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Association football club in Greater Manchester, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wythenshawe Town Football Club is a semi-professional football club based in Wythenshawe, Manchester, England, playing at Ericstan Park. They are members of the Northern Premier League Division One West, though they are currently suspended by the league from fulfilling fixtures.[2]
Full name | Wythenshawe Town Football Club | |
---|---|---|
Founded | 1946 | |
Ground | Ericstan Park, Wythenshawe | |
Chairman | Chris Eaton | |
Manager | Rory Fallon | |
League | Northern Premier League Division One West, Currently suspended[1] | |
2023–24 | North West Counties League Premier Division, 2nd of 24 (promoted via play-offs) | |
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The club was established in 1946 as North Withington Amateur by attendees of St Crispin's Church in nearby Fallowfield.[3] They joined the South Manchester & Wythenshawe League, and were Division Two champions in 1949–50, before winning the Barker Cup in 1950–51.[4] In 1958 the club transferred to the Lancashire & Cheshire Amateur League.[3] After winning Division C in 1958–59, they were Division Three champions the following season. A hugely successful period then saw them win Division B in 1963–64 and Division Two the following season, before winning back-to-back Division One titles in 1965–66 and 1966–67, and then three in a row between 1968–69 and 1970–71.[3] The club also won the league's Whitehead Cup in 1963–64, 1966–67 and 1970–71, and the Lancashire Amateur Cup in 1967–68.[4]
In 1973 North Withington Amateur joined Division Two of the Manchester League and won the division in their first season, earning promotion to Division One.[5] The following season saw them win the Division One title, resulting in promotion to the Premier Division.[5] During a successful period in the second half of the 1970s, they won the Manchester Challenge Trophy in 1976–77, 1977–78 and 1979–80, and the Lancashire Amateur Cup in 1979–80.[4] In 1987 the club adopted their current name, and they won two more Manchester Challenge Trophy finals in 1992–93 and 1994–95. The 1997–98 season saw them finish bottom of the Premier Division, resulting in relegation to Division One.[6] They remained in Division One until winning the division in 2011–12, earning promotion to the Premier Division.[6]
After finishing bottom of the Manchester League Premier Division in 2013–14 with only one win from 28 matches, Wythenshawe transferred to Division Two of the Cheshire League. They went on to win all 18 league matches in 2014–15, as well as all 20 cup matches, claiming the Division Two title, the league's JA Walton Challenge Cup, the Manchester Amateur Cup and the Altrincham Senior Cup.[7] After being promoted, the club won the Division One title in 2015–16, and were promoted to the Premier Division.[6] In 2018 they successfully applied to move up to Division One South of the North West Counties League.[6] In 2021 the club were promoted to the Premier Division based on their results in the abandoned 2019–20 and 2020–21 seasons.[8] In 2023–24 they were Premier Division runners-up, missing out on the title on goal difference to local rivals Wythenshawe. In the subsequent promotion play-offs they defeated Padiham 1–0 in the semi-finals before beating Bury 3–2 on penalties in the final to earn promotion to Division One West of the Northern Premier League.
On 1 November 2024, Wythenshawe Town were suspended from the Northern Premier League. On the previous day, the league had announced that their 2 November fixture against Stafford Rangers had been postponed, though no explanation was given as to why. On the morning on 1 November, Wythenshawe Town's Board of Directors released their own statement, claiming this was due documentation not being submitted to the league in the correct format[9]. This statement was later deleted, before the Northern Premier League released their own statement to refute Wythenshawe Town's allegations.[10]
The League notes the statement issued by Wythenshawe Town FC earlier today, subsequently removed in response to the decision of the Northern Premier League to postpone its fixture against Stafford Rangers FC on Saturday 2 November.
In such circumstances, the NPL does not normally make any comment. An exception is being made here because the claims made in the club’s original statement are false and misleading.
The club has been suspended from membership of the NPL for failing to provide information relative to the Financial Reporting Initiative (FRI) to which all clubs at Steps 1-4 of the NLS are subject and 87 out of 88 member clubs are currently compliant.
As of Monday 4 November, a second Wythenshawe Town fixture away at Chasetown had been postponed[11], though no further statement had been made by the league.
The club played at Hough End Field on Princess Road until 1974, with their headquarters in the Princess Hotel. They then moved to a new ground on Timpson Road in the Baguley area of Wythenshawe, where three prefab houses were converted into a clubhouse. The ground was named Ericstan Park after founder members Eric Renard and Stan Hahn.[3] The two are also remembered in the club badge, which includes a fox (Renard in French) and cockerel (Hänchen in German).[3]
A new clubhouse was opened in 2009.[12]
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