Worcester City Football Club is an English football club based in Worcester, Worcestershire. The club play in the Northern Premier League Midlands Division, the eighth tier of English football.[1] Established in 1902, the club play at Claines Lane.

Quick Facts Full name, Nickname(s) ...
Worcester City Football Club
Full nameWorcester City Football Club
Nickname(s)City, The Blues, The Faithful
Founded1902
GroundClaines Lane
Capacity1,400
ChairmanSteve Goode
ManagerChris Cornes
LeagueNorthern Premier League Division One Midlands
2023–24Hellenic League Premier Division, 1st of 20 (promoted)
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Worcester City's most notable successes include an FA Cup First round victory against Coventry City[2] and a third round win, in the same competition, against Liverpool.[3]

History

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Worcester (blue and white shirts) in action against Dover Athletic in 2009

The club was formed on 9 September 1902 when, following the liquidation of another local side, Berwick Rangers, Worcester Rovers amalgamated taking the present name of Worcester City F. C.[4] taking over Berwick's fixture list in the Birmingham & District League. Initially they played on Pitchcroft on an enclosed area called Severn Terrace (behind the modern day Swan Theatre).[4] They played there until the start of the 1905 season.[4] It was in 1905 that they reached the first round of the FA Cup, losing 6–0 at home to Watford. In 1924–25 they won the league for the first time, and the following season reached the FA Cup first round again, losing 2–0 to Kettering Town in a second replay at St Andrew's. The club won back-to-back league titles in 1928–29 and 1929–30, also reaching the FA Cup first round in the former, losing 3–1 at Walsall.

In 1938 they joined the Southern League. In 1940 they won the Southern League Cup beating Chelmsford 7–3 over two legs under the guidance of former Fulham F.C. legend Syd Gibbons. During World War II the club returned to the Birmingham & District League for two seasons.

After the war Worcester rejoined the Southern League. In 1958–59 the club reached the first round of the FA Cup again. After beating Chelmsford City in a replay and then Millwall 5–2 in the second round, they were drawn against Liverpool. A 2–1 win saw Worcester qualify for the fourth round against Sheffield United. They were defeated 2–0 in front of a record home attendance of 17,042 at St George's Lane.

In 1973–74 the club were relegated to Division One North of the Southern League. They returned to the Premier Division as Division One champions in 1977, and in 1978–79 won the title. The following season they became founder members of the Alliance Premier League, finishing third in their first season. However, they were relegated at the end of the 1984–85 season.

The 1973–74 season saw City reach the quarter-final of the FA Trophy (reached 5 times in the club's history). They beat Taunton Town 1–0 away from home and then a 5–1 home win over Bletchley saw the club reach the third round. Having beaten Sandbach Ramblers 4–1, City progressed to the last eight where a 2–0 away defeat followed a goalless draw against South Shields ended their cup run. Also in 1973–74 Worcester played in the Welsh Cup for the first time, losing in the quarter-finals to Stourbridge In 1975–76 City were drawn against Shrewsbury Town in the quarter-finals at home and took them to a replay after a 2–2 draw, losing 3–0 in the replay. In the 1978–79 season, Worcester reached the semi-finals after beating Cardiff City 3–2 in the quarters. They again played Shrewsbury, this time losing 2–0 away.

The club remained in the Southern League Premier Division until 2004, when a fifth-placed finish earned them a place in the newly established Conference North. In 2008 they were moved to the Conference South after no southern teams were relegated from the Conference National. In 2009–10 they finished in the relegation zone, but were reprieved after several other clubs were demoted or folded – these clubs were all based in northern England so Worcester were transferred back to the Conference North.

On 9 November 2014, In the FA Cup first round, Worcester went to the Ricoh Arena and beat Coventry City 2–1. This earned them a second-round away tie against Scunthorpe United four weeks later. City secured a replay at Aggborough after a 1–1 draw, in which Daniel Nti equalised immediately after half-time with a strike into the roof of the net in front of the 2,200 travelling fans. The replay also finished 1–1 and, some 212 hours after kick-off, Scunthorpe won 14–13 on penalties, setting a record for the longest shoot-out in FA Cup history.[5]

Worcester resigned from National League North towards the end of the 2016–17 season, but finished in one of the relegation places anyway. The FA then decided the club would be further relegated to the Midland League to ease the club's financial situation.[6] The 2023–24 season saw Worcester promoted from the Hellenic Football League as champions, as well as reaching the semi-finals of the FA Vase.[7]

Stadium

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Entrance to St George's Lane

The club used to play at St George's Lane. The ground had four main areas; the Dressing Room End and the Canal End (which was used for away fans), the Main Stand (containing all 1,121 seats) and the Brookside Terrace, including The Shed. The capacity was 4,523.

