Wexford F.C.
Full name | Wexford Football Club | ||
---|---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | Youths | ||
Founded | 2007 | ||
Ground | Ferrycarrig Park | ||
Capacity | 2,500 (609 temp seats) | ||
Manager | James Keddy | ||
League | League of Ireland First Division | ||
2023 | League of Ireland First Division, 4th of 10 | ||
Website | Club website | ||
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Wexford Football Club is an
History
Founding years
Wexford Youths were founded by developer and
Wexford Youths FC applied for a League of Ireland licence in December 2006,[9] and were officially granted a First Division licence on 6 February 2007.[1] The club has stated an intention to be a unique institution in Irish football in prioritising local players, and has only taken on players from the Wexford area.[1]
Wexford Youths' first game was away to
Wexford Youths finished their first season in ninth place (out of ten) in the league, five points clear of bottom club Kilkenny City.[15]
On 25 August 2008, the Youths achieved a famous victory in the League Cup semifinal, beating
Wexford Youths finished the 2008 season in seventh place.[18] The Youths rose a place in the 2009 season, finishing 6th out of an expanded 12 teams[19]
Before the beginning of the 2010 season, the Youths' captain, crowd favourite and record goal-scorer
Paul "Patsi" Malone returned to the Youths for the 2011 season, and later in the season Shane Dempsey returned to the club after a spell at
In December 2011, Noel O'Connor ended his management of the club, replaced by former
In 2015 under Shane Keegan's management, the Youths won the First Division and promotion to the League of Ireland Premier Division for the first time in their history.
The following season was a poor one for Wexford Youths. They lost 22 and won just 6 of their 33 league games. They finished 11th in the
Reborn as Wexford FC
In September 2017, the club announced that Wexford Supporters' Trust, a supporter's co-op, were to take ownership of the club. The club finished their first season under the new name in 7th place in the First Division. After poor results Locke was let go by the club in 2018, with Brian O'Sullivan appointed as the new manager for the 2019 season. In the latter half of the season, centre back Darragh O'Connor made a transfer to Premier League side
In May 2021, Brian O'Sullivan departed as manager by mutual consent after 7 defeats from the first 7 games of the season.[29]
Ian Ryan was appointed as the new senior team manager in May 2021.[30] Ryan had an immediate impact at the club, bringing Wexford to the FAI Cup quarter final (equalling their best ever finish) and late season wins over UCD, Bray Wanderers, Athlone Town, Cobh Ramblers and Cabinteely. Wexford finished third in the table based on the final series of games, boding well for the following year.
Wexford made their best ever start to a season in 2022, with two wins in their opening three games against Cobh Ramblers and Athlone Town. Wexford continued to challenge for the playoff places, with a memorable win over Longford Town thanks to goals from Luka Lovic and Conor Barry [31]
The club announced a major restructuring plan late in 2022 with the appointment of Tony Doyle as new CEO of the club. They picked up another historic result soon after, defeating Premier Division side
Wexford ended the season in 6th position, failing to reach the playoffs but a noted improvement on previous seasons. Manager Ian Ryan unexpectedly announced his resignation after the end of the season. [33]
James Keddy was named as Ian Ryan's replacement as manager on 17th November 2022. After a strong performance in the second half of the 2023 season, Wexford secured their first ever playoff finish in the First Division with a fourth place finish.
In November 2023, the club announced plans to move to a new 6000 seater stadium in Wexford Town.[34] The following month, they announced a full amalgamation with the women's side of the club.
Colours and Badge
The home kit was pink shirt, pink shorts and white socks. The away strip is a black shirt, black shorts and white socks.
The original badge featured the club motto 'Play the beautiful game' and the words 'Life's short, work hard, play hard', a motto used by Wallace Construction for many years, having previously been placed on the kits of
In December of 2022, Wexford underwent another logo change, opting to use the traditional GAA colours of purple and yellow. The new logo consists of a purple background with three pikes in reference to the 1798 Rebellion in the shape of a W, with a football on both the far left and far right of the logo adjacent to the left-most and right-most pikes.[35]
Stadium
Wexford play at Ferrycarrig Park. It has a current seated capacity of just over 600 but plans are in place to extend this to over 2000.
Records
Most appearances for Wexford FC
# | Name | Career | Appearances |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Danny Furlong | 2007–2016, 2019, 2023 | 272 |
2 | Patsy Malone | 2007–2013 | 173 |
3 | Graham Doyle | 2012–2017 | 172 |
4 | Anthony Russell | 2007–2011 | 148 |
5 | Shane Dempsey | 2007–2012, 2016 | 128 |
Most goals scored for Wexford FC
# | Name | Career | Goals |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Danny Furlong | 2007-2016, 2019, 2023 | 119 |
2 | Aaron Dobbs | 2018- | 33 |
3 | Eric Molloy | 2012–2016 | 23 |
4 | Aidan Keenan | 2012–2016 | 22 |
= | Gavin Doyle | 2007-2009 | 22 |
Wexford FC Supporters' Player of the Year
Club records
- Biggest home victory – 7–0 vs. Cabinteely – 24 April 2015 and vs Athlone Town – 20 April 2018
- Biggest away victory – 0–6 vs. Kerry FC – 26 May 2023
- Biggest defeat – 0–8 vs. UCD(a) – 4 September 2020.
