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Grays Athletic F.C.

Grays Athletic Football Club is a football club based in Grays, Essex, England. They are currently members of the Isthmian League North Division and play at Parkside in nearby Aveley.

Grays Athletic
Full nameGrays Athletic Football Club
Nickname(s)The Gravelmen, The Ath, The Blues
Founded1890
GroundParkside, Aveley
Capacity3,500 (424 seated)[1]
ChairmanSteve Skinner
ManagerLewis Dark
LeagueIsthmian League North Division
2021–22Isthmian League North Division, 6th of 20
WebsiteClub website

History

The club was established as Grays Juniors in 1890,[2] before merging with former Southern League club Grays United to form Grays Athletic.[3] The newly formed club joined the Grays & District League, later joining Division Two B of the South Essex League in 1908. They were runners-up in their first season in the division and won it in their second season, earning promotion to Division One for the 1909–10 season.[4] The club were founder members of the Athenian League in 1912,[5] but the league closed down in 1914 due to World War I and Grays transferred to the Premier Division (Amateur) of the London League.[6] They won the division in their first season, with the reserves also winning Division One.[6] The league was suspended at the end of the 1914–15 season, with Grays rejoining in the Premier Division when it restarted in 1919–20.

Grays were Premier Division runners-up in 1920–21, before winning the division in 1921–22. In 1924 the club joined the Kent League but after two seasons in mid-table,[7] they returned to the London League in 1926. The return was a success as the club were Premier Division champions in 1926–27 and runners-up in the next two seasons, before winning the title again in 1929–30.[6][8] After finishing as runners-up in 1930–31, the club spent most of the 1930s in mid-table,[8] although they won the league's Challenge Cup in 1936–37.[9]

After World War II Grays were founder members of the Corinthian League, and were its inaugural champions and League Cup winners in 1945–46.[5][10] They were league runners-up in 1951–52, and the following season saw them qualify for the first round of the FA Cup for the first time, losing 5–0 at home to Llanelli.[5] They were league runners-up again in 1954–55 and 1956–57, before rejoining the Athenian League in 1958. When the league gained two more divisions in 1963, the club were placed in the Premier Division, where they remained until being relegated to Division One at the end of the 1971–72 season, in which they had finished bottom of the table.[5] In 1977 the league was reorganised into a single division, and the club were runners-up in 1982–83.[5]

In 1983 Grays transferred to Division Two of the Isthmian League. League reorganisation saw them placed in Division Two South in 1984 and they went on to win the division at the first attempt, earning promotion to Division One.[5] In 1987–88 they were Division One runners-up, resulting in promotion to the Premier Division.[5] In 1988–89 the club reached the first round of the FA Cup for a second time, losing 2–0 at Bath City.[5] They remained in the Premier Division until being relegated back to Division One at the end of the 1996–97 season. In 1999–2000 the club were Division One runners-up, earning promotion back to the Premier Division. In 2000–01 another appearance in the FA Cup first round saw them play Football League opposition for the first time, losing 4–0 at Reading.[5]

A sixth-place finish in 2003–04 resulted in Grays being placed in the new Conference South for the 2004–05 season. They went on to win the new division in its first season, earning promotion to the Conference National.[5] The season also saw them reach the final of the FA Trophy, in which they beat Hucknall Town 6–5 on penalties after a 1–1 draw at Villa Park.[5] In their first season in the Conference National the club finished third, qualifying for the promotion play-offs. However, they lost 5–4 on aggregate to Halifax Town.[11] They also reached the second round of the FA Cup, beating York City 3–0 at Bootham Crescent before losing 3–0 at Mansfield Town, as well as retaining the FA Trophy with a 2–0 win over Woking in the final.[5] The club's league form subsequently faded and after narrowly avoiding relegation in 2006–07 and 2008–09, they finished bottom of the Conference National in 2009–10 and resigned from the Football Conference.

Grays were initially rejected by the Isthmian League and were lined up to play in the Essex Senior League. However, an appeal to the Football Association saw them placed in Division One North of the Isthmian League.[12] A fifth-place finish in 2011–12 saw them qualify for the play-offs, in which Enfield Town defeated them 3–1 on penalties after a 2–2 draw in the semi-final.[5] However, the club were Division One North champions the following season with a club record 102 points, earning promotion back to the Premier Division.[5] In August 2016 the club became community-owned.[13] They went on to finish bottom of the Premier Division in the 2016–17 and were relegated back to the (renamed) North Division.

