Full name | Avoniel Football Club |
---|---|
Founded | 1880 |
Dissolved | 1884 |
Ground | Beechfield |
Secretary | Robert Craig |
Avoniel Football Club is a former Irish football club based in east Belfast.
The club was founded in 1880 and named after the Avoniel Distillery on Albert Bridge Road where many of its players worked [1] . The club's first match - a 3 goals to 0 win over Oldpark in November 1880 - was played to rugby football rules, [2] but by the second match (at Cliftonville) it had adopted the Association laws as applied in Scotland. [3] [4]
Avoniel was one of the seven founder members of the Irish Football Association in 1881 and played in the first Irish Cup. [5] In the first round, lost 2–0 at eventual winner Moyola Park. [6] An Avoniel protest as to illegal boots on the Park side was dismissed. [7] Later in the year the club was the first opponent for Queen's Island, the clubs playing out a 3–3 draw. [8]
The club reached the semi-final of the 1882–83 Irish Cup, beating Distillery twice after the first match was ended four minutes early with Avoniel 3–1 up. [9] The semi-final against Cliftonville went to a second replay, but Avoniel was handicapped by losing Simm (formerly of Renfrew) after a protest that he had not been in the district for the qualifying period of 4 weeks, and captain Bryan was initially suspended for the tie, even though he had no knowledge of any offence. [10] Bryan was eventually allowed to play and Cliftonville won 2–0. [11] It was actually the fifth Cup tie that season between the sides - they had both been put into the second round after drawing with each other twice in the first. [12]
It was the victim of an unusual theft in December 1883, when, during a home match, the ball was kicked out of the ground, and a James Glenholme ran off with it, being subsequently charged. [13] By 1884 however apathy set in and the club faded away, owing to a lack of playing members. [14] Its last record of note was scratching to Wellington Park in the first round of the Irish Cup in 1883–84. [15]
Its ground was Beechfield on the Mountpottinger Road [16] in Belfast. [17] After the club's demise, the stand roof was blown off in a storm. [18]
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