Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Hadley F.C.

Coordinates:51°38′32″N0°14′39″W / 51.642221°N 0.24425536°W /51.642221; -0.24425536
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Association football club in England

Football club
Hadley
Full nameHadley Football Club
NicknameThe Bricks
Founded1882
GroundBrickfield Lane,Arkley
Capacity2,000 (150 seated)[1]
ChairmanSteve Gray
ManagerAnthony Clark
LeagueSouthern League Division One Central
2024–25Southern League Division One Central, 5th of 21

Hadley Football Club is afootball club based inArkley, Barnet, England. Affiliated to theHertfordshire County Football Association, they are currently members of theSouthern League Division One Central and play at Brickfield Lane.

History

[edit]

The club was founded in 1882,[1] and started playing in the North Middlesex League. They joined the Barnet & District League in 1922, which they played in until transferring to the North Suburban League in 1957.[1] In 1970 the club switched to the Mid-Herts League,[1] going on to win back-to-back Premier Division titles in 1975–76 and 1976–77 and the Premier Division Shield in 1976–77.[2]

In 1977 Hadley joined Division Three of theHertfordshire Senior County League.[3] They won the division at the first attempt, earning promotion to Division One rather than Division Two. The following season, 1978–79, saw them finish the season as Division One runners-up, resulting in promotion to the Premier Division. However, they were relegated back to Division One after finishing bottom of the Premier Division in 1983–84. At the end of the 1984–85 season the club left the league to join the Southern Olympian League. They rejoined Division One of the Hertfordshire Senior County League in 1999, and were promoted to the Premier Division after winning the Division One title in 2001–02.[3] In 2003–04 they won the Premier Division and the Herts Senior Centenary Trophy.[3][4] They retained the league title the following season and won the league's Aubrey Cup in 2005–06.[2]

At the end of the 2006–07 season the club made an application to join the Spartan South Midlands league, this was blocked by the Herts County League, so the following season the club dropped out of the league and played in the West Herts Saturday League Premier Division, which they won at the first attempt.[2] Another application was made to join the Spartan South Midlands League in 2008 and the club was accepted into Division Two.[3] The2008–09 season saw them finish the season as Division Two runners-up, earning promotion to Division One, as well as winning the Division Two Cup.[2] They went on to finish second in Division One thefollowing season and were promoted to the Premier Division.[3] In 2015–16 they won the Herts Charity Shield, beatingTring Athletic 3–1 in the final.[5] At the end of the2018–19 season the club were transferred to theEssex Senior League. Two seasons later they were transferred back to the Premier Division of the Spartan South Midlands League.

In2021–22 Hadley won the Spartan South Midlands League Challenge Trophy, defeatingStotfold 3–1 in the final.[6] They went on to finish third in the Premier Division, earning promotion to Division One Central of theSouthern League after second-placedRisborough Rangers failed the ground grading criteria. In 2024–25 the club won theHerts Charity Cup, beatingWelwyn Garden City 4–2 in the final.[7] They alsofinished fifth in Division One Central, qualifying for the promotion play-offs in which they lost 5–0 toBerkhamsted in the semi-finals.

Ground

[edit]

The club originally played on Hadley Common inMonken Hadley.[2] Around 1947 the club moved to Wrotham Park, where they played until around 1955, when they moved to Barnet Playing Fields.[2] They played at St Albans Road in Barnet during the 1977–78 season but had their lease terminated at the end of the season, so moved to Chandos Avenue inWhetstone, theEngland training base.[2]

In 1985 the club moved to Woodside Park Club inTotteridge, before moving to Brickfield Lane in Arkley in 1992.[2] At the start of the 2008–09 season the club started playing at Parkfield inPotters Bar, before returning to Brickfield Lane in 2016 following installation of new floodlights and a stand.[8]

Honours

[edit]
  • Spartan South Midlands League
    • Challenge Trophy winners 2021–22
    • Division Two Cup winners 2008–09
  • Hertfordshire Senior County League
    • Premier Division champions 2003–04, 2004–05
    • Division One champions 2001–02
    • Division Three champions 1977–78
    • Aubrey Cup winners 2005–06
    • Centenary Trophy winners 2003–04
  • Mid-Herts Football League
    • Premier Division champions 1975–76, 1976–77
    • Premier Division Shield winners 1976–77
  • West Herts Saturday League
    • Champions 2007–08
  • Herts Senior Centenary Trophy
    • Winners 2003–04
  • Herts Charity Cup
    • Winners 2024–25
  • Herts Charity Shield
    • Winners 2015–16

Records

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdMike Williams & Tony Williams (2016)Non-League Club Directory 2017, Tony Williams Publications, p522ISBN 978-1869833695
  2. ^abcdefghHistory Hadley F.C.
  3. ^abcdefghHadley at theFootball Club History Database
  4. ^Hertfordshire Football Club History Database
  5. ^Season ends with final defeatArchived 23 April 2017 at theWayback Machine Tring Athletic F.C.
  6. ^Spartan South Midlands League 2021/22 update #71 Sports Shorts, 16 May 2022
  7. ^"RECAP: Welwyn Garden City 2 Hadley 4 - Herts Charity Cup".Welwyn Hatfield Times. 8 May 2025.
  8. ^Homecoming: Barnet’s oldest football club is back in town after eight year break Times, 2 September 2016

External links

[edit]
2025–26
clubs
Premier
Central
Premier
South
Central
South
Seasons
Related
League teams
(tiers 1–4)
1
2
3
4
Non-league teams
(tiers 5–8)
5
6
7
8
Rivalries
Cup competitions
See also

51°38′32″N0°14′39″W / 51.642221°N 0.24425536°W /51.642221; -0.24425536

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hadley_F.C.&oldid=1305073123"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp