Brentwood Town F.C.

Coordinates: 51°38′2.400″N 0°18′2.160″E / 51.63400000°N 0.30060000°E / 51.63400000; 0.30060000
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Brentwood Town
Full nameBrentwood Town Football Club
Nickname(s)The Blues
Founded1954
GroundBrentwood Centre Arena, Brentwood
Capacity1,000 (50 seated)[1]
ChairmanJez Dickinson
ManagerKeith Rowland
LeagueIsthmian League North Division
2022–23Isthmian League North Division, 8th of 20
WebsiteClub website

Brentwood Town Football Club is a football club based in Brentwood, Essex, England. They are currently members of the Isthmian League North Division and play at the Brentwood Centre Arena.

History

A Brentwood Football Club was established in the 19th century, and played in the FA Cup several times, reaching the quarter-finals in 1885–86, where they were beaten 3–1 by eventual winners Blackburn Rovers.[2] They were also briefly members of Division One of the South Essex League for the 1896–97 season, but left after finishing bottom of the division. The club were later replaced as the town's main club by amateur club Brentwood & Warley.[3] Brentwod & Warley joined Division One A of the South Essex League in 1921 and were runners-up in their first season in the league. They finished bottom of Division One in 1926–27, but were runners-up the following season, after which they joined Division One East of the Spartan League.[4]

League reorganisation at the end of the 1928–29 season saw Brentwood & Warley placed in the Premier Division, where they remained until leaving the league at the end of the 1933–34 season.[4] They rejoined the league in 1948, and were runners-up in 1948–49.[5] In 1951 they were founder members of the Delphian League and were its inaugural champions.[6] The club went on to win the league again in 1958–59 and 1959–60. In 1963 they joined Division Two of the Athenian League in 1963 after the Delphian League was disbanded.[6]

In 1965 the club turned professional and became Brentwood Town.

Football League club Reading 1–0 in the first round, before defeating Hendon 2–0 in the second round. The third round saw them drawn at home against Northampton Town, with a record crowd of over 4,000 seeing the club lose 1–0.[7] In the league the club briefly topped the table in September, and eventually finished ninth. However, at the end of the season the club directors decided to merge the club with Chelmsford City. The club's ground was sold for housing.[7]

Modern club

After Brentwood Town were dissolved, Manor Athletic changed their name to Brentwood Athletic.[7][8] Manor Athletic had been established in 1954,[9] and joined the Essex Olympian League in 1967, winning the League Cup in their first season. In 1974 the club was renamed again, becoming simply Brentwood, and joined the Essex Senior League.[10][11] They went on to win the League Cup in 1975–76, 1978–79, 1990–91

In 2000–01 the club won their first Essex Senior League title, although they finished third from bottom of the league the following season.[11] In 2004 the club adopted its current name.[12] After winning the Essex Senior League for the second time in 2006–07, and also winning the League Cup, the club was promoted to Division One North of the Isthmian League.[12] In 2008–09 they finished third and qualified for the promotion play-offs, but lost 4–1 at home to Waltham Abbey. In 2010–11 the club finished fifth and qualified for the play-offs again. After defeating Needham Market 3–1 in the semi-finals, they lost 3–2 to Wingate & Finchley in the final.[13] They qualified for the play-offs again after a fourth-place finish in 2014–15, and after beating AFC Sudbury on penalties in the semi-final, they defeated Thurrock 5–0 in the final to earn promotion to the Premier Division. However, the following season saw them finish in the relegation zone, resulting in relegation back to Division One North.[12]

Ground

Manor Athletic played at King George's Playing Fields until moving to Larkin's Playing Field in 1957.[14] In 1992 they were required to leave the ground in order to maintain senior status, and groundshared at East Thurrock United's Rookery Hill.[14] The following year they moved to the Brentwood Centre, with the opening match played on 9 October 1993.[14] Initially the only spectator facilities was a covered area adjacent to the clubhouse; seats were later installed in one half of the stand.[15] Floodlights were installed in 1999.[14] A new record attendance was set in August 2004 when a crowd of 472 watched a friendly match against a West Ham United XI.[15]

Coaching staff

Role Name
Manager Keith Rowland
Assistant Manager Steve Butterworth
Goalkeeping Coach Vacant
Kit Manager Nathan Lugg
Source: Brentwood Town F.C.

List of managers

Years Name
1972–1976 England David Emerick
1978–1999 England Derrick Stittle
1999–2004 England Paul Delea
2004–2005 England Andy Macdonald
2005–2006 England Tony Myers
2006–2008 England Steve Witherspoon
2008–2009 Wales Carl Griffiths
2009–2011 England Les Whitton
2011–2013 England Steve Witherspoon
2013 England Les Whitton
2013–2015 England Danny Dafter & Adam Flanagan
2015 England Danny Dafter
2015 England Dean Holdsworth
2015 England George Borg
2015–2016 England Mike Flanagan
2016–2017 England Tony Ievoli
2017–2019 England Craig Shipman
2019–2020 England Ryan O'Rawe
2020–2021 England Adam Flanagan
2021–2023 England Rod Stringer
2023–2023 England Craig Shipman

Honours

  • Essex Senior League
    • Champions 2000–01, 2006–07
    • League Cup winners 1975–76, 1978–79, 1990–91, 2006–07
  • Gordon Brasted Memorial Trophy
    • Winners 2006–07
  • Harry Fisher Memorial Trophy
    • Winners 1995–96
  • Essex Olympian League
    • League Cup Winners 1967–68

Records

See also

References

  1. ^ Brentwood {1} at the Football Club History Database
  2. ^ a b Club History Brentwood Town F.C.
  3. ^ a b Spartan League 1907–1934 Non-League Matters
  4. ^ Spartan League 1934–1955 Non-League Matters
  5. ^ a b Brentwood & Warley at the Football Club History Database
  6. ^ a b c d Memories of FA Cup glory in 1969 Brentwood Town
  7. ^ Manor Athletic at the Football Club History Database
  8. ^ About BTFC Brentwood Town Football Club
  9. ^ Brentwood Athletic at the Football Club History Database
  10. ^ a b Brentwood at the Football Club History Database
  11. ^ a b c d e f Brentwood Town at the Football Club History Database
  12. ^ 2010–11 Isthmian League FCHD
  13. ^ a b c d Brentwood Town Pyramid Passion
  14. ^ a b Jon Weaver (2005) The Football Grounds of Rural Essex, p11
  15. ^ "Ashley heads Blues into the final". Phoenix FM. 27 April 2022.

External links

51°38′2.400″N 0°18′2.160″E / 51.63400000°N 0.30060000°E / 51.63400000; 0.30060000