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Bray Wanderers F.C.

Irish association football club


Irish association football club

FieldValue
current2025 League of Ireland First Division
clubnameBray Wanderers
imageBray Wanderers F.C. Crest.svg
fullnameBray Wanderers Football Club
nicknameThe Seagulls
founded
groundCarlisle Grounds,
Bray, County Wicklow
capacity3,200
ownerMalachy Burke, JB Gough, David Goldstein
mgrtitleHead Coach
managerPaul Heffernan
chairmanTBC
leagueLeague of Ireland First Division
season2025
positionLeague of Ireland First Division, 3rd of 10
website
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pattern_ra1_braywanderers24h
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rightarm1FFFFFF
shorts1009650
socks1009650
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rightarm20000FF
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Bray, County Wicklow

Bray Wanderers Football Club are an Irish association football club playing in the League of Ireland First Division. The club in its present form was founded in 1942 in Bray, and was known until 2010 as Bray Wanderers A.F.C. It was elected to the league in 1985, and plays its home matches at the Carlisle Grounds. The club colours are green and white, and it goes by the nickname "The Seagulls".

History

Early Days

In 1922, some members of St Kevin's Gaelic football club in Bray left the club as a result of a dispute and formed a soccer club called Bray Wanderers. Through the 1930s and 1940s, however, Bray Unknowns were the leading team in the town, playing in the League of Ireland for nineteen seasons from 1924–25 to 1942–43. Bray Wanderers went into decline in the mid-thirties but was reformed in 1942–43 and entered the Athletic Union League Division 3 for the 1943–44 season. By the 1948–49 season Wanderers had reached Division 1 of the AUL but the period in between did not pass without controversy. In 1944 the club reached the Leinster Football Association Shield final but was disqualified for fielding an illegal player in the semi-final. When in Division 2 of the AUL in 1946–47 the club was expelled from the league due to the B team not fulfilling a league fixture, although the club was reinstated the following season. Wanderers won the Junior Cup in 1950-51 and again in 1953–54, defeating Ierne 1–0 in the Final. The following season Wanderers left the AUL and joined the Leinster Senior League.

Mid 1900s

In 1955–56 Wanderers won the FAI Intermediate Cup, defeating Workmens Club 2–1 in the final. There was also a first appearance in the FAI Cup against Longford Town in 1956. They won the FAI Intermediate Cup again two years later, defeating Chapelizod 2–1 in the final. In 1964–65 they were founder members of the League of Ireland B Division. However they left after just one season and once again went into decline. By 1973 Bray Unknowns were playing in the LSL and the management changed the name to Bray Wanderers in a partially successful effort to amalgamate the two.

League of Ireland

Chart of yearly table positions for Bray Wanderers in League of Ireland

Bray Wanderers were elected to the League of Ireland when it was expanded to two Divisions for the 1985–86 season. They played their first game as a League of Ireland club on 8 September 1985 in a FAI League Cup match against Dundalk with Jim Mahon scoring the club's first goal at senior level. The Wanderers' secured promotion to the Premier Division by winning the League of Ireland First Division Championship that year. They were relegated back down to the First Division in the 1987–88 season. Wanderers did not regain Premier Division status until the 1990–91 season but had their first major success during their spell in the First Division. They won the FAI Cup in 1990 beating St Francis 3–0 in the first Lansdowne Road final with John Ryan becoming only the second player to score a hat-trick in a FAI Cup final. They made history by becoming the first ever First Division side to win the trophy. Due to this cup win, Wanderers competed in European competition, for the first time in their history in the 1990–91 season. They were defeated, however, by Trabzonspor in the European Cup Winners' Cup preliminary round.

After two seasons in the Premier Division, the club was once again relegated to the First Division where they remained for three seasons. In 1995–96 season, Wanderers were promoted back to the Premier Division as First Division champions, but were relegated back down in the following season. The next two seasons followed a similar pattern as they went back up and came straight back down. In 1998–99, a season they got relegated again, Wanderers won their second FAI Cup, defeating Finn Harps after two replays which earned them a spot in the 1999-2000 UEFA Cup against a Roy Hodgson led Grasshoppers.

In 1999–00, the club won promotion back to the Premier Division, and in 2000–01 Wanderers achieved their highest ever league finish of 4th place in the Premier Division. The club could not build on this as they were relegated back down in 2002–03 but were once again promoted in 2004. The club was relegated at the end of the 2009 season, but the demise of Cork City F.C. meant they were reinstated to the Premier Division. Finishing in a promotion/relegation play-off in 2010, the club maintained its Premier status following a penalty shoot-out with Monaghan United.

