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Dorking Wanderers F.C.

Association football club in Dorking, England


Association football club in Dorking, England

FieldValue
clubnameDorking Wanderers
imageDorking Wanderers FC crest.svg
upright0.8
fullnameDorking Wanderers Football Club
founded1999
groundMeadowbank, Dorking
chairmanMarc White
managerMarc White
nicknameWanderers
league
season
position
websitedorkingwanderers.com
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Dorking Wanderers Football Club is a professional football club based in Dorking, Surrey, England. Affiliated to the Surrey County Football Association, they are currently members of and play at Meadowbank. Formed in 1999 by a group of friends as a recreational amateur team playing grassroots football, the club began life in the Crawley & District League and went on to win twelve promotions in their first 23 seasons, reaching the National League in 2022, where they remained for two seasons before suffering their first-ever relegation. Having played for the club in its earlier years, club founder Marc White continues to be the chairman and first team manager to the present day.

History

The club was formed in 1999 by businessman Marc White and friends Peter Buckland, Mark Lewington, Ian Davidson, Lee Spickett, and Penny Gregg. White described at the time of the formation of the club he and his friends were season ticket holders at Wimbledon and had become disillusioned with how the club was being run coming to the end of its Premier League tenure. The group decided to do something else with their weekends and so Dorking Wanderers were formed as an amateur recreational team. The club initially played in the Crawley & District League. After their first season in the Crawley League they switched to Division Four of the West Sussex League, winning the division at the first attempt. In 2001–02 the club finished as Division Three runners-up, earning a third consecutive promotion. After winning Division Two in 2003–04 they were promoted to Division One, and a third-place finish in Division One in 2005–06 saw them promoted to the Premier Division.

In 2006–07 Wanderers won the West Sussex League's Premier Division, clinching the title with a victory on the last day of the season. They went on to win Division Three in 2010–11, earning promotion to Division Two. A third-place finish in Division Two the following season was enough to see them promoted to Division One. the club appealed to the Football Association, who overruled the decision after an independent ground grading visit confirmed that the ground reached the mandatory standards for Division One football. The team initially struggled in Division One, finishing third-from-bottom in 2012–13. However, they finished second in 2014–15, earning promotion to Division One South of the Isthmian League.

In Wanderers' first season in the Isthmian League they finished as runners-up in Division One South, qualifying for the promotion play-offs, going on to lose 2–1 to Faversham Town in the semi-finals.

In the 2021–22 season Wanderers finished second in the National League South, going on to defeat Ebbsfleet United 3–2 in the play-off final, earning promotion to the National League for the first time in the club's history. They also won the Surrey Senior Cup, beating Kingstonian 5–4 on penalties after the final had ended in a 1–1 draw. The club's second season in the fifth tier saw them finish second-from-bottom of the division, resulting in relegation to the National League South, the first time the club had been relegated.

Season-by-season record

SeasonTierDivisionPldWDLGFGAPtsPos
1999–00?Crawley & District Leaguecolspan=9 rowspan=8
2000–0116West Sussex League Division Four
2001–0215West Sussex League Division Three
2002–0314West Sussex League Division Two
2003–04West Sussex League Division Two
2004–0513West Sussex League Division One
2005–06West Sussex League Division One
2006–0712West Sussex League Premier Division
2007–0811Sussex County League Division Three2412755847424/13
2008–09Sussex County League Division Three2615297045475/14
2009–10Sussex County League Division Three2815677844514/15
2010–11Sussex County League Division Three302424933574
2011–1210Sussex County League Division Two342167804869
2012–139Sussex County League Division One4210112162804120/22
2013–14Sussex County League Division One38167156863558/20
2014–15Sussex County League Division One3826571015183
2015–168Isthmian League Division One South46279109956902/24
2016–17Isthmian League Division One South46336710344105
2017–187Isthmian League Premier Division4616102077805814/24
2018–19Isthmian League Premier Division422895873193
2019–206National League South35148135856507/22
2020–21National League South1812334017391/21
2021–22National League South4025691015381
2022–235National League461692167915716/24
2023–24National League4612925549445
2024–256National League South46241488954866/24
2025–26National League Southto be decided}}

Reserve team

In 2015 the club's reserve team were promoted from the Suburban League to Division One of the Combined Counties League. However, they left the league at the end of the season as the club were set to groundshare with Dorking during the 2016–17 season. The reserve team rejoined the Combined Counties League at the start of the 2018–19 season. In 2021 they were transferred to Division One of the Southern Combination.

