翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares
・ Ramsay, Calgary
・ Ramsay, unintroduced baronial
・ Ramsay-Durfee Estate
・ Ramsay-Steel-Maitland baronets
・ Ramsayornis
・ Ramsayville, Ontario
・ Ramsberg
・ Ramsbotham
・ Ramsbottom
・ Ramsbottom Carbon Residue
・ Ramsbottom Cricket Club
・ Ramsbottom Evangelical Church
・ Ramsbottom railway station
・ Ramsbottom Rides Again
Ramsbottom United F.C.
・ Ramsbottom Urban District
・ Ramsbottomia
・ Ramsbury
・ Ramsbury Manor
・ Ramsbury Rural District
・ Ramscappelle Road Military Cemetery
・ Ramschied
・ Ramscraig
・ Ramsdean
・ Ramsdell
・ Ramsdell (disambiguation)
・ Ramsdell Hall
・ Ramsdell Public Library
・ Ramsdell Theatre


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

Ramsbottom United F.C. : ウィキペディア英語版
Ramsbottom United F.C.

Ramsbottom United F.C. are an English football club based in Ramsbottom, Greater Manchester. They play in the Northern Premier League Premier Division, having been promoted from the Northern Premier League Division One North in the 2013–14 season. Their home stadium is the Harry Williams Riverside Stadium, Acrebottom, Ramsbottom and their nickname is ''The Rams''. They are full members of the Lancashire County Football Association.
==History==
The club was founded in 1966 by present chairman Harry Williams. They first played in the Bury Amateur League.
In 1967 Ramsbottom moved leagues to the Bolton Combination, where they spent the next eighteen years before a move in 1987 to the Manchester League, playing in Division One. In 1989–90 they finished in third place, and the following season were Division One champions, earning promotion to the Premier Division, where they spent the next four seasons. At the end of the 1994–95 season, the club applied to the North West Counties Football League and following substantial ground improvements, were admitted into the league's Second Division in June 1995.
In their first season, ''The Rams'' finished 12th and also won the Second Division Trophy with a 2–1 victory over Cheadle Town at Darwen's Anchor Ground. The following season they were crowned Second Division champions, pipping local rivals Haslingden on goal difference on the last day of the season.〔 On 9 November 1996 they beat Stantondale 9–0, setting a club record winning margin〔 and they also won all of their first 17 home fixtures. The club also entered the FA Vase for the first time, losing in the first qualifying round 0–1 at home to Tetley Walker.〔
In 1997–98 the club finished 17th in their first season in the First Division.〔
The 1998–99 season saw the club finish in 11th place and also enter the FA Cup for the first time. They beat Maine Road 2–1 in a replay in the preliminary round, then won 3–0 at home to Shildon in the first qualifying round. In the second qualifying round they beat Billingham Town 3–0 before losing 0–5 at home to Conference National club Southport in the third qualifying round.〔
The 1999–2000 season saw a third-place finish, on 79 points.〔 Russell Brierley became the club's top scorer in any one season with 38 league goals.〔 In the 2000–01 season they finished third again, this time on 88 points, and in the following season they finished 15th. Further mid-table finishes continued in the early 2000s, with a fifth-place in 2004–05,〔 which also included a league double over eventual champions Fleetwood Town.
''The Rams'' won the Bolton Hospitals Cup in the 2005–06 season with a 2–1 victory over Eagley at the Reebok Stadium, Bolton. In the league they finished in 18th place.〔 The following season they finished 8th〔 and won the Bolton Hospitals Cup again. And in 2007–08 they completed a third successive Bolton Hospitals Cup win, while finishing in 16th place in the league.〔 The following season was once again seen as a disappointment, a 14th placed finish and unable to retain the Hospital's cup led to both manager and caretaker manager losing their jobs.
The 2009–10 season saw two former players return as joint managers, 26-year-old Anthony Johnson and 25-year-old Bernard Morley. The team finished in 4th place with a new club record of fourteen away victories. The following season (2010–11) was even better as the team once again broke plenty of club records including its highest ever finish in the club's history by taking the runners-up trophy.
The 2011–12 season saw the club take the Premier Division title, gaining not only promotion to the Northern Premier League Division One North but also giving the club its highest-ever finish. The side broke many club records – 31 league wins, 16 away league wins, 108 league goals scored, and 96 points amassed, were just a few of the season's highlights, as well as numerous 'Player of the Month' awards being won. At the North West Counties AGM dinner in Blackpool, joint managers Johnson and Morley were awarded with the Managers of the Year award.
The 2012–13 season saw the club play in the Northern Premier League for the first time. The team missed out on a play-off place in the last minutes of the season: needing a single point, for which a draw would have sufficed, after 81 minutes the team were 1–0 up before division champions Skelmersdale United scored two late goals. The club finished in 6th place and two of its players, Lee Gaskell and Gary Stopforth, were named in the league's 'Team Of The Year'.
2013–14 proved to be Ramsbottom's best season to date. Despite being deducted three points towards the end of the season, they managed to take fifth place and the last play-off spot. They proceeded to defeat Darlington 1883 in the semi-finals, before passing Bamber Bridge 3–2 after extra time in the final, reaching the Northern Premier League Premier Division, the seventh tier of English football, for the first time in their history.
After six years in the role, joint managers Johnson and Morley resigned in January 2015, moving to manage Salford City. The club appointed former player Jon Robinson as new manager.

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「Ramsbottom United 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.