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Cirencester Town F.C.

Association football club in England


Summary

Association football club in England

FieldValue
clubnameCirencester Town
imageCirencester Town FC logo.png
fullnameCirencester Town Football Club
nicknameThe Centurions
founded1889
groundCorinium Stadium, Cirencester
capacity4,500 (550 seated)
chairmanSteve Abbley
managerJames Mortimer-Jones
league
season
position
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pattern_la2_yellowlowerpattern_b2=_blackcollarpattern_ra2=_yellowlowerpattern_sh2=pattern_so2=_blacktop
leftarm2000000body2=FFFF00rightarm2=000000shorts2=FFFF00socks2=FFFF00

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Cirencester Town Football Club is a football club based in Cirencester, Gloucestershire, England. Affiliated to the Gloucestershire County FA, the club are currently members of the and play at the Corinium Stadium.

History

The club was established in October 1889. They played in the Cheltenham League, winning the Division One title in 1927–28 and again in 1929–30. They joined the Gloucestershire Northern Senior League in 1935, but left after two season. Returning to the Cheltenham League, they were Division One champions again in 1948–49, before winning back-to-back titles in 1954–55 and 1955–56. However, they returned for the 1962–63 season. They left the league again at the end of the 1963–64 season, but returned in 1965 and were runners-up in 1965–66, before going on to win back-to-back titles in 1966–67 and 1967–68.

In 1968 Cirencester were founder members of the Gloucestershire County League, but after a single season in the new league they moved up to the Premier Division of the Hellenic League. They were relegated to Division One at the end of the 1971–72 season, but were promoted back to the Premier Division after winning Division One in 1973–74. The club returned to Division One after finishing bottom of the Premier Division in the 1977–78 season.

The 1990–91 season saw the club finish as Division One runners-up, earning promotion to the Premier Division. They were Premier Division runners-up the following season, and won the league in 1995–96, earning promotion to Division One South of the Southern League. The division was renamed Division One West in 1999, and after finishing third in 2003–04, the club were promoted to the Premier Division.

The next few years saw Cirencester becoming a yo-yo club as they were relegated in 2007–08 and then promoted in 2009–10 after finishing fifth and winning the promotion play-offs, beating AFC Totton 3–2 in the semi-final and Bridgwater Town 4–3 in the final. They were relegated again at the end of the 2011–12 season after finishing bottom of the Premier Division, but returned to the division after winning Division One South & West in 2013–14. In 2018–19 the club were runners-up in Division One South, qualifying for the promotion play-offs. However, they lost 2–1 to Cinderford Town in the semi-finals. The club finished third in 2021–22 season, going on to lose 4–1 to Winchester City in the play-off semi-finals. They were then transferred to Division One Central of the Southern League. At the end of the 2023–24 season, in which they had finished sixth in the division, the club were voluntarily relegated to the Premier Division of the Hellenic League.

Development team

The Development Team, born out of the previous season's Under-16s team, "made their bow" in the 2009–10 season playing in the Uhlsport Hellenic League Reserve Division 2 West, and against all expectations, won the division title convincingly to be promoted to the Reserve Division 1. After a restructuring of the Hellenic League they were allocated to Division 2 West which they duly won and were promoted to Division 1 West where they finished fourth in their first season. This team continues to provide a solid platform for younger players to develop and progress to the first team.

Ground

The club has played at the Corinium Stadium since moving from the Smithfield ground in 2002. The ground has also been used by Gloucester City (2008–2010) and Wootton Bassett Town. It has a capacity of 4,500, of which 550 is seated and 1,250 covered.

Honours

  • Southern League
    • Division One South & West champions 2013–14
  • Hellenic League
    • Premier Division champions 1995–96
    • Division One champions 1973–74
  • Gloucestershire Northern Senior League
    • Champions 1966–67, 1967–68
  • Cheltenham League
    • Division One champions 1927–28, 1929–30, 1948–49, 1954–55, 1955–56
    • Senior Charities Cup winners 1948–49, 1949–50, 1955–56
  • Gloucestershire Senior Cup
    • Winners 1995–96, 2015–16

Records

  • Highest league position: 7th in the Southern League Premier Division, 2004–05
  • Best FA Cup performance: Fourth qualifying round, 2001–02, 2003–04
  • Best FA Trophy performance: Third round, 2002–03
  • Best FA Vase performance: Third round: 1975–76, 1976–77
  • Record attendance: 2,600 vs Fareham Town, 1969
  • Record transfer fee paid: £4,000 to Gloucester City for Lee Smith

References

References

  1. Mike Williams & Tony Williams (2012) ''Non-League Club Directory 2013'', p510 {{ISBN. 978-1-869833-77-0
  2. [http://www.cheltenhamleague.co.uk/div1hist.html Division 1 winners] {{Webarchive. link. (2016-12-20 Cheltenham League)
  3. [http://www.nonleaguematters.co.uk/nlmnet/Aarg3EC/GNSL19.html Gloucestershire Northern Senior League 1919-1939] {{Webarchive. link. (2018-01-03 Non-League Matters)
  4. link. (2016-10-10 Non-League Matters)
  5. {{fchd
  6. The season also saw them win the [[Gloucestershire Senior Cup]], beating Endsleigh 2–1 in the final.[http://fchd.info/cups/gloucestershiresummary.htm Gloucestershire] {{Webarchive. link. (2020-08-25 Football Club History Database)
  7. [https://www.fchd.info/lghist/south2010.htm 2009-10 Southern League] {{Webarchive. link. (2020-08-25 Football Club History Database)
  8. [http://www.wiltsglosstandard.co.uk/sport/887003.the_standard_talks_to_cirencester_town_boss/ The Standard talks to Cirencester Town boss] {{Webarchive. link. (2016-12-01 Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard, 21 August 2006)
  9. [http://www.cheltenhamleague.co.uk/senior.html Senior Charities Cup winners] {{Webarchive. link. (2016-12-20 Cheltenham League)
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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