Yeovil Town F.C.

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Yeovil Town
Full name Yeovil Town Football Club
Nickname(s) The Glovers
Founded 1895
Ground Huish Park
Yeovil
(Capacity 9,978)
Chairman Flag of England John Fry
Manager Flag of England Russell Slade
League League One
2006–07 League One, 5th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Yeovil Town F.C. are an English football team based in Yeovil, Somerset. The club play in League One after having won the League Two championship in 2004-05.

Along with Plymouth Argyle, they are one of the few clubs within England to play in a largely green strip. Since the 2003-04 season they have played in green and white hoops.

They won promotion to the Football League as Conference champions in 2003, and had long been established as the most successful non-league team in the FA Cup - having defeated major Football League teams and playing against clubs like Liverpool FC. In 2004-05, only their second season in the Football League, Yeovil were crowned champions of League Two and were promoted to League One.

They play their home games at Huish Park, which is also currently the location of the club's training facilities; however, it has been announced that Yeovil Town will be building new training facilities at nearby village in Kingsbury Episcopi, Somerset.

Contents

They have spent almost all of their history outside of The Football League but are still one of the most famous FA Cup "giant-killing" teams that has earned them notoriety around the country and indeed it can be said around the world. The club, founded in 1890 as Yeovil Football Club, shared a ground for many years with the town's rugby club. In 1895 they became Yeovil Casuals and moved to play their home games at the Pen Mill Athletic Ground. The club became Yeovil Town in 1907, and in 1915 an amalgamation of Yeovil Town and Petters United led to a new club called Yeovil and Petters United. This seasons's away shirt, a predominantly black kit with amber trim, was inspired by the amber and black colours of Petters United. In the 1948-49 FA Cup, Yeovil defeated Sunderland in the fourth round, in front of over 16,000 ecstatic fans (a club record) this gave them the "Giant-Killing" status. At the next hurdle, over 81,000 saw them lose to Manchester United at Maine Road 8-0.

Between 1955 and 1973 they lifted the Southern Football League crown three times, with the runners-up spot being reached on two occasions.

During this period, Yeovil Town applied for election to the Football League on a number of occasions, coming within a few votes of being elected in 1976. [1]

1979 saw the birth of what is now the Football Conference the game's 'Fifth Division' - of which the Glovers were founder-members. In 1985 they were relegated to the Vauxhall Opel League. After three years Yeovil won the championship in 1988 and returned to the Conference.

There was success in the Bob Lord Challenge Trophy in 1990 and three years later Yeovil finished fourth in the Conference, their best finish ever. In January 1995 Graham Roberts was appointed manager, but demotion back to the Isthmian League (ICIS) soon followed. Yeovil secured promotion back into the Conference in 1997 after winning the ICIS League (as it was then known) by a record number of points - 101.

Gary Johnson took charge in June 2001 and he won the FA Umbro Trophy in his first season in charge with a 2-0 victory over Stevenage Borough in the final at Villa Park. This was their first major trophy in 106 years as a Football Club. Yeovil Town earned promotion to the Football League in the following season, by winning the Football Conference by a record 17 points margin. They accumulated a huge 95 points and scored 100 goals, remaining unbeaten at Huish Park

The team's first season in League football saw them finish in a creditable eighth place just missing out on the play off positions by goal difference, just four goals.

In February 2004, the team released the single "Yeovil True". The single reached #36 in the UK charts before dropping out of the top 75 the next week. The single was only available in major record stores in the town.

David Webb bought the club from Jon Goddard-Watts in December 2005, taking over the role of Chief Executive from Chairman John Fry. He resigned from this position in February 2006.

In September 2005, manager Gary Johnson left Yeovil Town for Bristol City, after having turned down job offers from both Plymouth Argyle and Derby County. He was replaced by second-in-command Steve Thompson, and Kevin Hodges was appointed as his number two, but at the end of the 2005-06 Thompson was demoted to first team coach, with the club advertising for a new manager. Russell Slade was named as his replacement on June 7, 2006.

In March 2006, Yeovil appointed two new directors, Brian Willis and Ron Budden. Willis was part of the Yeovil board in the late 1990s for three years and was vice-chairman at Bournemouth before that. Budden, Exeter-based, was a former League referee.

In June 2006, it was announced that John Fry had bought all of Dave Webb's share to become the new owner of Yeovil Town FC.

On September 30, 2006, Yeovil moved into second place in League One after a 2-1 victory over Brentford, which was their highest-ever league position.

