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St James's Gate Football Club is an Irish association football club based in Drimnagh/Crumlin, Dublin. They played in the League of Ireland between 1921–22 and 1943–44 and again from 1990–91 until 1995–96. Gate were the inaugural winners of both the League of Ireland and the FAI Cup. Like several fellow early League of Ireland clubs, such as Fordsons, Jacobs, Midland Athletic and Dundalk, Gate had their origins as a factory or works team. They were initially the football team of the St James's Gate Brewery, the home of Guinness. In July 2022 they narrowly survived folding and survived due to a public appeal.[1][2][3]
Full name | St James's Gate Football Club | |
---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | The Gate | |
Founded | 1902 | |
Ground | Iveagh Grounds Crumlin Road Dublin 12 | |
League | Leinster Senior League League of Ireland | |
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The club was founded in 1902.[4] The prime mover behind forming the club was John Lumsden, then serving as a medical officer at St James's Gate Brewery. The club first gained national recognition in 1909–10 when they won both the Leinster Senior League title and the Irish Intermediate Cup. In 1919–20, with a team that included Charlie Dowdall, Paddy Duncan and Ernie MacKay, Gate won four trophies – the Leinster Senior League title, the Irish Intermediate Cup, the Leinster Senior Cup and the LFA Metropolitan Cup.
In 1921–22, together with Shelbourne, Bohemians, Jacobs, Frankfort, Olympia, YMCA and Dublin United, Gate became founder members of the League of Ireland. Like Gate, the other seven founding members had spent the 1920–21 season playing in the Leinster Senior League. Gate initially emerged as one of the strongest teams in the league and in their debut season won a treble. In addition to winning the inaugural league title, they also won the 1921–22 FAI Cup and the 1921–22 Leinster Senior Cup. This season proved to be the highlight of Gate's time in the League of Ireland. In 1939–40 they won a second league title, however after finishing in last place in 1943–44 they failed to gain re-election.[5] It had been suggested that the reason for this was the club announcing its intention to revert to amateur status. However, when the vote was being taken, the representative for Shamrock Rovers stated, "the St. James's Gate club has not full control over their own finances, as any profit made during the season goes to the Guinness Athletic Union and is therefore lost to football." The other clubs were also known to be unhappy that members of the Guinness Athletic Union did not have to pay into home matches, depriving those clubs of their share of gate receipts.[6]
Season | Pts | Place | Season | Pts | Place |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1921–22 | 23 | 1st | 1933–34 | 13 | 8th |
1922–23 | 25 | 5th | 1934–35 | 27 | 2nd |
1923–24 | 20 | 5th | 1935–36 | 19 | 10th |
1924–25 | 17 | 6th | 1936–37 | 23 | 5th |
1925–26 | 11 | 8th | 1937–38 | 27 | 5th |
1926–27 | 12 | 9th | 1938–39 | 23 | 4th |
1927–28 | 14 | 7th | 1939–40 | 36 | 1st |
1928–29 | 14 | 6th | 1940–41 | 21 | 5th |
1929–30 | 11 | 9th | 1941–42 | 19 | 5th |
1930–31 | 18 | 10th | 1942–43 | 18 | 6th |
1932–33 | 10 | 11th | 1943–44 | 3 | 8th |
1932–33 | 17 | 6th | |||
Stat | Opponent | Score | Competition | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Record Win | Jacobs | 8–0 | 1929–30 | 24 August 1929 |
Record Defeat | Waterford Cork United Shamrock Rovers |
0–7 0–7 0–7 |
1931–32 1943–44 1943–44 |
22 November 1931 19 December 1943 27 December 1943 |
In 1990–91 Gate joined the League of Ireland First Division, replacing Newcastlewest. In 1995, the club was taken over by a consortium. Only one year later, however, just before the start of the 1996–97 they pulled out of the league, unable to meet their financial responsibilities. They were replaced by St. Francis.[5]
To celebrate their 110th anniversary, in July 2012 the club hosted a tournament.
Ballymena United | 1–1 Ballymena won 5–3 after penalties | Port Talbot Town |
---|---|---|
White, 90 | (Report) | ???, 6 |
St James's Gate | 2–0 | Bohemians |
---|---|---|
(Report) |
Bohemians | 0–6 | Port Talbot Town |
---|---|---|
(Report) |
St James's Gate | 0–2 | Ballymena United |
---|---|---|
(Report) | Baker Teggart (pen) |
Gate originally played their home games at Bellevue Lodge by the Grand Canal near Inchicore. The same venue was also used by Olympia. Between 1921 and 1928 they played at St. James's Park in Dolphin's Barn on a pitch hired by the Guinness board. In 1928 they moved to their current home at the Iveagh Grounds.
On 28 May 1924 when Ireland made their international debut at the 1924 Olympics against Bulgaria, the Ireland team included three Gate players – Paddy Duncan, Michael Farrell and Ernie MacKay. A fourth member of the team, Paddy O'Reilly, would also later play for the club. Duncan also scored the Republic of Ireland's first international goal. Joe O'Reilly, with 20, was also the most capped player for Ireland in the pre–Second World War era.[9][10]
In addition to playing for Ireland teams selected by the FAI, at least five Gate players also played for Ireland teams selected by the Irish Football Association.
On seven occasions St James's Gate players finished as the League of Ireland's top goalscorer. On 30 March 1930, Willie Byrne scored six goals in a 7–1 win against Sligo Rovers. Paddy Bradshaw, with 68, remains Gate's top goalscorer in the League of Ireland. [13][5]
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