Durban City F.C.
This article does not cite any sources. (August 2021) |
Nickname(s) | Banana Boys, Golden Boys | |||
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Founded | May 1959 | |||
Dissolved | 29 July 1988 | |||
Ground | , Durban | |||
Owner | Norman Elliott | |||
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Durban City was a South African association football club based in the city of Durban. Formed in 1959 by , the club was dissolved in 1988.
History[]
Durban City FC played in the newly formed whites only National Football League from 1959 to 1977, the team then moved over to the Federation Professional League for the 1978 season. The team moved again to the National Premier Soccer League, which later changed its name to the National Soccer League from 1979 to 1988.
The club was sold on 27 July 1988 midway through the season to a group of local businessmen from the KwaZulu-Natal area. The new owners kept the famous blue and white hoops but immediately changed the name to Natal United. The team got relegated at the end of that season and disbanded.
In the 1986–1987 season the club courted controversy by becoming the first South African football club to have a mascot. 'Barry' was a kudu with enlarged eyes and glasses and was sponsored by a local opticians.
Durban Club[]
In late 2008 Durban businessman and former youth player Glen Adams started talking about the revival of the former glamour club. The club was registered in 2009 with the South African Football Association and will be active in the 2009 season albeit in the amateur leagues from juniors to seniors.
Notable coaches[]
- Colin Addison
- Clive Barker
- Alf Boyd
- Budgie Byrne
- Joe Kirkup
- Dave Sexton (guest)[citation needed]
- Bill Williams
- Butch Webster[citation needed]
- Willie Lewis[citation needed]
External links[]
- Durban City F.C.
- Defunct soccer clubs in South Africa
- Association football clubs established in 1959
- Association football clubs disestablished in 1988
- Soccer clubs in Durban
- National Football League (South Africa) clubs
- 1959 establishments in South Africa
- 1988 disestablishments in South Africa
- Soccer and apartheid