Welcome to fedrix.com on July 6 2009.
This is an internet experiment running to monitor browsing habbits of individuals through wikipedia contents.

Lisburn Distillery F.C.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Lisburn Distillery
Image:Distillery.png
Full name Lisburn Distillery Football Club
Nickname(s) "The Whites"
Founded 1880 (as Distillery)
Ground New Grosvenor Stadium,
Lisburn,Lambeg County Antrim
(Capacity: 8,000 seated and standing)
Manager Jimmy Brown
League IFA Premiership
2008/09 4th
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Home colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Away colours

Lisburn Distillery is a Northern Ireland football club playing in the IFA Premiership. The club, founded in 1879, originated in west Belfast, where it was based at Grosvenor Park at Distillery Street off the Grosvenor Road until 1971. After sharing Skegoneill Avenue (Brantwood) and Seaview (Crusaders) for some years the club moved in 1980 to a permanent new home at New Grosvenor Stadium, Ballyskeagh, near Lambeg, on the southern outskirts of Belfast. The club was known as Distillery until 1999, when it changed its name to 'Lisburn Distillery' in an attempt to associate itself more closely with its adopted borough of Lisburn. The club colour is white. The club sacked its manager Paul Kirk on 14th May 2009. Jimmy Brown was appointed the new manager on 19th May 2009.

Contents

[edit] Honours

[edit] Senior honours

  • Irish League: 6
    • 1895/96, 1898/99, 1900/01, 1902/03, 1905/06 (shared), 1962/63
  • Irish Cup: 12
    • 1883/84, 1884/85, 1885/86, 1888/89, 1893/94, 1895/96, 1902/03, 1904/05, 1909/10, 1924/25, 1955/56, 1970/71
  • Gold Cup: 5
    • 1913/14, 1919/20, 1924/25, 1929/30, 1993/94
  • City Cup: 5
    • 1904/05, 1912/13, 1933/34, 1959/60, 1962/63
  • Ulster Cup: 2
    • 1957/58, 1998/99
  • Irish League First Division: 2
    • 1998/99, 2001/02
  • County Antrim Shield: 14
    • 1888/89, 1892/93, 1895/96, 1896/97, 1899/00, 1902/03, 1904/05, 1914/15, 1918/19, 1919/20, 1945/46, 1953/54, 1963/64, 1985/86
  • Inter-city Cup: 1
    • 1947/48 (shared)

[edit] Intermediate honours

† Won by Distillery Rovers (reserve team)

‡ Won by Distillery II (reserve team)

ƒ Won by Distillery West End (reserve team)

[edit] Junior honours

  • Irish Junior Cup: 1
    • 1887/88‡

‡ Won by Distillery II (reserve team)

[edit] History

Distillery is Ireland's oldest professional football club. Its story begins with Robert Baxter. Baxter moved from Banbridge to Belfast's Grosvenor Street in 1878. A keen cricketer, he became friendly with some of the employees of the nearby Royal Irish Distillery and, in the summer of 1879, they formed the V.R. Distillery Cricket Club under his captaincy. By the end of 1880, the members of the cricket club decided to form a football club in order to stay active during the winter months: Distillery Football Club was born and held its first practice session on 20 November , 1880.

The directors of Dunville's, especially James Barr, took great interest in the club from the start. They agreed to fill in a waste pond at the back of the distillery to make a ground for the team. The ground, Daisy Hill, was elevated several feet above sea level. Because it was filled in, it was soon known in the community under several nicknames such as 'Cinder Park' and 'Coke Yard'. On 11 December, Distillery F.C. played its first match there against Dundela, winning 1-0.

During the 1882-3 season the team moved from Daisy Hill to a larger ground at Broadway. James Barr paid for the move of the club (including a new pavilion and changing facilities) from Broadway to Grosvenor Park, close to Daisy Hill. In 1923 Distillery FC moved to York Park as Dunvilles decided to sell the Grosvenor Park ground. However in 1929 the firm agreed to re-lease the ground back to Distillery FC in a generous gesture as the club's premises in York Park had been blown down in a gale and a deputation had asked for help. Further testament to the close link between the distillery and the club, another of Dunville's directors, Robert Grimshaw Dunville, donated a cup to the Irish Football Association in 1894 to be competed for by the major teams. Originally called the Dunville's Cup, this cup was later renamed the City Cup. Ironically, it wasn't until 1905 that Distillery FC would win its 'own' City Cup.

From winning their first piece of silverware, the Irish Cup, by beating Wellington Park 5-0 in April 1884, Distillery Football Club grew into a major football force in Ireland in the late 19th and the early part of the 20th century. Their first overseas foray was to Scotland in December 1884 and ended in a 0-4 defeat to Harp of Dundee. Five years later, they achieved a 2-1 win over the English club Newton Heath which, is now known as Manchester United.The club's finest hour in European competitions was undoubtedly the 3-3 draw at home in 1963 against the Portuguese club Benfica, certainly in those days among the strongest European club teams. Former England International Tom Finney came out of retirement to play for Distillery FC - it was the only time that he played in the European Cup in his illustrious career.

Distillery FC suffered during the Troubles. In 1971, a firebomb attack caused Grosvenor Park to burn down and the club was forced to vacate the grounds it had called home for most of its existence. Not only did the fire eliminate the grounds, it also destroyed most of the club's records. After sharing grounds with a number of clubs for almost a decade, Distillery FC found a new home ground at Ballyskeagh Road, Lambeg in 1980. To symbolise the club's rising from the flames, a new badge was designed featuring a phoenix on a football. This badge replaced the original simple white 'DFC' shield.

In 1995, Distillery FC was relegated to the newly-formed First Division. In 1999 they won the First Division Championship and with it promotion back to the Premier League. Later that year, the club's name was officially changed to Lisburn Distillery and the 'rising phoenix' badge replaced with one incorporating Lisburn's coat of arms. Lisburn Distillery continue to compete in the Irish Premier League.

In 2008 the whites played in the Intertoto Cup and played TPS Turku from Finland. TPS Turku won 6-3 on aggregate.

[edit] Current squad

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Northern Ireland GK Philip Matthews
2 Flag of Northern Ireland GK Chris McCluskey
3 Flag of Northern Ireland DF Peter McCann
4 Flag of Northern Ireland DF Greg Hall
5 Flag of Northern Ireland DF Pat McShane
6 Flag of England MF Julian Ward
7 Flag of Northern Ireland DF Wayne Buchanan
8 Flag of Northern Ireland MF Andy Kilmartin
9 Flag of Northern Ireland MF Ryan McCann
10 Flag of Northern Ireland FW Darren Armour
11 Flag of Northern Ireland FW Gary Browne
No. Position Player
12 Flag of Northern Ireland MF Chris Kingsberry
13 Flag of Northern Ireland DF Stuart Thompson
14 Flag of Northern Ireland MF Mark Cooling
15 Flag of Northern Ireland DF Jonny Magee
16 Flag of Northern Ireland FW Glenn Ferguson
17 Flag of Northern Ireland FW Curtis Allen
19 Flag of Northern Ireland MF Neal Gawley
18 Flag of Northern Ireland MF Mark Patton
20 Flag of Northern Ireland MF Niall Atkinson
Flag of Ireland MF Gavin Whelan

[edit] Notable former players

[edit] Notable former managers

[edit] External links

Personal tools

Visit joltnews for the latest headlines
Visit bloit.com for company information
Geed Media does computer consulting on long island.
This page viewed times. See Logs