Crewe United F.C.

Crewe United Football Club is an intermediate-level football club playing in the Intermediate A division of the Mid-Ulster Football League in Northern Ireland. The club hails from Glenavy in County Antrim. The club was formed as Sparta in 1961 and played in the West Belfast League before joining the Northern Amateur League in 1968. In 1971, the club switched to the Lisburn League, and during its time there it change its name to Crewe United. In 1978, Crewe returned to the Amateur League, and gained intermediate status following a Junior Cup win in 1983.

Crewe United
Full nameCrewe United Football Club
Founded1961 (as Sparta)
GroundCrewe Park
Glenavy, County Antrim
ChairmanThomas McKenna (Jnr)
ManagerEamonn McCarthy
LeagueMid-Ulster Football League Intermediate A
2021/22Mid-Ulster Football League Intermediate A, 2nd

George Best played his last game in Northern Ireland for Crewe United in 1995 at Crewe Park in a Charity game. Crewe are renowned for their progressive thinking and have some of the best facilities in Intermediate Football and recently constructed a new playing surface at Crewe Park. They have also played games in many different countries, most notably Holland, and played BVO Emmen in 1999 in front of 2,699 people. Many English league sides such as Brentford and Luton Town have played at Crewe Park[1]

Honours

Intermediate honours

  • Marshall Cup: 1
    • 2016–17

Junior honours

  • Irish Junior Cup: 1
    • 1982–83

Players

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK  USA Charlie Eaton
GK  NIR Eamonn Browne
DF  NIR Dean Youle
DF  NIR Michael McQuitty
DF  NIR Conor Maxwell
DF  NIR Tiernan McAuley
MF  NIR Aaron Harmon
MF  NIR Ronan Brannigan
MF  NIR Noel Halfpenny
No. Pos. Nation Player
GK  NIR Matthew Williamson
DF  NIR Dylan Whiteway
MF  NIR Eamonn McAllister
MF  NIR Gerard Mallon
MF  NIR Jack Wasson
FW  NIR Dan Smith
FW  NIR Ryan Kelly
FW  NIR Rhys Calvert

Notes

  1. H. Johnstone & G. Hamilton (n.d.) A Memorable Milestone: 75 Years of the Northern Amateur Football League, p. 187


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.