Stevenston Thistle F.C.

Association football club in Scotland

Football club
Stevenston Thistle
Full nameStevenston Thistle Football Club
Nickname(s)the Thistle, the Jags,[1] the Dynamite Boys[2]
Founded1885
Dissolved1904
GroundWarner Park
Home colours

Stevenston Thistle Football Club was a football club from the town of Stevenston, Ayrshire, Scotland.

History

The club was founded in 1885. The club's first reported matches are from 1886[3] and it started to play competitive football from 1887–88, losing in the first round of the Ayrshire Cup and the Scottish Cup.

The club reached the third round of the national competition in 1889–90, where it lost at Abercorn; the score was 2–2 at half-time but three goals in the first five second-half minutes saw the home side through.[4] The following season the club successfully protested a second round defeat by Burnbank Swifts on the basis that the full 90 minutes had not been played,[5] but the club lost the replayed tie anyway.

The club's best performance came after the Scottish Football Association brought in preliminary rounds in 1891, as in reaching the first round proper in 1894–95, the club won 3 ties for the only time,[6] and the last 32 was the furthest the club reached in the competition. The club was drawn to play Clyde at the latter's Barrowfield Park and lost 7–2.[7]

In 1891, the club was a founder member of the Ayrshire Football League;[8] after two seasons of mediocrity, and the league growing to an unfeasible number of clubs, Thistle was one of six clubs which broke away to form the Ayrshire Football Combination, with the North Ayrshire Cup running alongside it as a geographically limited (and therefore cheaper) competition.

The club remained a member of the Combination until its collapse in 1896–97, without success, and finished bottom in its one season back in the Ayrshire League in 1901–02. However, the Thistle won the North Ayrshire Cup in 1894–95 (played as a knockout) and 1895–96 (played as a league, beating Beith 2–1 in a title playoff). The club was also runner-up in 1896–97 and 1898–99 - in the latter season losing a play-off to Galston, after the clubs had finished level on points, by 8 goals to 1. The club also reached the final of the Ayrshire Cup for the only time in 1900–01, and, against the odds, took Ayr to a replay, only going down 2–1 at the second time of asking.[9]

By 1902–03, local leagues were no longer feasible, with Ayrshire clubs in the Scottish League attracting the most attention, and the North Ayrshire League collapsed during the season, with the Thistle having only played four games. The club scratched from its Scottish Qualifying Cup first round tie with Hurlford in 1903–04,[10] having lost the use of Warner Park,[11] and was formally struck off the Scottish FA register before the 1904–05 season.[12]

Colours

The club originally played in maroon shirts with a gold hoop and white knickerbockers. From 1889 to 1894 the club wore blue and white stripes, and after 1894 black and white stripes.[13]

Grounds

The club played at Warner Park,[14] which was later used as the ground for Stevenston United.

Notable players

  • James Cairns, who left the club in 1895 to play in the Football League
  • Willie Fisher, who joined the club in 1901 having played for several teams in the Football League
  • Joseph Frew, who played in the Football League in between two stints with the club[15]

References

  1. ^ "2nd Irvine v 2nd Stevenston Thistle". Irvine Herald: 8. 30 October 1891.
  2. ^ "Ayrshire Notes". Daily Record: 6. 6 February 1897.
  3. ^ "Stevenston Thistle v Dalry Swifts". Irvine Herald: 2. 18 December 1886.
  4. ^ "Abercorn v Stevenson [sic] Thistle". Paisley Daily Express: 3. 21 October 1889.
  5. ^ "Scottish Football Association". Lothian Courier: 6. 11 October 1890.
  6. ^ Mathers, Stewart. "Season 1894–95". Beautiful Dribbling Game. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
  7. ^ "Clyde v Stevenston Thistle". Glasgow Herald: 9. 26 November 1894.
  8. ^ "Ayrshire Football League". Irvine Herald: 6. 19 June 1891.
  9. ^ "Learn to lose, learn to win". Scottish Referee: 1. 1 April 1901.
  10. ^ Mathers, Stewart. "Season 1903–04". Beautiful Dribbling Game. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
  11. ^ "Ayrshire notes". Scottish Referee: 2. 4 September 1903.
  12. ^ "Scottish Football Association". Airdrie Advertiser: 6. 13 August 1904.
  13. ^ "Club Directory". Scottish Football Historical Results Archive. Retrieved 27 October 2022.
  14. ^ "Stevenston Thistle Football Club Athletic Sports". Irvine Herald: 8. 22 August 1890.
  15. ^ "Dundee v West Bromwich Albion". Birmingham Daily Gazette: 3. 15 October 1895.

External links

  • Scottish Cup results
  • Ayrshire Cup results
  • Ayrshire League results
  • Ayrshire Combination results
  • North Ayrshire League and Cup results
  • v
  • t
  • e
Founder members of the Scottish Football AssociationEntrants to the first Scottish Cup
Former Scottish Football League membersFormer Scottish Football Alliance membersFormer Scottish Football Federation membersFormer Scottish Football Combination members
Former Scottish Football Union members
Former Northern League membersFormer Highland League membersFormer East of Scotland League membersFormer Eastern League (and successors) membersFormer Midland Football league members
Former Southern Counties/South of Scotland League membersFormer Lanarkshire Football League members
Other senior clubs
Senior clubs without dedicated pages
Junior clubs