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Clydebank F.C. (1888)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Scottish football club
For the current club, seeClydebank F.C. For the club founded in 1874, seeClydebank F.C. (Rutherglen). For the clubs that played in the Scottish Football League, seeClydebank F.C. (1914) andClydebank F.C. (1965).

Football club
Clydebank
Full nameClydebank Football Club
Nicknamethe Bankies[1]
Founded1888
Dissolved1895
GroundHamilton Park
SecretaryJames Rennie[2]
ManagerIsaac McKay

Clydebank Football Club was a 19th-centuryfootball club based inClydebank, Scotland. It was the first team with that name in the town.

History

[edit]

The club was formed at a meeting on 17 January 1888, at a meeting in a billiard hall in Clydebank, attended by over 200 people, including representatives from football clubs such asRangers,Queen's Park andCowlairs; at that first meeting, Isaac McKay of1st Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers F.C. was appointed as coach.[3] Most of the club's players were employees of either the J. & G. Thomson shipbuilding company or the Singer Manufacturing Co.[4] In its first season, the club entered theDumbartonshire Cup, losing in the second round toDumbarton Athletic.

The club entered theScottish Cup for the first time in1888–89. It was drawn at home toVale of Leven Wanderers F.C. in its first tie, who had reached the quarter-finals the previous year, and lost 4–3. Clydebank had come from 2–0 down to go 3–2 up by half-time, and after the match protested two of the Wanderers' goals,[5] to no avail. The clubs met in the first roundthe following year, but at kick-off time Clydebank was short of four players. The club therefore forfeited the tie to the Wanderers, which was a mistake on two grounds - firstly, a number of angry spectators demanded refunds, and secondly, the clubs agreed to play a friendly match instead, which Clydebank won 3–1.[6]

The club's third entry in1890–91, was its most successful, beatingKirkintilloch Athletic F.C. in the first round andSlamannan F.C. in the second,[7] in a re-played tie. The Bankies protested that the Slamannan goals in the original match were of the wrong height;[8] the tie had ended 5–3 for Slamannan, with all of the scores being registered in the same goal.[9] The run ended againstDumbarton in the third, who, despite playing well within themselves, won 6–0.[10] Clydebank also had its best run in the county competition, reaching the semi-final, but lost to Dumbarton again, this time 4–1; Clydebank had taken the lead, but when 2–1 down was reduced to 10 men because of an injury to Melvin.[11]

From 1891 to 1892, the Scottish Cup introduced qualifying rounds, and Clydebank did not make the main stage again. That season, the club became a founder member of theScottish Football Federation, a de facto third national division. The club finished 9th out of 12 in its first season, the players being considered "on the slight and small side",[12] but only registered one point in 1892–93; the first match of the season - a 12–4 defeat at the previous season's wooden spoonistsMotherwell - set the tone for the season.[13] The 'return' match - played away because of a lack of ground - was lost 16–1.[14] The club was 3–0 up atWishaw Thistle early in the season but the match was abandoned because of bad light with ten minutes remaining, the late start caused by the Clydebank players missing their train;[15] Thistle won the re-played fixture 8–2. Without a ground, the club was not one of the teams that transferred into theScottish Football Alliance on the Federation's dissolution.

Its last competitive match was a defeat in the second round of the county cup in 1893–94; the club had entered the Scottish Cup in 1894–95, but scratched before the first round.[16] The club was formally struck off the Scottish FA register before the 1895–96 season.[17]

Colours

[edit]

The club originally played in white shirts with a red band, and navy shorts. From 1890 to 1892 it played in sky and navy "quarters" (the term used for counterchanged halved shirts) with white shorts, and afterwards changed the shirts to plain navy.[18]

Ground

[edit]

Clydebank secured a ground off Belmont Street soon after foundation.,[19] eventually named Hamilton Park.[20] The club lost the use of its ground at the end of 1892, which resulted in it playing fixtures afterwards away from home.[21]

See also

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External links

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References

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  1. ^"Dumbarton v Clydebank".Glasgow Herald: 10. 20 October 1890.
  2. ^"Clydebank Football Club".Glasgow Herald: 2. 6 April 1888.
  3. ^"Football".Lennox Herald: 4. 21 January 1888.
  4. ^"Football".Lennox Herald: 3. 27 April 1889.
  5. ^"Vale of Leven Wanderers v Clydebank".Lennox Herald: 6. 8 September 1888.
  6. ^"Clydebank v Vale of Leven Wanderers".Lennox Herald: 6. 14 September 1889.
  7. ^"Slamannan v Clydebank".Bridge of Allan Advertiser: 3. 18 October 1890.
  8. ^"Scottish Football Association".Lothian Courier: 6. 11 October 1890.
  9. ^"Slamannan v Clydebank".Lothian Courier: 6. 4 October 1890.
  10. ^"Dumbarton v Clydebank".Glasgow Herald: 10. 20 October 1890.
  11. ^"Clydebank v Dumbarton".Lennox Herald: 3. 20 December 1890.
  12. ^"Football notes".Airdrie Advertiser: 6. 10 October 1891.
  13. ^"Football".Airdrie Advertiser: 6. 20 August 1892.
  14. ^"Football".Wishaw Press: 2. 18 February 1893.
  15. ^"Football".Wishaw Press: 3. 12 November 1892.
  16. ^Mathers, Stewart."Season 1894-95".Beautiful Dribbling Game. Retrieved7 February 2023.
  17. ^"Scottish Football Association".Dundee Courier: 5. 14 August 1895.
  18. ^"Club Directory".Scottish Football Historical Results Archive. Retrieved27 October 2022.
  19. ^"Clydebank Football Club".Lennox Herald: 5. 7 April 1888.
  20. ^"Highland sports at Clydebank".Lennox Herald: 5. 17 August 1889.
  21. ^"Scottish Federation".Scottish Football Historical Archive. Retrieved7 February 2023.
Founding members
Member of
Chief Executives
Affiliates
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Related articles
Founder members of theScottish Football Association
Entrants to thefirst Scottish Cup
FormerScottish Football League members
FormerScottish Football Alliance members
FormerScottish Football Federation members
FormerScottish Football Combination members
FormerScottish Football Union members
FormerNorthern League members
FormerHighland League members
FormerEast of Scotland League members
FormerEastern League (and successors) members
FormerMidland Football league members
FormerSouthern Counties/South of Scotland League members
FormerLanarkshire Football League members
FormerNorth Caledonian Football Association members
Other senior clubs
Senior clubs without dedicated pages
Junior/amateur clubs
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