Season-by-season

Season Division Position Top league goalscorer Notes
2003–04 Isthmian League Premier Division 6 Freddy Eastwood, 28
2004–05 Conference South 1 Leroy Griffiths, 19 Champions
2005–06 Conference National 3 Michael Kightly, 15
2006–07 Conference National 19 Aaron McLean, 13
2007–08 Conference National 10 Danny Kedwell, 13
2008–09 Conference National 19 Andy Pugh, 7
2009–10 Conference National 23 Jamie Slabber, 4 Relegated
2010–11 Isthmian League Division One North 10 Alex Osborn, 17
2011–12 Isthmian League Division One North 5 Joao Carlos, 10 Lost in play-off semi-final.
2012–13 Isthmian League Division One North 1 Jack West, 17 Champions
2013–14 Isthmian League Premier Division 14 Joao Carlos, 20
2014–15 Isthmian League Premier Division 6 Freddie Ladapo, 14
2015–16 Isthmian League Premier Division 15 Dumebi Dumaka, 19
2016–17 Isthmian League Premier Division 24 Kieran Bishop, 12 Relegated
2017–18 Isthmian League North Division 16 Kieran Bishop, 24
2018–19 Isthmian League North Division 7 Mitch Hahn, 9
2019–20 Isthmian League North Division Joao Carlos, 14 Season abandoned in March due to COVID-19 pandemic.
2020–21 Isthmian League North Division Joseph Agunbiade, 2 Season abandoned in November due to COVID-19 pandemic.
2021–22 Isthmian League North Division 6 Anointed Chukwu, 16

Ground

The club initially played at the Hoppit Ground in Little Thurrock.[14] In 1906 they moved to the New Recreation Ground, playing there until 2010. After the ground was sold to developers, the club groundshared with East Thurrock United at their Rookery Hill ground in Corringham.[12]

During the 2012–13 season the club played at Rush Green Stadium in Rush Green, sharing the ground with West Ham United's reserves who played in the Professional Development League.[15] The following season, West Ham pulled out of the deal in June and Grays moved to Aveley's Mill Field ground. When Aveley moved to Parkside in 2017, Grays became tenants at the new ground.[1]

Honours

  • FA Trophy
    • Winners 2004–05, 2005–06
  • Football Conference
    • Conference South champions 2004–05
  • Isthmian League
    • Division Two South champions 1984–85
    • Division One North champions 2012–13
    • League Cup winners: 1991–92
  • London League
    • Premier Division champions 1921–22, 1926–27, 1929–30
    • Premier Division (Amateur) champions 1914–15
    • Challenge Cup winners 1936–37
  • Corinthian League
    • Champions 1945–46
    • League Cup winners 1945–46
  • South Essex League
    • Division Two B champions 1908–09
  • Essex Senior Cup
    • Winners 1914–15, 1920–21, 1922–23, 1944–45, 1956–57, 1987–88, 1993–94, 1994–95[9]
  • Essex Thameside Trophy
    • Winners 1947–48, 1978–79, 1980–81, 1987–88, 1988–89, 1990–91, 2001–02[9]
  • East Anglian Cup
    • Winners 1944–45[9]

Records

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Parklife for Millers", Groundtastic, Autumn 2017, issue 90, pp46–49
  2. ^ Grays look for positive headlines BBC Sport, 26 November 2008
  3. ^ George H. Watts (2006) The Place I Love Best, p14
  4. ^ Season 1909/10 Barking F.C.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Grays Athletic at the Football Club History Database
  6. ^ a b c London League 1910–1928 Non-League Matters
  7. ^ The 'original' Kent League 1922–1939 Non-League Matters
  8. ^ a b London League 1928–1950 Non-League Matters
  9. ^ a b c d Honours Grays Athletic F.C.
  10. ^ History Grays Athletic F.C.
  11. ^ 2005–06 Football Conference Football Club History Database
  12. ^ a b Grays Athletic win Ryman League appeal BBC Sport, 18 June 2010
  13. ^ Grays Ath celebrate after raising thousands through community share[permanent dead link] Your Thurrock, 2 August 2016
  14. ^ Grays Athletic Pyramid Passion
  15. ^ Grays Athletic v West Ham United XI Grays Athletic F.C.
  16. ^ a b c d e Mike Williams & Tony Williams (2016) Non-League Club Directory 2017, Tony Williams Publications, p326 ISBN 978-1869833695

