Billericay Town F.C.

Billericay Town
Full name Billericay Town Football Club
Nickname(s) Ricay, The Blues
Founded 1880
Ground New Lodge, Billericay
Ground Capacity 3,500 (424 seated)[1]
Chairman Steve Kent
Manager Craig Edwards
League Isthmian League Premier Division
2015–16 Isthmian League Premier Division, 9th
Website Club home page
Kevin Ramsay and Craig Edwards, 5 August 2014, during a pre-season friendly with Charlton Athletic.

Billericay Town Football Club is a semi-professional football club based in Billericay, Essex, England. They are currently members of the Isthmian League Premier Division and play at New Lodge. They are the second most successful club in FA Vase history, having won the competition on three occasions.

History

Established as Billericay in 1880,[2] the club joined the Romford & District League in 1890, where they played until World War I.[3] They also started playing in the Mid-Essex League, winning Division Two in 1912–13.[4] They remained in the Mid-Essex League until joining the Southern Essex Combination League in 1947.[5] In 1946 they adopted their current name.[2]

In 1966 the club were founder members of the Essex Olympian League.[5] The 1969–70 season saw them win the league and League Cup double, a feat they repeated the following season.[3] Following their back-to-back titles, the club became founder members of the Essex Senior League in 1971, finishing as runners-up in its first season and winning the title in 1972–73.[5]

After finishing as runners-up again, the club won back-to-back league titles in 1974–75 and 1975–76. The latter season also saw them reach the final of the FA Vase and beat Stamford 1–0 at Wembley,[5] as well as a first Essex Senior Cup title when they beat Epping Town 3–2 in the final.[3] Although they only finished third in 1976–77, they retained the FA Vase, beating Sheffield 2–1 in a replay at the City Ground in Nottingham after a 1–1 draw at Wembley.[5]

In 1977 the club switched to the Athenian League, which they won at the first attempt. The 1978–79 season saw them retain their Athenian League title and win a third FA Vase in four seasons, beating Almondsbury Greenway 4–1 in the final,[5] with Doug Young becoming the only player to score a hat-trick in an FA Vase final at the old Wembley.[6] The following season saw them move up to Division Two of the Isthmian League, they also won at the first attempt, earning promotion to Division One. Their run of success continued in 1980–81 as they finished as runners-up in Division One and were promoted to the Premier Division,[5] the first time back-to-back promotions had been achieved in the league by a new club.[3]

Billericay remained in the Premier Division until being relegated to Division One at the end of the 1985–86 season. This began a spell as a yo-yo club, as they were relegated to Division Two North at the end of the 1988–89 season. They were placed in Division Two in 1991 after league restructuring, before being promoted back to Division One in 1992–93 and then to the Premier Division in 1997–98 after finishing as Division One runners-up.[5] The 1997–98 season also saw them reach the first round of the FA Cup for the first time, losing 3–2 at home to fellow non-League club Wisbech Town.[5]

In 2004–05 the club reached the first round of the FA Cup again, losing 1–0 at home to Stevenage Borough.[5] They also finished as Premier Division runners-up, qualifying for the promotion play-offs. However, they were beaten 2–0 at home by Leyton in the semi-finals.[7] A fourth-place finish in 2006–07 saw them qualify for the play-offs again, this time beating local rivals Chelmsford City 5–3 on penalties in the semi-finals after a 1–1 draw, before losing 4–2 on penalties to Bromley in the final following another 1–1 draw.[8] In 2007–08 they qualified for the first round of the FA Cup again, losing 2–1 at home to Swansea City.[5]

In 2010–11 Billericay won the Essex Senior Cup for a second time, beating Aveley 2–0 in the final.[3] The following season saw the club win the Premier Division, earning promotion to the Conference South. However, they were relegated back to the Isthmian League the following season after finishing second-from-bottom of the Conference South.[5]

Current squad

As of 5 September 2016[9]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
England GK Jack Giddens (Captain)
England DF Gabby Adelowo
England DF Jerome Bowers
England DF Luke Wilson
Lithuania DF Edvardas Gaurilovas
England DF William Putt
England DF Alex Stephenson
England MF Kam Guthmy
England MF Luke Moore
England MF Pierre Hazet
England MF Conor Hubble
No. Position Player
Kosovo MF Kreshnic Krasniqi
Antigua and Barbuda MF Louis Taaffe
England MF Quentin Monville
England MF Lloyd Ross
England MF Lartey Sarpong
England FW Kyle Asante
England FW Lewis Byrne-Hewitt
England FW Billy Bricknell
Jamaica FW Ricky Sappleton
England FW Michael Bakare
England FW Goldy Capella

