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Kings Park F.C. : ウィキペディア英語版
King's Park F.C.

King's Park FC were a football club who played in the Scottish Football League before the Second World War. Based in Stirling, they joined the League in the 1921–22 season, following the reintroduction of the Second Division and were one of 11 new members for that season.
==History==
Their finest season came in 1927–28, when they just missed promotion by one point. Their record victory was in a 12–2 league victory against Forfar Athletic on 2 January 1930. In this game Jim Dyet scored eight of the club's goals, a feat made all the more remarkable by the fact that it was his debut for the club.〔D. Pickering, ''The Cassell Soccer Companion'', London: Cassell, 1995, p. 122〕 Indeed, Dyet's feat stands as British record for goals on a debut to this day.〔("Wayne two three" ) from ''The Sun''〕 The club's other great goalscorer of the 1930s was Alex Haddow, who hit five consecutive league hat-tricks in January and February 1932.〔J. Rollin, ''The Guinness Football Factbook'', Enfield: Guinness Publishing, 1993, p. 128〕 Although overall they failed to make much impact on the league. However, they were 4 times winners of the Stirlingshire Cup.
Although a middle-ranking Second Division club King's Park did at times make the headlines. Their league game against Dundee Hibernian on 20 October 1923 would be the last game that club would play under that name, they were renamed Dundee United two days later.〔M. Watson, ''The Tannadice Encyclopedia'', Edinburgh: Mainstream, 1997, p. 117〕 The club became the centre of controversy in 1927 when a newspaper report suggested that their next opponents Clydebank were about to go out of business and as a consequence the attendance at the match was minimal. As a consequence King's Park held back Clydebank's cut of the gate until the Scottish League intervened. Although the issue was resolved it helped to increase support amongst the League administrators for cutting the number of clubs due to their volatile status.〔B. Crampsey, ''The First Hundred Years'', Glasgow: Scottish Football League, 1990, p. 83〕

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