University of St Andrews Football Club
Encyclopedia
The University of St Andrews Football Club was formed in the late 19th Century at the University of St Andrews
University of St Andrews
The University of St Andrews, informally referred to as "St Andrews", is the oldest university in Scotland and the third oldest in the English-speaking world after Oxford and Cambridge. The university is situated in the town of St Andrews, Fife, on the east coast of Scotland. It was founded between...

 in Scotland
Scotland
Scotland is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. Occupying the northern third of the island of Great Britain, it shares a border with England to the south and is bounded by the North Sea to the east, the Atlantic Ocean to the north and west, and the North Channel and Irish Sea to the...

. The Club currently has three teams participating in the Fife Amateur League and in the BUCS League.

Senior/amateur saturday football

The Club fully affiliated to the Scottish Football Association
Scottish Football Association
The Scottish Football Association is the governing body of football in Scotland and has the ultimate responsibility for the control and development of football in Scotland. Members of the SFA include clubs in Scotland, affiliated national associations as well as local associations...

 (SFA) in 1907, playing Senior Football until it allowed its membership to lapse in 1939. Since then the University Teams have been playing in the local Amateur league.

In the early 20th Century the four 'Ancient' Universities (Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Glasgow and St. Andrews) were given a bye into the 3rd qualifying round of the Scottish Cup. St. Andrews debuted in 1907 against the Vale of Atholl in front of 1000 spectators at University Park.

The Club have appeared in the Scottish Cup proper on three occasions losing 10–1 to Cowdenbeath in 1923, 3–;0 at home to Bathgate in 1929 and 6–1 away to Nithsdale Wanderers in 1930.

There are no records of the Club's exploits in the Scottish Amateur Cup, but the University side have won the Fife Amateur Cup on two occasions - 1934–35 and 1957–58.

A second XI can be traced back to the 1923–24 season, but it is unknown exactly when the Club first entered a second team into the Fife Amateur League. However, when they did so it was under the moniker 'United Colleges' in reference to the amalgamation of St Leonard's and St Salvatore's Colleges' in 1747. The Club have spent most of their time in Divisions 1 and 2. Their most successful season to date was 2003–04 where they were 'promoted' to division 1 via a restructuring of the league and they won the Division 2 Cup, defeating Inverkeithing Swifts in the final 2–1.

The Club entered a third team into the Saturday Amateur League for the first time in 2005, under the banner of St. Andrews Academicals. After two disappointing seasons, the club decided to stop fielding Academicals in the Fife League.

The University and the Colleges currently play in Fife Amateur League Division 1.

Inter-university competition

The Club competed against the four Ancients in 'Friendly' competition from their formation in 1887 until the introduction of the Queen's Park Shield in 1921. The First XI have won the competition three times the last being in 1942–43. The format of the Shield changed a number of times over the years, but changed for good in the late 1990s when BUCS took over the co-ordination of Scottish University Football from the now defunct SUSF. The Shield is now awarded to the winner of the Scottish 1A Conference, which for the last four years has been won by Herriot Watt. St Andrews 1st XI have, since the late nineties, been in Scottish Conference 2A suffering many years of frustration and near misses in their quest for promotion.

This all changed in 2005 when the team won the Conference and promotion into the top division. On top of that the team qualified for the BUSA Trophy, a British University knock-out competition, for the first time. After defeating the University of Central Lancashire in the last 16 and University of York. St. John in the quarter-finals, the team were very unfortunate to lose to DeMontford University on penalties, in a game that was watched by over 150 at University Park.

The United Colleges (2nd X1) are also believed to have competed in friendlies up until the advent of the SUSF Paterson trophy in 1973–74. A competition that they have won a number of occasions the last being in (?). In 2002 the Colleges came close to winning the Trophy and entry to BUSA plate but were lost the league by 1 point to Stirling University. With the advent of integrated leagues (all 1st, 2nd and 3rd XI play in the same league and can be promoted/relegated to any division) in BUSA competitions in 2004, the Paterson Trophy disappeared. Since 2002 the team have suffered a couple of relegations and are fighting for promotion from Scottish 5a.

The Academicals (3rd XI) entered the Colts trophy at its inception in 1979–80. The team have never won the competition, but came close in 1999–2000 and 2000–01. The majority of players from these years went on to play for the first XI. In fact the team of 2000–01 defeated the United Colleges by 4–1 in a highly contested 'friendly' match. The team are currently holding their own in BUSA Scottish Conference 5b.

SUSF did organise an indoor five-a-side tournament and a Freshers' tournament. The inaugural tournament of the former was won by Edinburgh in 1975–76, but St. Andrews have won it three times since then in 1977–78, 1981–82 and 1985–86. The competition stopped running in the mid-1990s for reasons unknown.

The Freshers' Tournament was first contested in 1984–85 and has been dominated by Edinburgh University since its inception. Saints finally lifted the trophy in 1999–2000 winning every game in the regional competition in St Andrews and the finals in Edinburgh. Most of the 'Golden Generation' went on to pick up University Colours later in their Saints careers. With increased games in the BUSA leagues and each University putting more and more teams into the Amateur Leagues, the competition came to an end in 2003–04.

Kits

Management

Since the Club has an ever changing roster of Office Bearers and limited resources, it has been difficult to attract coaches of a high quality on a regular basis. In the late 1980s, Andy Law, a barman from the Central Bar on Market Street, volunteered to coach the First XI, providing much needed objectivity from the sidelines.

