Devon County Football Association

Devon County Football Association

Devon County FA logo
Purpose Football association
Location
Coordinates 50°31′21″N 3°36′23″W / 50.522472°N 3.6064875°W / 50.522472; -3.6064875Coordinates: 50°31′21″N 3°36′23″W / 50.522472°N 3.6064875°W / 50.522472; -3.6064875
Bernard Leach
Website http://www.devonfa.com/

The Devon County Football Association, also simply known as the Devon FA, is the governing body of football in the county of Devon. The Devon FA was founded in 1888 in Plymouth.[1]

They run a number of league and cup competitions for teams of all levels across the county, and representative teams for Senior Ladies, Under 18 Men and Under 18 Ladies.[2]

History

The Devon County Football Association was formed in 1888 at a meeting held in the pavilion of Plymouth Cricket Club, which is now the Astor Playing Fields at Cattedown. The founding clubs were:

Initially the County FA established a set of rules for members and oversaw friendlies and inter county representative matches. The first County Representative match took place in March 1888 at Weston-super-Mare against Somerset County FA where they were defeated by two goals to nil. The return fixture in April also ended in a defeat by two goals to three. In 1889, the County Cup competition, the Challenge Cup, was inaugurated. The first winners were Tavistock Town who defeated Plymouth FC in the final.[1]

Leagues

Devon is one of the largest County FA's by geographic area. There are five affiliated Saturday men's leagues, one Women's league, four Sunday leagues and a Wednesday league. They are:

Saturday

Women's

Sunday

Additionally there are 8 Junior Boy's leagues and one Girl's league. Affiliated clubs also play in other Football Association and Football League competitions. These include the three senior clubs that play in Football League Two (as of 2013) of Plymouth Argyle, Exeter City and Torquay United.

County Cups

The Devon St Lukes Challenge Cup is the senior county knockout cup competition. Other cup competitions include:

References

  1. 1 2 "The History Of Devon County Football Association". www.devonfa.com. Archived from the original on 2007-02-03. Retrieved 2008-02-25.
  2. "Representative Sides". Devon County Football Association. Retrieved 2009-07-30.

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.