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Ashton United F.C.

Coordinates:53°30′05″N2°04′47″W / 53.50139°N 2.07972°W /53.50139; -2.07972
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Association football club in Greater Manchester, England

Football club
Ashton United
Full nameAshton United Football Club
NicknameThe Robins
Founded1878-1892 (Reformed 1909)
GroundHurst Cross,Ashton-under-Lyne
Capacity4,500 (250 seated)[1]
ChairmanDavid Burke &Jonathan Sayer
ManagerSteve Cunningham
LeagueNorthern Premier League Premier Division
2024–25Northern Premier League Premier Division, 5th of 22
Websiteashtonunited.co.uk

Ashton United Football Club is afootball club inAshton-under-Lyne, Greater Manchester, England. They are currently members of theNorthern Premier League Premier Division, the seventh tier of English football, and play at Hurst Cross. Having been founded as Hurst in 1892, they folded in 1892, before being reformed in 1909. The name was changed to Ashton United in early 1947.

History

[edit]

The club was founded in 1878 asHurst Football Club and the earliest known match report dates back to a game against Hurst Red Star on 16 March 1879.[2] They originally played in black-and-white stripes and were nicknamed the Lambs.[3] The club first entered theFA Cup in 1883, beatingTurton 3–1 in the first round, and thenIrwell Springs 3–2 in the second. However, the result was annulled after a protest from Irwell,[4] and it was they who advanced to the third round after Hurst refused to play the replay.[5] In 1885 they won the first edition of theManchester Senior Cup, beatingNewton Heath (now Manchester United) 3–0 in the final.[3] In the same year they reached the second round of the FA Cup again.[4] However, although they defeatedHalliwell 3–1, the result was annulled again. Ashton refused to play the replay and Halliwell advanced to the third round.[6]

Hurst joined the Ashton & District League in 1891, but after finishing ninth in the league in the 1891–92 season, it was reported in June 1892 that the club had folded.[2]

They were reformed in April 1909,[7] when there was a meeting of former members and players of the old Hurst club, and it was decided to form a committee to revive the club to play at the Hurst Cross ground. The reformed club were then admitted to theManchester League as it was expanded from 16 to 18 clubs.[8] In their first season in the league, they finished level on points at the top of the table with Salford United, resulting in a play-off for the championship, which Salford won 2–1.[4][8] After finishing sixth in 1910–11, the club won the league title in 1911–12 and subsequently joined Division Two of theLancashire Combination.[8][9] Although they only finished fifth in 1912–13, they were promoted to Division One of the league for the 1913–14 season. Due to the outbreak ofWorld War I, the club did not compete in 1915–16, but re-entered a wartime edition of the league for the 1916–17 season, winning the title.[10] However, they did not compete during the following season. They resumed in the Lancashire Combination in 1918–19,[10] but switched to theCheshire County League in 1923.[11] Players started wearing red shirts, earning the club a new nickname – the Robins.[3]

Shortly beforeWorld War II, Hurst signedDixie Dean, but the outbreak of hostilities limited him to a handful of appearances for the club.[3] Following the war, the club resumed playing in the Cheshire County League for the 1945–46 season,[9] changing their name to Ashton United on 1 February 1947.[4] Despite finishing second bottom of the league in 1946–47, they applied forelection to theFootball League, but the four Football League clubs were re-elected without a vote being taken.[12] They subsequently rejoined the Lancashire Combination in 1948 and were placed in Division One.[11] After finishing twelfth in 1960–61, the club resigned from the league in order to apply to rejoin the Cheshire County League; in a ballot, they defeated byAltrincham andWigan Athletic, and so had to rejoin the Lancashire Combination. However, Division One was now full, so the club had to drop into Division Two,[13] which they won in 1961–62 to earn promotion back to Division One.[11]

In 1964, Ashton United switched to theMidland Counties League, where they played for two seasons before moving back to Division Two of the Lancashire Combination in 1966.[11] Two seasons later, they moved across to the Cheshire County League, where they remained until it merged with the Lancashire Combination to form theNorth West Counties League in 1982.[11] The club were placed in Division One of the new league, but were relegated to Division Two after finishing second-from-bottom in1983–84. After winning Division Two in1987–88 they were promoted back to Division One. The1991–92 season saw them win the Division One title, earning promotion to Division One of the Northern Premier League.[11] They remained in the division until a third-place finish in2001–02 saw them qualify for the promotion play-offs. After a 3–1 win overSpennymoor United in the semi-finals, a 2–1 win overBamber Bridge in the final saw them promoted to the Premier Division. In that season, Ashton's Gareth Morris scored one of the fastest goals in FA Cup history, netting after only four seconds againstSkelmersdale United.[14]

With the creation of theConference North in 2004, a 14th-place finish in2003–04 saw Ashton United play-off againstHyde United andBradford Park Avenue for the right to play in the new league. Following a 2–1 win over Hyde, they lost 2–1 to Bradford Park Avenue in the final. However, after the demise ofTelford United, an extra place became available in the new structure and Ashton took their place in the Conference North.[15] Thefollowing season saw them finish second-from-bottom, resulting in relegation back to the Northern Premier League's Premier Division.[11] In 2010 the club were ordered to pay £32,000 to Marcus Hallows after he was injured playing against Ashton for Altrincham.[16]