- Biggest Attendance – 3,000 vs. EA Sports Cup Final 27 September 2008[37]
- Biggest League Attendance – 2,100 vs. Cobh Ramblers. – 18 March 2007[38]
- Most points in a season – 61 in 2015
Current squad
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Club Officials
Position | Staff |
---|---|
CEO | Tony Doyle |
Head of Football | John Godkin |
Head of Academy | Mark Ross |
Manager | James Keddy |
Assistant Manager | Denis Hyland |
Goalkeeper Coach | Ian Fowler |
Doctor | Ravi Kumar |
Physio | Sean Mulligan |
Honours
- Men's
- League of Ireland First Division
- Winners: 2015
- League of Ireland Cup
- Runners-up: 2008
- FAI Youth Cup
- Winners: 2008, 2012
- Leinster Senior Cup
- Runners-up: 2016
- Women's National League
- FAI Women's Cup
- Winners: 2015, 2018, 2019, 2021
- WNL Cup
- Winners: 2013–14
- WNL Shield
- Winners: 2015–16
References
- ^ a b c "Wexford Youths to play in First Division", RTÉ.ie (6 February 2007).
- ^ "Dublin City goes bust with €1.5m debt", thepost.ie (12 October 2007).
- ^ "FAI assumes control of eircom League", RTÉ.ie (12 October 2007).
- ^ "Limerick 37 granted league licence", RTÉ.ie (12 October 2007).
- ^ "Wexford Youths | Airtricity League - Real Football, Real Fans". www.airtricityleague.com. Archived from the original on 4 March 2010. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
- ^ Duffy, Emma (3 February 2017). "Change at Wexford FC as they drop the 'Youths' and unveil new club crest". The42.
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ "All systems go for Wexford FC Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine", Wexford Echo (15 February 2007).
- ^ "Wallace confident of being in Eircom league next season", New Ross Standard (12 October 2007).
- ^ "Mons Miserable Draw With Wexford", monaghanunited.ie (13 April 2007).
- ^ "Wexford Youths Record First League Win", rte.ie (13 April 2007).
- ^ "Waterford United 3–0 Wexford Youths", rte.ie (13 April 2007).
- ^ "Limerick 37 1–1 Wexford Youths", rte.ie (19 June 2007).
- ^ "Wexford Youths 0–1 Limerick 37", rte.ie (4 July 2007).
- ^ "Eircom League First Division 2007 League Table", walkthechalk.com (12 November 2007).
- ^ "Cork City 0–1 Wexford Youths Archived 28 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine", RTE.ie (3 November 2008).
- ^ "Wexford Youths 1–6 Derry City Archived 28 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine", RTE.ie (3 November 2008).
- ^ "Division One League Table 2008", Extratime.ie (15 November 2008).
- ^ "Extratime.com - Extratime.ie - League Tables - League of Ireland Premier Division -". www.extratime.com.
- ^ "RTÉ Sport: Bermingham joins St Patrick's Athletic". www.rte.ie. Archived from the original on 30 January 2010. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
- ^ "Wexford Youths 1 - 0 Waterford United - Extratime.ie - League of Ireland". www.extratime.ie. Archived from the original on 18 March 2012. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
- ^ "Shelbourne 1-2 Wexford Youths - Extratime.ie - League of Ireland". www.extratime.ie. Archived from the original on 18 March 2012. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
- ^ "Wexford Youths v Limerick FC - Ferrycarrig Park - Extratime.ie - League of Ireland Fixtures". www.extratime.ie. Archived from the original on 18 March 2012. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
- ^ [2] Archived 24 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Mervue United 2 - 5 Wexford Youths". ExtraTime.com.
- ^ "Wexford Youths -v- Salthill Devon". ExtraTime.com.
- ^ "Wexford Youths 4 - 1 Derry City". ExtraTime.com.
- ^ "Wexford Youths v Waterford United - Ferrycarrig Park - Extratime.ie - League of Ireland Fixtures". www.extratime.ie. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
- ^ "Club Statement 10th May 2021". wexfordfc.ie.
- ^ "Wexford FC announce Ian Ryan as new senior manager". wexfordfc.ie.
- ^ "Wexford FC v Longford Town – Soccer". 7 May 2022.
- ^ wexfordfc.ie
- ^ "Club statement: Ian Ryan". Archived from the original on 29 November 2022. Retrieved 28 October 2023.
- ^ "Plans to move Wexford FC to new 6,000 capacity stadium". 13 November 2023.
- ^ "A New Look for Wexford FC". Wexford FC. 5 December 2022. Retrieved 7 December 2022.
- ^ [3][dead link]
- ^ "The Fan-Site of Ireland's Wexford FC". www.wexfordyouthsfc.ie.
- ^ "Wexford Youths Record First League Win", rte.ie (12 November 2007).
External links
- Wexford FC Wexford FC Official Website
- Supporters Club Wexford Youths Supporters Club
- Foot.ie Wexford Youths discussion forum