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Poole Town F.C.

Coordinates: 50°43′41.75″N 1°59′03.55″W / 50.7282639°N 1.9843194°W / 50.7282639; -1.9843194
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Poole Town
File:PooleTownFC.png
Full namePoole Town Football Club
Nickname(s)The Dolphins
Founded20th September 1890
GroundTatnam, Poole [1]
Capacity2000
ChairmanEngland Clive Robbins
ManagerEngland Tommy Killick
LeagueSouthern League Division One South and West Southern League Division One
2010-11Wessex League Premier Division, 1st

Poole Town F.C. is a football club based in Poole, England. They were established in 1890 and joined the Western League Division Two in 1930. They won the Western League title in 1957 and reached the First Round Proper of the FA Cup four times in their history. They are currently members of the Wessex League Premier Division. They play at Tatnam, Poole, and finished the 2008-09 season as Double Winners - Champions[2] and Dorset Senior Cup Winners. In 2009/10 they became Back-to-Back Champions of the Wessex Premier League and completed an unprecedented treble winning the League for the 2rd time in a row in 2010/2011.

History

Poole Town were formed when two local teams, Poole Hornets and Poole Rovers, merged in 1890. Both teams had been in existence since 1880. Poole joined the Dorset League in 1896 then the Hampshire League in 1903.[3] The club enjoyed success in the Dorset Senior Cup in their early years, winning it for the fifth time in 1907.[3]

After several season without football because of the First World War, the club began playing again in the 1919-20 season under the name Poole & St. Marys. They changed their name back to Poole FC after one season.[3] Poole joined the Western League in 1923.[3]

Poole won the Dorset Senior Cup again in 1926, the club also turned professional that year and joined the Southern Football League, Eastern Division. The 1926-27 season saw the club's best FA Cup run in its history. They reached the third round and played Everton, losing 3-1 at Goodison Park.[3] They won the Dorset Senior Cup again in 1927 and reached the First Round of the FA Cup three seasons in a row.[3] Poole rejoined the Western League in 1930 and stayed there (except for the 1934-35 season) until 1957.[3]

In 1933, Poole moved into Poole Stadium (now the home of Poole Pirates) which they stayed in until 1994. They became known as "Poole Town" in 1934.[3] Poole Town reached the First Round Proper of the FA Cup in 1946. They held Queens Park Rangers to a 2-2 draw before losing in the replay 6-0.[3] They reached the first round again in 1963 and 1967. They lost to Watford in a replay in 1963. They lost again to Queens Park Rangers in 1967.[3]

Poole were forced to leave Poole Stadium after 61 years in 1994 and they shared a ground with Hamworthy United. In the 1995-96 season, they equalled the record for the worst season in football history, winning just 1 point from 42 matches. They were relegated from the Southern League and joined the Hampshire League Division One, sharing a ground with Holt United.[3]

Poole won the Dorset Senior Cup for the 12th time in 1998. They also won the Hampshire League Cup and finished 3rd in the league.[3] They won the league cup again in 1999 and finished 2nd in the league but were not promoted. The Hampshire League Premier Division was created for the 2000-01 season but Poole could not join because they did not have sufficient ground grading. They were effectively relegated, staying in the first division.[3]

In 2000, they were promoted into the Hampshire League Premier Division. They moved into Haskells Rec in Newtown but left after a few seasons due to vandalism and started playing at Tatnam, the school field of Oakdale South Road Middle School. They have since had built a permanent barrier around the pitch, hardstanding, floodlights, dugouts, a small club shop, tea hut, licensed bar and a £80,000 stand which allowed them to be promoted into the Wessex League First Division.[3]

In 2008, Poole Town submitted plans for the creation of a new £1.2 million ground at Branksome Recreation Ground which would enable them to meet strict Football Association criteria to gain promotion to the Southern League Division One.[4] However, In December 2009 the Poole Borough Council Planning Committee turned the plans down due to loss of space policy and no community benefit. The club switched to plan B and are now seeking a £2M development at Bear Cross, adjacent to Canford Park Arena.

The 2008/9 season saw Poole win the Wessex Premier title and Dorset Senior Cup (beating Dorchester 2-0 aet). Poole Town were the second best team of 1,600 Football Association clubs in England, based on points per match, with the following record: played 42, won 38, drawn 2, lost 2. They were, however denied promotion due to inadequate ground grading.

In the 2009/10 season Poole Town sold Charlie Austin to Swindon Town in an undisclosed deal, but reported to be worth a record of £70,000. Austin scored 46 goals in 46 games in his first season at Poole and 18 goals in 11 games before his transfer. He signed off with 5 goals in his last game at Moneyfields. Despite jumping six divisions, Austin continued scoring goals earning a transfer to Championship club Burnley F.C.. The season ended with another Wessex title for Poole, but no promotion again due to ground grading.

During the 2010/2011 season Poole Town achieved further success winning the Wessex League Premier Division for a 3rd consecutive time. They also enjoyed runs to the semi-final of the FA Vase and reached the Final Qualifying Round of the FA Cup. In contrast to previous seasons the club were granted promotion to the Southern League after the FA agreed to them staging Southern League football at Tatnam Park following an upgrade of the facilities. [5]

Poole Council have also agreed that the club can move to a new ground at Bear Cross following agreement by the Council's planning committee. They are hoping to complete the build and move into the new stadium in time for the 2012-2013 season staging games at Tatnam in the interim.

Records

Highest league position: 16th Southern Premier League - 1966-67 [6]
Lowest league position: 1st Hampshire League Division One [6]
Best FA Cup run: 3rd Round Proper - 1926 [6]
Largest home crowd: 11,155 vs Watford in the FA Cup 1st round replay - 1963 [6]
Biggest home win: 10-0 vs Horndean - 2009 [6]
Biggest away win: 11-0 vs Horndean - 1998 [6]
Record transfer fee (Paid): Nicky Dent (£5,000) - 1990 [6]
Record transfer fee (Rec'd): Charlie Austin (Undisclosed - est. £70,000) - 2009 [6]

Supporters

Poole Town are one of the best supported teams in the league. [7] The official mascot is Dylan The Dolphin

Current squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK England ENG Nick Jones
DF England ENG Will Spetch
DF England ENG Carl Poore (captain)
DF England ENG Tommy McCormick
DF England ENG Lamin Dibba
DF England ENG Michael Walker
MF England ENG Aaron Skelton
MF England ENG Marcus Browning
MF England ENG James Bailey-Pearce
MF England ENG Dave Sturgess
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF England ENG Steve Richardson
MF England ENG Kevin Gill
MF England ENG Michael Hubbard
MF England ENG Carl Preston
FW England ENG Steve Smith
FW England ENG Stuart Gates
FW England ENG Russel Cook
FW England ENG Dann Cann
FW England ENG Tom Jeffes
FW England ENG Stuart Douglas

References

  1. ^ "Poole Town FC - The Sydenhams Football League (Wessex)".
  2. ^ "The Sydenhams Football League (Wessex)". The FA. 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-31.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "History of Poole Town FC". Poole Town FC. 2008.
  4. ^ "Poole plan move to Branksome Rec". Dorset Echo. Newsquest. 2008. Retrieved 2008-06-29.
  5. ^ Poole Town win Promotion to Southern League
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h "Records". Cite error: The named reference "records" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  7. ^ Andy Starmore (2006-09-27). "Rivals Wimborne and Poole lead the way in the attendance table" (HTML). Retrieved 2006-12-18.

50°43′41.75″N 1°59′03.55″W / 50.7282639°N 1.9843194°W / 50.7282639; -1.9843194