翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Canterbury by-election, 1878
・ Canterbury by-election, 1879
・ Canterbury by-election, 1918
・ Canterbury by-election, 1927
・ Canterbury by-election, 1953
・ Canterbury Caledonian Society Pipe Band
・ Canterbury cap
・ Canterbury Castle
・ Canterbury Castle (Portland, Oregon)
・ Canterbury Cathedral
・ Canterbury Center Historic District
・ Canterbury Charm
・ Canterbury Christ Church University
・ Canterbury City Council election, 2015
・ Canterbury City Council elections
Canterbury City F.C.
・ Canterbury city walls
・ Canterbury College
・ Canterbury College (Indiana)
・ Canterbury College (Waterford)
・ Canterbury College (Windsor, Ontario)
・ Canterbury College, Kent
・ Canterbury College, Oxford
・ Canterbury Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemetery
・ Canterbury corpus
・ Canterbury Country Cardinals
・ Canterbury cricket team
・ Canterbury Cricket Week
・ Canterbury cross
・ Canterbury Crusaders (speedway)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Canterbury City F.C. : ウィキペディア英語版
Canterbury City F.C.

Canterbury City F.C. are a football club currently based in Ashford but originally from and representing Canterbury, England. Reformed in 2007, they are the first football club formed as a Community interest company. For the 2015–16 season they will compete in the Southern Counties East League. The club is affiliated to the Kent County Football Association〔(FOOTBALL IN FOCUS ) THE MAGAZINE OF THE KENT COUNTY FA ISSUE 5 – OCTOBER 2009〕 The club also has a number of youth teams, including a girls only team, a deaf friendly team and a learning difficulties adult team. Canterbury are one of a small number of clubs who also run a homeless team that competes in the Canterbury and District League.
==History==
They were founded in 1947 and spent a long association with the Kent and Southern Football Leagues. However, archaic evidence suggests a team of the same name existed in the mid-19th century, though the modern team did not claim lineage.
Originally Canterbury played in the Kent League from 1947 to 1959. In their first season they made it to the semi-finals of the Kent League Cup where they lost 2-0 away at Margate. In the 1949–50 and 1950–51 seasons, they finished third in Division 1, the highest they achieved in the Kent League. In 1949–50 they won their first cup, the Kent League Cup, then in 1953–54 Canterbury City won the Kent Senior Cup and finished runners-up in the Kent League Cup and Kent Senior Shield, the 1954 sides being captained by Bobby Veck. The remainder of the 1950s saw the club finish no lower than ninth and reach the final of the Kent Senior Shield and semi-final of the Kent Senior Cup in 1955–56 and the semi-final of the Kent League Cup in 1957–58. When the Kent League disbanded at the end of the 1958–59 season, Canterbury joined the Metropolitan League for the 1959–60 season where they finished third. This was enough to win promotion to the Southern League Division 1 where they soon consolidated.
The 1960s saw some good FA Cup runs for Canterbury as they twice made it through to the 1st round proper. In 1964–65 they hosted Torquay United at home but lost 6–0 in front of a record 3,001 attendance and in 1968–69 they gave Swindon Town a tough battle before eventually going down by a narrow 1–0 scoreline. Canterbury City also achieved their highest position in English football by finishing seventh in the 1965–66 Southern League Division 1 campaign.〔
In 1971 Division 1 was renamed the Southern Division as Canterbury remained a regular name in the division. Among their players during this period was former Busby Babe Bob Harrop. They reached the semi-finals of the Kent Senior Cup in 1971–72 and 1973–74. They made the first round proper of the FA Trophy in 1973–74 and went one better in 1974–75 making the second round proper. Canterbury also finished ninth in the Southern League in 1974–75 and then the following season were runners-up in the Kent Floodlight Trophy, losing 2–3 to Margate on aggregate. They also finished as runners-up in the Kent Senior Cup, losing to Maidstone United. In 1979–80 they won the Kent Senior Trophy, however, the club struggled for most of the 1970s and 1980s, as they were often found at the wrong end of the league table. Finishing tenth in the Southern League and making it to the quarter-finals of the Kent Senior Cup in 1984–85 being the only high point of the 1980s.
Canterbury City played in four consecutive pre-season Frank Norris Trophy matches against Ashford Town, winning in 1988–89 and 1989–90 and finishing Runners Up in 1987–88 and 1990–91.
In 1994 Canterbury were struggling on and off the pitch and after another tough season they dropped down to the Kent League for the 1994–95 season. Canterbury City reached the first round proper of the FA Vase in 1998–99, but then the club again fell on hard times and after finishing bottom of the ladder for two consecutive seasons they withdrew in the summer of 2001 and folded.
The new club was formed in 2007, and was elected into the Kent County League Division 2 East, part of the 13th tier of the football pyramid. In their first season they claimed the Division 2 East title, thus securing promotion, and also won the Kent County Junior Cup. In 2008–09 the club secured back to back promotions by claiming the Division 1 East title and won a second cup competition (the Les Leckie Cup). In their first season (2009–10) in the Kent County League Premier Division they achieved a 5th-place finish and reached the quarter-finals of the Inter-Regional Challenge Cup. The 2010–11 season saw Canterbury finish as runners-up and become the last club to be elected directly from the Kent County League to the Kent League.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Canterbury City F.C.」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.