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词条 Inglewood United FC
释义

  1. History

  2. Honours

  3. Current squad

  4. Coaching staff

  5. Season by Season Record

     Key 

  6. Coaches and players

     Head Coach  Player of the Year  Notable past players 

  7. References

  8. External links

{{More citations needed|date=September 2018}}{{Use Australian English|date=February 2014}}{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2014}}{{Infobox football club
| clubname = Inglewood United
| fullname = Inglewood United Football Club
| image = Inglewood United FC logo.svg
| upright = 0.7
| founded = 1951
| ground = Perth Plasterboard Centre Stadium
| capacity = 7,000
| chrtitle = President
| chairman = Cesare Colli
| manager = Andres Oliveira
| league = NPL Western Australia
|season = 2018
| position = 5th
| website = http://www.inglewoodunitedfc.com.au/
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|leftarm1=3333FF|body1=3333FF|rightarm1=3333FF|shorts1=3333FF|socks1=FFDD18|
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|leftarm2=FFDD18|body2=FFDD18|rightarm2=FFDD18|shorts2=3333FF|socks2=FFDD18|
}}

Inglewood United Football Club is an Australian semi-professional soccer club based in Inglewood, a suburb of Perth, Western Australia. The club competes in the National Premier Leagues Western Australia. The club are based at Perth Plasterboard Centre Stadium.

Inglewood have won the State League Premier League once, in 1996, and the State Cup twice, in 1977 and 1999. Their most recent success was in the 2005 Night Series when they lifted the trophy by defeating Swan I.C. 3–0.

History

Kiev Soccer Club was founded in March 1951[1] by Alexander Minko and Igor Schorsch, migrants from Ukraine. The club took its name from Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, and the famous Dynamo Kyiv team.

Their playing colours of gold and blue were adopted from the Ukrainian national flag in the late 1960s. The clubs' original playing strip was all-black.

Kiev’s first competitive game was on 12 April 1953 when they claimed a 3–1 victory over Wundowie in Division Three North of the Western Australian Soccer Football Association.

In 1962 Kiev entered Division One of the newly formed Western Australian Soccer Federation. The club finished second to Swan Valley to gain promotion to the top flight for the first time.

For the next few years they bounced between the top two tiers, changing their name from Kiev to Kiev-Victoria Park and then back to Kiev.

Spells at Langley Park in Perth, Weston Street in Carlisle and Raphael Park in Victoria Park preceded the club's 1963 relocation to Walter Road Reserve (now Perth Plasterboard Centre Stadium) in Inglewood, which remains their home ground to this day.

1964 saw Kiev capture their first trophy by finishing top of Division One, with State representative Peter Atkinson voted the league’s Player of the Year. Another second tier championship followed in 1967.

Kiev announced their top flight return by placing second to Perth Azzurri on the 1968 league table. They went on to win the Top Four Cup, downing Cracovia 2–1 in the final courtesy of a Bev Allan double.

1970 brought about another name change – to Inglewood Kiev – and within twelve months a 21-year lease was arranged for the use of Walter Road Reserve.

Striker Len Dundo scored himself a hat-trick of Golden Boots as the top flight’s leading goal scorer in 1972, 1973 and 1974. In those three seasons alone Dundo amassed 77 goals for Inglewood.

The fundraising efforts of long-time club secretary Jack Soer were instrumental in ensuring the club maintained a strong financial position throughout the 1970s.

Inglewood commemorated their 25th anniversary with the construction of clubrooms at the northern end of the ground, under the guidance of Vladimir Mandyczewsky. The new bar and office facilities were officially opened in November 1976.

1977 will long be remembered as the year Inglewood truly came of age. Robert Earl (3) and Nick Macallum (2) may have scored the goals in a 5–1 State Cup final mauling of Spearwood Dalmatinac but it was defender Jimmy Smith who was recognised as best on ground.

English import Gordon Todd celebrated his first State League season by taking out the Gold Medal, awarded to the top flights’ best player. John Davidson ensured the year ended on a high by scoring the solitary goal in a 1–0 Top Four Cup victory over Floreat Athena.

Lee Adam created State League history by becoming the first player to collect two Gold Medals, the midfielder winning the prestigious award in 1978 and again in 1980.

Memories of England’s 1966 World Cup win were revived in mid-1981 when team captain Bobby Moore joined Inglewood for two guest appearances.

Midfield livewire Norrie Sutton became Inglewood’s fourth Gold Medal winner in six seasons when he won the award in 1982.

Inglewood lifted their first Night Series trophy in 1983. A Paddy Morris goal in the first period of extra-time was enough to gain a 1–0 win over West Perth Macedonia. Further success eluded the club in the years that followed, culminating in relegation to the second tier in 1987.

