| Full name | Ayr United Football Club | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nickname | The Honest Men[1] | |||
| Founded | 1910; 115 years ago (1910) | |||
| Ground | Somerset Park | |||
| Capacity | 10,185[2] (1,597 seated) | |||
| Chairman | David Smith | |||
| Manager | Scott Brown | |||
| League | Scottish Championship | |||
| 2024–25 | Scottish Championship, 3rd of 10 | |||
| Website | ayrunitedfc | |||
Ayr United Football Club are afootball club inAyr, Scotland, who play in theScottish Championship, the second tier of theScottish Professional Football League. Formed in 1910 by the merger ofAyr Parkhouse andAyr F.C., their nickname is The Honest Men, from a line in theRobert Burns poem "Tam o' Shanter". They play atSomerset Park.[3]
The club is currently managed byScott Brown. The club have spent 34 seasons in Scotland's top division, the last being1977–78, and have been the champions of the second tier of Scottish football on six occasions, and of the third tier on three occasions. The club's most successful manager,Ally MacLeod, went on to manage theScotland national team. In 2018, Ayr United secured promotion to theScottish Championship as champions ofLeague One.
Ayr United were founded in 1910 by the merger ofAyr Parkhouse andAyr F.C. AlthoughInverness Caledonian Thistle are also the product of a merger between two clubs, Ayr United are the only Scottish Football League club to have been formed from a merger of two existing league clubs.
The club's honours include winning six Second Division titles (as the second tier championship) and a further three titles (as the third tier championship), most recently in 2017–18. They have not won any national cup competitions, although they were runners-up in the 2001–02 Scottish League Cup, and in the Scottish Challenge Cup in the first two seasons in which the competition was held: 1990–91 and 1991–92. They have won the local competition the Ayrshire Cup on 26 occasions, most commonly facing fierce local rivalsKilmarnock in the final. The Ayrshire Cup was last played for in season 1996–97, since when the competition has been suspended.
The club's record scorer in a single season isJimmy Smith, who scored 66 goals for Ayr in only 38 league matches in 1927–28 and currently holds the British goalscoring record for the most league goals scored in a single season.[4] The club's overall record scorer isPeter Price, who scored 213 times in competitive matches for the club between 1955 and 1962.
Former Scotland national team managerAlly MacLeod is regarded as the club's most famous and most successful manager. He led the club on three separate occasions spanning 15 years, during which his teams recorded a record 214 wins, and won two league titles. In 1973 MacLeod was voted Ayr's Citizen of the Year. More recent managers have also included the recent Scotland national team manager,George Burley, and formerScottish League Cup winner withRaith Rovers,Gordon Dalziel. Gordon Dalziel is the only manager to take Ayr to a national cup final on 17 March 2002 when they lost to Rangers 4–0.
Although the club has spent 34 seasons in Scotland's top division, they have played in the second and third tiers of Scottish senior football since the 1977–78 season. During the late 1990s and early 2000s, the club established a record of defeating teams which played in higher leagues incup competitions, includingHibernian,Dundee,Dundee United,Motherwell,Dunfermline Athletic and four consecutive wins in cup competitions against their fiercest rivalsKilmarnock.
In 1988, Ayr United fan and businessmanSir David Murray offered to buy the club but the club's shareholders rejected the bid by a vote of 60 to 56. The manager at that time, Ally MacLeod, had threatened to leave if Murray's bid had succeeded: Murray went on to become chairman ofRangers, which coincided with a period of financial growth and league success for that club. During much of the 1990s and 2000s, a period of relative success both in league and cup competitions, the Ayr United chairman was local construction magnate Bill Barr. After Barr stood down, there were occasional boardroom struggles: the club suffered significant cashflow problems in 2004 although it survived with a combination of efforts.Prestwick-based Roy Kennedy failed to take over the club in 2005, and his company Kennedy Construction went bankrupt in 2006.
On 24 May 2009, Ayr won the Scottish First Division Play-off againstAirdrie United 3–2 on aggregate to win promotion to the First Division. The following season, to celebrate the club's centenary, Ayr United played in black and white hoops, the club's original black and white kit. The away kit was crimson and gold with blue shorts to reflect the original club colours. But it was not a successful season. Ayr were relegated on the last day of the season after losing 2–1 to Morton.The club bounced back the following season, winning promotion after defeating Forfar Athletic and Brechin City in the play-offs. That same season, they knocked outHibernian in theScottish Cup, winning 1–0 at Somerset Park in a replay.