The following season, finishing sixth in the Premier Division, the club gained a place in the all-Ireland Setanta Cup, but early in 2012 conceded home and away matches to Glentoran FC in the first round of the competition (2–4 & 0–3).

In the 2012 season, Bray finished tenth of 12 clubs in the Premier Division, five points above Dundalk, who had to survive a promotion/relegation battle against Waterford United to ensure their survival in the top flight.

In 2013, Bray were again in the relegation mix, and having finished second-last they played First Division promotion play-off winners Longford Town over two legs, winning 5–4 on aggregate.

On 10 January 2014, it was announced that Alan Mathews would be the new manager with Barry O'Connor as his assistant. The club ended the season in tenth place, just one point above UCD, and entered the 2015 season as the fourth-longest surviving Premier Division club.

2015: Five managers in one season

The club had five first team managers in total across the 2015 season. On 1 April 2015, Mathews resigned suddenly, together with the rest of his backroom team, citing a breakdown in communication with the club's new owners: Gerry Mulvey & Denis O'Connor, who had taken over during the off-season. The club appointed Under-19 coach Maciej Tarnogrodzki as interim senior team manager the following day. The following month, the club announced that former Shamrock Rovers boss Trevor Croly had signed a three-year contract to manage the club.

Just one month later however, Croly also resigned in a similar fashion to Mathews before him. Mick Cooke was brought in to replace him as the fifth manager of the season (including temporary Player/Manager David Cassidy), and Bray finished the 2015 season in 8th position.

2016 - 2021

In July 2017, after much speculation about the future of the club, majority shareholder and interim chairman Gerry Mulvey released a statement which confirmed that the club was financially stable and outlined big plans for the future of the club. The statement was widely ridiculed, mainly due to its branding of Wicklow County Council as "the North Korea of Ireland for business" after the council's repeated refusal to allow the Carlisle Grounds to be rezoned.

In September 2017, the FAI launched an investigation into alleged match-fixing surrounding Bray Wanderers friendly against Waterford on 8 September 2017. The FAI released a formal statement in February 2018 affirming that no evidence to support any charge had been found.

The 2018 season went badly for Bray, with the club losing 28 of their 36 league matches and exiting every cup competition at the first time of asking. The financial situation was not any better, with players voting to strike due to unpaid wages and medical costs. The players were eventually paid before the strike went ahead. On 26 July 2018, after several weeks of speculation over Bray's future, the club was taken over by St. Joseph's Boys academy director Niall O'Driscoll. Mulvey remained in a minority role. Bray were officially relegated to the League of Ireland First Division in October 2018, ending a 12-year stay in the top flight of Irish football.

Merger with Cabinteely

In November 2021, Bray Wanderers and Cabinteely F.C. announced a merger, technically a takeover of Wanderers by Cabinteely. The newly created team would be known as Bray Wanderers and continue to play in the Carlisle Grounds, with the intention to apply for a First Division licence. Bray's former manager Pat Devlin returned for his second spell in the post, and the then Director of Football (DoF) at Cabinteely became the DoF for the new Bray Wanderers.

Since the merger and Devlin's return to Bray Wanderers, there have been a number of conflicts. One such incident saw Devlin and fans engage in an "ugly exchange" at an away fixture against Wexford FC. There was even a substantial drop in attendance at the Carlisle Grounds at one point, as Bray experienced one of the worst seasons in their history, going from a title challenging side to one near the bottom of the table. In mid-2022, club chairman Tony Richardson reportedly stated that the club were "making progress" in "eliminating crowd trouble which [..] marred some of their games this season", and the club stated that it had appointed a "Fan Liaison Officer [..] for dialogue with fans who wish to make their point". A report in the Bray People, after the clubs's eighth home league defeat of the season, referred to a "lack of goals" and a video reputedly showing "people throwing pyrotechnics [..] over the walls of the Carlisle Grounds". With a 5–1 home defeat in Bray's final home game of the 2022 season to Cobh Ramblers, the season ended with a 18.75% win record, among the worst season performances in the club's history.

2022 – Present

In November 2022, former Wexford FC manager Ian Ryan was appointed as head coach, with Devlin remaining as "Head of Football". In March 2023, Bray progressed to the semi-final of the Leinster Senior Cup with a 2–1 victory over reigning League of Ireland Premier Division champions Shamrock Rovers. Bray Wanderers were eliminated by LSL side Usher Celtic and slipped to a 7th-place finish in the First Division.