Ground

St Martin's Church

The club initially played at Brockham Big Field, before moving to the Westhumble Playing Fields on London Road in 2007. Floodlights were installed in 2012. In July 2018 the club relocated to a refurbished Meadowbank ground, Their first game at Meadowbank was a friendly match against Sutton United on 17 July 2018.

Meadowbank had become the home ground of Dorking F.C. in 1953. However, they were forced to leave the ground in 2013 after it was shut down for failing to meet health and safety requirements. Prior to Dorking Wanderers moving to the ground, it was upgraded to include a 300-seat stand, two covered standing areas and a 3G pitch as it was converted to a community sports facility at a cost of £5m. The Surrey County Football Association also moved their headquarters to Meadowbank when it reopened.

In February 2020 the club announced that planning permission had been granted to upgrade Meadowbank Stadium to grade B status. In July 2020 the stadium passed the grade B status assessment. By September 2020 work had been completed on a new seated stand and a new covered terrace both at the east end of the ground, taking Meadowbank's official capacity to 3,000. In March 2023 an uncovered 1,200-capacity terrace was opened at the west end of the ground.

Current squad

Out on loan

B Team and Academy

  • Players to have at least one first-team appearance for Dorking Wanderers.

Honours

  • Isthmian League
    • Premier Division champions 2018–19
  • Southern Combination
    • Division Three champions 2010–11
  • West Sussex League
    • Premier Division champions 2006–07
    • Division Two North champions 2003–04
    • Division Four North champions 2000–01
  • Surrey Senior Cup
    • Winners 2021–22

Records

Notes

References

References

  1. [https://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/football/news/dorking-wanderers-marc-white-premierleague-29531313 Non-league success story Dorking Wanderers targeting Premier League dream]
  2. [https://archive.today/20130505083744/http://www.thisissurreytoday.co.uk/Dorking-Wanderers-manager-praises-Surrey-FA-fair/story-18544040-detail/story.html%23axzz2RmADCKXU Dorking Wanderers manager praises Surrey FA as 'fair and responsible'] This is Surrey, 28 March 2013
  3. "Club History". Dorking Wanderers.
  4. (11 October 2019). "'Real-life Championship Manager': the incredible rise of Dorking Wanderers".
  5. [https://web.archive.org/web/20170118221629/http://www.dorkingwanderers.com/history History] Dorking Wanderers F.C.
  6. [https://web.archive.org/web/20130927072227/http://files.pitchero.com/clubs/23011/DorkingWanderershistory.doc A History Of Dorking Wanderers F.C.] Dorking Wanderers F.C.
  7. As a result, the club were promoted to Division Three of the [[Southern Combination Football League
  8. Although the league initially denied them entry to the division as their ground was not deemed to meet the requirements,[https://web.archive.org/web/20130928055130/http://www.thisissurreytoday.co.uk/League-secretary-slams-Wanderers/story-15932451-detail/story.html League secretary slams Wanderers] This is Surrey, 27 April 2012
  9. [https://web.archive.org/web/20130928055133/http://www.thisissurreytoday.co.uk/Champagne-corks-fly-Wanderers/story-16524035-detail/story.html Champagne corks fly as Wanderers] This is Surrey, 12 July 2012
  10. Panting, Matthew. (2022-05-21). "Report: Ebbsfleet denied promotion in controversial fashion".
  11. Stobbart, Dan. (2022-05-18). "Wanderers win the Surrey Senior Cup".
  12. (13 April 2024). "Many Matters Now Settled With Just One Week Left To Go".
  13. Osborn, Oliver. (18 February 2021). "National League Statement {{!}} Outcome Of Written Resolutions".
  14. {{fchd
  15. [https://web.archive.org/web/20160415123057/http://combinedcounties.pitchero.com/dorking-wanderers-reserves-submit-their-resignatio-29987 Groundshare ends Membership for Reserve Side] Combined Counties League
  16. (January 2018)
  17. which had previously been home to [[Dorking F.C.]] prior to their disbanding.[http://www.surreymirror.co.uk/dorking-s-137-year-old-football-club-is-closing-down-leaving-just-one-senior-team-in-the-town/story-30135988-detail/story.html Dorking's 137 year old football club is closing down leaving just one senior team in the town]{{Dead link. (November 2018)
  18. "Return to Meadowbank", ''[[Groundtastic]]'', Autumn 2018, pp28–33
  19. "Meadowbank Stadium".
  20. "First Team – Dorking Wanderers".
  21. "Specsavers Surrey Senior Cup Results". Surrey FA.
  22. (7 April 2023). "Cards come out on top in Surrey derby". Dorking Wanderers F.C..
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