Elmore F.C.

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Elmore
Elmore F.C. logo.png
Full nameElmore Football Club
Nickname(s)The Eagles
Founded1947
GroundHorsdon Park, Tiverton
ChairmanJed Hewitt
ManagerSteve Orchard
LeagueSouth West Peninsula League Premier Division East
2020–21South West Peninsula League Premier Division East (season curtailed)

Elmore Football Club is a football club based in Tiverton, Devon, England. They are currently members of the South West Peninsula League Premier Division East and play at Horsdon Park.

History[]

The club was founded in 1947 as the Elmore Sports Club.[1] They joined Junior Division One of the Exeter & District League in 1953, and were runners-up in their first two seasons.[2] After finishing as runners-up again in 1959–60,[3] the 1960–61 season saw the club win the Devon Junior Cup,[4] the Football Express Cup,[5] and the Junior Division One East title, resulting in promotion to Senior Division One.[3] Elmore were Senior Division One runners-up in 1964–65 and were promoted to the Premier Division.[3] They shared the Geary Cup with Exmouth Town in 1968–69,[6] and in 1971–72 the club won the East Devon Senior Cup, beating Dawlish Town 3–2 in the final.[7] The Exeter & District League was renamed the Devon & Exeter League in 1972.

In 1974 Elmore moved up to the South Western League.[8] They won the East Devon Senior Cup again in 1975–76,[7] and the Devon Senior Cup the following season. The club remained in the South Western League for four seasons, before transferring to Division One of the Western League in 1978.[8] After finishing bottom of the division in 1988–89, they won the Les Phillips Cup and were Division One runners-up in 1990–91, resulting in promotion to the Premier Division. The 1994–95 season saw them win the Les Phillips Cup again and finish as runners-up in the Premier Division, finishing one point below neighbours Tiverton Town. Two seasons later, Elmore finished bottom of the Premier Division, but avoided relegation as the division was expanded from 18 to 20 clubs. They finished bottom of the division again in 2003–04 and were relegated back to Division One. The next few seasons saw the club struggle, conceding over 100 goals in five of the next nine seasons and finishing bottom of the league in 2005–06 and 2010–11.

At the end of the 2012–13 season Elmore transferred to the Premier Division of the South West Peninsula League. However, they withdrew from the league midway through the 2014–15 season, after which the reserve team in the Devon & Exeter League became the first team. The club were Premier Division champions in 2017–18, earning promotion to Division One East of the South West Peninsula League. League restructuring saw them become members of the Premier Division East for the 2019–20 season.

Ground[]

Following their establishment, the club moved grounds on a regular basis. In 1958 they bought a plot of land named Slaughterhouse Field and built a new ground, Horsdon Park.[1] In March 2011 the main stand was named after Adam Stansfield, a former player who went on to play professionally with Yeovil Town but died from cancer aged 31 in 2010.[9]

Honours[]

  • Western League
    • Les Phillips Cup winners 1990–91, 1994–95
  • Devon & Exeter League
    • Premier Division champions 2017–18
    • Junior Division One East champions 1960–61
    • Football Express Cup winners 1960–61
    • Geary Cup winners 1968–69
  • Devon Senior Cup
    • Winners 1976–77
  • East Devon Senior Cup
    • Winners 1971–72, 1975–76
  • Devon Junior Cup
    • Winners 1960–61

Records[]

See also[]

  • Elmore F.C. players
  • Elmore F.C. managers

References[]

  1. ^ a b Club history Elmore F.C.
  2. ^ 1950s Devon & Exeter Football League
  3. ^ a b c 1960s Devon & Exeter League
  4. ^ Devon Intermediate Cup Devon & Exeter League
  5. ^ Football Express Cup Devon & Exeter League
  6. ^ Geary Cup Devon & Exeter League
  7. ^ a b East Devon Senior Cup Devon & Exeter League
  8. ^ a b c d Elmore at the Football Club History Database
  9. ^ Permanent reminder of football legend as stand is named after Stansfield This is Exeter, 31 January 2011
  10. ^ a b c Mike Williams & Tony Williams (2012) Non-League Club Directory 2013, p831 ISBN 978-1-869833-77-0

External links[]

Coordinates: 50°54′21.61″N 3°28′27.47″W / 50.9060028°N 3.4742972°W / 50.9060028; -3.4742972

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