Old Brightonians F.C.

Old Brightonians were an amateur association football club, based in London, for the former pupils of Brighton College.

Old Brightonians
1894
Full nameOld Brightonians Football Club
Nickname(s)O.B.s[1]
Founded1881
Dissolved1920
GroundGreyhound Ground, Dulwich

History

The club's first entry into the FA Cup, in 1884-85, saw the club defeated in the first round by the Swifts club of Slough, the club not helped by one of their players having to miss the match through illness and having to play with ten men throughout.[2] The club's biggest win in the competition proper was over the Clapham Rovers in 1886-87, a team that had won the cup at the start of the decade, by six goals to nil, away from home.[3] (The club bettered that score in the qualifying rounds in 1891-92, beating Gravesend 8-0 away at the latter's Bat & Ball Ground.)[4] The O.B.s' best run was in 1887-88, reaching the third round and losing to the Old Carthusians.[5]

In 1888-89, the Football Association introduced qualifying rounds, and the Old Brightonians won through four rounds to play in the first round proper, losing 2-0 at Notts County, a Football League club; the O.B.s were considered a little unlucky, the first goal being an own goal and the second coming right at the death.[6] Only one other old boys' club had made it that far.

The difficulties of pure amateurism was demonstrated the next season, when the club withdrew from the Cup at the third qualifying round stage, because some of its best players were needed for the Varsity Match.[7] The closest the club came to making the first round again was in 1891-92, when the club lost to Chatham in the third qualifying round, losing 3-2 amidst controversial circumstances; the referee allowed a Chatham goal that was handled into the goal on the basis that the O.B.s had only appealed for offside, and the Chatham winner coming after goalkeeper Stone stepped back when catching a header by Hobart and the referee ruled he had stepped over the line. Old Brightonians protested the result but, at a Southern Sub-divisional FA Committee meeting four days later, the protest was quickly rejected.[8]

With the advance of professional football, the club's last FA Cup entry was in 1892-93, losing to the Old Westminsters in the first qualifying round.[9] The club retreated to the old boy competitions, and had some success in the Arthur Dunn Cup. The club however only seems to have lasted one season after World War I, although in 1996 a new club was formed, the Old Brightonians Association Football Club.

Colours

The club's colours throughout the 1880s were blue and white,[10] which photographic evidence[11] confirms to have been hoops, originally with a blue and white striped cap. By 1894 the club was wearing claret with blue pinstripes.[12]

Honours

Arthur Dunn Cup: winners 1912-13, runners-up 1906-07[13]

Notable players

Four players were capped by England while registered with the club:[14]

References

  1. "Clapham Rovers v Old Brightonians". Field: 684. 6 November 1886.
  2. "match report". Uxbridge & West Drayton Gazette: 7. 15 November 1884.
  3. "Clapham Rovers v Old Brightonians". Field: 684. 6 November 1886.
  4. "Gravesend v Old Brightonians". Lloyd's Weekly Register: 16. 25 October 1891.
  5. "report". Sporting Life: 4. 25 November 1887.
  6. "The Association Cup". Pall Mall Gazette: 6. 4 February 1889.
  7. "English Challenge Cup". Sheffield Independent: 7. 16 November 1889.
  8. "English Cup tie at Chatham". The Chatham & Rochester News: 3. 21 November 1891.
  9. Kratsev, Todor. "Football 22nd English Football Association (FA) Cup 1892-1893 Qualification". Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  10. Charles Alcock Football Yearbooks 1881-89
  11. "Old Brightonians". Facebook.
  12. "Antique photo: Football soccer team, Old Brightonians stock photo". iStock. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  13. "Arthur Dunn Cup". Arthurian League. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  14. "England Players' Clubs". England Football Online. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.