It wasn’t until a competition restructure in 1993, brought on by the formation of new peak body the Professional Soccer Federation, that top flight football returned to Inglewood. The following year new president Siggy Kramer secured a new 10-year lease on Walter Road Reserve.

The club entered 1995 as Inglewood Falcons and ended it as Premier League runners-up and Top Four Cup finalists. Jason Ainsley was the runaway winner of that season's Gold Medal.

Inglewood reached the State League pinnacle by winning the 1996 Premier League under the management of Paul Wormley. Goals in the final minutes of the season by Scott Daley and veteran Ian Ballantyne earned the club a 2–1 victory over near-neighbours Bayswater City, and their first league title. Norrie Sutton collected his second Gold Medal, Ronnie More was named Goalkeeper of the Year and Paul Wormley the Coach of the Year.

The State Cup returned to Inglewood in 1999 courtesy of Gavin Tait, whose second half header was enough to see off Floreat Athena 1–0.

A rebranding to Inglewood United in 2000 preceded the negotiation of a new 25-year lease on Walter Road Reserve. The following year the club celebrated their 50th anniversary with the opening of a new 1,000-seat stadium, the Kramer Family Stand, on the western side of Walter Road Reserve.

Although recognised as one of the State League’s powerhouse clubs, Inglewood’s only trophy capture of recent times has been the 2005 Night Series. Jason Colli, Dean Apelgren and Rory Mouttet were the scorers in a convincing 3–0 defeat of Swan IC.

By contrast, individual accolades have flowed for Inglewood players. Robert Zabica (2000), Oliver Taseski (2001, 2009 and 2011) and Alex Dunn (2018) were honoured with the Goalkeeper of the Year award, Louis Parkinson (2003), Jack Clisby (2012) and Alex Salmon (2017) added their names to the Gold Medal winners list, with the latter also scoring the Golden Boot (2017).

Honours

National Premier Leagues Western Australia Champions: 1996

National Premier Leagues Western Australia Runners-Up: 1968, 1977, 1994, 1995, 2016, 2017

State Cup Winners: 1977, 1999

State Cup Runners-Up: 1981, 1995, 2005, 2009

Top Four Cup Winners: 1968, 1977

Top Four Cup Runners-up: 1982, 2008, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2016

Night Series Winners: 1983, 2005

Night Series Runners-Up: 1976, 1979, 1997, 2000

Division One Champions: 1964, 1967

Division One Runners-Up: 1962

Division Three Cup Winners: 1959

Current squad

As of 17 March 2019[2]{{Fs start}}{{Fs player|no=1 |nat=AUS|pos=GK|name=Alex Dunn}}{{Fs player|no=2 |nat=AUS|pos=DF|name=Alex Ishida-Livings}}{{Fs player|no=3 |nat=GRN|pos=DF|name=David Cyrus}}{{Fs player|no=4 |nat=ENG|pos=DF|name=Scott Blackmore}}{{Fs player|no=5 |nat=South Sudan|pos=MF|name=Sammie Riak}}{{Fs player|no=6 |nat=AUS |pos=MF|name=Miki Vujacic}}{{Fs player|no=7 |nat=EGY|pos=FW|name=Hamza Hina}}{{Fs player|no=8 |nat=CHI|pos=MF|name=Jason Barrera}}{{Fs player|no=9 |nat=KEN|pos=FW|name=Chok Dau}}{{Fs mid}}{{Fs player|no=10 |nat= |pos=MF|name=Antony Bafobusha}}{{Fs player|no=13 |nat= |pos=DF|name=Nelson Tshongo}}{{Fs player|no=14 |nat=SIN|pos=FW|name=Steve Sokol}}{{Fs player|no=15 |nat=IRE|pos=MF|name=Brian Farrell}}{{Fs player|no=16 |nat=AUS|pos=MF|name=Jamie Murphy}}{{Fs player|no=17 |nat=AUS|pos=DF|name=Mark Barnett}}{{Fs player|no=19 |nat=AUS|pos=DF|name=Connor Becsi}}{{Fs player|no=21 |nat=AUS |pos=GK|name=Josiah Godfrey}}{{Fs player|no=23 |nat=CZE |pos=FW|name=Zdenek Bezdek}}{{Fs end}}

Coaching staff

  • Technical Director: Alex Stanojevic
  • First Team Coach: Andres Oliveira
  • First Team Assistant Coach: Jason Colli
  • First Team Physio: Katie Holtham
  • Goalkeeper Coach: Dave Whalley