Bray started the 2024 season poorly with one win from the opening 8 games. In May 2024, Ian Ryan unexpectedly resigned as manager with Bray in 6th place. Assistants Lorcan Fitzgerald and Paul Heffernan took charge of the club and oversaw an upturn in results, raising Bray to third in the table. On September 10, Lorcan Fitzgerald also resigned from management leaving Paul Heffernan in sole charge. Bray ended the 2024 regular season in 5th place earning the last play-off position. In the promotion semi-final Bray beat UCD 2–1 on aggregate over two legs after winning the opening leg 2–0 at home. In November, Bray faced Athlone Town in the promition play-off final at Dalymount Park. After going 2–0 down early on Bray pulled one back through Conor Knight's deflected shot before Cole Omorehiomwan scored a last minute header to level at 2–2 and force extratime. After a goalless extratime, goalkeeper Jimmy Corcoran saved two penalties as Bray won 4–2 on penalties to advance to the promotion/relegation final. In front of over 5,000 spectators, Bray lost 3–1 to Drogheda United at Tallaght Stadium ending their promotion hopes.

Early in 2025 Bray Wanderers announced a partnership with Next Level Soccer. A football club and youth academy in the USA.

Ownership

On Friday 26 November 2021, Bray Wanderers merger with Cabinteely was officially announced with Cabinteely chairman Tony Richardson becoming majority shareholder of Bray Wanderers.

In March 2025, a US-based company named 'Next-Level Sports' entered a partnership with Bray Wanderers and became part-owners.

In September 2025, the club was transferred to an ownership consortium of Malachy Burke, JB Gough, and David Goldstein.

Supporters

Bray Wanderers has maintained a small, but loyal fanbase through the years with average attendances generally numbering at around 500–1500 fans.

Levels of support have fluctuated in recent years. Lows of 271 fans in attendance where recorded in the relegation season of 2018. Attendance also dropped significantly following the clubs merger with Cabinteely in 2022. However, average crowds have also reached over 1000 supporters at times during the 2019 season and regularly in 2025.

In March 2008, the Ultra group of Bray Wanderers fans, "Na Fánaithe", was formed by five members of the supporters club. Unlike similar groups in Dublin, such as "Briogáid Dearg", "SRFC Ultras", "Shed End Invincibles" and "Notorious Boo Boys", Na Fánaithe is a much smaller group.

In July 2022, Bray Wanderers fans formed a new supporters club, the "1985 Seagulls" group.

For away matches, supporters clubs usually organise a bus to run direct to the relevant ground. The Bray Wanderers Supporters Club operated this service for a number of years until it stopped in 2022. Since 2022, the 1985 Seagulls group have taken over the running of this service.

Honours

  • FAI Cup: 2
  • League of Ireland First Division: 3
  • League of Ireland First Division Shield: 1
    • 1995–96
  • Leinster Senior League: 3
    • 1957–58, 1958–59, 1959–60
  • FAI Intermediate Cup: 2
    • 1955–56, 1957–58
  • FAI Junior Cup: 2
    • 1950–51, 1953–54
  • Enda McGuill Cup: 1
    • 2005

Records

Most appearances for Bray Wanderers

#NameSeasonsAppearances
1Ireland Colm Tresson1990-1992, 1998-2012441
2Ireland Kieran 'Tarzan' O'Brien1993-2006374
3Ireland Alan Smyth1988-1995, 1996 - 2000353
4Ireland Anthony 'Bo' McKeever1985-1993, 1995-2000352
5Ireland Mick Doohan1988-1993, 1998-2003343

Most goals scored for Bray Wanderers

#NameSeasonsGoals
1Ireland Jason Byrne1998-2003, 2012-201395
2Ireland Kieran 'Tarzan' O'Brien1993-200690
3Ireland Colm Tresson1990-1992, 1998-201274
4Ireland Eamon Zayed2002-200659
5Ireland Richie Parsons1988–1991, 1995–1999, 2001–200255

Source:

Club Records

  • Record Victory: 7–0 v Cobh Ramblers 17 October 1997, 7–0 v St. Mochta's 2007 FAI Cup, 17 June 2007
  • Record League Defeat: 8–1 v Dundalk 4 May 2015
  • Most Points in a League Season: 72 in 1999–00
  • Most League Goals in a Season: 19, Eamon Zayed, 2003
  • Most League Goals: 72, Jason Byrne 1998–03, 2012–13

