Hinckley United F.C.

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Hinckley United
Club logo
Full nameHinckley United FC
Nickname(s)The Knitters
Founded1997 (or 1889)
(Merger of Athletic and Town)
GroundMarston's Stadium
Capacity4329
ChairmanEngland Kevin Downes
ManagerEngland Dean Thomas
LeagueBlue Square North
2006-07Conference North, 4th

Hinckley United Football Club are an English football club, from Hinckley, Leicestershire currently playing in the Blue Square North. Formed only in 1997, the club has risen from the Southern League Midland/West Division to the Blue Square North in those 10 years. Hinckley United play their home games at the Marston's Stadium having moved to the purpose built football stadium in March 2005.

Club History

One of the newest clubs in senior Non-League football, Hinckley United, was formed as recently as Wednesday 18 June 1997. A meeting on that date saw shareholders of Hinckley Athletic (Midland Alliance) approve a merger with neighbours Hinckley Town (Southern League Midland/West Division.) Merger moves were made immediately at the end of the 1996/1997 season when Athletic narrowly missed out on promotion to the Dr Marten's League for the third consecutive campaign following finishes of 2nd, 3rd and 2nd again. A meeting of the respective chairmen, Mick Voce (Athletic) and Kevin Downes (Town), established there was some common ground with each club having something positive to offer.

Formed in 1889, Athletic had the traditional support of the Hinckley people, averaging 250 and a Dr Marten's League approved ground at Middlefield Lane with good and ever improving facilities as well as exciting development plans in hand.

Town were formed in 1958 and made rapid strides from local football to the Dr Marten's League with the 1980s being a successful decade.

Consequently, the new club were to play at Middlefield Lane with Town's Leicester Road set up being used as a training ground, and once the FA and Southern League had approved the merger, United inherited Town's Southern League Midland/West Division place.

Manager

In August 1997 Dean Thomas became team manager with former Hinckley Athletic boss John Hanna being appointed general manager, although Hanna relinquished his position in the new year of 1998, leaving Thomas in sole charge.

Dean Thomas was a Professional Footballer with Wimbledon, Fortuna Düsseldorf, Northampton Town and Notts County. While at Notts County, Dean was club captain and played twice at Wembley Stadium. His first managerial post was with Bedworth United, his hometown club, and then after the formation in 1997 became Hinckley United's manager. His greatest achievement as a manager so far has been winning the Dr Marten Western Division Championship with Hinckley United in season 2000/2001, plus guiding Hinckley United to the FA Cup 2nd round in December 2001 and December 2004. He recently signed an extension to his contract keeping him at the club until 2010.

Dean Thomas has now been Hinckley United manager for 10 years and has been granted a Testimonal Season for 2007/2008.

His assistant manager during that time was former Notts County player Charlie Palmer, however at the start of the 2007/2008 season Palmer was replaced by Nick Platnauer. Platnauer had previously managed Rothwell Town, Kettering Town and Bedford Town

Colours, Crest & Nickname

The club colours are red and blue, a blend of the main colours of the former clubs. Athletic played in red and Town played in blue. The original playing kit was red and blue stripes, blue shorts, blue socks - but that has evolved over the past 10 years. Now the playing kit is a solid blue body with red sleeves, and red flashes down the side of the body, blue shorts and red socks.

The original club crest for Hinckley United was the Arms of Honour of Hinckley, basically a red and white halved shield divided in half by a serated line. The Club Crest was relaunched in 2004 still incorporating the Arms of Honour of Hinckley but also taking elements of the Borough of Hinckley and Bosworth crest and mascots of the two merged clubs Hinckley Athletic and Hinckley Town. The Rams were added from the Borough crest signifying the Hosiery industry in the town, and Hinckley Town's Eagle plus Hinckley Athletic's Robin were placed atop the crest. A full description plus history of the crest can be found here: http://www.hinckleyunitedfc.co.uk/club/crest.html

At the formation of the club, a competition was held for fans to come up with a nickname and The Knitters was chosen. This reflects one of the longest standing industries associated with the town, the wool and hoseiry trade, having been factories in Hinckley since the 17th Century.

Club Sponsors

The current shirt sponsors for 2007/2008 are Castle Commercial, a property managing firm based in Hinckley. Hinckley United have had an association with the famous Triumph Motorcycles over the last 3 seasons and they still carry this on by being Associate Shirt Sponor, having the Triumph brand across the back of the playing shirts and on the shorts.

Marston Stadium

the Main Stand

Hinckley United began playing their games in 1997 at Middlefield Lane, former home to Hinckley Athletic. Although having the required Grade for Southern League and Conference North, it was old and would take a lot of work to upgrade to a better level. Hinckley United spent two years financing, securing land and building a new ground, and in 2005 Phase 1 of the Stadium was completed. Marston's Brewery signed to a 10 year sponsorship of the ground and it became known as the Marston's Stadium.

In total the complex covers 22 acres and includes 3 full size pitches, 2 three-quarter size pitches, 3 half size pitches and an All Weather floodlit pitch. The flagship of the complex is the Marston's Stadium, a 4329 capacity purpose built football ground, also comprising gymnasium, sports injury clinic and a social club too.