External links

  • Official website

Coordinates: 51°30′13″N 0°15′41″E / 51.503494°N 0.26130885°E / 51.503494; 0.26130885

grays, athletic, grays, athletic, football, club, football, club, based, grays, essex, england, they, currently, members, isthmian, league, north, division, play, parkside, nearby, aveley, grays, athleticfull, namegrays, athletic, football, clubnickname, grave. Grays Athletic Football Club is a football club based in Grays Essex England They are currently members of the Isthmian League North Division and play at Parkside in nearby Aveley Grays AthleticFull nameGrays Athletic Football ClubNickname s The Gravelmen The Ath The BluesFounded1890GroundParkside AveleyCapacity3 500 424 seated 1 ChairmanSteve SkinnerManagerLewis DarkLeagueIsthmian League North Division2021 22Isthmian League North Division 6th of 20WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway colours Contents 1 History 1 1 Season by season 2 Ground 3 Honours 4 Records 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditThe club was established as Grays Juniors in 1890 2 before merging with former Southern League club Grays United to form Grays Athletic 3 The newly formed club joined the Grays amp District League later joining Division Two B of the South Essex League in 1908 They were runners up in their first season in the division and won it in their second season earning promotion to Division One for the 1909 10 season 4 The club were founder members of the Athenian League in 1912 5 but the league closed down in 1914 due to World War I and Grays transferred to the Premier Division Amateur of the London League 6 They won the division in their first season with the reserves also winning Division One 6 The league was suspended at the end of the 1914 15 season with Grays rejoining in the Premier Division when it restarted in 1919 20 Grays were Premier Division runners up in 1920 21 before winning the division in 1921 22 In 1924 the club joined the Kent League but after two seasons in mid table 7 they returned to the London League in 1926 The return was a success as the club were Premier Division champions in 1926 27 and runners up in the next two seasons before winning the title again in 1929 30 6 8 After finishing as runners up in 1930 31 the club spent most of the 1930s in mid table 8 although they won the league s Challenge Cup in 1936 37 9 After World War II Grays were founder members of the Corinthian League and were its inaugural champions and League Cup winners in 1945 46 5 10 They were league runners up in 1951 52 and the following season saw them qualify for the first round of the FA Cup for the first time losing 5 0 at home to Llanelli 5 They were league runners up again in 1954 55 and 1956 57 before rejoining the Athenian League in 1958 When the league gained two more divisions in 1963 the club were placed in the Premier Division where they remained until being relegated to Division One at the end of the 1971 72 season in which they had finished bottom of the table 5 In 1977 the league was reorganised into a single division and the club were runners up in 1982 83 5 In 1983 Grays transferred to Division Two of the Isthmian League League reorganisation saw them placed in Division Two South in 1984 and they went on to win the division at the first attempt earning promotion to Division One 5 In 1987 88 they were Division One runners up resulting in promotion to the Premier Division 5 In 1988 89 the club reached the first round of the FA Cup for a second time losing 2 0 at Bath City 5 They remained in the Premier Division until being relegated back to Division One at the end of the 1996 97 season In 1999 2000 the club were Division One runners up earning promotion back to the Premier Division In 2000 01 another appearance in the FA Cup first round saw them play Football League opposition for the first time losing 4 0 at Reading 5 A sixth place finish in 2003 04 resulted in Grays being placed in the new Conference South for the 2004 05 season They went on to win the new division in its first season earning promotion to the Conference National 5 The season also saw them reach the final of the FA Trophy in which they beat Hucknall Town 6 5 on penalties after a 1 1 draw at Villa Park 5 In their first season in the Conference National the club finished third qualifying for the promotion play offs However they lost 5 4 on aggregate to Halifax Town 11 They also reached the second round of the FA Cup beating York City 3 0 at Bootham Crescent before losing 3 0 at Mansfield Town as well as retaining the FA Trophy with a 2 0 win over Woking in the final 5 The club s league form subsequently faded and after narrowly avoiding relegation in 2006 07 and 2008 09 they finished bottom of the Conference National in 2009 10 and resigned from the Football Conference Grays were initially rejected by the Isthmian League and were lined up to play in the Essex Senior League However an appeal to the Football Association saw them placed in Division One North of the Isthmian League 12 A fifth place finish in 2011 12 saw them qualify for the play