European record

Overview

CompetitionMatchesWDLGFGA
UEFA Cup200208
European Cup Winners' Cup201113
Overall4013111

Matches

SeasonCompetitionRoundOpponentHomeAwayAggregate
1990–91European Cup Winners' CupQRTUR Trabzonspor1–10–21–3
1999–00UEFA CupQRSUI Grasshoppers0–40–40–8

Current squad

Technical staff

PositionStaff
Head CoachPaul Heffernan
Assistant Head CoachGavin Teehan
First Team CoachGraham Kelly
Goalkeeping CoachStephen McGuinness
Director of Athletic PerformancePaul McGrath
PhysioPeter Mulrean
Kit MenJoe Walsh, Joseph Walsh & Josh Dolan
Academy DirectorDave Foley

Managers

DatesNameNotes
July 1985 – December 90IRL Pat DevlinLeague of Ireland First Division Champions 1985–86,
FAI Cup Winners 1990
December 1990 – March 95IRL John HolmesFirst Division Runner-up 1990–91
March 1995 – August 95IRL Pat DevlinFirst Division Champions 1995–96,
1999–00,
FAI Cup Winners 1999,
First Division Runner-up 1997–98,
2003
August 2005 – October 2005IRL Tony McGuirk
October 2005 – 10 May 2006IRL Pat Devlin
10 May 2006 – 26 September 2006IRL Tony McGuirk
27 September 2006 – 9 August 2010IRL Eddie Gormley
10 August 2010 – December 2011IRL Pat Devlin
1 December 2011 – 15 September 2012IRL Keith Long
16 September 2012 – 31 December 2012IRL Eddie Gormley
1 January 2012 – December 2013IRL Pat Devlin
10 January 2014 – 1 April 2015IRL Alan Mathews
Caretaker 2 April 2015 – 6 May 2015Poland Maciej Tarnogrodzki
11 May 2015 – 3 July 2015IRL Trevor Croly
7 July 2015 – April 2016IRL Mick Cooke
April 2016 – October 2017IRL Harry Kenny
Dec 2017 – April 2018IRL Dave Mackey
8 June 2018 – 18 July 2018IRL Martin Russell
7 August 2018 – 2 December 2021IRL Gary Cronin
26 November 2021 - 15 November 2022IRL Pat DevlinOfficially "Head of Football" rather than manager.
15 November 2022 – 22 May 2024IRL Ian Ryan
22 May 2024 – 10 September 2024IRL Lorcan FitzgeraldInterim
10 September 2024 – 1 December 2024IRL Paul HeffernanInterim
2 December 2024 – PresentIRL Paul Heffernan

