Free State Stars F.C.

Football club From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Free State Stars F.C.

Free State Stars Football club was a South African professional soccer club based in Bethlehem, Free State that played in the National First Division. Formerly known as Makwane Computer Stars, Fairway Stars[2] and Qwa Qwa Stars, their most significant honour was winning the 1994 Coca-Cola Cup and 2017–18 Nedbank Cup.

Quick Facts Full name, Nickname(s) ...
Free State Stars F.C.
Full nameFree State Stars Football Club
Nickname(s)Ea Lla Koto
Founded1977; 48 years ago (1977) (as Makwane Computer Stars)
GroundGoble Park, Bethlehem
Capacity20,000
ChairmanMike Mokoena
CoachInnocent Mayoyo[1]
LeagueNational First Division
2020–215th
Close
Former club crest
Former club crest

The club sold their National First Division status to Casric F.C. at the start of the 2022–23 season. Following the sale of Bloemfontein Celtic the previous year, this left the Free State without any representatives in professional football.[3]

History

Founded in 1977 in a small village of Makwane in an area then known as QwaQwa, the club gained promotion to the National Professional Soccer League in 1986.

The team won the league cup (then known as The Coca-Cola Cup) in 1994 with Bunene Ngaduane leading the scoring charts.

To avoid fixture congestion the club's franchise was sold to the Premier Soccer League in 2002.

The following year, Mike Mokoena revived the club as he bought and renamed the franchise of National First Division side Maholosiane. Free State Stars regained their Premiership status in 2005 after winning the Mvela Golden League.

After a disappointing season in the top-flight, with the first team finishing bottom of the table, the club was relegated. The 2006–07 season however proved to be a huge success with Stars dominating the First Division and securing promotion to the Premiership once again.

They also won the inaugural Baymed Cup in December 2006 beating FC AK in the final.


Honours

Winners – 2018[4]
Winners – 1994
Winners – 2006
Champions – 2004–05, 2006–07[5]
  • Second Division:
Champions – 1985

Club records

League record

Premiership

National First Division

Premiership

National First Division

Notable former coaches

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.