Heriot-Watt University F.C.

Heriot-Watt University Football Club is a football club based at Riccarton Campus, on the western fringes of Edinburgh. The club's first team plays in the East of Scotland Football League (Conference C). Home matches are played on a 3G synthetic pitch within the John Brydson Arena on the University campus at Riccarton. In weekend competition, the club also enters a team into the Lowland and East of Scotland Under-20 Development League; and another into Lothian & Edinburgh Amateur Football Association competition.

Heriot-Watt University
Full nameHeriot-Watt University Football Club
Nickname(s)The Watt
Founded1945
GroundHeriot-Watt Sports Academy, Riccarton, Edinburgh
Capacity1,800
CoachBanji Koya
LeagueEast of Scotland League First Division Conference B
2019–20East of Scotland League First Division Conference A, 5th of 12
WebsiteClub website

Heriot-Watt University F.C. also participates in a Community Club in partnership with two youth football clubs based in its locality, Currie Star F.C and Currie FC.

The current head coach, Banji Koya, who took over at the beginning of season 2016–17, is a former Heriot-Watt striker. As well as coaching the First Team squad in the East of Scotland League, he also takes charge of the Under-20 and BUCS First Team squads. The current top goalscorer of the club is Northern Irishman, Chris Donnelly, who was the first HWUFC player to reach one hundred goals in East of Scotland competition.

Notable former players include Adam Crozier, British businessman, chief executive and television executives; Chief Executive of ITV.

History

The club was founded around 1945 as Heriot-Watt College F.C. After Heriot-Watt became a university and moved most of its activity to its new campus at Riccarton, (a move which was substantially complete by 1971), the club, now named Heriot-Watt University F.C., applied to join the East of Scotland Football Association and League. It played in the league for the first time in season 1971–72 and has continued in membership since that time.

For the first three decades of its membership of the East of Scotland League, the club struggled to make an impact, although it did reach the Final of the East of Scotland Qualifying Cup in season 1973–74. The early years of the new century saw an improvement in the club's performances and for the first time it gained promotion to the Premier Division in 2005. The following season under head coach Billy Henderson the club won its first trophy, the East of Scotland League Cup, and finished in second place in the league, two points behind winners Edinburgh City.

The club was relegated twice during the course of the next five seasons, but on each occasion returned immediately as First Division champions. A second cup success occurred in 2009 when the King Cup was won.

Student competitions

A large part of the club's purpose is to provide the opportunity for football training and playing to as great a number of students as possible, so seven men's teams and one women's team are entered into the competitions operated by British Universities and Colleges Sport[1] (BUCS) and Scottish Student Sport (SSS),[2] with the matches being played on Wednesday afternoons. The Queen's Park Shield is the most prestigious trophy for male student football clubs from Scottish Universities and Colleges.

HWUFC first won the QPS in the 1972/73 season when the club shared it with the University of Aberdeen Football club. Despite winning ten games from ten across the season, HWUFC were docked points by the Scottish Amateur Football Association due to playing an ineligible player in an entirely separate East of Scotland League fixture that same season. Kenny Laird, who was previously registered as a professional player with Peebles Rovers Football club had been registered as an amateur player by HWUFC - due to this the club was banned from all football for five months and stripped of the Queen's Park Shield title. Following an appeal, it was agreed that the trophy would be shared with second placed side, the University of Aberdeen FC.

The club wouldn't win the QPS again until the 2002–03 season. In what was undoubtedly the 'Golden Generation' for the club, the trophy was retained the following four seasons. This five in a row achievement was the first of its kind by any University in the modern era of the competition.

Honours

Queens Park Shield

  • Champions (6): 1972–73, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2006–07

East of Scotland Football League First Division

East of Scotland League Cup

  • Winners: 2003–04

King Cup

  • Winners (2): 2005–06, 2008–09

References

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