Sandhurst Town F.C.

Sandhurst Town
Full nameSandhurst Town Football Club
NicknameThe Fizzers
Founded1910
GroundBottom Meadow, Sandhurst
Capacity1,950 (250 seated)
ManagerBob Ryan
LeagueCombined Counties League Division One
2024–25Combined Counties League Premier Division South, 19th of 20 (relegated)

Sandhurst Town Football Club is a semi-professional football club based in Sandhurst, Berkshire, England. Formed in 1910, the club plays at their temporary home ground sharing with Bracknell Town. They play in the Combined Counties League Division One.

History

After the club's formation in 1910, Sandhurst played in the Reading & District League consistently up to 1979 other than a short spell in the East Berkshire Football League. In 1979, the club was then elected into the Aldershot & District League in which they finished in third place in their first season. In 1984 Sandhurst Town F.C. finished as runners-up from whence whey became founder members of the Chiltonian League and a stepping stone toward becoming a senior club. Their most successful season in the Chiltonian Football League was in 1986–87 when they finished in second place. In 1990, the club applied for membership of the Combined Counties League and were accepted after being granted senior status by the Berks & Bucks County FA. The first two seasons were poor as they finished in bottom place on each occasion and avoided relegation back to the Chiltonian Football League at the end of the second season only due to the vacancy created by the departure of Steyning Town to the Sussex County League. However, the form of the club improved thereafter with appointment as player-manager of Tony O'Connor, who brought an improvement in the quality and stature of the team. During his second season of management, the club reached the final of the Berks & Bucks Senior Trophy, where they lost 1–0 to Eton Wick, and the final of the League Challenge Vase, losing 2–1 to Bedfont. In 1996, Tony O'Connor gave up his position as manager, although he remained at the club as a player.

The club were first accepted for entry in to the FA Cup in 1998–99, with their best run in the competition to date being reaching the second round qualifying in 2004–05. In the FA Vase, their most successful season was also 2004–05, when they reached the third round (last 64) before losing.

Upon finishing 7th in the 2010–11 league season, the Fizzers went on to beat Wembley F.C. 1–0 at Farnborough Town Football Stadium on 6 May 2011 in the EL Records Premier Challenge Cup. This was the first time Sandhurst had won this honour and did so without conceding a single goal throughout the tournament.

The 2022–23 season saw Sandhurst hit the national headlines as they were forced to play 10 games in 13 days following a wet winter which had seen many games postponed, and the FA insisting that all leagues were to be completed by the end of April.[1] Winning eight out of the ten games enabled them to clinch the Combined Counties League Division One title.

Stadium

The first ground used by the club was a field adjacent to the Bull & Butcher Public House, which was used as the club headquarters. After a few years, a move was made to the Memorial Park where the club remained until the 1996 close season apart from a couple of seasons during the 1950s spent on a nearby pitch in St John's Road. The introduction of the National Lottery prompted an immediate bid for funding to build a new ground in Bottom Meadow adjacent to the Memorial Park. With support and backing through additional match funding from Bracknell Forest Borough Council and Sandhurst Town Council, the club were successful in the first round of allocation ever made by the National Lotteries Charities Board.

The new facilities opened in August 1997 at a cost of £265,000. The ground is totally enclosed with perimeter fence and contains a boardroom/changing rooms complex, floodlights, covered accommodation, hardstanding and a post and rail barrier around the pitch. The new pitch was laid some eighteen months previously, following guidance from the national Sports Turf Council, but did not stage its first match until the start of the 1997–98 season. The ground and facilities at Bottom Meadow have been designed to meet the highest grading level of the Isthmian League to enable the club to make further progress in the football pyramid structure when circumstances permit. How far this progression has reached can be determined by the inclusion of the Club into the FA Cup for season 1998–99. The attendance record at the ground was set on 17 August 2002, when 2,449 watched Sandhurst Town's league match against AFC Wimbledon.

In 2005 a small all-seater covered stand was incorporated into the ground. This consists of 108 seats, in the red and black colours of the club.

In 2019 a proposal was tabled to replace the existing pitch, which had suffered drainage issues for a number of years, with a 3G pitch. This, among other improvements, was ultimately completed in May 2023.[2] Shortly before this, in 2022, after a meeting between The SB Group and Sandhurst Town Council, permission was granted to allow Bracknell Town to groundshare with Sandhurst Town, the agreement running until the end of the 2037/38 season.[3]

Nickname

The club gives two explanations of its unusual nickname of 'The Fizzers', and it is unclear if the two are related. One explanation states that it derives from a Friendly Insurance Society (F.I.S.) set up in Sandhurst in 1933.[4] The club alternatively state that the nickname originates from their supporters standing behind an opposing team's goal and shouting "Fizz Fizz Bang!" when the ball went into the net, although no explanation is given for why they would have done so.[4]

Season-by-season (since 1984)