Management

Position Name
ManagerEngland Craig Edwards
Assistant managerEngland Kevin Ramsay
First team coach England Alex Fiddes
Goalkeeping CoachEngland Kevin Shrimpton
Physiotherapist England Kevin Head

Ground

The clubhouse, main stand and The Cowshed at New Lodge, 2014
Covered seating, May 2014
Clubhouse, Main Stand and Cow Shed terracing

Billericay Town played at Archer Hall on Laindon Road until moving to New Lodge in 1971.[10] The ground had previously been use by Outwell Common,[10] and Chelmsford City also played at New Lodge between 1998 and 2005.[11] A small seated stand was erected in 1980, with the clubhouse on one side and the Cow Shed terracing on the other. In the 1990s seated stands were installed behind each goal having been obtained from the ground of Newbury Town after they folded.[10] These were later both moved to the opposite side of the pitch to the 1980 stand and were joined together.[10] An area of covered terracing was added alongside the seated stands.[10] Plans to move to a new stadium at Gloucester Park in Basildon in the early 2000s fell through and instead the club redeveloped New Lodge.[10]

The ground has a capacity of 3,500, of which 424 is seated and 2,000 is covered.[1] The record attendance of 3,841 was set for a friendly match against West Ham United to mark the switching on of the new floodlights in 1977.[1] The club had won the floodlights by winning the Philips Electrical Floodlight Competition, a six-a-side tournament played at the Crystal Palace National Sports Centre played the day after the club won the 1977 FA Vase final against Sheffield.[3]

Honours

Records

Top scorers

  • 1971–72: Freddie Clayden[12]
  • 1972–73: Freddie Clayden
  • 1973–74: Danny Westwood
  • 1974–75: Freddie Clayden
  • 1975–76: Freddie Clayden
  • 1976–77: Freddie Clayden
  • 1977–78: Freddie Clayden
  • 1978–79: Freddie Clayden & Doug Young
  • 1979–80: Doug Young
  • 1980–81: Dave Groom
  • 1981–82: Gary Rolph
  • 1982–83: Freddie Clayden
  • 1983–84: Danny Westwood
  • 1984–85: Keith Pope
  • 1985–86: Kurt Davidson, Keith Pope & Paul Wilson
  • 1986–87: Paul Cockayne
  • 1987–88: Vince Callcutt
  • 1988–89: Mel Kelly & Barry Turner
  • 1989–90: Dave Groom
  • 1990–91: Andy Howard
  • 1991–92: Steve Jones
  • 1992–93: Steve Jones
  • 1993–94: Paul Battram
  • 1994–95: Paul Battram
  • 1995–96: Leon Gutzmore
  • 1996–97: Leon Gutzmore
  • 1997–98: Leon Gutzmore
  • 1998–99: David Adekola
  • 1999–00: Stafford Browne & Colin Simpson
  • 2000–01: Joe Baker
  • 2001–02: Martin Carthy
  • 2002–03: Roy Essandoh
  • 2003–04: Martin Carthy
  • 2004–05: Nathan Elder
  • 2005–06: Nathan Elder
  • 2006–07: Joe Flack
  • 2007–08: Bradley Woods-Garness
  • 2008–09: Billy Bricknell
  • 2009–10: Billy Bricknell
  • 2010–11: Cedric Ngakam
  • 2011–12: Jay May
  • 2012–13: Glenn Poole
  • 2013–14: Ricky Sappleton
  • 2014–15: Ricky Sappleton
  • 2015–16: Tom Derry

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Mike Williams & Tony Williams (2012) Non-League Club Directory 2013, p265 ISBN 978-1-869833-77-0
  2. 1 2 3 History Billericay Town Unofficial
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Club History Billericay Town F.C.
  4. Official Handbook Mid-Essex League, p71
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Billericay Town at the Football Club History Database
  6. Billericay Town – FA Vase Winners 1979 The Non-League Paper, 5 August 2012
  7. 2004-05 Isthmian League Football Club History Database
  8. 2006-07 Isthmian League Football Club History Database
  9. Player profiles Billericay Town F.C.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Billericay Town Pyramid Passion
  11. Williams & Williams, p277
  12. Top goalscorers Billericay Town Unofficial

External links

Coordinates: 51°37′18.5334″N 0°24′11.8008″E / 51.621814833°N 0.403278000°E / 51.621814833; 0.403278000

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