity 1,980[1]
Chairman Lee Murray
Manager Gary Naysmith
League Scottish League One
2012–13 Scottish Second Division, 9th
Website Club home page
Home colours
Away colours
Current season

East Fife Football Club (known informally as The Fife or The Fifers) are a Scottish football club based in the Fife coastal town of Methil. They are members of the Scottish Professional Football League and currently compete in the Scottish League One.

The club, established in 1903, were the first club to win the Scottish League Cup three times and the only club from the Second Division (at the time, the second tier of the Scottish league structure) to win the prestigious Scottish Cup. The Second Division is currently (2012–13) the third tier of the league system.

East Fife are one of four senior clubs based in the Fife region but are the only one to bear the name of the area. The three other clubs are Cowdenbeath, Dunfermline Athletic and the Kirkcaldy based Raith Rovers, all of whom have historically shared rivalries with East Fife.

There is also an East Fife Ladies team that plays in the Scottish Women's Football League Second Division East.

History

Formation and early years

Local demand for the establishment of a senior football team led to a public meeting being held in January 1903. and resulted in the formation East Fife Football Club. After spending its first season competing in the Fife League and the Scottish Qualifying Cup, as well as playing in a number of challenge matches, the club joined the Eastern League for season 1904–05. The following season East Fife joined the Northern League, which included clubs such as Dunfermline Athletic and St. Johnstone. The club remained in the Northern League until the 1908–09 season. In 1909, East Fife joined the Central League, which consisted of many of the teams who had played in the Northern League, with the addition of Alloa Athletic, Stenhousemuir and King's Park from Stirling.


1920s and 30s

East Fife remained in the Central League until 1921, apart from a period during the First World War when the Eastern League was reformed. In the period following the war, the clubs competing for the Central League were mainly from the coal and shale mining communities of Fife and West Lothian. As the mining towns thrived with the growth of the mining industry and its associated influx of miners and their families, so did the local football clubs. The result of this was that by the end of the decade, the Central League clubs could afford to pay their players higher wages than they would receive in the Scottish Football League. In an effort to stop the migration of its players to the Central League, the Scottish League decided to admit the Central League clubs, including East Fife, to its membership. The Central League therefore became the Scottish Second Division at the start of the 1921–22 season.

Only six years after becoming members of the Scottish League, East Fife appeared in the 1927 Scottish Cup final, which it lost 3–1 to Celtic at Hampden Park.

East Fife's only season in Scottish football's top division before World War II was 1930–31 after finishing Second Division runners-up the year before.

The 1927 cup feat was surpassed just over a decade later when "The Fifers" won the 1937–38 Scottish Cup. The prestigious cup was secured with a 4–2 win over Kilmarnock in the final. The game was watched by a crowd of almost 92,000 spectators.

Golden age

East Fife's best years were undoubtedly in the decade following the Second World War. In 1946–47 (the first season after the war) the club finished third missing promotion by one place. The next season (1947–48) East Fife were promoted to the top flight of Scottish football as 'B' Division champions.[2]

During this "Golden Period", the club won the Scottish League Cup on three separate occasions (1947–48, 1949–50, and 1953–54) in seven seasons. A third Scottish Cup final appearance was added to its achievements list in 1949–50.[2]

The club’s league record is also impressive. In the six seasons between 1948 and 1954, East Fife finished its Scottish First Division (then the pinnacle of Scottish football) campaign in fourth, fourth, tenth, third, third and sixth respectively.[3] In one of these seasons, 1952–53, East Fife were still in the running for the league title with only a few games remaining.[2]

Among players who played at the club for at least part of this era were Jack Lynch and Willie Laird – both had played in the Scottish Cup winning side before the war. Others joined club and would go on to represent Scotland while at the club – George Aitken, Davie Duncan, Allan Brown, Henry Morris, Charlie Fleming and Andy Matthew. Others such as Jimmy Philp and winger and later Scottish League cap Bobby Black were among those who picked up cup winners medals at the club.[2]

East Fife spent ten successive seasons in Scotland's top league. Away from this period the club have spent only four other seasons playing in Scotland's top division.

Late 20th century

East Fife were relegated from Scotland's top division at the end of season 1957–58. Since then, the Methil outfit has struggled to match previous success. This is emphasised by the fact that aside from three seasons during the early 1970s, the club has played all of its football outside the top league since the 1950s.

In November 1998, East Fife moved to a purpose built stadium near Methil power station.