Season Division League FA Cup FA Vase
P W D L GF GA GD Pts Pos
1984–85 Chiltonian League[a] 32 17 8 7 73 42 +31 59 4th
1985–86 Chiltonian League Division One 18 5 3 10 31 34 −3 18 7th
1986–87 Chiltonian League Division One 20 10 8 2 35 19 +16 38 2nd
1987–88 Chiltonian League Premier Division[b] 28 14 4 10 58 42 +16 46 4th
1988–89 Chiltonian League Premier Division 28 15 8 5 49 31 +18 53 4th
1989–90 Chiltonian League Premier Division 28 9 3 16 37 46 −9 30 11th
1990–91 Combined Counties League 32 1 8 23 22 90 −68 11 17th
1991–92 Combined Counties League 36 6 2 28 34 109 −75 20 19th
1992–93 Combined Counties League 36 14 11 11 48 52 −4 53 7th
1993–94 Combined Counties League 40 17 9 14 65 63 +2 60 10th 1R
1994–95 Combined Counties League 34 12 8 14 58 61 −3 44 10th EP
1995–96 Combined Counties League 42 18 7 17 77 89 −12 61 12th 2Q
1996–97 Combined Counties League 38 17 10 11 61 63 −2 61 8th 2Q
1997–98 Combined Counties League 38 16 7 15 67 64 +3 55 9th 2Q
1998–99 Combined Counties League 40 13 8 19 63 92 −29 47 15th 1Q R1
1999–00 Combined Counties League 40 9 9 22 70 96 −26 36 17th PR 1Q
2000–01 Combined Counties League 39 17 6 16 75 61 +14 57 13th[c] PR 2Q
2001–02 Combined Counties League 42 16 6 20 73 74 −1 54 13th PR R2
2002–03 Combined Counties League 46 23 9 14 86 57 +29 78 6th PR R2
2003–04 Combined Counties League Premier Division 46 27 11 8 109 60 +49 92 5th 1Q 2Q
2004–05 Combined Counties League Premier Division 46 26 10 10 106 61 +45 88 5th 2Q R3[d]
2005–06 Combined Counties League Premier Division 40 18 12 10 77 50 +27 66 7th EP 2Q
2006–07 Combined Counties League Premier Division 42 15 10 17 61 67 −6 55 12th PR R1
2007–08 Combined Counties League Premier Division 42 14 9 19 63 89 −26 51 16th 1Q R1
2008–09 Combined Counties League Premier Division 42 14 9 19 63 82 −19 51 16th EP R2
2009–10 Combined Counties League Premier Division 42 20 8 14 80 67 +13 68 9th EP 1Q
2010–11 Combined Counties League Premier Division 40 20 8 12 77 58 +19 68 7th EP 2Q
2011–12 Combined Counties League Premier Division 42 15 3 24 64 106 −42 48 15th EP 1Q
2012–13 Combined Counties League Premier Division 42 13 2 27 68 103 −35 41 21st EP R1
2013–14 Combined Counties League Division One 30 8 3 19 47 90 −43 27 13th EP 1Q
2014–15 Combined Counties League Division One 30 7 1 22 46 96 −50 22 16th[e]
2015–16 Combined Counties League Division One 32 9 8 15 57 89 −32 35 11th
2016–17 Hellenic Football League Division One East 26 10 7 9 38 41 −3 37 8th 1Q
2017–18 Hellenic Football League Division One East 24 14 3 7 66 37 +29 45 4th R1
2018–19 Combined Counties League Division One 34 18 6 10 61 54 +7 60 6th EP 1Q
2019–20 Combined Counties League Division One 25 12 8 5 56 39 +17 44 N/A[f] 1Q
2020–21 Combined Counties League Division One 11 4 0 7 10 26 −16 12 EP R1
2021–22 Combined Counties League Division One 40 21 6 13 87 54 +33 69 8th 2Q
2022–23 Combined Counties League Division One 40 28 3 9 128 53 +75 87 1st 1Q
2023–24 Combined Counties League Premier Division 38 16 5 17 73 78 −5 53 10th EP 1Q
2024–25 Combined Counties League Premier Division 38 9 6 23 65 97 −32 33 19th PR 2Q

Notes

  1. ^ Sandhurst Town were founding members of Chiltonian League.
  2. ^ Chiltonian League Division One was renamed to Chiltonian League Premier Division.
  3. ^ Three points deducted after a match against Farnham Town was not played.
  4. ^ Sandhurst were knocked out 3–0 away to AFC Newbury after a previous attempt at the tie was abandoned due to fog in the 73rd minute, Sandhurst were leading 3–2 at the time.
  5. ^ Three points deducted.
  6. ^ Both seasons were abandoned part way due to COVID-19

Key

Winners Runners-up Third place Play-offs Promoted Relegated

Honours

League

  • Reading & District League Premier Division
    • Champions: 1933–1934
  • Chiltonian League Division One
    • Runners-up: 1986–1987

Cup

  • EL Records Premier Challenge Cup
    • Winners: 2010–11
  • Yateley & District Hospital Cup
    • Winners: 1925–1926, 1926–1927, 1971–1972, 1983–1984
  • Aldershot FA Senior Cup
    • Winners: 2000–2001, 2005–06
  • Southern Combination Cup
    • Winners: 2002–2003
  • Aldershot & District League Division One Cup
    • Winners: 1980–1981
  • Aldershot & District League Eric Perrin Silver Plate
    • Winners: 1997–1998
  • Ascot & District Charity Cup
    • Winners: 1933–1934, 1986–1987, 1987–1988
  • Fripp-Smith Trophy[a]
    • Winners: 2021

Notes

  1. ^ A small cup competition organised by the Combined Counties League in memory of two board members of the league who died.

Records

References

  1. ^ Brewin, John (22 April 2023). "Football, sleep, repeat: Sandhurst Town and a fixture pile-up for the ages". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 26 June 2024.
  2. ^ "Bracknell Town reveal important Bottom Meadow upgrade". Football in Berkshire. 3 April 2023. Retrieved 13 March 2026.
  3. ^ "Bottom Meadow Timeline". sandhurst.gov.uk. Retrieved 13 March 2026.
  4. ^ a b Club website Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine

51°20′32″N 0°47′36″W / 51.34222°N 0.79333°W / 51.34222; -0.79333