The first match in the Stadium was on 5th March 2005 when Stalybridge Celtic were the first team to play Hinckley United on the ground, and drew 1-1, in front of a crowd of over 2000.

  • Phase 1 completed in 2005, the Main Stand, The East Stand and the North Stand.
  • Phase 2 completed in 2007, the Junior and All Weather pitch changing facilities at the West End.
  • Phase 3 will incorporate a 400 seat covered stand at the West End of the ground.
  • Phase 4 if necessary planning is in place to extend the stands to increase capacity to 6000.

Performance

Summary

Having won the Southern League Midlands/West Division in 2001, Hinckley United then qualified for the new Conference North league by finishing 6th in the Southern League Premier in 2004. In 2007 Hinckley United achieved their highest ever league position of 4th, qualifying for the play-offs, then reaching the play-off final, only to lose 4-3 to a last minute penalty.

League Position


FA Competitions

FA Cup

Hinckley United have only ever reached beyond the 1st round of the FA Cup on two occasions, both times losing to Football League opposition in the 2nd Round.

In 2001/2002 Hinckley United beat Grays Athletic 1-2 at the New Recreation Ground in the 1st round, then lost to Cheltenham Town 0-2 at Middlefield Lane.

In 2004/2005 Hinckley United recorded one of their most famous victories by beating Torquay United 2-0 at Middlefield Lane. In the 2nd round Brentford would play at Middlefield Lane live on BBC TV as the match was scheduled to be shown on Match of the Day. The game finished 0-0 with Tommy Whittle, the then Hinckley goalkeeper facing a penalty that John Salako put wide of the post. The replay took place at Griffin Park and Brentford won 2-1, after Hinckley United defender Brad Piercewright was sent off for 'handling the ball on the line', but what a save it was!

FA Trophy

In the short history of Hinckley United the furthest progression has been to the 4th round. Yeovil Town beat Hinckley United 3-2 at Huish Park in 1998/1999. Erm, let's not dwell on this one eh...

2007/2008 Squad

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
-- GK England ENG Dale Belford
-- GK England ENG Sean Bowles
-- DF England ENG Tom Birch
-- DF England ENG Tony Butler
-- DF England ENG Michael Byron (on loan from Notts County)
-- DF England ENG Leigh Platnauer
-- DF England ENG Dominic Roma
-- DF England ENG Sam Shilton
-- DF England ENG Stuart Storer
-- MF Wales WAL Neil Cartwright
-- MF England ENG Luke Edwards
-- MF England ENG Leon Jackson
No. Pos. Nation Player
-- MF England ENG Richard Lavery (captain)
-- MF England ENG Jamie Lenton
-- MF England ENG Callum Lloyd
-- MF Northern Ireland NIR Dave McClements (on loan from Sheffield Wednesday)
-- MF England ENG Lee Philpott
-- MF England ENG Kyle Storer
-- FW England ENG Leon Kelly
-- FW England ENG Colin Marrison
-- FW England ENG Gez Murphy
-- FW England ENG Owen Story
-- FW Germany GER Brian Woodall

2007/08 Transfers

Players In:

Players Out:

Rivals

Local rivals include Nuneatin Borough, Shepshed Dynamo and Barwell.

Honours

  • Dr Marten League Western Division Champions 2000-2001
  • Dr Marten Merit Cup Winners 2000-2001 (Joint Winners)
  • Leicestershire Challenge Cup Winners 2006-2007 | 2003-2004 | 2001-2002 | 2000-2001

Matt Gadsby in Memorial

Matt Gadsby remembered always

On September 9 2006 Hinckley United defender Matt Gadsby collapsed and died during a Conference North match at Harrogate Town[1]. Despite valiant efforts by paramedics to revive him, he died soon afterwards in Harrogate District Hospital, just three days after his 27th birthday. Medical tests have revealed Matt Gadsby died from a heart condition known as Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy. ARVC (or Dysplasia as it is also known) is an inherited condition that affects the muscle of the right ventricle of the heart. [2] He is survived by his wife, Sarah, and young daughter.

The practical response in the days following Matt's death was overwhelming. Ordinary fans took it upon themselves voluntarily to organise bucket collections at games to donate to Matt's widow and daughter. There was a huge desire to help out and these collections were so many that the Football Club in tandem with the Gadsby family had to set up a Memorial Fund to cope with the donations. It wasn't long before organised events began to add to the Fund. No one person or organisation were pressurised to give anything, it was all down to generosity of the football community. At the time our Commercial Manager Dave Riche said: "The donations just keep flooding in we cannot thank the people out there enough. Everyone in the football community has come together for the fund and long may it continue." These events culminated in a Memorial Match at the Marston Stadium featuring a Legends XI and a Gadsby Select XI, featuring players from Matt's previous clubs.

References

  1. ^ "Hinckley Utd defender Gadsby dies".
  2. ^ "Cause of Death". CIDG. 2006-10-27. Retrieved 2006-10-31. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)

External links

Template:Conference North