In the 2011–12 season, Ayr enjoyed success in the2011–12 Scottish League Cup, beatingSPL sidesInverness Caledonian Thistle,Heart of Midlothian andSt Mirren on their way to the semi-finals. Ayr United playedAyrshire derby rivalsKilmarnock in the semi-finals, the first time the two clubs had met at this stage. Kilmarnock won one-nil. But the league campaign was less successful, as United were relegated to theSecond Division following a play-off defeat toAirdrie United.[5]
Following relegation, United announced thatBrian Reid's contract would not be renewed. The club appointedMark Roberts, top scorer in the previous three seasons, manager, with head of youth development, Davie White, as his assistant.[6]In January 2015,Ian McCall was appointed Ayr's new manager, taking over from Roberts. After saving the club from relegation on the final day of the 2014–15 season, McCall led Ayr back to theChampionship with a penalty shoot-out victory over Stranraer in the play-offs.[7] Following their relegation in 2017, Ayr competed inLeague One but finished the season as Champions, regaining their Championship status at the first time of asking and winning their first league title in over twenty years in the process.
Ayr United enjoyed a good start to the Championship during the 2018–19 season, and found themselves leading the division for part of the season. However, injuries to key players resulted in a dip of form during the second half of the season. This poor form included a shock Scottish Cup defeat to Junior ChampionsAuchinleck Talbot. Ayr United eventually finish in fourth place, ensuring a place in the playoffs for promotion to theScottish Premiership. However, they were beaten on aggregate byInverness Caledonian Thistle.
Key playersLawrence Shankland,Robbie Crawford andLiam Smith departed at the end of 2018–19 and signed for other clubs. Despite these losses, Ayr started the 2019–20 season well and found themselves in 2nd place in September. However, managerIan McCall departed the club to return toPartick Thistle, ending his4+1⁄2-year tenure. After a recruitment process lasting four weeks, midfielderMark Kerr was appointed as manager on an 18-month contract.
The 2019–20 season was curtailed due to the Coronavirus pandemic. United were fourth place again at the time of curtailment and this stood as their final league standing. However, the playoffs were not contested due to the pandemic.
The 2020–2021 season was played behind closed doors due to the ongoing pandemic. Ayr United became embroiled in a relegation battle, and manager Mark Kerr was sacked in February 2021. He was replaced by ex-Scotland international and formerGreenock Morton,Bradford City andLivingston managerDavid Hopkin.
Ayr United avoided relegation on the final day of the season after a draw withInverness Caledonian Thistle.
After a poor start to the 2021–22 season, David Hopkin resigned as manager. Following a spell as caretaker manager,Jim Duffy was appointed as manager on a contract until the end of the season. However, after a poor run of only one win in twelve league games, Duffy was sacked in December 2021.
On 7 January 2022, former Sheffield Wednesday and Dunfermline playerLee Bullen was appointed as head coach. Under Bullen's leadership, Ayr United avoided the relegation play-offs and remained in the Championship.
In the 2022–23 season Ayr would clinch second place on the last day of the season, leapfroggingQueen's Park who had lost out in a 5–3 thriller withDundee for the league title. With Queen's dropping 2 in goal difference it allowed Ayr to jump ahead into second due to their superior goal difference. This secured a place in the play-off semi-final, however they were defeated byPartick Thistle in both legs.
From 1948 to 2016, Ayr United used a crest which is a shield containing aScottish saltire, with a scroll beneath stating the club's name.[8] In 2015, the club became subject to a legal action which claimed that the crest was an unregistered coat of arms.[8] After it had emerged that the club's badge was in jeopardy, a petition was started by fans and gained 700 signatures in 24 hours.[9] The campaign gained support and many political, footballing figures and fans alike lent support to keep the Ayr badge intact. Leader of theScottish Conservative Party leaderRuth Davidson stated "If archaic rules are forcing the team to change the badge, then I think we need to look at those rules again. WhenJohn Scott brought this issue to my attention, I was happy to take it all the way to the UK Government."[10] Another prominent name to join the campaign was former Ayr United andBayern Munich striker and now aSky Sports pundit onSoccer Saturday,Alan McInally, who said "Badges are so important to football supporters and are treasured by everyone. They are worn with pride by grandfathers, dads and sons as they represent the club that they support. New stadiums get built and re-named but the club badge always stays the same”.[11]
In 2016, after a fan competition to design a new club badge, a design incorporating most of the old features of the old badge was introduced.
