| Full name | Busby Football Club | |
|---|---|---|
| Founded | 1873 | |
| Dissolved | 1880 | |
| Ground | Field Park | |
| Hon. Secretary | William Leggatt | |
Busby Football Club was anassociation football club fromBusby inRenfrewshire.
The club was founded in 1873[1] and its earliest reported matches are from 1874.[2]
The club's first entry to theScottish Cup was in1876–77. At the time, the first two rounds were played on a geographical basis, and Busby was one of only four clubs in the Renfrewshire division of the draw;[3] the club beatRenfrew and the23rd Renfrewshire Rifle Volunteers (who had beatenThornliebank) - the 23rd protested the Busby goal, to no avail[4] - which put the club into the national section. After two draws againstHamilton at this third round stage, the second in front of a crowd of over 500,[5] both clubs were put through to the fourth round in accordance with the regulations at the time.
The club's run ended with a 4–0 defeat atVale of Leven, the defeat blamed on Busby's "long kicking" and inability to deal with the Vale's short passing.[6]
It was the club's best run in the competition, the club disbanding shortly after losing at home toArthurlie in the first round of the1879–80 tournament. One of the club's victims wasGreenock Morton, whom the club beat in the first round in1878–79, although the North British Daily Mail confused Busby withCartvale F.C., stating thatBarrhead had beaten Busby, rather than Cartvale, "four goals and two disputed to one".[7]
The Busby name was briefly revived from 1887 to 1890 after theCartvale club changed its name.[8]
The club's colours were listed as red, white, and blue until 1877,[9] and blue and white striped jerseys (at the time, stripes referred to hoops), with white knickers and red hose afterwards; the descriptions may refer to the same kit.[10]
The club's ground was Field Park until 1877, and Cartsbridge Park afterwards. The ground was noted to be particularly narrow, making good play difficult.[11]