Yeovil finished the regular season in fifth position, securing a play-off semi-final against Nottingham Forest, twice European champions. On May 11, 2007, Forest won the first leg 2-0 at Huish Park.[1] Seven days later, Yeovil won the return leg at the City Ground 5-2 after extra time, taking the tie 5-4 on aggregate.[2] Yeovil met Blackpool at Wembley Stadium on May 27, 2007, and were beaten 2-0, thus missing out on promotion to the The Championship. Almost 30,000 supporters took the trip up to Wembley, a large following for a club based in a town with a population of only 62,153.

Yeovil Town Football club have many players who have played at the international level, for instance Marc Bircham [Canada], Andrejs Stolcers [Latvia], Efe Sodje [Nigeria], Lloyd Owusu [Ghana], Jean-Paul Kamindumba Kalala [DR Congo] and Gavin Williams [Wales].

Huish Park is Yeovil's latest stadium and there has been a mention that Huish could become the new home of a 15,000 all seater. Their biggest stadium [Huish] held a complete maximum of 20,000 but now the stadium is a Tesco extra multi double store.

Season Division Tier Pos Pld Won Drawn Lost GF GA Points Outcome Ave. Attendance
2006–2007 League One 3 5 46 23 10 13 55 39 79 Play-offs 6,264
2005–2006 League One 3 15 46 15 11 20 54 62 56 6,668
2004–2005 League Two* 4 1 46 25 8 13 90 65 83 6,320
2003–2004 Division Three 4 8 46 23 5 18 70 57 74 6,197
2002–2003 Conference 5 1 42 28 11 3 100 37 95 4,741
2001–2002 Conference 5 3 42 19 13 10 66 53 70 2,872
2000–2001 Conference 5 2 42 24 8 10 73 50 80 3,416
  • Division 3 was renamed to League 2

  • Yeovil's pitch was once famous for the fact that it sloped.
  • The name Yeovil is understood to be a corruption of a Celtic word, Gifl, which means 'forked river'.
  • Yeovil's former manager Gary Johnson was the coach of the Latvian national team for two years from 1999 to 2001.
  • Yeovil's longest serving manager since 1922 is Billy Kingdon who was in charge from 1938 to 1946
  • Yeovil's largest recorded crowd at Huish Park was on 04/01/2004 against Liverpool in the FA Cup Third Round 9348 fans turned up to watch the game, in which Yeovil lost 2-0
  • Yeovil got their nick-name, The Glovers from the many glove factories that were present in Somerset at the time
  • American Pro-Wrestler Ken Doane is a big fan of the club.

As of 22 November 2007.
No. Position Player
1 Flag of England GK Steve Mildenhall
2 Flag of England DF Mark Lynch
3 Flag of Wales DF Nathan Jones
4 Flag of England DF Terry Skiverton (captain)
5 Flag of Australia DF Scott Guyett
6 Flag of England DF Terrell Forbes
7 Flag of Ireland MF Gary Dempsey
8 Flag of England MF Anthony Barry
9 Flag of Ghana FW Lloyd Owusu
11 Flag of England FW Lee Morris
12 Flag of England DF Matthew Rose
14 Flag of England FW Paul Warne
No. Position Player
15 Flag of England MF Justin Cochrane
16 Flag of England MF Ritchie Jones (on loan from Manchester United)
19 Flag of England DF Craig Alcock
20 Flag of Canada MF Marc Bircham
21 Flag of England MF Jerahl Hughes
24 Flag of England DF Curtis Ujah
25 Flag of Hungary MF Zoltán Stieber (on loan from Aston Villa)
26 Flag of Ireland MF Stephen Maher
27 Flag of England MF Lee Peltier (on loan from Liverpool)
28 Flag of England FW James Walker (on loan from Charlton Athletic)
30 Flag of France FW Wilfried Domoraud
32 Flag of England FW Marvin Williams

No. Position Player
13 Flag of England GK Darren Behcet (on loan to Dorchester Town)
18 Flag of England FW Darryl Knights (on loan to Cambridge United)
22 Flag of England FW Thomas Clarke (on loan to Bridgwater Town)
23 Flag of England MF Ishmael Welsh (on loan to Torquay United)

Flag of England John Whale

  • Most Overall Appearances: Len Harris, 691 (1958-72)
  • Most League Goals: Dave Taylor, 285 (1960-9)
  • Record Attendance Football League: 9,178 v Bristol City, 31 December 2005 (Football League One)
  • Record Attendance (new Huish Park): 9,348 v Liverpool, 4 January 2004 (FA Cup Third Round)
  • Record Attendance All Time: 16,318 v Sunderland, 29 January 1949 (FA Cup Fourth Round)
  • Longest Serving Player: Len Harris, 14 years (1958-72)
  • Longest Serving Manager: Billy Kingdon, 8 years (1938-46)
  • Highest League Finish: 5th League 1, 2006/07 season

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