Season by Season Record

SeasonLeagueCupNSFinalsTop Goalscorer (League only)
DivisionPWDLFAPtsPos
2000Premier Division2212463519404thQF2nd5thPaul Lincoln (10 goals)
2001Premier Division186482732228thSFSFDNQElton Holmes and Paul Lincoln (5 goals)
2002Premier Division2211294841355thSFGS4thLouis Parkinson (9 goals)
2003Premier Division209473236314thR2QF5thLouis Parkinson (11 goals)
2004Premier Division229584228326thR2GSDNQBobby Despotovski (13 goals)
2005Premier Division2211384535364th2nd1st-Andre Sarpe (7 goals)
2006Premier Division2265113542239thR2GS-Louis Parkinson (14 goals)
2007Premier Division2211384137365thSFGS-Daniel Niederberger (10 goals)
2008Premier Division2211473835374thR2GS2ndMladen Kovacevic and James Sammut (7 goals)
2009Premier Division228593337297th2ndSFDNQAlbert Osei-Tutu (8 goals)
2010Premier Division2282122742269thR1GSDNQRyan Clarke (9 goals)
2011Premier Division2211475137373rdR1QF4thRory Grant (15 goals)
2012Premier Division2213454530434thSFQF5thAleks Jovic (11 goals)
2013Premier Division228683927306thSFQFDNQGreg Sharland (12 goals)
2014National Premier Leagues22641236641510thQFSFDNQRyan Clarke (14 goals)
2015National Premier Leagues2283112846277thR5GSDNQDavid Micevski (6 goals)
2016National Premier Leagues2213364432422ndSFGS2ndKenny Keogh and Brian Woodall (9 goals)
2017National Premier Leagues2616737333552ndR4QF3rdAlex Salmon (28 goals)
2018National Premier Leagues2613765038465thR4R1DNQAlex Salmon (17 goals)
2019National Premier LeaguesGS
ChampionsRunners-upPromotedRelegated

Key

KeyMeaningKeyMeaning
PGames PlayedGSGroup Stage
WGames WonR1Round 1
DGames DrawnR2Round 2
LGames LostR3Round 3
FGoals ForR4Round 4
AGoals AgainstR5Round 5
PtsPointsQFQuarter-Finals
PosFinal PositionSFSemi-Finals
CupFootball West State CupRURunners-Up
NSNight SeriesWWinners
FinalsTop 4/5 CupDNQDid Not Qualify

Coaches and players

Head Coach

Listed according to first competitive game as Head Coach:
  • (C) – Caretaker
  • 1953 {{flagicon| }} not recorded
  • 1957 {{flagicon| }} Val Zazula
  • 1959 {{flagicon|ENG}} Alf Tipton
  • 1965 {{flagicon|ENG}} Danny Burton
  • 1966 {{flagicon|ENG}} Peter Atkinson
  • 1967 {{flagicon|ROM}} Siggy Kramer
  • 1970 {{flagicon| }} Frank Schaper
  • 1970 {{flagicon|ENG}} John Adshead
  • 1972 {{flagicon|POL}} Zyggie Pieda
  • 1974 {{flagicon| }} John Lovell
  • 1975 {{flagicon| }} Mick Jones
  • 1975 {{flagicon|AUS}} Jimmy Pearson
  • 1979 {{flagicon|POL}} Zyggie Pieda
  • 1980 {{flagicon|AUS}} Jimmy Pearson
  • 1982 {{flagicon| }} Gordon Todd
  • 1985 {{flagicon|ENG}} John Sydenham
  • 1986 {{flagicon| }} Alf De Bono
  • 1987 {{flagicon| }} Derek Henderson
  • 1987 {{flagicon| }} Colin Ashley
  • 1988 {{flagicon| }} B.Newell
  • 1990 {{flagicon|AUS}} John Coyne
  • 1991 {{flagicon|SCO}} Ernie Hannighan
  • 1992 {{flagicon|AUS}} Roy Jones
  • 1993 {{flagicon|ENG}} Eddy Hodgkinson
  • 1996 {{flagicon| }} Paul Wormley
  • 1998 {{flagicon| }} Ian Buckley
  • 1998 {{flagicon|SCO}} John Hunter
  • 2001 {{flagicon| }} Steve Parkinson
  • 2002 {{flagicon| }} Bob Braid (C)
  • 2002 {{flagicon|AUS}} Jimmy Pearson
  • 2003 {{flagicon| }} Paddy Morris (C)
  • 2003 {{flagicon|ENG}} Eddy Hodgkinson
  • 2006 {{flagicon|ENG}} Alan Vest
  • 2007 {{flagicon|AUS}} Bobby Despotovski
  • 2008 {{flagicon|ENG}} Lee Bamber
  • 2009 {{flagicon|ENG}} Alan Vest (C)
  • 2009 {{flagicon|AUS}} Shane Pryce
  • 2012 {{flagicon|ENG}} Graham Normanton
  • 2014 {{flagicon|AUS}} Goran Stajic (C)
  • 2015 {{flagicon|AUS}} Michael Garcia
  • 2016 {{flagicon|GRE}} Taki Nicolaides
  • 2017 {{flagicon|IRE}} Andy Keogh
  • 2019 {{flagicon|ENG}} Trim Morgan
  • 2019 {{flagicon|AUS}} Andres Oliveira