offs in which Enfield Town defeated them 3 1 on penalties after a 2 2 draw in the semi final 5 However the club were Division One North champions the following season with a club record 102 points earning promotion back to the Premier Division 5 In August 2016 the club became community owned 13 They went on to finish bottom of the Premier Division in the 2016 17 and were relegated back to the renamed North Division Season by season Edit Season Division Position Top league goalscorer Notes2003 04 Isthmian League Premier Division 6 Freddy Eastwood 28 2004 05 Conference South 1 Leroy Griffiths 19 Champions2005 06 Conference National 3 Michael Kightly 15 2006 07 Conference National 19 Aaron McLean 13 2007 08 Conference National 10 Danny Kedwell 13 2008 09 Conference National 19 Andy Pugh 7 2009 10 Conference National 23 Jamie Slabber 4 Relegated2010 11 Isthmian League Division One North 10 Alex Osborn 17 2011 12 Isthmian League Division One North 5 Joao Carlos 10 Lost in play off semi final 2012 13 Isthmian League Division One North 1 Jack West 17 Champions2013 14 Isthmian League Premier Division 14 Joao Carlos 20 2014 15 Isthmian League Premier Division 6 Freddie Ladapo 14 2015 16 Isthmian League Premier Division 15 Dumebi Dumaka 19 2016 17 Isthmian League Premier Division 24 Kieran Bishop 12 Relegated2017 18 Isthmian League North Division 16 Kieran Bishop 24 2018 19 Isthmian League North Division 7 Mitch Hahn 9 2019 20 Isthmian League North Division Joao Carlos 14 Season abandoned in March due to COVID 19 pandemic 2020 21 Isthmian League North Division Joseph Agunbiade 2 Season abandoned in November due to COVID 19 pandemic 2021 22 Isthmian League North Division 6 Anointed Chukwu 16 Ground EditThe club initially played at the Hoppit Ground in Little Thurrock 14 In 1906 they moved to the New Recreation Ground playing there until 2010 After the ground was sold to developers the club groundshared with East Thurrock United at their Rookery Hill ground in Corringham 12 During the 2012 13 season the club played at Rush Green Stadium in Rush Green sharing the ground with West Ham United s reserves who played in the Professional Development League 15 The following season West Ham pulled out of the deal in June and Grays moved to Aveley s Mill Field ground When Aveley moved to Parkside in 2017 Grays became tenants at the new ground 1 Honours EditFA Trophy Winners 2004 05 2005 06 Football Conference Conference South champions 2004 05 Isthmian League Division Two South champions 1984 85 Division One North champions 2012 13 League Cup winners 1991 92 London League Premier Division champions 1921 22 1926 27 1929 30 Premier Division Amateur champions 1914 15 Challenge Cup winners 1936 37 Corinthian League Champions 1945 46 League Cup winners 1945 46 South Essex League Division Two B champions 1908 09 Essex Senior Cup Winners 1914 15 1920 21 1922 23 1944 45 1956 57 1987 88 1993 94 1994 95 9 Essex Thameside Trophy Winners 1947 48 1978 79 1980 81 1987 88 1988 89 1990 91 2001 02 9 East Anglian Cup Winners 1944 45 9 Records EditBest FA Cup performance Second round 2005 06 5 Best FA Trophy performance Winners 2004 05 2005 06 5 Best FA Vase performance Fourth round 1977 78 1979 80 1981 82 1983 84 5 Biggest victory 12 0 vs Tooting Town London League 24 February 1923 16 Biggest defeat 0 12 vs Enfield Athenian League 20 April 1963 16 Attendance 9 500 v Chelmsford City FA Cup fourth qualifying round 1959 16 Most appearances Phil Sammons 673 1982 1997 16 Most goals Harry Brand 269 1944 1952 16 Transfer record fee paid 12 000 to Welling United for Danny Kedwell Transfer record fee received 150 000 from Peterborough United for Aaron McLeanSee also EditGrays Athletic F C players Grays Athletic F C managersReferences Edit a b Parklife for Millers Groundtastic Autumn 2017 issue 90 pp46 49 Grays look for positive headlines BBC Sport 26 November 2008 George H Watts 2006 The Place I Love Best p14 Season 1909 10 Barking F C a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Grays Athletic at the Football Club History Database a b c London League 1910 1928 Non League Matters The original Kent League 1922 1939 Non League Matters a b London League 1928 1950 Non League Matters a b c d Honours Grays Athletic F C History Grays Athletic F C 2005 06 Football Conference Football Club History Database a b Grays Athletic win Ryman League appeal BBC Sport 18 June 2010 Grays Ath celebrate after raising thousands through community share permanent dead link Your Thurrock 2 August 2016 Grays Athletic Pyramid Passion Grays Athletic v West Ham United XI Grays Athletic F C a b c d e Mike Williams amp Tony Williams 2016 Non League Club Directory 2017 Tony Williams Publications p326 ISBN 978 1869833695External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Grays Athletic F C Official website Coordinates 51 30 13 N 0 15 41 E 51 503494 N 0 26130885 E 51 503494 0 26130885 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grays Athletic F C amp oldid 1132998920, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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