21st century

The 2006–07 season saw East Fife begin the Scottish Third Division campaign impressively, at one point amassing a commanding nine point lead over their nearest rivals. The Fifer's form declined markedly but recovered to qualify for the newly implemented promotion play-offs. East Fife beat Scottish Second Division outfit Stranraer 4–2 on aggregate before losing 7–2 to Queen's Park on aggregate in the final. Season 2007–08 commenced with high expectations for The Fifers amidst a flurry of preseason signings.[4][5] The new acquisitions proved successful as the team thoroughly dominated the early stages, culminating in a twelve point lead at the top of the division by Christmas. East Fife also revived their historic tradition in the Scottish League Cup by reaching the third round, beating Queen of the South and SPL side St. Mirren,[6] before losing out to Old Firm heavyweights Rangers.[7]

The new ground was officially renamed Bayview Stadium in 2007.

East Fife secured the 2007–08 Third division title after beating East Stirlingshire at Firs Park, Falkirk 3–0 on 15 March 2008. This gave them a points total of 74, 26 points ahead of Stranraer who could post the next best total in the league of 69 points if they were to win their remaining fixtures. This was East Fife's first league title for 60 years and their first piece of silverware since 1954. On 14 April 2009 their manager David Baikie resigned from his position.[8] On 23 August 2011, the fifers delivered an empathetic victory against Dunfermline Athletic of the SPL in the League Cup.[9] Four days later East Fife suffered an emphatic defeat to Dumbarton, losing 6–0 at home. However, on 20 September 2011,East Fife recorded arguably one of their biggest results in their history, defeating SPL giants Aberdeen 7–6 on penalties, after a 3–3 draw, at Pittodrie, to advance to the quarter finals on the Scottish League Cup.[10]

Players

Current squad

As of 15 Jan 2014[11]

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
Scotland GK Michael Andrews
Scotland GK Greg Paterson
Scotland GK Connor Shaw
Scotland DF Steven Campbell
Scotland DF Scott Durie
France DF Alexis Dutot
Scotland DF Craig Johnstone
Cameroon DF Joe Mbu
Scotland DF Gary Naysmith
Scotland DF Kevin Rutkiewicz
Scotland DF Gary Thom
Scotland MF Lewis Barr
No. Position Player
Scotland MF Ross Brown
Scotland MF Ross Lennie
Scotland MF Scott McBride
Scotland MF Johnny Stewart
Scotland MF Ryan Stewart
Scotland MF Paul Willis
Scotland FW Nathan Austin
Scotland FW Liam Buchanan
Scotland FW Pat Clarke
Scotland FW Daryl Falconer
Scotland FW Cyrus Moosavi
France FW Cedric Tuta
For recent transfers, see East Fife transfers in 2012–13 season.


Non-playing staff

Boardroom

Name Role
Scotland Brian McNeillSEO
Scotland Lee MurrayManaging Director
Scotland Position AvailableVice Chairman/Secretary
Scotland Position AvailableDirector
Scotland Position AvailableDirector
Scotland Ian HendersonDirector
Scotland Eugene ClarkeDirector
Scotland David StevensonAssociate Director

Club Management

Name Role
Scotland Gary NaysmithManager
Scotland Paul Hegarty Assistant Manager
Scotland Gary McAlpineFirst Team Coach
Scotland Jonathan CraigGoalkeeping Coach
Scotland David WestwoodGoalkeeping Coach
Scotland Alex BlythHead of Youth Development
Scotland Brian McNaughtonReserve Team Manager
Scotland Robert CargillYouth Coach
Scotland Colin MartinYouth Coach
Scotland Stuart TelfordYouth Coach
Scotland Brian McNeillClub Physio

Managers

Stadium

East Fife's original ground was Bayview Park, in the centre of Methil, Wellsley Road. Since 1998, home matches have been played at the new Bayview Stadium lower methil docks, capacity 1,980 (all seated). The ground has one stand and is open at the three remaining sides. The far side was overshadowed by the derelict Methil power station until its demolition in April 2011 and has a growing business park being built around it.

Achievements

Records

References

  1. http://spfl.co.uk/clubs/east-fife/
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Bobby Black profile on "Queens Legends" on the official Queen of the South FC website
  3. League History – East Fife FC – C'MON THE FIFE
  4. "East Fife add five more to squad". BBC Sport. 2007-06-13. Retrieved 2007-12-16. 
  5. "All to play for in the Third". BBC Sport. 2007-08-02. Retrieved 2007-12-16. 
  6. "St. Mirren 0–1 East Fife". BBC Sport. 2007-08-28. Retrieved 2007-12-16. 
  7. "East Fife 0–4 Rangers". BBC Sport. 2007-09-26. Retrieved 2007-12-16. 
  8. "Baikie resigns as East Fife manager". East Fife Football Club. 2009-04-14. Retrieved 2009-04-14. 
  9. "East Fife 2–1 Dunfermline". BBC Sport. 2011-08-23. Retrieved 2011-09-21. 
  10. "Aberdeen 3–3 East Fife (3–4 pens)". BBC Sport. 2011-09-20. Retrieved 2011-09-21. 
  11. "1st Team Squad 2012/2013". eastfifefc.info (East Fife F.C.). Retrieved 2 February 2013. 

External links

Official websites
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