Player of the Year

  • 1979 {{flagicon|UKR}} Peter Baczynski
  • 1980 {{flagicon| }} Neil Mearns
  • 1981 {{flagicon|AUS}} Peter Baczynski
  • 1982 {{flagicon|SCO}} Norrie Sutton
  • 1983 {{flagicon| }} Mel Weston
  • 1984 {{flagicon| }} Mark Johnson
  • 1985 {{flagicon| }} Richie Paskins
  • 1986 {{flagicon| }} John Cockerill
  • 1987 {{flagicon| }} Dean Paini
  • 1988 {{flagicon| }} Paul Mooney and Andy Godfrey
  • 1989 {{flagicon|IRE}} Donal O'Brien
  • 1990 {{flagicon| }} not recorded
  • 1991 {{flagicon| }} Steve McCaffrey
  • 1992 {{flagicon| }} Paul Gorst
  • 1993 {{flagicon| }} Martin Guilfoyle
  • 1994 {{flagicon| }} Paul Gibbon
  • 1995 {{flagicon|ENG}} Jason Ainsley
  • 1996 {{flagicon| }} Tony Hall
  • 1997 {{flagicon| }} Martin Woodall
  • 1998 {{flagicon|ENG}} Lee Crosby
  • 1999 {{flagicon| }} Steve McDonald
  • 2000 {{flagicon|AUS}} Robbie Zabica
  • 2001 {{flagicon| }} Jamie Goodman
  • 2002 {{flagicon| }} Jamie Goodman
  • 2003 {{flagicon|SCO}} Alan MacKenzie
  • 2004 {{flagicon|AUS}} Greg Sharland
  • 2005 {{flagicon|AUS}} Shaun Kilkelly
  • 2006 {{flagicon|AUS}} Shane Pryce
  • 2007 {{flagicon|AUS}} Shane Pryce
  • 2008 {{flagicon|AUS}} James Sammut
  • 2009 {{flagicon|AUS}} Shane Pryce
  • 2010 {{flagicon|AUS}} Ryan Clarke
  • 2011 {{flagicon|SCO}} Rory Grant
  • 2012 {{flagicon|AUS}} Jack Clisby
  • 2013 {{flagicon|AUS}} Greg Sharland
  • 2014 {{flagicon|AUS}} Ryan Clarke
  • 2015 {{flagicon|ENG}} Tim Gould
  • 2016 {{flagicon|AUS}} John Migas
  • 2017 {{flagicon|ENG}} Alex Salmon
  • 2018 {{flagicon|GRN}} David Cyrus

Notable past players

List includes players from Inglewood youth or senior teams that have gone on to represent the Australian national team or similar, or have amassed over 100 games with Perth Glory FC or similar.

  • {{flagicon|AUS}} Gary Marocchi
  • {{flagicon|AUS}} Robert Zabica
  • {{flagicon|SCO}} Alan MacKenzie
  • {{flagicon|AUS}} Bobby Despotovski (also has the all-time goal-scoring record with Perth Glory FC)
  • {{flagicon|AUS}} Nikita Rukavytsya
  • {{flagicon|GRN}} David Cyrus
  • {{flagicon|NZL}} Lewis Italiano

References

1. ^Federation of Ukrainians in Australia, 'Ukrainians in Australia Volume 1', Melbourne, 1966, p838.
2. ^{{cite web|title=National Premier Leagues Season Preview|url=http://footballwest.com.au/national-premier-league-season-preview/|publisher=Football West|date=27 October 2017|accessdate=17 February 2017}}

External links

  • Club website
  • Statistics from OzFootball
  • footballwa.net Club Directory entry
  • Українська футбольна діаспора
{{WASL Clubs}}

6 : National Premier Leagues clubs|Soccer clubs in Western Australia|Football West State League teams|Association football clubs established in 1951|Ukrainian association football clubs outside Ukraine|1951 establishments in Australia

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