The club's original jerseys were red and gold, inherited fromAyr,[12] with navy blue shorts and socks. In 1914, Ayr adopted black and white hoops, which were worn, with several modifications, up to 1930, when TheHonest Men switched to a plain white jersey, with navy blue shorts and socks, worn until the outbreak ofWorld War II. After the war, the club retained the white jersey, and switched back to the black shorts that had originally complemented the hooped shirts, kits similar to these were worn up to 1958, when Ayr had changed the black and white look for a white with a blue trim, used until 1963, when they once again reverted to the black and white hoops, that were kept until 1968 and not used again until the2009–10 centenary season. From then until 1994, Ayr maintained white jerseys trimmed with black with either black or white shorts and socks, then switching to a striped shirt for a single season. The following season, Ayr wore an all-black jersey for the first time. Ayr went back to keeping an all-white jersey with either white or black shorts and socks until the centenary season. For the2011–12 season, a half-black-half-white shirt was worn for the first time, however, Ayr FC had previously wore a similar jersey between 1899 and 1903. The2013–14 season saw Ayr return to the white jersey, black shorts and socks for the first time since 1973.
![]() ![]() ![]() 1910–1914 | ![]() ![]() ![]() 1914–1938 | 1938–1940 | 1945–1958 | ![]() 1973–1978 |
![]() 1970s | 1990s | ![]() ![]() ![]() 1995–96 |
| Period | Sportswear | Home sponsor | Away sponsor | Third sponsor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1977–1981 | Umbro | none | none | |
| 1981–1987 | Barr Construction | |||
| 1987–1988 | Ayr Advertiser | |||
| 1988–1990 | Bukta | Centrum | ||
| 1990–1991 | Riberio | |||
| 1991–1993 | Arrow | |||
| 1993–1994 | Sports Division | |||
| 1994–1995 | Core | What Everyone Wants | ||
| 1995–1996 | The Ayr United Collection | |||
| 1996–1997 | Ayrshire Post | |||
| 1997–1998 | Premier Marketing UK | |||
| 1998–1999 | Barr Construction | |||
| 1999–2000 | TFG Sports | Strachans Motors | Barr Construction | |
| 2000–2001 | Leader Newspaper | Barr Steel | ||
| 2001–2002 | Aurigin | |||
| 2002–2004 | Kerr & Smith | Iveco Daily | ||
| 2004–2005 | Kennedy Construction | Simply Purchasing | ||
| 2005–2006 | The Home Bakery | Honest Men Trust | ||
| 2006–2007 | The Events Company | Greig Lucas | ||
| 2007–2008 | Lotto Sports | Rodie | Carrick Bathrooms | |
| 2008–2010 | Surridge Sports | Paligap | ||
| 2010–2011 | Nike | |||
| 2011–2014 | Bodog | |||
| 2014–2018 | Adidas | |||
| 2018–2020 | Bitcoin SV | |||
| 2020–2022 | Hummel | |||
| 2022–2023 | Jewson | Lindsay Mortgage Services | RSL Renewables | |
| 2023–2024 | O'Neills | Caledonia Vehicle Solutions | ||
| 2024–2025 | MKM | Simpson & Shaw | ||
| 2025–present | Jewson | none | ||
Ayr play their football atSomerset Park in Ayr's New Town. One of the few surviving traditional stadium designs, it consists of the original Archibald Leitch designed stand, two covered terraces, and, on the North side of the ground, a new stand has been constructed which sits behind an area of older terracing. It has a capacity of 10,185.[2] The first match to take place at Somerset Park was between the formerAyr andAston Villa in a 3–0 victory for Ayr.
