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Ayr United F.C.

 
Wikipedia: Ayr United F.C.
Ayr United
Full name Ayr United Football and Athletic Club Ltd.
Nickname(s) The Honest Men
Founded 1910
Ground Somerset Park
(Capacity: 10,243 (1,597 seated))
Chairman United States Lachlan Cameron
Manager Scotland Brian Reid
League Scottish First Division
2008–09 Scottish Second Division, 2nd (Promoted via play-offs)
Home colours
Away colours

Ayr United F.C. are an association football team based in Ayr, South Ayrshire, who play in the First Division of the Scottish Football League, having been promoted in the 2008-09 season. Formed in 1910 after the merger of former clubs Ayr Parkhouse F.C. and Ayr F.C. (the latter being a prior merger of Ayr Thistle and Ayr Academical in 1879), their nickname is "The Honest Men", taken from a line in the poem "Tam o' Shanter" by Scotland's national poet, Robert Burns. They play at Somerset Park.

The club have spent 34 seasons in Scotland's top division altogether, though the last was in the 1977/78 season. The club have been the champions of the second tier of Scottish football on six occasions and of the third tier twice (most recently in 1996/97), but have not won any national cup competitions. The club's most famous and most successful manager is Ally MacLeod, who went on to manage the Scottish national football team. Their current manager is former player Brian Reid.

The club's local derby is with rival Ayrshire side Kilmarnock.

Contents

History

Ayr United were founded in 1910 after the merger of Ayr Parkhouse F.C. and Ayr F.C. Although Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. are also the product of a merger between two clubs, Ayr United are the only senior Scottish League club to have been formed from a merger of two existing league clubs.

The club's honours include winning six Second Division titles (as the second tier championship) and a further two such titles (as the third tier championship), most recently in 1996/97. They have not won any national cup competitions, although they were runners-up in the 2001-02 Scottish League Cup, and in the Scottish Challenge Cup in the first two seasons in which the competition was held: 1990-91 and 1991-92. They have won the local competition the Ayrshire Cup on 26 occasions, most commonly facing fierce local rivals Kilmarnock F.C. in the final. The Ayrshire Cup was last played for in season 1996/97, since when the competition has been suspended.

The club's record scorer in a single season is Jimmy Smith, who scored 66 goals for Ayr in only 38 league matches in 1927-28, which remains the British goalscoring record for a single season. The club's overall record scorer is Peter Price, who scored 213 times in competitive matches for the club between 1955 and 1962.

Former Scottish national team manager Ally MacLeod is regarded as the club's most famous and most successful manager. He led the club on three separate occasions spanning fifteen years, during which his teams recorded a record 214 wins, won two league titles and finished one point short of qualifying for European competition in 1973, when Macleod was also voted as Ayr's Citizen of the Year. More recent managers have also included the current Scottish national team manager, George Burley, and former Scottish League Cup winner with Raith Rovers F.C., Gordon Dalziel. Their current manager is Brian Reid.

Although the club has spent 34 seasons in Scotland's top division, they have played in the second and third tiers of Scottish senior football since the 1977/78 season. During the late 1990s and early 2000s, the club established a record of defeating teams which played in higher leagues in cup competitions, including Hibernian, Dundee, Dundee United, Motherwell, Dunfermline Athletic

In 1988, Ayr United fan and businessman Sir David Murray offered to buy the club but the club's shareholders rejected the bid by a vote of 60 to 56. Then-manager Ally MacLeod had threatened to leave if Murray's bid had succeeded: Murray went on to become Chairman of Rangers F.C., which coincided with a period of financial growth and league success for that club. During much of the 1990s and 2000s, a period of relative success both in league and cup competitions, the Ayr United Chairman was local construction magnate Bill Barr. After Barr stood down, there were occasional boardroom struggles: the club suffered significant cashflow problems in 2004 and only survived after supporters came together to form The Honest Men Trust. Prestwick-based Roy Kennedy failed to takeover the club in 2005, and his company Kennedy Construction went bankrupt in 2006.