The ground's record attendance is 17,042 from a fourth round FA Cup game against Sheffield United in 1959.

The ground was vacated in June 2013, as it has been sold to a housing developer. The sale of the ground was aimed at helping to fund the building of a new 6,000-capacity ground to be built at Nunnery Way on the edge of Worcester but the sale of the ground failed to provide sufficient finances to pay for such a stadium.[8] On 30 January 2013, it was announced that Worcester would ground-share with Kidderminster Harriers at their Aggborough ground from the 2013–14 season.[9]

Worcester City decided to terminate their arrangement with Kidderminster and move to Bromsgrove and groundshare the Victoria Ground with Bromsgrove Sporting from the start of the 2016–17 season.[10]

New stadium

In 2013 previous plans for the club's new stadium to be built out of the city at Nunnery Way were shelved. The Worcester City Supporters' Trust have since tabled plans for a multi-use sporting facility on land currently occupied by Perdiswell Sports Centre, close to the city centre. Being a modest stadium with a capacity of 4,130, it would consist of a covered stand with 500 seats and two covered, terraced stands to hold 130 each (the capacity could be increased to 5,540 if tiered terraces are utilised). The proposal includes a full-size, all-weather and flood-lit artificial pitch, alongside three existing grass pitches. It would incorporate community facilities, in conjunction with the proposal of a new swimming pool. A full planning application was submitted to the City of Worcester Council and was rejected. [citation needed] New plans were drawn up for a new stadium at Parsonage Way, but this land was unfeasible.

In late 2019 it was announced that City would be returning to Worcester for the start of the 2020–21 season and playing at the Worcestershire FA headquarters at Claines Lane.

In November 2023, the club unveiled plans to move to a permanent home at a new Worcestershire Community Sports Park at Fernhill Heath, to the north of the city[11]

Players

Current squad

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

More information No., Pos. ...
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Management and coaching staff

Current staff

More information Position, Name ...
Position Name
ManagerChris Cornes
Assistant ManagerRyan Rowe
CoachNick Clayton
Football SecretaryKevin Preece
PhysioJess Morton
Kit ManagerDave Boddy
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Managerial history

More information Image, Name ...
List of Worcester City F.C. managers
Image Name Nationality From ToPWDLGFGAWin% Honours Notes
Frank Womack  England May 1928 July 1930 000000!
Joe Smith  England 1930 1932 000000!
Alex Hair  Scotland 1932 1934 000000!
Jack Whitehouse  England 1934 1935 000000!
Frank Keetley  England 1935 1936 000000!
Jack Russell  England 1936 1937 000000!
Syd Wallington  England 1937 1938 000000!
Syd Gibbons  England 1938 1946 000000!
Bob Jackson  England 1946 1947 000000!
Jack Vinall  England 1947 1950 000000!
Percy Percy  England 1950 1953 000000!
Bill Jones  England 1953 1957 000000!
Roy Paul  Wales 1957 1958 000000!
Bill Thompson  Scotland 1958 1962 000000!
Danny McLennan  Scotland 1962 1962 000000!
Bill Jones  England 1962 1968 000000!
Eddie Stuart  South Africa 1968 December 1971 000000!
Wilf Grant  England December 1971 1973 000000!
Graham Newton  England 1973 1973 000000!
Bill Jackman  England 1973 July 1974 000000!
Ronnie Radford  England July 1974 1975 000000!
Nobby Clark  England 1975 1984 000000!
Bobby Shinton  England 1984 1984 000000!
George Armstrong  England 1984 1985 000000!
Ian Cooper  England 1985 1986 000000!
John Jones  England 1986 1986 000000!
George Rooney  England 1986 1989 000000!
Dave Boddy  England 1989 1989 000000!
Steve Fergusson  England 1989 1990 000000!
Ally Robertson  Scotland 1990 1991 000000!
Thumb Martyn Bennett  England 1991 1992 000000!
George Rooney  England 1992 1998 000000!
Graham Allner  England 1998 1999 000000!
John Barton  England 1999 January 2005 000000!
Thumb Richard Dryden  England November 2007 17 January 2010 000000!
Carl Heeley  England 13 March 2010 2017 000000!
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Records

Honours

References

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