Bridlington Town A.F.C.

Bridlington Town Association Football Club are an English football club, based in Bridlington, in the East Riding of Yorkshire. They were founded in 1918 and currently play in the Northern Counties East League Premier Division. The club's reserve team play in the Humber Premier League division 1.

Bridlington Town
Full nameBridlington Town Association Football Club
Nickname(s)The Seasiders
Brid
Founded1918 as Bridlington Central United (reformed as Bridlington Town 1920)
GroundQueensgate
Bridlington,
East Riding of Yorkshire
Capacity3,000 (740 seated)
ChairmanPeter Smurthwaite[1]
ManagerBrett Agnew
LeagueNorthern Counties East League Premier Division
2019–20Northern Counties East League Premier Division (season abandoned)

History

The club was founded in 1918 as Bridlington Central United after the First World War. The team joined the Driffield and District Minor League, soon joining the Driffield and District League. After several seasons of hard work, the team were promoted into the East Riding Amateur League, they won the championship five consecutive times during the 1950s. They also won the East Riding Senior Cup twice around this time.

Yorkshire League

The club changed their name to Bridlington Town F.C. in 1920 and moved into the Yorkshire League Division Two, during their first season in that league, they finished runners up and were promoted. In 1960–61 they reached the First Round proper of the FA Cup eventually losing out to Bishop Auckland who were very strong at the time.

In the mid to late 1960s, Town built up a rivalry with fellow Bridlington side Bridlington Trinity. During the 1966–67 season in the Yorkshire League, Town won the championship while Trinity finished second. The following year it would be Trinity who took the title and Town finished in third. This rivalry continued until the early 1970s when Trinity became part of the Midland League.

Northern Counties East League

In 1982 the club were one of the founder members of the Northern Counties East League after the Yorkshire and Midland Leagues were merged. They were put into Northern Counties East League Division One, here they stayed for four seasons.

By 1986–87, they were promoted to the Northern Counties East League Premier Division, even though they only finished sixth. This was because several teams in the Premier Division had resigned in the close season. This gave Town the opportunity to ignite their old rivalry with Bridlington Trinity, for the first time since the early 1970s.

During the first three seasons in the Premier Division, Town finished higher. With a third and a fourth place, while Trinity were in the bottom half. The 1989–90 season was the concluding showdown for the two clubs. Town were crowned champions, while Trinity ended the season a respectable fourth. This would prove to be the end of the rivalry as Trinity folded due to the termination of their groundshare with Bridlington Town. Unfortunately for Bridlington, they were unable to put the icing on the cake in their FA Vase final clash at Wembley with Yeading, they drew the game, but lost in the replay 1–0 at Elland Road.

Cup and League success, before folding

Ken Richardson had joined the club as President and was essential in helping the club with the necessary finance to develop their ground, in order to climb the football ladder. They added a new stand, clubhouse, turnstiles and floodlights.

Town marched on to the Northern Premier League Division One. The 1992–93 season was the most successful in the club's history, they finished as champions of the NPL Division One, and they finally took the FA Vase at Wembley, beating Tiverton Town 1–0. Alan Radford scored the only goal of the game.

The sunny spell would not last. Due to legalities, the team was forced to play their home games at Doncaster Rovers' ground; Belle Vue. The club went into turmoil. They finished 21st in the Northern Premier League Premier Division and were deducted three points. Instead of going into Northern Premier League Division One, they folded.

Return

A local pub team The Greyhound, approached the lease-holders of Bridlington Town's former stadium Queensgate, looking for it to become their base. A deal was struck under the condition that the team would change their name to Bridlington Town AFC, essentially bringing the old club back to the town.

The Greyhound club agreed and a new club crest was designed and a new motto "Pergere et Eniti", which means "Onwards and Upwards". The club returned on 10 September 1994, and were put into the league where they had originally played during their formative years; the Driffield and District League, it was literally back to square one.

Bridlington progressed steadily, gaining entry to the East Riding County League Division One, they won the league and cup double. After three seasons in the East Riding County League Premier Division, Town finished runners-up and applied for promotion back into the Northern Counties East League Division One. They were accepted and spent three seasons at this level; finishing fifth, and then fourth, before achieving promotion with a runners-up spot in 2001–02.

Town made their mark in 2002–03, reaching the quarter-final of the FA Vase before going out to Brigg Town. And they also reached the Fourth Qualifying Round of the FA Cup, eventually losing to Conference National side Southport. Bridlington Town won the league that year, they were crowned champions with 20 points ahead of the runners-up.

Recent times

The club were back in the Northern Premier League Division One and focused all their attention on it. Bridlington Town finished eleventh but were promoted back into the Northern Premier League Premier Division after the league was re-organised. Amazingly in 10 years after they were forced to start again, the club had pulled themselves back up to the highest division they had been in. It took the original club 85 years to reach that level.

In 2007, it was announced that Bridlington Town would play in the inaugural season of the Northern Premier League Division One North. However a disastrous campaign followed, and they finished bottom of the division, and were relegated to the Northern Counties East League Premier Division. In 2012 The Seasiders won the East Riding Senior Cup, beating Hall Road Rangers (res) 9–2 in the final at the KC Stadium.[2] They won the cup again in 2015 beating Hull United F.C. 4–2.[3]

In September 2016 Curtis Woodhouse was appointed as manager at Bridlington Town.[4] Curtis Woodhouse remained as manager until September 2018.

Since the departure of Curtis Woodhouse the team had been managed by aspiring caretaker manager Brett Agnew along with assistant Anthony Bowsley and after a successful trial period they were given the post on a permanent basis. The Seasiders finished a creditable 3rd place in the league and won the East Riding Senior Cup Final against Hull City u23s 3-1. The story continues

Current squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK  ENG James Hitchcock
GK  ENG Jody Barford
DF  ENG Chris Jenkinson
DF  ENG Benn Lewis
DF  ENG Fraser Papprill
DF  ENG Jack Bulless
DF  ENG Mike Thompson
MF  ENG Matt Broadley
MF  ENG Stuart Oliver
MF  ENG Andy Norfolk (Captain)
MF  ENG Lewis Dennison
MF  ENG Ben Flowerdew
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF  ENG Tom Fleming
MF  ENG Ben Leyland
MF  ENG Anthony Bowsley
MF  ENG
FW  ENG Joe McFadyen
FW  ENG Nathan Modest
FW  ENG Joel Sutton
FW  ENG Chris Adams
FW  SCO Brett Agnew
FW  ENG Jamie Reeson
FW  ENG Mark Hutchinson
FW  ENG

Honours

Records

References

  1. Unibond League Archived 2 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "Comeback kings crown season with cup final win". Bridlington Free Press. 18 May 2012. Archived from the original on 30 July 2017. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  3. "Hat-trick hero Hogg wins Senior Cup for Bridlington". Bridlington Free Press. 12 May 2015. Archived from the original on 30 July 2017. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  4. "BREAKING: Woodhouse 'delighted' to be new Bridlington Town boss". Bridlington Free Press. 30 September 2016. Archived from the original on 5 October 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2016.

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