On 24 May 2009, Ayr won the Scottish First Division Play-off against Airdrie United F.C. 3–2 on aggregate to win promotion to the First Division. For season 2009/10, to celebrate the club's centenary, Ayr United will play in black and white hoops, the club's original black and white kit. The away kit will be crimson and gold with blue shorts to reflect the original club colours.They have found their feet in the Scottish First Division. After their shaky start they beat fellow first division side Raith Rovers 1-0 at the beloved Somerset Park Then losing 5-1 to Inverness CT

Stadium

Ayr play their football at Somerset Park in Ayr's New Town. One of the few surviving traditional stadium designs, it consists of one stand, two covered terraces, and one open terrace. It has a capacity of 10,128. The first match to take place at Somerset Park was between the former Ayr F.C. and Aston Villa in a 3–0 victory for Ayr.

During the 1990s the club's chairman was Bill Barr, who owned and managed the company which built modern-style stadiums and stands for several other clubs around the UK. United also sought — and obtained — planning permission from South Ayrshire Council for a new 10,200 all-seated stadium at Heathfield in Ayr with an associated retail development. However, the Scottish Executive then "called in" the application and reversed the decision in respect of the retail development. Since the club considered this aspect of the proposal necessary to fund the construction, the development did not proceed.[1]

In November 2006, United signed a contract with Barratt Homes for the sale of Somerset Park, having secured a 20-acre (81,000 m2) site in the Heathfield area of Ayr. The site would house a new GBP£18 million stadium seating 7,650 as part of a "sports and business campus".[2] However, following the economic downturn, Barratt used a loophole in the contract to pull out of the project.[original research?] No alternative purchaser has been identified yet, and the new stadium proposal remains on hold.[citation needed]

Current squad

No. Position Player
Scotland GK Stephen Grindlay
Scotland GK Craig Samson
Scotland DF Andy Aitken
Scotland DF Martyn Campbell
Scotland DF Billy Gibson
Scotland DF Kevin James
Scotland DF Neil McGowan
Australia DF Ryan McGowan (on loan from Hearts)
Scotland MF Chris Aitken (captain)
Scotland MF Ryan Borris
No. Position Player
Scotland MF Kenny Connolly
Scotland MF William Easton
Croatia MF Romeo Filipovic
Scotland MF Dean Keenan
Scotland MF Ryan Stevenson
Scotland MF Alistair Woodburn
Scotland FW Kevin Cawley
Montserrat FW Junior Mendes
Scotland FW Stephen Reynolds (on loan from St Johnstone)
Scotland FW Mark Roberts

Players out on loan

No. Position Player
Scotland GK David Mitchell (on loan to Stranraer)
Scotland MF Scott Agnew (on loan to Alloa Athletic)
Scotland FW David Gormley (on loan to Albion Rovers)
Scotland FW Bryan Prunty (on loan to Stirling Albion)

Recent managers

Name Years
Northern Ireland Frank Thompson 1935–39
Scotland Archie Anderson 1949–53
Scotland Reuben Bennett 1953–55
Scotland Neil McBain 1955–56
Scotland Jackie Cox 1956–61
Scotland Bobby Flavell 1961
Scotland Gerry Mays 1961–62
Scotland Neil McBain 1962–63
Scotland Bobby Flavell 1963–64
Scotland Tom McCreath 1964–66
Scotland Ally MacLeod 1966–75
Scotland Alex Stuart 1975–78
Scotland Ally MacLeod 1978
Scotland Willie McLean 1979–83
Scotland George Caldwell 1983–85
Scotland Ally MacLeod 1985–90
Scotland George Burley 1991–93
England Simon Stainrod 1993–95
Scotland Gordon Dalziel 1995–02
Scotland Campbell Money 2002–04
Scotland Mark Shanks 2004–05
Scotland Bobby Connor 2005–07
Scotland Neil Watt 2007
Scotland Brian Reid 2007–Present

Club honours

Scottish Second Division / Scottish League First Division
Scottish Football League First Division Play-Offs
Scottish League Second Division
Scottish League Cup
Scottish Challenge Cup

Records

Their biggest win to date came against Dumbarton in the Scottish League Cup on 13 August 1952. They won 11–1.

Their biggest defeat came against Heart of Midlothian in the 1st Division on 28 February 1931. They lost 0–9.

Their highest attendance of 25,225 came against Rangers on 13 September 1969.

Notable players

References

External links


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