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

Tayport F.C. are a Scottish Junior football club from Tayport, Fife. Formed in 1947, they play their home games at The Canniepairt. Nicknamed ''the Port'', the club's colours are red, white and black.
They presently play in the Scottish Junior Football Association's East Region Premier League.
Although the club is based in Fife, their close geographical location to Dundee and Angus meant that, when they became a junior club, they chose to join the Tayside League rather than the Fife League. They had phenomenal success in the 1990s and early 2000s, winning the league they were competing in every season since 1990-91, bar four times when they have managed to finish as runners-up.
==History==
For over a century the game of football has been a major influence in most communities in Scotland. Tayport, a small former burgh of just under 4,000 inhabitants, situated on Fife’s most northern extremity on the south bank of the River Tay, is no exception.
From Victorian times, through to the Second World War, the town has always had at least one football club. Information from those days is sketchy, but we do know that Tayport had a Junior club pre-First World War, winning the East of Fife Cup in 1905, for example. The Great War in 1914 effectively signalled the demise of Junior football in the town for seventy five years.
Throughout the twenties and thirties, there were various amateurs clubs in the town, but success was fleeting and there is little recorded history. After the Second World War and the second half of the 20th Century beckoning, The town’s football club was Tayport Violet. In 1947 a new club emerged as rivals to Violet when Tayport Amateurs was formed by local lads who had been playing friendlies together as a Senior Boy Scouts team. This was the birth of the club we know today.
These local lads entered the Amateurs team in the Midlands Amateurs’ Alliance League, a league which was essentially for clubs’ reserve XIs. Local rivals Violet played in the Midlands’ top division. By 1950, the Midlands Amateur Football Association was expanding and in the reorganised leagues, both the Violet and the Amateurs found themselves in Division Two.
Promotion was swift and the two teams finished the season in 1st and 2nd spots respectively. 1952/53 saw Violet and the Amateurs finish second and third in the first division behind the champions, YM Anchorage. YM Anchorage, incidentally, had won every title since 1933. Then, suddenly, Violet were gone. Despite finishing runners-up, it was their last season.
There were contrasting fortunes for the Amateurs during the 50s and 60s, but despite experiencing some quite often desperate times, the club managed to survive. That survival was important and a significant factor in the success the club was to enjoy during the latter part of the century. A new, young committee emerged in the late 1960s and the 1970s was a reasonably successful era, with the club establishing itself as a major force in the amateur game.
The club, which had always played its football on the East Common, required more modern accommodation and, at the invitation of Tayport Town Council, in 1975, moved across the factory burn from the East Common to The Canniepairt. This was formerly poor farming land which had been allowed to go to waste but which had recently been used by the Army for its Polex 70 Exercise. Clubrooms were constructed and, like the ground, were subjected to various upgrades in order to provide the accommodation which the club, and indeed, the community, now enjoys.
In 1980, the club which, since 1953 had run an Alliance, or Reserve XI, started a third team – the Fife XI - which was to enjoy eleven successful seasons in the East Fife Amateur Association and for one season, the Kingdom Caledonian League.
As the club’s standing in the game developed, the committee felt the time was right to take a further step and, in 1990, the club’s Junior team was launched and the name of the club became, quite simply, ‘Tayport Football Club’, a name which could embrace both amateur and junior grades. The enthusiasm for amateur football in the town waned, and through a lack of local players, season 2000/2001 was to be the club’s last in the Amateurs Leagues.
Since the club joined the Junior ranks, the success which the club has enjoyed has been phenomenal and is unsurpassed in 120 years’ history of the Junior game. Virtually every honour the game has to offer, has come Tayport’s way, culminating in six Scottish Junior Cup Final appearances, with three wins - 1996, 2003 and 2005. Six live TV appearances and sustained media spotlight has raised the profile of the previously unknown former harbour and railway town to a hitherto unknown level.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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