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Loughborough F.C.

Former association football club in England


Summary

Former association football club in England

FieldValue
clubnameLoughborough
fullnameLoughborough Athletic and Football Club
founded1886
dissolved1900
groundAthletic Ground, Loughborough
leagueFootball League Second Division
season1899–1900
position18th (out of 18)
pattern_la1_black_stripespattern_b1=_blackstripespattern_ra1=_black_stripesleftarm1=FFFFFFbody1=FFFFFFrightarm1=FFFFFFshorts1=000099socks1=000000

Loughborough Athletic and Football Club were an English football club based in Loughborough, Leicestershire, that played in the Football League at the end of the 19th century.

History

The club started life as Loughborough Football Club in 1886 from a merger of Victoria and Athletic, the two senior sides in the town, using the latter's ground then called Bromhead or Hubbard Cricket Ground. November 1887 saw merger with the local athletics club to form Loughborough Athletic and Football Club. The club was also known as Loughborough Town, the reserve side as Loughborough Athletic, and third XI as Loughborough Rovers.

In 1891 the club joined the Midland League. After winning the league title in 1894–95, Loughborough were elected to the Football League Second Division after Millwall Athletic turned down an invitation to join.

The club struggled in the Second Division, never finishing higher than 12th (out of 16). In 1900 the club finished bottom of the League, conceding 100 goals in 34 games, winning only a single game and collecting only 8 points of a possible 68, arguably the worst record in the history of the League—only Doncaster Rovers have an equally low points record, set in 1904–05, but they had a somewhat better goal average. This season saw their record League defeat, 12–0 at Woolwich Arsenal; due to financial constraints the team consisted of four professionals and seven amateurs and their travelling expenses were paid for by Arsenal.

After failing to gain re-election to the League in 1900, the club applied for acceptance back into the Midland League, but failed to turn up for the fixtures meeting on 9 June. On 29 June a meeting was held when it was decided that the club was defunct.

League history

SeasonLevelLeaguePositionFA Cup
1890–914Midland Alliance3rd of 8Fourth round qualifying
1891–923Midland League8th of 11
1892–933Midland League3rd of 13First round
1893–943Midland League3rd of 11Fourth round qualifying
1894–953Midland League1st of 14 (elected to the Football League)Fourth round qualifying (Replay)
1895–962Football League Second Division12th of 16Third round qualifying
1896–972Football League Second Division13th of 16
United League4th of 8
1897–982Football League Second Division16th of 16
United League9th of 9
1898–992Football League Second Division17th of 18
1899–19002Football League Second Division18th of 18 (failed re-election to English Football League)
Source: Football Club History Database

Successor clubs

Several clubs have since represented the town of Loughborough:

  • Loughborough Corinthians emerged and became founder members of the Leicestershire League, which they won twice before the outbreak of World War I. In 1925, after some good FA Cup runs, the team stepped up to the Midland League, where they played until their demise in 1933.
  • Loughborough United were formed and were elected to Midland League in 1961. The 1960s were a good time for the club, as they were league champions in 1963 and twice reached the 1st round proper of the FA Cup. However, the success was short-lived, and after some difficult seasons they left the league in 1973 after finishing bottom for the second successive season.
  • A second Loughborough FC came into existence in 1988, when Loughborough J.O.L. (formerly Thorpe Acre Hallam) changed their name to Loughborough FC. The club competed in the Central Midlands League, but left and apparently folded in 1990.
  • A third Loughborough FC appeared when Loughborough Athletic dropped the "Athletic" suffix in 2001. The club were members of the Midland Football Combination, but resigned from the league in the summer of 2006, stepping down to the North Leicestershire Football League, at level 13 of the English football league system.
  • Loughborough Dynamo were founded in 1955 and were promoted to the Northern Premier League Division One South, in 2008, before eventually dropping back down to Division One of the Leicestershire Senior League.

Sources

Cited sources

Bibliography

References

  1. "Loughborough".
  2. (4 March 1893). "Loughborough". Football News (Nottingham).
  3. Richard Lindsay (1991) ''Millwall: A Complete Record, 1885–1991'', p27 {{isbn. 0907969941
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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