In the mid-90s, rector Donald Findlay
Donald Findlay
Donald Findlay QC, is a well-known senior advocate and Queen's Counsel in Scotland. He has also held positions as a vice chairman of Rangers Football Club and twice Rector of the University of St Andrews...

 helped to provide coaching on a sporadic basis from Rangers
Rangers F.C.
Rangers Football Club are an association football club based in Glasgow, Scotland, who play in the Scottish Premier League. The club are nicknamed the Gers, Teddy Bears and the Light Blues, and the fans are known to each other as bluenoses...

 But with the Q.C's resignation as rector came the end of the tie-up. In between times, all three squads have relied on the team captains to take training and pick the team.

During the 1997–98 season, the then AU president and 1st XI left-back, Thomas Finbar Patrick William Doyle, drafted in Eric Walker to help first team captain Ross Gilder, whose form was suffering as a result of the dual strains of team selection and his ever increasing waistline. Walker's arrival, a former Scottish Amateur Cup winner (sporting discipline unknown), looked like it would herald a new era of total football within the club. However, the new managerial duo only ever really hit it off during happy hour which lead to both departing (Gilder to The Kinnes Fry Bar and Walker to Bell's distillery) shortly after.

In 2002 the first team took the unprecedented step of 'employing' a coach to take training and attend matches, but with team selection remaining with the Captain. Gary Cardle coached the team to varying success before 'losing the dressing room' in the 2003–04 season. He moved on to Cowdenbeath
Cowdenbeath F.C.
Cowdenbeath Football Club are a professional Scottish football team based in the town of Cowdenbeath, Fife. They currently play in the Second Division of the Scottish Football League. The club plays its home games at Central Park in the centre of the town which has the unusual feature of a motor...

 Youth team and Herriot Watt 2nd XI respectively.

The reigns were immediately taken up voluntarily by Peter Henry, father of 1st team player Pete Henry Jnr. His effect was immediate, with the players galvanised, the team finished mid-table in the Fife Amateur Premier League and second in the BUSA Scottish 2a Conference in his first season.

The 1st XI were to enjoy a period of success unrivalled in modern times under Henry, as in his second season the team marched to League victory in the BUSA Scottish 2a Conference and the semi-finals of the BUSA Trophy in 2006. Henry left the club with immediate effect after the 2006 committee election, spelling the end of an era for the 1st XI. The managerless team's standards slipped in the Fife League and they were eventually relegated. Happily, however, the University agreed a deal in July 2006 with Dundee United
Dundee United F.C.
Dundee United Football Club is a Scottish professional football club located in the city of Dundee. Formed in 1909, originally as Dundee Hibernian, the club changed to the present name in 1923...

 allowing the professional Club to train on the University grounds in return for professional coaching for all three University teams.

The Tayside Club assigned Austin McPhee as the regular Coach for the University. Austin hails from Fife and has played professional football in Japan and NCAA
NCAA Men's Soccer Championship
The NCAA began conducting a Men's Division I Soccer Championship tournament in 1959 with an eight-team tournament. Currently, the tournament field consists of 48 teams...

 Division 1 College Soccer for UNCW. He holds a UEFA A-License and 2006–07 was his first season in charge. Despite an excellent win against Edinburgh, the 1st XI lost their hard earned place at the BUSA top table following relegation on the final day of McPhee's first season. The team showed some promise in the Fife League, but the season ended in disappointment after failure to win promotion.

Tours

The Club has gone on numerous tours, spreading the Saint's gospel far and wide to the local amateur teams.
  • The Club toured to Paris in 1985, defeating the Sorbonne University 6–1 in the first game, before a defeat to Spartans of Edinburgh (1–3). The third game was a comprehensive 10–2 victory over the Standard Athletic Club, and the final game resulted in a 4–1 win over Old Challoners.
  • There was a tour to Loret de Mar, Spain in 1989
  • Amsterdam was home to a particularly well organised tour to Amsterdam in 1990
  • Cyprus 1997, played three, lost three, goals scored 4, goals conceded 17
  • Barcelona played host to notorious 1999 'White Monkey' tour
  • Greece was the venue for the 2002 tour
  • The Club intend to tour Prague in mid-2007



The United Colleges have made a couple of short breaks in recent years:
  • Ireland in 2002 and Germany in 2006.

"Famous" ex-players

  • Claude Cox Brighton and Hove Albion 2009–present (3app, 1 own goal)
  • Charles "The Cat" Devlin Queens Park 2008–present (36app, 0 Goals)
  • Bryan "Bouff" Hawkins Spartans 2004– (app, Goals)
  • Presley Orhue Cowdenbeath 2003–04 (1 app, 0 Goals)
  • Matt Dyer East Fife 1996–99 (44 app, 16 Goals)
  • Ryan Cameron East Fife 1996–;97 (15 app, 1 Goal)
  • Jonathan Wild Manchester City 1967–1987 (432 app, 1 Goal)
  • Dave Young Raith Rovers 1992–94 (? app, ? Goals)
  • PW Dirkin earned two Scottish Amateur Caps, both against Ireland in 1951 and 1952

Past club captains

2011–2012 Gregor 'Neebs' Smith

2010–2011 Matt Leggett

2009–2010 Stephen Deland

2008–2009 Claude Cox

2007–2008 Glenn Johnston

2006–2007 Jeff Flis

2005–2006 David MacAulay

2004–2005 Neil Stewart

2003–2004 Richard Watson

2002–2003 Frazer Wilson

2001–2002 Chris Hull

2000–2001 Richie Walker

1999–2000 Andrew Wilson

1998–1999 Chris Keay

1997–1998 Simon Taylor

1996–1997 Jonathan Wild

1995–1996 James Edge

1994–1995 Alwyn Bell

1993–1994 Jonathan Arana

1992–1993 Mark Gray

1991–1992 Alan Marshall

1990–1991 Cameron Brown

1989–1990 Dave Pritchard
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