During the 1990s, the club's chairman, Bill Barr, who owned and managed a company that built modern-style stadiums and stands for several other clubs around the UK, sought — and obtained — planning permission fromSouth Ayrshire Council for a new 10,200 all-seated stadium at Heathfield in Ayr with an associated retail development. TheScottish Executive then "called in" the application and reversed the decision in respect of the retail development. Since the club considered this aspect of the proposal necessary to fund the construction, the development did not proceed.[13]
In November 2006, United signed a contract withBarratt Homes for the sale ofSomerset Park, having secured a 20-acre (81,000 m2) site in theHeathfield area of Ayr. The site would house a new £29 million stadium seating 7,650 as part of a "sports and business campus".[14] The project ultimately did not proceed.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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| Role | Name |
|---|---|
| Manager | Scott Brown |
| Assistant manager | Steven Whittaker |
| First team coaches | Jamie Murphy Tommy Tait |
| Goalkeeping coach | Dave Timmins |
| Head of youth academy | David White |
| Physiotherapist | Steven Maguire |
| Performance analyst | Jamie Watt |
| Kitman | Chris Taylor |
| Dates[17] | Name |
|---|---|
| 1910–1914 | Committee |
| 1914–1915 | |
| 1915–1918 | |
| 1918–1919 | |
| 1919–1923 | |
| 1923–1924 | |
| 1924–1926 | |
| 1926–1931 | |
| 1931–1935 | |
| 1935–1940 | |
| 1945–1948 | |
| 1949–1953 | |
| 1953–1955 | |
| 1955–1956 | |
| 1956–1961 | |
| 1961 | |
| 1961–1962 | |
| 1962–1963 | |
| 1963–1964 | |
| 1964–1966 | |
| 1966–1975 | |
| 1975–1978 | |
| 1978 | |
| 1979–1983 | |
| 1983–1985 | |
| 1985–1990 | |
| 1991–1993 | |
| 1993–1995 | |
| 1995–2002 | |
| 2002–2004 | |
| 2004–2005 | |
| 2005–2007 | |
| 2007 | |
| 2007–2012 | |
| 2012–2014 | |
| 2015–2019 | |
| 2019–2021 | |
| 2021 | |
| 2021 | |
| 2022–2024 | |
| 2024– |
25,225 vsRangers, 13 September 1969, inScottish League Division One[19]
51,158 vsRangers, 4 April 1973,Scottish Cup semi-final, atHampden Park[19]
106 vsGirvan, 1 May 1991, in theAyrshire Cup[19]
192 vsDeveronvale, 28 November 2009, in theScottish Cup[19]
11–1 vsDumbarton, 13 August 1952[19]
0–9 vsRangers, 16 November 1929[19] |
John Murphy (597 apps), between 1963 and 1978[19]
Peter Price, (213 goals in 251 apps) between 1955 and 1962[19]
Jimmy Smith, (66 goals in 38 apps) in the1927–28 season[19]
James Nisbet forScotland (3) vsNorway,Germany andThe Netherlands in 1929[19]
Mark Shankland, aged 15 years and 300 days (vsBrechin City, 7 May 2011)[20]
Alan Forrest, aged 16 years and 321 days (vsQueens Park, 27 July 2013) |
All players are from Scotland unless otherwise stated.
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| Year Inducted | Name | Years at Ayr Utd. | Role(s) at Ayr Utd. |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Ally MacLeod[22] | 1964–1965, 1966–1975*, 1978*, 1986–1989* | Player and Manager |
| Ian McAllister[22] | 1977–1992 | Player | |
| Peter Price[22] | 1955–1962 | Player | |
| 2007 | Sam McMillan[22] | 1952–1968 | Player and coach |
| John 'Spud' Murphy[22] | 1963–1978 | Player | |
| Henry Templeton[22] | 1987–1991 | Player | |
| 2008 | Alex 'Dixie' Ingram[22] | 1966–1970, 1970–1977, 2008–2022[23]** | Player and vice-chairman |
| Alex 'Sanny' McAnespie[22] | 1964–1978 | Player | |
| Davie Stewart[22] | 1967–1974 | Player | |
| 2010 | Rikki Fleming[22] | 1968–1978 | Player |
| Dick Malone[22] | 1964–1971 | Player | |
2013 | The 1987–88 Squad | 1987–88 | Team |
* years involved as a manager
** years involved as vice-chairman
| Year Inducted | Player | Years at Ayr United |
|---|---|---|
2004[24] | SirAlex Ferguson CBE | 1973–1974 |
2009[25] | Steve Archibald | 1991–1992 |
2013 | Alan Rough | 1989–1990 |
2015 | Ally MacLeod | 1964–1965 1966–1975* 1978* 1986–1989* |
* years involved as manager
| year Inducted | Player | Years at Ayr United |
|---|---|---|
2002[26] | SirAlex Ferguson CBE | 1973–1974 |
Only includes caps won while playing for Ayr United.
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