In 2011, Ashton United won the Northern Premier League Challenge Cup, beatingNorthwich Victoria 1–0 in the final. After finishing fifth in2013–14 the club qualified for the promotion play-offs; however, after beatingF.C. United of Manchester 2–1 after extra time, they lost the final toAFC Fylde on penalties after a 1–1 draw.[17] The2014–15 season saw a third-place finish, again qualifying for the promotion play-offs, in which they lost on penalties to local rivalsCurzon Ashton after a 1–1 draw.[18] A third consecutive play-off campaign followed a fourth-place finish in2015–16, but saw the club lose 3–1 toSalford City in the semi-finals.[19] In2017–18 they were Premier Division runners-up; in the play-offs they defeatedFarsley Celtic 2–0 in the semi-finals, before beatingGrantham Town in the final to earn promotion back to the renamedNational League North; they were relegated back to the Northern Premier League at the end of thefollowing season after finishing third-from-bottom.

Ground

[edit]
Hurst Cross entrance

The club initially played at Holebottom on Smallshaw, before moving to Rosehill and then to nearby Hurst Cross for their first fixture played on 27 September 1884, making the ground one of the oldest football venues in the world.[3] The following year saw a record crowd of over 9,000 attend aLancashire Senior Cup match againstBlackburn Rovers.[3] Floodlights were installed in 1953 and inaugurated with a 4–3 win overWigan Athletic on 29 September that year; club record goalscorer Stuart Dimond getting the club's first goal under lights. During the 1954–55 season Hurst Cross staged the firstFootball Association-approved floodlit competition, the Lancashire and Cheshire Floodlit Cup. Ashton United, Wigan Athletic andNelson of the Lancashire Combination andMossley,Macclesfield Town,Droylsden,Hyde United andStalybridge Celtic from the Cheshire County League were invited to compete for the trophy, eventually won by Hyde United. The competition was repeated the following season withWinsford United taking the place of Wigan Athletic; Hyde United were again successful.

The current capacity is 4,500, of which 250 is seated (in the Sid Sykes Stand) and 750 is covered,[1] including the Popular Stand on the opposite side of the ground. Open terracing with a small amount of covered standing is available at both ends of the ground.

Honours

[edit]
  • Northern Premier League
    • Challenge Cup winners 2010–11
    • Division One Cup winners 1993–94, 1996–97, 1998–99
  • North West Counties League
    • Division One champions 1991–92
    • Division Two champions 1987–88
    • Challenge Cup winners 1991–92
  • Lancashire Combination
    • Division One champions 1916–17
    • Division Two champions 1961–62
    • League Cup winners 1961–62
  • Manchester League
    • Champions 1911–12
  • Manchester Senior Cup
    • Winners 1884–85 (won by original Hurst club), 1977–78
  • Manchester Junior Cup
    • Winners 1910–11, 1932–33
  • Manchester Challenge Cup
    • Winners 1935–36, 1938–39, 1949–50, 1952–53, 1953–54, 1954–55
  • Manchester Intermediate Cup
    • Winners 1958–59, 1962–63
  • Manchester Premier Cup
    • Winners 1979–80, 1982–83, 1991–92, 2000–01, 2001–02, 2002–03, 2021–22, 2023–24

Records

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abAshton United Non-League Club Directory
  2. ^ab1878-1892 AUFC Tables
  3. ^abcdefghHistory Ashton United F.C.
  4. ^abcdDave Twydell (2001)Denied F.C.: The Football League election struggles, Yore Publications, pp34–35
  5. ^1883-1884 The FA
  6. ^1885-1886 The FA
  7. ^Manchester Evening News Friday 2 April 1909 Page 3 Proposed New Club For Ashton
  8. ^abcManchester League 1893-1912 Non-League Matters
  9. ^abHurst at theFootball Club History Database
  10. ^abA new beginning AUFC Tables
  11. ^abcdefghiAshton United at theFootball Club History Database
  12. ^Twydell, p17
  13. ^1960-69 AUFC Tables
  14. ^FA Cup: Morris claims fastest goalThe Daily Telegraph, 17 September 2001
  15. ^[1] AUFC History
  16. ^Ashton United face closure after pay-out BBC Sport, 28 May 2010
  17. ^Premier Division Final play-off review Northern Premier League
  18. ^Evo-Stik Premier report: Curzon upset derby rivals to continue play-off dream Manchester Evening News, 29 April 2015
  19. ^Seddon thunder strike sees Salford City through to dream play off final Salford Online, 27 April 2016
  20. ^abcMike Williams & Tony Williams (2012)Non-League Club Directory 2013, p350ISBN 978-1-869833-77-0
  21. ^Players B Project 1878

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53°30′05″N2°04′47″W / 53.50139°N 2.07972°W /53.50139; -2.07972

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