University-Mount Wellington
University-Mount Wellington Association Football Club Emblem | ||||
Full name | University-Mount Wellington Association Football Club | |||
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Nickname(s) | Unimount | |||
Ground | Bill McKinley Park, Panmure, New Zealand, Auckland | |||
Capacity | 5,000[1] | |||
Chairman | Barbara Cox | |||
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University-Mount Wellington is an association football club in Auckland, New Zealand. It was formed from the amalgamation of Mount Wellington AFC and Auckland University AFC, and was one of the country's strongest sides. The team play at Bill McKinlay Park, Panmure, Auckland.
Club history
During much of the 1970s and 1980s, Mt Wellington AFC was the country's strongest club side, rivaled only by Christchurch United. The team won the Chatham Cup on five occasions, in 1973, 1980, 1982, 1983, and 1990. Since amalgamation, the cup has been won a further two times, in 2001 and 2003, making the club the only seven-time winner of the country's main knockout tournament. They also won the country's national league in 1972, 1974, 1980, 1982, and 1986.
Auckland University did not win any national titles as a separate team, but competed in the top flight of the national league from 1983 to 1986.
Present day
In recent years, the club's focus has been on its status as a convenor of social and university teams, rather than concentrating on a senior club side.
Players
Many of the country's top players have played for either University-Mount Wellington or its predecessor teams, including several members of New Zealand's first World Cup Finals qualifiers, the 1982 All Whites. These players include Ricki Herbert, Brian Turner, Tony Sibley, Dave Taylor, Darren McClennan, Peter Henry, Jeff Campbell, Rodger Gray, John Houghton, Leigh Kenyon, Michael RIdenton and Fred de Jong.
Former players
- Andy Willock (1983)
- Eddie Gavigan (1983-??)
- Ricki Herbert
- Brian Turner
- Ron Armstrong
- Noel Barkley
- Tony Sibley
- Martin Jennison
- Dave Taylor (New Zealand footballer)
- Billy McClure
- Michele Cox
- John Houghton (footballer)
- Willem de Graaf
- Dave Witteveen
- Clive Campbell (footballer)
- Sean Douglas (footballer)
- John Leijh
- Nigel Debenham
- Brian Armstrong (footballer)
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References
External links
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