Notes

References

References

  1. Johns, Nathan. "Bray Wanderers to keep name in Cabinteely merger". [[The Irish Times]].
  2. "Ireland - FA Intermediate Cup Winners and Runners-Up".
  3. Lynch, Frank. (1991). "A History of Athlone Town F.C: The First 101 Years". Arcadia.
  4. Graham, Alex. (2005). "Football in the Republic of Ireland a Statistical Record 1921–2005". Soccer Books Limited.
  5. "(Republic of) Ireland League Tables - Second Level".
  6. (20 February 2015). "What Happens (To) Teams That Enter The League Of Ireland First Division?". www.balls.ie.
  7. "Bray Wanderers 1 - 1 Dundalk | 1985/86 League Cup Group 4".
  8. "(Republic of) Ireland League Tables".
  9. Meehan, Sean. (15 May 2020). "The 1990 FAI Cup Final Remains One Of Irish Football's Great Stories".
  10. (June 2023). "Trabzonspor - Record against Bray Wanderers".
  11. Byrne, Cormac. (10 March 2017). "Bohs to re-unite Bray with special gift after it was found in strange place".
  12. Duffy, Michael. "Bray Wanderers A.F.C. – a brief history". Bray Wanderers A.F.C..
  13. Scully, Michael. (4 August 1999). "Football: Celtic Class Sees Off Wanderers; Bray Wanderers 0 Celtic 2.". [[Irish Mirror]].
  14. "Bray-Grasshoppers".
  15. Walsh, Daire. "Bray Wanderers 1–1 Monaghan United (7-6 on penalties)".
  16. "Bray let it slip on debut".
  17. McCormack, John. "Glentoran 3 - 0 Bray Wanderers".
  18. Dodge, John. (July 27, 2015). "What's Going On At Bray Wanderers?".
  19. (1 April 2015). "Alan Mathews and Bray staff resign en masse". [[RTÉ News]].
  20. (2015-04-02). "New Management Team Appointment". Bray Wanderers FC Website.
  21. (2 April 2015). "Maciej Tarnogrodzki named Bray caretaker coach". RTÉ News website (2/04/2015).
  22. (2015-05-11). "Croly Announced as Bray Manager". Bray Wanderers FC Website.
  23. (2015-05-11). "Trevor Croly unveiled as Bray Wanderers Manager". [[RTÉ News]].
  24. (28 July 2017). "Bizarre Bray missive invites more ridicule".
  25. (27 July 2017). "'The North Korea of Ireland for business, Conor McGregor and Barcelona' - Bray FC release truly bizarre statement".
  26. (13 September 2017). "STATEMENT ON BRAY WANDERERS FC". [[SSE Airtricity League]].
  27. (13 July 2018). "Bray Wanderers Players Reveal Plight As They Confirm Strike Action".
  28. "Troubled Bray Wanderers confirm takeover by academy coach Niall O'Driscoll".
  29. Goulden, David. (6 October 2018). "Bray relegated as Sligo win to secure top-flight status".
  30. (26 November 2021). "Cabinteely FC and Bray Wanderers set to merge after takeover agreement".
  31. (3 December 2021). "Bray Wanderers and Cabinteely confirm name of newly merged team".
  32. (2 May 2022). "Stewards forced to intervene as Pat Devlin and Bray fans in ugly exchange".
  33. (28 June 2022). "Bray Wanderers chief vows to take action over crowd trouble".
  34. (5 May 2022). "Bray give their backing to Pat Devlin after he was confronted by fans".
  35. (17 August 2022). "Bray Wanderers' Pat Devlin: "There's no point in kicking a dog when he's down"". Bray People.
  36. "SSE Airtricity League".
  37. (15 November 2022). "Ian Ryan appointed as head coach of Bray Wanderers".
  38. (22 May 2024). "Bray seeking new manager as Ian Ryan resigns". [[RTÉ]].
  39. (10 September 2024). "Lorcan Fitzgerald 'steps back' from first team coaching duties with Bray Wanderers/".
  40. (2 November 2024). "First Division Playoff Final Report: Bray Wanderers 2 - 2 Athlone Town AET (Bray win 4-2 on penalties)".
  41. (2025-03-07). "US soccer business becomes part-owner of Bray Wanderers, promising 'direct path to Europe' for American players".
  42. Fallon, John. (26 November 2021). "Bray Wanderers and Cabinteely announce merger to create 'dynamic new force in Irish football'".
  43. O'Connor, Sean. (26 November 2021). "US soccer business becomes part-owner of Bray Wanderers, promising 'direct path to Europe' for American players".
  44. Branigan, Peter. (September 3, 2025). "Consortium takes over at Bray Wanderers".
  45. Penrose, Gareth. (20 February 2025). "From Athlone to the Aviva:: A deep dive into a decade of League of Ireland attendances".
  46. (5 July 2025). "Match Report - Bray Wanderers 1 Wexford FC 0".
  47. Bailey, Ryan. (4 May 2015). "13 signs you're a hardcore Bray Wanderers fan".
  48. (February 2023). "Na Fanaithe (@NFanaithe08)".
  49. (23 August 2022). "Overwhelming feeling of positivity following first meeting of 1985 Seagulls Supporters Club".
  50. Duffy, Michael. (3 March 2019). "Supporters bus to Galway".
  51. "FAI Junior Cup Winners". stadium.aviva.ie.
  52. Mark Herbert, Donie Butler. (1994–95). "FAI Yearbook & Diary 1995". Sportsworld Ltd.
  53. "Club History 1920s to 1985". www.braywanderers.com.
  54. Graham, Alex. (2005). "Football in the Republic of Ireland a Statistical Record 1921–2005". Soccer Books Limited.
  55. "(Republic of) Ireland League Tables - Second Level".
  56. https://www.braywanderersfc.ie/club/history/
  57. [https://www.questia.com/read/1G1-135488906 Devoted Fan & Absent Boss Believe in Tony], The Mirror (London, England) 26 Aug 2005
  58. (18 May 2006). "McGuirk laments 'schoolboy' errors in Bray defence". [[Wicklow People]].
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